binutils-gdb/gdb/utils.c

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/* General utility routines for GDB, the GNU debugger.
Copyright (C) 1986-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
This file is part of GDB.
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
(at your option) any later version.
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#include "defs.h"
#include <ctype.h>
Rename common to gdbsupport This is the next patch in the ongoing series to move gdbsever to the top level. This patch just renames the "common" directory. The idea is to do this move in two parts: first rename the directory (this patch), then move the directory to the top. This approach makes the patches a bit more tractable. I chose the name "gdbsupport" for the directory. However, as this patch was largely written by sed, we could pick a new name without too much difficulty. Tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-07-09 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * contrib/ari/gdb_ari.sh: Change common to gdbsupport. * configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Change common to gdbsupport. * gdbsupport: Rename from common. * acinclude.m4: Change common to gdbsupport. * Makefile.in (CONFIG_SRC_SUBDIR, COMMON_SFILES) (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR, stamp-version, ALLDEPFILES): Change common to gdbsupport. * aarch64-tdep.c, ada-lang.c, ada-lang.h, agent.c, alloc.c, amd64-darwin-tdep.c, amd64-dicos-tdep.c, amd64-fbsd-nat.c, amd64-fbsd-tdep.c, amd64-linux-nat.c, amd64-linux-tdep.c, amd64-nbsd-tdep.c, amd64-obsd-tdep.c, amd64-sol2-tdep.c, amd64-tdep.c, amd64-windows-tdep.c, arch-utils.c, arch/aarch64-insn.c, arch/aarch64.c, arch/aarch64.h, arch/amd64.c, arch/amd64.h, arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c, arch/arm-linux.c, arch/arm.c, arch/i386.c, arch/i386.h, arch/ppc-linux-common.c, arch/riscv.c, arch/riscv.h, arch/tic6x.c, arm-tdep.c, auto-load.c, auxv.c, ax-gdb.c, ax-general.c, ax.h, breakpoint.c, breakpoint.h, btrace.c, btrace.h, build-id.c, build-id.h, c-lang.h, charset.c, charset.h, cli/cli-cmds.c, cli/cli-cmds.h, cli/cli-decode.c, cli/cli-dump.c, cli/cli-option.h, cli/cli-script.c, coff-pe-read.c, command.h, compile/compile-c-support.c, compile/compile-c.h, compile/compile-cplus-symbols.c, compile/compile-cplus-types.c, compile/compile-cplus.h, compile/compile-loc2c.c, compile/compile.c, completer.c, completer.h, contrib/ari/gdb_ari.sh, corefile.c, corelow.c, cp-support.c, cp-support.h, cp-valprint.c, csky-tdep.c, ctf.c, darwin-nat.c, debug.c, defs.h, disasm-selftests.c, disasm.c, disasm.h, dtrace-probe.c, dwarf-index-cache.c, dwarf-index-cache.h, dwarf-index-write.c, dwarf2-frame.c, dwarf2expr.c, dwarf2loc.c, dwarf2read.c, event-loop.c, event-top.c, exceptions.c, exec.c, extension.h, fbsd-nat.c, features/aarch64-core.c, features/aarch64-fpu.c, features/aarch64-pauth.c, features/aarch64-sve.c, features/i386/32bit-avx.c, features/i386/32bit-avx512.c, features/i386/32bit-core.c, features/i386/32bit-linux.c, features/i386/32bit-mpx.c, features/i386/32bit-pkeys.c, features/i386/32bit-segments.c, features/i386/32bit-sse.c, features/i386/64bit-avx.c, features/i386/64bit-avx512.c, features/i386/64bit-core.c, features/i386/64bit-linux.c, features/i386/64bit-mpx.c, features/i386/64bit-pkeys.c, features/i386/64bit-segments.c, features/i386/64bit-sse.c, features/i386/x32-core.c, features/riscv/32bit-cpu.c, features/riscv/32bit-csr.c, features/riscv/32bit-fpu.c, features/riscv/64bit-cpu.c, features/riscv/64bit-csr.c, features/riscv/64bit-fpu.c, features/tic6x-c6xp.c, features/tic6x-core.c, features/tic6x-gp.c, filename-seen-cache.h, findcmd.c, findvar.c, fork-child.c, gcore.c, gdb_bfd.c, gdb_bfd.h, gdb_proc_service.h, gdb_regex.c, gdb_select.h, gdb_usleep.c, gdbarch-selftests.c, gdbthread.h, gdbtypes.h, gnu-nat.c, go32-nat.c, guile/guile.c, guile/scm-ports.c, guile/scm-safe-call.c, guile/scm-type.c, i386-fbsd-nat.c, i386-fbsd-tdep.c, i386-go32-tdep.c, i386-linux-nat.c, i386-linux-tdep.c, i386-tdep.c, i387-tdep.c, ia64-libunwind-tdep.c, ia64-linux-nat.c, inf-child.c, inf-ptrace.c, infcall.c, infcall.h, infcmd.c, inferior-iter.h, inferior.c, inferior.h, inflow.c, inflow.h, infrun.c, infrun.h, inline-frame.c, language.h, linespec.c, linux-fork.c, linux-nat.c, linux-tdep.c, linux-thread-db.c, location.c, machoread.c, macrotab.h, main.c, maint.c, maint.h, memattr.c, memrange.h, mi/mi-cmd-break.h, mi/mi-cmd-env.c, mi/mi-cmd-stack.c, mi/mi-cmd-var.c, mi/mi-interp.c, mi/mi-main.c, mi/mi-parse.h, minsyms.c, mips-linux-tdep.c, namespace.h, nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.c, nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.h, nat/aarch64-linux.c, nat/aarch64-sve-linux-ptrace.c, nat/amd64-linux-siginfo.c, nat/fork-inferior.c, nat/linux-btrace.c, nat/linux-btrace.h, nat/linux-namespaces.c, nat/linux-nat.h, nat/linux-osdata.c, nat/linux-personality.c, nat/linux-procfs.c, nat/linux-ptrace.c, nat/linux-ptrace.h, nat/linux-waitpid.c, nat/mips-linux-watch.c, nat/mips-linux-watch.h, nat/ppc-linux.c, nat/x86-dregs.c, nat/x86-dregs.h, nat/x86-linux-dregs.c, nat/x86-linux.c, nto-procfs.c, nto-tdep.c, objfile-flags.h, objfiles.c, objfiles.h, obsd-nat.c, observable.h, osdata.c, p-valprint.c, parse.c, parser-defs.h, ppc-linux-nat.c, printcmd.c, probe.c, proc-api.c, procfs.c, producer.c, progspace.h, psymtab.h, python/py-framefilter.c, python/py-inferior.c, python/py-ref.h, python/py-type.c, python/python.c, record-btrace.c, record-full.c, record.c, record.h, regcache-dump.c, regcache.c, regcache.h, remote-fileio.c, remote-fileio.h, remote-sim.c, remote.c, riscv-tdep.c, rs6000-aix-tdep.c, rust-exp.y, s12z-tdep.c, selftest-arch.c, ser-base.c, ser-event.c, ser-pipe.c, ser-tcp.c, ser-unix.c, skip.c, solib-aix.c, solib-target.c, solib.c, source-cache.c, source.c, source.h, sparc-nat.c, spu-linux-nat.c, stack.c, stap-probe.c, symfile-add-flags.h, symfile.c, symfile.h, symtab.c, symtab.h, target-descriptions.c, target-descriptions.h, target-memory.c, target.c, target.h, target/waitstatus.c, target/waitstatus.h, thread-iter.h, thread.c, tilegx-tdep.c, top.c, top.h, tracefile-tfile.c, tracefile.c, tracepoint.c, tracepoint.h, tui/tui-io.c, ui-file.c, ui-out.h, unittests/array-view-selftests.c, unittests/child-path-selftests.c, unittests/cli-utils-selftests.c, unittests/common-utils-selftests.c, unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c, unittests/environ-selftests.c, unittests/format_pieces-selftests.c, unittests/function-view-selftests.c, unittests/lookup_name_info-selftests.c, unittests/memory-map-selftests.c, unittests/memrange-selftests.c, unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.c, unittests/observable-selftests.c, unittests/offset-type-selftests.c, unittests/optional-selftests.c, unittests/parse-connection-spec-selftests.c, unittests/ptid-selftests.c, unittests/rsp-low-selftests.c, unittests/scoped_fd-selftests.c, unittests/scoped_mmap-selftests.c, unittests/scoped_restore-selftests.c, unittests/string_view-selftests.c, unittests/style-selftests.c, unittests/tracepoint-selftests.c, unittests/unpack-selftests.c, unittests/utils-selftests.c, unittests/xml-utils-selftests.c, utils.c, utils.h, valarith.c, valops.c, valprint.c, value.c, value.h, varobj.c, varobj.h, windows-nat.c, x86-linux-nat.c, xml-support.c, xml-support.h, xml-tdesc.h, xstormy16-tdep.c, xtensa-linux-nat.c, dwarf2read.h: Change common to gdbsupport. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2019-07-09 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Change common to gdbsupport. * acinclude.m4: Change common to gdbsupport. * Makefile.in (SFILES, OBS, GDBREPLAY_OBS, IPA_OBJS) (version-generated.c, gdbsupport/%-ipa.o, gdbsupport/%.o): Change common to gdbsupport. * ax.c, event-loop.c, fork-child.c, gdb_proc_service.h, gdbreplay.c, gdbthread.h, hostio-errno.c, hostio.c, i387-fp.c, inferiors.c, inferiors.h, linux-aarch64-tdesc-selftest.c, linux-amd64-ipa.c, linux-i386-ipa.c, linux-low.c, linux-tic6x-low.c, linux-x86-low.c, linux-x86-tdesc-selftest.c, linux-x86-tdesc.c, lynx-i386-low.c, lynx-low.c, mem-break.h, nto-x86-low.c, regcache.c, regcache.h, remote-utils.c, server.c, server.h, spu-low.c, symbol.c, target.h, tdesc.c, tdesc.h, thread-db.c, tracepoint.c, win32-i386-low.c, win32-low.c: Change common to gdbsupport.
2019-05-06 10:29:24 +08:00
#include "gdbsupport/gdb_wait.h"
#include "event-top.h"
Remove global continuations in favour of a per-thread continuations. * gdbthread.h (struct thread_info): Add comments around continuations and intermediate_continuations. (save_infrun_state, load_infrun_state): Delete continuations and intermediate_continuations arguments. * infrun.c (fetch_inferior_event): Only call normal_stop if stop_soon is NO_STOP_QUIETLY. (context_switch): Don't context-switch the continuations. * thread.c (clear_thread_inferior_resources): Discard all continuations of the thread we're clearing. (save_infrun_state, load_infrun_state): Delete continuations and intermediate_continuations arguments, and the code referencing them. * utils.c: Include "gdbthread.h". (cmd_continuation, intermediate_continuation): Delete. (add_continuation): Add thread_info* argument. Install the continuation on it. (restore_thread_cleanup): New. (do_all_continuations_ptid, do_all_continuations_thread_callback): New. (do_all_continuations): Reimplement. (discard_all_continuations_thread_callback, discard_all_continuations_thread): New. (discard_all_continuations): Reimplement. (add_intermediate_continuation): Add thread_info* argument. Install the continuation on it. (do_all_intermediate_continuations_thread_callback) (do_all_intermediate_continuations_thread): New. (do_all_intermediate_continuations): Reimplement. (discard_all_intermediate_continuations_thread_callback): New. (discard_all_intermediate_continuations_thread): New. (discard_all_intermediate_continuations): Reimplement. * breakpoint.c (until_break_command): Install the continuation on the current thread. * defs.h (cmd_continuation, intermediate_continuation): Delete. (struct thread_info): Forward declare. (add_continuation, add_intermediate_continuation): Add thread_info* argument. (do_all_continuations_thread, discard_all_continuations_thread) (do_all_intermediate_continuations_thread) (discard_all_intermediate_continuations_thread): Declare. * inf-loop.c (inferior_event_handler): In non-stop only run continuations on the thread that stopped. In all-stop, run continuations on all threads. * infcmd.c (step_once, finish_command): Adjust.
2008-09-09 05:57:42 +08:00
#include "gdbthread.h"
#include "fnmatch.h"
* dwarf2read.c (try_open_dwo_file): Use gdb_bfd_ref and gdb_bfd_unref. (free_dwo_file): Use gdb_bfd_unref. * cli/cli-dump.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (bfd_openw_with_cleanup): Use gdb_bfd_ref. (bfd_openr_with_cleanup): Likewise. * windows-nat.c (windows_make_so): Use gdb_bfd_ref, gdb_bfd_unref. * utils.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (do_bfd_close_cleanup): Use gdb_bfd_unref. * symfile.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (separate_debug_file_exists): Use gdb_bfd_unref. (bfd_open_maybe_remote): Use gdb_bfd_ref. (symfile_bfd_open): Use gdb_bfd_ref, gdb_bfd_unref. (generic_load): Use gdb_bfd_ref. (reread_symbols): Use gdb_bfd_unref. * symfile-mem.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (symbol_file_add_from_memory): Use make_cleanup_bfd_close. * spu-linux-nat.c (spu_bfd_open): Use gdb_bfd_ref, gdb_bfd_unref. * solib.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (solib_bfd_fopen): Use gdb_bfd_ref. (solib_bfd_open): Use gdb_bfd_unref. (free_so_symbols): Use gdb_bfd_unref. (reload_shared_libraries_1): Use gdb_bfd_unref. * solib-spu.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (spu_bfd_fopen): Use gdb_bfd_ref, gdb_bfd_unref. * solib-pa64.c (pa64_solib_create_inferior_hook): Use gdb_bfd_ref, gdb_bfd_unref. * solib-frv.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (enable_break2): Use gdb_bfd_unref. * solib-dsbt.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (enable_break2): Use gdb_bfd_unref. * solib-darwin.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (darwin_solib_get_all_image_info_addr_at_init): Use gdb_bfd_ref, gdb_bfd_unref. (darwin_bfd_open): Use gdb_bfd_unref. * rs6000-nat.c (add_vmap): Use gdb_bfd_ref, gdb_bfd_unref. * remote-mips.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (mips_load_srec): Use gdb_bfd_ref. (pmon_load_fast): Use gdb_bfd_ref. * remote-m32r-sdi.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (m32r_load): Use gdb_bfd_ref. * record.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (record_save_cleanups): Use gdb_bfd_unref. (cmd_record_save): Use gdb_bfd_unref. * procfs.c (insert_dbx_link_bpt_in_file): Use gdb_bfd_ref, gdb_bfd_unref. * objfiles.h (gdb_bfd_close_or_warn): Remove. (gdb_bfd_ref, gdb_bfd_unref): Move to gdb_bfd.h. * objfiles.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (free_objfile): Use gdb_bfd_unref. (gdb_bfd_close_or_warn, gdb_bfd_ref, gdb_bfd_unref): Move to gdb_bfd.c. * machoread.c (macho_add_oso_symfile): Use gdb_bfd_unref. (macho_symfile_read_all_oso): Use gdb_bfd_ref, gdb_bfd_unref. (macho_check_dsym): Likewise. * m32r-rom.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (m32r_load): Use gdb_bfd_ref. (m32r_upload_command): Use gdb_bfd_ref. * jit.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (jit_bfd_try_read_symtab): Use gdb_bfd_ref, gdb_bfd_unref. * gdb_bfd.h: New file. * gdb_bfd.c: New file. * gcore.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (create_gcore_bfd): Use gdb_bfd_ref. (do_bfd_delete_cleanup): Use gdb_bfd_unref. (gcore_command): Use gdb_bfd_unref. * exec.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (exec_close): Use gdb_bfd_unref. (exec_close_1): Use gdb_bfd_unref. (exec_file_attach): Use gdb_bfd_ref. * elfread.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (build_id_verify): Use gdb_bfd_unref. * dsrec.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (load_srec): Use gdb_bfd_ref. * corelow.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (core_close): Use gdb_bfd_unref. (core_open): Use gdb_bfd_ref. * bfd-target.c: Include gdb_bfd.h. (target_bfd_xclose): Use gdb_bfd_unref. (target_bfd_reopen): Use gdb_bfd_ref. * Makefile.in (SFILES): Add gdb_bfd.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add gdb_bfd.h. (COMMON_OBS): Add gdb_bfd.o.
2012-07-19 03:33:34 +08:00
#include "gdb_bfd.h"
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H
#include <sys/resource.h>
#endif /* HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H */
#ifdef TUI
gdb/tui: disable tui mode when an assert triggers When an assert triggers in tui mode the output is not great, the internal backtrace that is generated is printed directly to the file descriptor for gdb_stderr, and, as a result, does not currently format itself correctly - the output uses only '\n' at the end of each line, and so, when the terminal is in raw mode, the cursor does not return to the start of each line after the '\n'. This is mostly fixable, we could update bt-utils.c to use '\r\n' instead of just '\n', and this would fix most of the problems. The one we can't easily fix is if/when GDB is built to use execinfo instead of libbacktrace, in this case we use backtrace_symbols_fd to print the symbols, and this function only uses '\n' as the line terminator. Fixing this would require switching to backtrace_symbols, but that API uses malloc, which is something we're trying to avoid (this code is called when GDB hits an error, so ideally we don't want to rely on malloc). However, the execinfo code is only used when libbacktrace is not available (or the user specifically disables libbacktrace) so maybe we can ignore that problem... ... but there is another problem. When the backtrace is printed in raw mode, it is possible that the backtrace fills the screen. With the terminal in raw mode we don't have the ability to scroll back, which means we loose some of the backtrace, which isn't ideal. In this commit I propose that we should disable tui mode whenever we handle a fatal signal, or when we hit the internal error code path (e.g. when an assert triggers). With this done then we don't need to update the bt-utils.c code, and the execinfo version of the code (using backtrace_symbols_fd) works just fine. We also get the ability to scroll back to view the error message and all of the backtrace, assuming the users terminal supports scrolling back. The only downside I see with this change is if the tui_disable call itself causes an error for some reason, or, if we handle a single at a time when it is not safe to call tui_disable, in these cases the extra tui_disable call might cause GDB to loose the original error. However, I think (just from personal experience) that the above two issues are pretty rare and the benefits from this change far out weighs the possible drawbacks.
2023-01-04 17:48:31 +08:00
/* For tui_get_command_dimension and tui_disable. */
#include "tui/tui.h"
#endif
2000-02-29 15:45:13 +08:00
#ifdef __GO32__
#include <pc.h>
#endif
#include <signal.h>
#include "gdbcmd.h"
#include "serial.h"
#include "bfd.h"
#include "target.h"
#include "gdb-demangle.h"
#include "expression.h"
#include "language.h"
#include "charset.h"
#include "annotate.h"
2002-04-06 00:39:11 +08:00
#include "filenames.h"
#include "symfile.h"
#include "gdbsupport/gdb_obstack.h"
#include "gdbcore.h"
#include "top.h"
#include "ui.h"
#include "main.h"
#include "solist.h"
#include "inferior.h"
#include "gdb_curses.h"
#include "readline/readline.h"
gdb: Use C++11 std::chrono This patch fixes a few problems with GDB's time handling. #1 - It avoids problems with gnulib's C++ namespace support On MinGW, the struct timeval that should be passed to gnulib's gettimeofday replacement is incompatible with libiberty's timeval_sub/timeval_add. That's because gnulib also replaces "struct timeval" with its own definition, while libiberty expects the system's. E.g., in code like this: gettimeofday (&prompt_ended, NULL); timeval_sub (&prompt_delta, &prompt_ended, &prompt_started); timeval_add (&prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_delta); That's currently handled in gdb by not using gnulib's gettimeofday at all (see common/gdb_sys_time.h), but that #undef hack won't work with if/when we enable gnulib's C++ namespace support, because that mode adds compile time warnings for uses of ::gettimeofday, which are hard errors with -Werror. #2 - But there's an elephant in the room: gettimeofday is not monotonic... We're using it to: a) check how long functions take, for performance analysis b) compute when in the future to fire events in the event-loop c) print debug timestamps But that's exactly what gettimeofday is NOT meant for. Straight from the man page: ~~~ The time returned by gettimeofday() is affected by discontinuous jumps in the system time (e.g., if the system administrator manually changes the system time). If you need a monotonically increasing clock, see clock_gettime(2). ~~~ std::chrono (part of the C++11 standard library) has a monotonic clock exactly for such purposes (std::chrono::steady_clock). This commit switches to use that instead of gettimeofday, fixing all the issues mentioned above. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/run-time-clock.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/run-time-clock.h. (COMMON_OBS): Add run-time-clock.o. * common/run-time-clock.c, common/run-time-clock.h: New files. * defs.h (struct timeval, print_transfer_performance): Delete declarations. * event-loop.c (struct gdb_timer) <when>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. (create_timer): use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use new instead of malloc. (delete_timer): Use delete instead of xfree. (duration_cast_timeval): New. (update_wait_timeout): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. * maint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h", <time.h> and "timeval-utils.h". (scoped_command_stats::~scoped_command_stats) (scoped_command_stats::scoped_command_stats): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use user_cpu_time_clock instead of get_run_time. * maint.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono>. (scoped_command_stats): <m_start_cpu_time>: Now a user_cpu_time_clock::time_point. <m_start_wall_time>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. * mi/mi-main.c: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h" and <sys/resource.h>. (rusage): Delete. (mi_execute_command): Use new instead of XNEW. (mi_load_progress): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (timestamp): Rewrite in terms of std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. (timeval_diff): Delete. (print_diff): Adjust to use std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. * mi/mi-parse.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct mi_timestamp): Change fields types to std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point, user_cpu_time_clock::time and system_cpu_time_clock::time_point, instead of struct timeval. * symfile.c: Include <chrono> instead of <time.h> and "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct time_range): New. (generic_load): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (print_transfer_performance): Replace timeval parameters with a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration parameter. Adjust. * utils.c: Include <chrono> instead of "timeval-utils.h", "gdb_sys_time.h", and <time.h>. (prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday/timeval_sub/timeval_add. (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Use std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (vfprintf_unfiltered): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use std::string. Use '.' instead of ':'. * utils.h: Include <chrono>. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * debug.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (debug_vprintf): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use '.' instead of ':'. * tracepoint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (get_timestamp): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday.
2016-11-23 23:36:26 +08:00
#include <chrono>
#include "interps.h"
#include "gdbsupport/gdb_regex.h"
Rename common to gdbsupport This is the next patch in the ongoing series to move gdbsever to the top level. This patch just renames the "common" directory. The idea is to do this move in two parts: first rename the directory (this patch), then move the directory to the top. This approach makes the patches a bit more tractable. I chose the name "gdbsupport" for the directory. However, as this patch was largely written by sed, we could pick a new name without too much difficulty. Tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-07-09 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * contrib/ari/gdb_ari.sh: Change common to gdbsupport. * configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Change common to gdbsupport. * gdbsupport: Rename from common. * acinclude.m4: Change common to gdbsupport. * Makefile.in (CONFIG_SRC_SUBDIR, COMMON_SFILES) (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR, stamp-version, ALLDEPFILES): Change common to gdbsupport. * aarch64-tdep.c, ada-lang.c, ada-lang.h, agent.c, alloc.c, amd64-darwin-tdep.c, amd64-dicos-tdep.c, amd64-fbsd-nat.c, amd64-fbsd-tdep.c, amd64-linux-nat.c, amd64-linux-tdep.c, amd64-nbsd-tdep.c, amd64-obsd-tdep.c, amd64-sol2-tdep.c, amd64-tdep.c, amd64-windows-tdep.c, arch-utils.c, arch/aarch64-insn.c, arch/aarch64.c, arch/aarch64.h, arch/amd64.c, arch/amd64.h, arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c, arch/arm-linux.c, arch/arm.c, arch/i386.c, arch/i386.h, arch/ppc-linux-common.c, arch/riscv.c, arch/riscv.h, arch/tic6x.c, arm-tdep.c, auto-load.c, auxv.c, ax-gdb.c, ax-general.c, ax.h, breakpoint.c, breakpoint.h, btrace.c, btrace.h, build-id.c, build-id.h, c-lang.h, charset.c, charset.h, cli/cli-cmds.c, cli/cli-cmds.h, cli/cli-decode.c, cli/cli-dump.c, cli/cli-option.h, cli/cli-script.c, coff-pe-read.c, command.h, compile/compile-c-support.c, compile/compile-c.h, compile/compile-cplus-symbols.c, compile/compile-cplus-types.c, compile/compile-cplus.h, compile/compile-loc2c.c, compile/compile.c, completer.c, completer.h, contrib/ari/gdb_ari.sh, corefile.c, corelow.c, cp-support.c, cp-support.h, cp-valprint.c, csky-tdep.c, ctf.c, darwin-nat.c, debug.c, defs.h, disasm-selftests.c, disasm.c, disasm.h, dtrace-probe.c, dwarf-index-cache.c, dwarf-index-cache.h, dwarf-index-write.c, dwarf2-frame.c, dwarf2expr.c, dwarf2loc.c, dwarf2read.c, event-loop.c, event-top.c, exceptions.c, exec.c, extension.h, fbsd-nat.c, features/aarch64-core.c, features/aarch64-fpu.c, features/aarch64-pauth.c, features/aarch64-sve.c, features/i386/32bit-avx.c, features/i386/32bit-avx512.c, features/i386/32bit-core.c, features/i386/32bit-linux.c, features/i386/32bit-mpx.c, features/i386/32bit-pkeys.c, features/i386/32bit-segments.c, features/i386/32bit-sse.c, features/i386/64bit-avx.c, features/i386/64bit-avx512.c, features/i386/64bit-core.c, features/i386/64bit-linux.c, features/i386/64bit-mpx.c, features/i386/64bit-pkeys.c, features/i386/64bit-segments.c, features/i386/64bit-sse.c, features/i386/x32-core.c, features/riscv/32bit-cpu.c, features/riscv/32bit-csr.c, features/riscv/32bit-fpu.c, features/riscv/64bit-cpu.c, features/riscv/64bit-csr.c, features/riscv/64bit-fpu.c, features/tic6x-c6xp.c, features/tic6x-core.c, features/tic6x-gp.c, filename-seen-cache.h, findcmd.c, findvar.c, fork-child.c, gcore.c, gdb_bfd.c, gdb_bfd.h, gdb_proc_service.h, gdb_regex.c, gdb_select.h, gdb_usleep.c, gdbarch-selftests.c, gdbthread.h, gdbtypes.h, gnu-nat.c, go32-nat.c, guile/guile.c, guile/scm-ports.c, guile/scm-safe-call.c, guile/scm-type.c, i386-fbsd-nat.c, i386-fbsd-tdep.c, i386-go32-tdep.c, i386-linux-nat.c, i386-linux-tdep.c, i386-tdep.c, i387-tdep.c, ia64-libunwind-tdep.c, ia64-linux-nat.c, inf-child.c, inf-ptrace.c, infcall.c, infcall.h, infcmd.c, inferior-iter.h, inferior.c, inferior.h, inflow.c, inflow.h, infrun.c, infrun.h, inline-frame.c, language.h, linespec.c, linux-fork.c, linux-nat.c, linux-tdep.c, linux-thread-db.c, location.c, machoread.c, macrotab.h, main.c, maint.c, maint.h, memattr.c, memrange.h, mi/mi-cmd-break.h, mi/mi-cmd-env.c, mi/mi-cmd-stack.c, mi/mi-cmd-var.c, mi/mi-interp.c, mi/mi-main.c, mi/mi-parse.h, minsyms.c, mips-linux-tdep.c, namespace.h, nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.c, nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.h, nat/aarch64-linux.c, nat/aarch64-sve-linux-ptrace.c, nat/amd64-linux-siginfo.c, nat/fork-inferior.c, nat/linux-btrace.c, nat/linux-btrace.h, nat/linux-namespaces.c, nat/linux-nat.h, nat/linux-osdata.c, nat/linux-personality.c, nat/linux-procfs.c, nat/linux-ptrace.c, nat/linux-ptrace.h, nat/linux-waitpid.c, nat/mips-linux-watch.c, nat/mips-linux-watch.h, nat/ppc-linux.c, nat/x86-dregs.c, nat/x86-dregs.h, nat/x86-linux-dregs.c, nat/x86-linux.c, nto-procfs.c, nto-tdep.c, objfile-flags.h, objfiles.c, objfiles.h, obsd-nat.c, observable.h, osdata.c, p-valprint.c, parse.c, parser-defs.h, ppc-linux-nat.c, printcmd.c, probe.c, proc-api.c, procfs.c, producer.c, progspace.h, psymtab.h, python/py-framefilter.c, python/py-inferior.c, python/py-ref.h, python/py-type.c, python/python.c, record-btrace.c, record-full.c, record.c, record.h, regcache-dump.c, regcache.c, regcache.h, remote-fileio.c, remote-fileio.h, remote-sim.c, remote.c, riscv-tdep.c, rs6000-aix-tdep.c, rust-exp.y, s12z-tdep.c, selftest-arch.c, ser-base.c, ser-event.c, ser-pipe.c, ser-tcp.c, ser-unix.c, skip.c, solib-aix.c, solib-target.c, solib.c, source-cache.c, source.c, source.h, sparc-nat.c, spu-linux-nat.c, stack.c, stap-probe.c, symfile-add-flags.h, symfile.c, symfile.h, symtab.c, symtab.h, target-descriptions.c, target-descriptions.h, target-memory.c, target.c, target.h, target/waitstatus.c, target/waitstatus.h, thread-iter.h, thread.c, tilegx-tdep.c, top.c, top.h, tracefile-tfile.c, tracefile.c, tracepoint.c, tracepoint.h, tui/tui-io.c, ui-file.c, ui-out.h, unittests/array-view-selftests.c, unittests/child-path-selftests.c, unittests/cli-utils-selftests.c, unittests/common-utils-selftests.c, unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c, unittests/environ-selftests.c, unittests/format_pieces-selftests.c, unittests/function-view-selftests.c, unittests/lookup_name_info-selftests.c, unittests/memory-map-selftests.c, unittests/memrange-selftests.c, unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.c, unittests/observable-selftests.c, unittests/offset-type-selftests.c, unittests/optional-selftests.c, unittests/parse-connection-spec-selftests.c, unittests/ptid-selftests.c, unittests/rsp-low-selftests.c, unittests/scoped_fd-selftests.c, unittests/scoped_mmap-selftests.c, unittests/scoped_restore-selftests.c, unittests/string_view-selftests.c, unittests/style-selftests.c, unittests/tracepoint-selftests.c, unittests/unpack-selftests.c, unittests/utils-selftests.c, unittests/xml-utils-selftests.c, utils.c, utils.h, valarith.c, valops.c, valprint.c, value.c, value.h, varobj.c, varobj.h, windows-nat.c, x86-linux-nat.c, xml-support.c, xml-support.h, xml-tdesc.h, xstormy16-tdep.c, xtensa-linux-nat.c, dwarf2read.h: Change common to gdbsupport. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2019-07-09 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Change common to gdbsupport. * acinclude.m4: Change common to gdbsupport. * Makefile.in (SFILES, OBS, GDBREPLAY_OBS, IPA_OBJS) (version-generated.c, gdbsupport/%-ipa.o, gdbsupport/%.o): Change common to gdbsupport. * ax.c, event-loop.c, fork-child.c, gdb_proc_service.h, gdbreplay.c, gdbthread.h, hostio-errno.c, hostio.c, i387-fp.c, inferiors.c, inferiors.h, linux-aarch64-tdesc-selftest.c, linux-amd64-ipa.c, linux-i386-ipa.c, linux-low.c, linux-tic6x-low.c, linux-x86-low.c, linux-x86-tdesc-selftest.c, linux-x86-tdesc.c, lynx-i386-low.c, lynx-low.c, mem-break.h, nto-x86-low.c, regcache.c, regcache.h, remote-utils.c, server.c, server.h, spu-low.c, symbol.c, target.h, tdesc.c, tdesc.h, thread-db.c, tracepoint.c, win32-i386-low.c, win32-low.c: Change common to gdbsupport.
2019-05-06 10:29:24 +08:00
#include "gdbsupport/job-control.h"
#include "gdbsupport/selftest.h"
#include "gdbsupport/gdb_optional.h"
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
#include "cp-support.h"
#include <algorithm>
Rename common to gdbsupport This is the next patch in the ongoing series to move gdbsever to the top level. This patch just renames the "common" directory. The idea is to do this move in two parts: first rename the directory (this patch), then move the directory to the top. This approach makes the patches a bit more tractable. I chose the name "gdbsupport" for the directory. However, as this patch was largely written by sed, we could pick a new name without too much difficulty. Tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-07-09 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * contrib/ari/gdb_ari.sh: Change common to gdbsupport. * configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Change common to gdbsupport. * gdbsupport: Rename from common. * acinclude.m4: Change common to gdbsupport. * Makefile.in (CONFIG_SRC_SUBDIR, COMMON_SFILES) (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR, stamp-version, ALLDEPFILES): Change common to gdbsupport. * aarch64-tdep.c, ada-lang.c, ada-lang.h, agent.c, alloc.c, amd64-darwin-tdep.c, amd64-dicos-tdep.c, amd64-fbsd-nat.c, amd64-fbsd-tdep.c, amd64-linux-nat.c, amd64-linux-tdep.c, amd64-nbsd-tdep.c, amd64-obsd-tdep.c, amd64-sol2-tdep.c, amd64-tdep.c, amd64-windows-tdep.c, arch-utils.c, arch/aarch64-insn.c, arch/aarch64.c, arch/aarch64.h, arch/amd64.c, arch/amd64.h, arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c, arch/arm-linux.c, arch/arm.c, arch/i386.c, arch/i386.h, arch/ppc-linux-common.c, arch/riscv.c, arch/riscv.h, arch/tic6x.c, arm-tdep.c, auto-load.c, auxv.c, ax-gdb.c, ax-general.c, ax.h, breakpoint.c, breakpoint.h, btrace.c, btrace.h, build-id.c, build-id.h, c-lang.h, charset.c, charset.h, cli/cli-cmds.c, cli/cli-cmds.h, cli/cli-decode.c, cli/cli-dump.c, cli/cli-option.h, cli/cli-script.c, coff-pe-read.c, command.h, compile/compile-c-support.c, compile/compile-c.h, compile/compile-cplus-symbols.c, compile/compile-cplus-types.c, compile/compile-cplus.h, compile/compile-loc2c.c, compile/compile.c, completer.c, completer.h, contrib/ari/gdb_ari.sh, corefile.c, corelow.c, cp-support.c, cp-support.h, cp-valprint.c, csky-tdep.c, ctf.c, darwin-nat.c, debug.c, defs.h, disasm-selftests.c, disasm.c, disasm.h, dtrace-probe.c, dwarf-index-cache.c, dwarf-index-cache.h, dwarf-index-write.c, dwarf2-frame.c, dwarf2expr.c, dwarf2loc.c, dwarf2read.c, event-loop.c, event-top.c, exceptions.c, exec.c, extension.h, fbsd-nat.c, features/aarch64-core.c, features/aarch64-fpu.c, features/aarch64-pauth.c, features/aarch64-sve.c, features/i386/32bit-avx.c, features/i386/32bit-avx512.c, features/i386/32bit-core.c, features/i386/32bit-linux.c, features/i386/32bit-mpx.c, features/i386/32bit-pkeys.c, features/i386/32bit-segments.c, features/i386/32bit-sse.c, features/i386/64bit-avx.c, features/i386/64bit-avx512.c, features/i386/64bit-core.c, features/i386/64bit-linux.c, features/i386/64bit-mpx.c, features/i386/64bit-pkeys.c, features/i386/64bit-segments.c, features/i386/64bit-sse.c, features/i386/x32-core.c, features/riscv/32bit-cpu.c, features/riscv/32bit-csr.c, features/riscv/32bit-fpu.c, features/riscv/64bit-cpu.c, features/riscv/64bit-csr.c, features/riscv/64bit-fpu.c, features/tic6x-c6xp.c, features/tic6x-core.c, features/tic6x-gp.c, filename-seen-cache.h, findcmd.c, findvar.c, fork-child.c, gcore.c, gdb_bfd.c, gdb_bfd.h, gdb_proc_service.h, gdb_regex.c, gdb_select.h, gdb_usleep.c, gdbarch-selftests.c, gdbthread.h, gdbtypes.h, gnu-nat.c, go32-nat.c, guile/guile.c, guile/scm-ports.c, guile/scm-safe-call.c, guile/scm-type.c, i386-fbsd-nat.c, i386-fbsd-tdep.c, i386-go32-tdep.c, i386-linux-nat.c, i386-linux-tdep.c, i386-tdep.c, i387-tdep.c, ia64-libunwind-tdep.c, ia64-linux-nat.c, inf-child.c, inf-ptrace.c, infcall.c, infcall.h, infcmd.c, inferior-iter.h, inferior.c, inferior.h, inflow.c, inflow.h, infrun.c, infrun.h, inline-frame.c, language.h, linespec.c, linux-fork.c, linux-nat.c, linux-tdep.c, linux-thread-db.c, location.c, machoread.c, macrotab.h, main.c, maint.c, maint.h, memattr.c, memrange.h, mi/mi-cmd-break.h, mi/mi-cmd-env.c, mi/mi-cmd-stack.c, mi/mi-cmd-var.c, mi/mi-interp.c, mi/mi-main.c, mi/mi-parse.h, minsyms.c, mips-linux-tdep.c, namespace.h, nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.c, nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.h, nat/aarch64-linux.c, nat/aarch64-sve-linux-ptrace.c, nat/amd64-linux-siginfo.c, nat/fork-inferior.c, nat/linux-btrace.c, nat/linux-btrace.h, nat/linux-namespaces.c, nat/linux-nat.h, nat/linux-osdata.c, nat/linux-personality.c, nat/linux-procfs.c, nat/linux-ptrace.c, nat/linux-ptrace.h, nat/linux-waitpid.c, nat/mips-linux-watch.c, nat/mips-linux-watch.h, nat/ppc-linux.c, nat/x86-dregs.c, nat/x86-dregs.h, nat/x86-linux-dregs.c, nat/x86-linux.c, nto-procfs.c, nto-tdep.c, objfile-flags.h, objfiles.c, objfiles.h, obsd-nat.c, observable.h, osdata.c, p-valprint.c, parse.c, parser-defs.h, ppc-linux-nat.c, printcmd.c, probe.c, proc-api.c, procfs.c, producer.c, progspace.h, psymtab.h, python/py-framefilter.c, python/py-inferior.c, python/py-ref.h, python/py-type.c, python/python.c, record-btrace.c, record-full.c, record.c, record.h, regcache-dump.c, regcache.c, regcache.h, remote-fileio.c, remote-fileio.h, remote-sim.c, remote.c, riscv-tdep.c, rs6000-aix-tdep.c, rust-exp.y, s12z-tdep.c, selftest-arch.c, ser-base.c, ser-event.c, ser-pipe.c, ser-tcp.c, ser-unix.c, skip.c, solib-aix.c, solib-target.c, solib.c, source-cache.c, source.c, source.h, sparc-nat.c, spu-linux-nat.c, stack.c, stap-probe.c, symfile-add-flags.h, symfile.c, symfile.h, symtab.c, symtab.h, target-descriptions.c, target-descriptions.h, target-memory.c, target.c, target.h, target/waitstatus.c, target/waitstatus.h, thread-iter.h, thread.c, tilegx-tdep.c, top.c, top.h, tracefile-tfile.c, tracefile.c, tracepoint.c, tracepoint.h, tui/tui-io.c, ui-file.c, ui-out.h, unittests/array-view-selftests.c, unittests/child-path-selftests.c, unittests/cli-utils-selftests.c, unittests/common-utils-selftests.c, unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c, unittests/environ-selftests.c, unittests/format_pieces-selftests.c, unittests/function-view-selftests.c, unittests/lookup_name_info-selftests.c, unittests/memory-map-selftests.c, unittests/memrange-selftests.c, unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.c, unittests/observable-selftests.c, unittests/offset-type-selftests.c, unittests/optional-selftests.c, unittests/parse-connection-spec-selftests.c, unittests/ptid-selftests.c, unittests/rsp-low-selftests.c, unittests/scoped_fd-selftests.c, unittests/scoped_mmap-selftests.c, unittests/scoped_restore-selftests.c, unittests/string_view-selftests.c, unittests/style-selftests.c, unittests/tracepoint-selftests.c, unittests/unpack-selftests.c, unittests/utils-selftests.c, unittests/xml-utils-selftests.c, utils.c, utils.h, valarith.c, valops.c, valprint.c, value.c, value.h, varobj.c, varobj.h, windows-nat.c, x86-linux-nat.c, xml-support.c, xml-support.h, xml-tdesc.h, xstormy16-tdep.c, xtensa-linux-nat.c, dwarf2read.h: Change common to gdbsupport. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2019-07-09 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Change common to gdbsupport. * acinclude.m4: Change common to gdbsupport. * Makefile.in (SFILES, OBS, GDBREPLAY_OBS, IPA_OBJS) (version-generated.c, gdbsupport/%-ipa.o, gdbsupport/%.o): Change common to gdbsupport. * ax.c, event-loop.c, fork-child.c, gdb_proc_service.h, gdbreplay.c, gdbthread.h, hostio-errno.c, hostio.c, i387-fp.c, inferiors.c, inferiors.h, linux-aarch64-tdesc-selftest.c, linux-amd64-ipa.c, linux-i386-ipa.c, linux-low.c, linux-tic6x-low.c, linux-x86-low.c, linux-x86-tdesc-selftest.c, linux-x86-tdesc.c, lynx-i386-low.c, lynx-low.c, mem-break.h, nto-x86-low.c, regcache.c, regcache.h, remote-utils.c, server.c, server.h, spu-low.c, symbol.c, target.h, tdesc.c, tdesc.h, thread-db.c, tracepoint.c, win32-i386-low.c, win32-low.c: Change common to gdbsupport.
2019-05-06 10:29:24 +08:00
#include "gdbsupport/pathstuff.h"
Add output styles to gdb This adds some output styling to the CLI. A style is currently a foreground color, a background color, and an intensity (dim or bold). (This list could be expanded depending on terminal capabilities.) A style can be applied while printing. For ui-out, this is done by passing the style constant as an argument. For low-level cases, fprintf_styled and fputs_styled are provided. Users can control the style via a number of new set/show commands. In the interest of not typing many nearly-identical documentation strings, I automated this. On the down side, this is not very i18n-friendly. I've chose some default colors to use. I think it would be good to enable this by default, so that when users start the new gdb, they will see the new feature. Stylizing is done if TERM is set and is not "dumb". This could be improved when the TUI is available by using the curses has_colors call. That is, the lowest layer could call this without committing to using curses everywhere; see my other patch for TUI colorizing. I considered adding a new "set_style" method to ui_file. However, because the implementation had to interact with the pager code, I didn't take this approach. But, one idea might be to put the isatty check there and then have it defer to the lower layers. gdb/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * utils.h (set_output_style, fprintf_styled) (fputs_styled): Declare. * utils.c (applied_style, desired_style): New globals. (emit_style_escape, set_output_style): New function. (prompt_for_continue): Emit style escapes. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Likewise. (fputs_styled, fprintf_styled): New functions. * ui-out.h (enum class ui_out_style_kind): New. (class ui_out) <field_string, field_stream, do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out::field_stream, ui_out::field_string): Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.h (class tui_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.c (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * tracepoint.c (print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Style output. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Style output. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Style output. * skip.c (info_skip_command): Style output. * record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history_src_line): Style output. (btrace_call_history): Likewise. * python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Style output. * mi/mi-out.h (class mi_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out::do_table_header) (mi_ui_out::do_field_int): Update. (mi_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Style output. * cli/cli-style.h: New file. * cli/cli-style.c: New file. * cli-out.h (class cli_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * cli-out.c (cli_ui_out::do_table_header) (cli_ui_out::do_field_int, cli_ui_out::do_field_skip): Update. (cli_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. Style the output. * breakpoint.c (print_breakpoint_location): Style output. (update_static_tracepoint): Likewise. * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_CLI_SRCS): Add cli-style.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add cli-style.h. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: New file. * gdb.base/style.c: New file.
2018-09-04 12:56:33 +08:00
#include "cli/cli-style.h"
Rename common to gdbsupport This is the next patch in the ongoing series to move gdbsever to the top level. This patch just renames the "common" directory. The idea is to do this move in two parts: first rename the directory (this patch), then move the directory to the top. This approach makes the patches a bit more tractable. I chose the name "gdbsupport" for the directory. However, as this patch was largely written by sed, we could pick a new name without too much difficulty. Tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-07-09 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * contrib/ari/gdb_ari.sh: Change common to gdbsupport. * configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Change common to gdbsupport. * gdbsupport: Rename from common. * acinclude.m4: Change common to gdbsupport. * Makefile.in (CONFIG_SRC_SUBDIR, COMMON_SFILES) (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR, stamp-version, ALLDEPFILES): Change common to gdbsupport. * aarch64-tdep.c, ada-lang.c, ada-lang.h, agent.c, alloc.c, amd64-darwin-tdep.c, amd64-dicos-tdep.c, amd64-fbsd-nat.c, amd64-fbsd-tdep.c, amd64-linux-nat.c, amd64-linux-tdep.c, amd64-nbsd-tdep.c, amd64-obsd-tdep.c, amd64-sol2-tdep.c, amd64-tdep.c, amd64-windows-tdep.c, arch-utils.c, arch/aarch64-insn.c, arch/aarch64.c, arch/aarch64.h, arch/amd64.c, arch/amd64.h, arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c, arch/arm-linux.c, arch/arm.c, arch/i386.c, arch/i386.h, arch/ppc-linux-common.c, arch/riscv.c, arch/riscv.h, arch/tic6x.c, arm-tdep.c, auto-load.c, auxv.c, ax-gdb.c, ax-general.c, ax.h, breakpoint.c, breakpoint.h, btrace.c, btrace.h, build-id.c, build-id.h, c-lang.h, charset.c, charset.h, cli/cli-cmds.c, cli/cli-cmds.h, cli/cli-decode.c, cli/cli-dump.c, cli/cli-option.h, cli/cli-script.c, coff-pe-read.c, command.h, compile/compile-c-support.c, compile/compile-c.h, compile/compile-cplus-symbols.c, compile/compile-cplus-types.c, compile/compile-cplus.h, compile/compile-loc2c.c, compile/compile.c, completer.c, completer.h, contrib/ari/gdb_ari.sh, corefile.c, corelow.c, cp-support.c, cp-support.h, cp-valprint.c, csky-tdep.c, ctf.c, darwin-nat.c, debug.c, defs.h, disasm-selftests.c, disasm.c, disasm.h, dtrace-probe.c, dwarf-index-cache.c, dwarf-index-cache.h, dwarf-index-write.c, dwarf2-frame.c, dwarf2expr.c, dwarf2loc.c, dwarf2read.c, event-loop.c, event-top.c, exceptions.c, exec.c, extension.h, fbsd-nat.c, features/aarch64-core.c, features/aarch64-fpu.c, features/aarch64-pauth.c, features/aarch64-sve.c, features/i386/32bit-avx.c, features/i386/32bit-avx512.c, features/i386/32bit-core.c, features/i386/32bit-linux.c, features/i386/32bit-mpx.c, features/i386/32bit-pkeys.c, features/i386/32bit-segments.c, features/i386/32bit-sse.c, features/i386/64bit-avx.c, features/i386/64bit-avx512.c, features/i386/64bit-core.c, features/i386/64bit-linux.c, features/i386/64bit-mpx.c, features/i386/64bit-pkeys.c, features/i386/64bit-segments.c, features/i386/64bit-sse.c, features/i386/x32-core.c, features/riscv/32bit-cpu.c, features/riscv/32bit-csr.c, features/riscv/32bit-fpu.c, features/riscv/64bit-cpu.c, features/riscv/64bit-csr.c, features/riscv/64bit-fpu.c, features/tic6x-c6xp.c, features/tic6x-core.c, features/tic6x-gp.c, filename-seen-cache.h, findcmd.c, findvar.c, fork-child.c, gcore.c, gdb_bfd.c, gdb_bfd.h, gdb_proc_service.h, gdb_regex.c, gdb_select.h, gdb_usleep.c, gdbarch-selftests.c, gdbthread.h, gdbtypes.h, gnu-nat.c, go32-nat.c, guile/guile.c, guile/scm-ports.c, guile/scm-safe-call.c, guile/scm-type.c, i386-fbsd-nat.c, i386-fbsd-tdep.c, i386-go32-tdep.c, i386-linux-nat.c, i386-linux-tdep.c, i386-tdep.c, i387-tdep.c, ia64-libunwind-tdep.c, ia64-linux-nat.c, inf-child.c, inf-ptrace.c, infcall.c, infcall.h, infcmd.c, inferior-iter.h, inferior.c, inferior.h, inflow.c, inflow.h, infrun.c, infrun.h, inline-frame.c, language.h, linespec.c, linux-fork.c, linux-nat.c, linux-tdep.c, linux-thread-db.c, location.c, machoread.c, macrotab.h, main.c, maint.c, maint.h, memattr.c, memrange.h, mi/mi-cmd-break.h, mi/mi-cmd-env.c, mi/mi-cmd-stack.c, mi/mi-cmd-var.c, mi/mi-interp.c, mi/mi-main.c, mi/mi-parse.h, minsyms.c, mips-linux-tdep.c, namespace.h, nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.c, nat/aarch64-linux-hw-point.h, nat/aarch64-linux.c, nat/aarch64-sve-linux-ptrace.c, nat/amd64-linux-siginfo.c, nat/fork-inferior.c, nat/linux-btrace.c, nat/linux-btrace.h, nat/linux-namespaces.c, nat/linux-nat.h, nat/linux-osdata.c, nat/linux-personality.c, nat/linux-procfs.c, nat/linux-ptrace.c, nat/linux-ptrace.h, nat/linux-waitpid.c, nat/mips-linux-watch.c, nat/mips-linux-watch.h, nat/ppc-linux.c, nat/x86-dregs.c, nat/x86-dregs.h, nat/x86-linux-dregs.c, nat/x86-linux.c, nto-procfs.c, nto-tdep.c, objfile-flags.h, objfiles.c, objfiles.h, obsd-nat.c, observable.h, osdata.c, p-valprint.c, parse.c, parser-defs.h, ppc-linux-nat.c, printcmd.c, probe.c, proc-api.c, procfs.c, producer.c, progspace.h, psymtab.h, python/py-framefilter.c, python/py-inferior.c, python/py-ref.h, python/py-type.c, python/python.c, record-btrace.c, record-full.c, record.c, record.h, regcache-dump.c, regcache.c, regcache.h, remote-fileio.c, remote-fileio.h, remote-sim.c, remote.c, riscv-tdep.c, rs6000-aix-tdep.c, rust-exp.y, s12z-tdep.c, selftest-arch.c, ser-base.c, ser-event.c, ser-pipe.c, ser-tcp.c, ser-unix.c, skip.c, solib-aix.c, solib-target.c, solib.c, source-cache.c, source.c, source.h, sparc-nat.c, spu-linux-nat.c, stack.c, stap-probe.c, symfile-add-flags.h, symfile.c, symfile.h, symtab.c, symtab.h, target-descriptions.c, target-descriptions.h, target-memory.c, target.c, target.h, target/waitstatus.c, target/waitstatus.h, thread-iter.h, thread.c, tilegx-tdep.c, top.c, top.h, tracefile-tfile.c, tracefile.c, tracepoint.c, tracepoint.h, tui/tui-io.c, ui-file.c, ui-out.h, unittests/array-view-selftests.c, unittests/child-path-selftests.c, unittests/cli-utils-selftests.c, unittests/common-utils-selftests.c, unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c, unittests/environ-selftests.c, unittests/format_pieces-selftests.c, unittests/function-view-selftests.c, unittests/lookup_name_info-selftests.c, unittests/memory-map-selftests.c, unittests/memrange-selftests.c, unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.c, unittests/observable-selftests.c, unittests/offset-type-selftests.c, unittests/optional-selftests.c, unittests/parse-connection-spec-selftests.c, unittests/ptid-selftests.c, unittests/rsp-low-selftests.c, unittests/scoped_fd-selftests.c, unittests/scoped_mmap-selftests.c, unittests/scoped_restore-selftests.c, unittests/string_view-selftests.c, unittests/style-selftests.c, unittests/tracepoint-selftests.c, unittests/unpack-selftests.c, unittests/utils-selftests.c, unittests/xml-utils-selftests.c, utils.c, utils.h, valarith.c, valops.c, valprint.c, value.c, value.h, varobj.c, varobj.h, windows-nat.c, x86-linux-nat.c, xml-support.c, xml-support.h, xml-tdesc.h, xstormy16-tdep.c, xtensa-linux-nat.c, dwarf2read.h: Change common to gdbsupport. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2019-07-09 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Change common to gdbsupport. * acinclude.m4: Change common to gdbsupport. * Makefile.in (SFILES, OBS, GDBREPLAY_OBS, IPA_OBJS) (version-generated.c, gdbsupport/%-ipa.o, gdbsupport/%.o): Change common to gdbsupport. * ax.c, event-loop.c, fork-child.c, gdb_proc_service.h, gdbreplay.c, gdbthread.h, hostio-errno.c, hostio.c, i387-fp.c, inferiors.c, inferiors.h, linux-aarch64-tdesc-selftest.c, linux-amd64-ipa.c, linux-i386-ipa.c, linux-low.c, linux-tic6x-low.c, linux-x86-low.c, linux-x86-tdesc-selftest.c, linux-x86-tdesc.c, lynx-i386-low.c, lynx-low.c, mem-break.h, nto-x86-low.c, regcache.c, regcache.h, remote-utils.c, server.c, server.h, spu-low.c, symbol.c, target.h, tdesc.c, tdesc.h, thread-db.c, tracepoint.c, win32-i386-low.c, win32-low.c: Change common to gdbsupport.
2019-05-06 10:29:24 +08:00
#include "gdbsupport/scope-exit.h"
Don't include gdbarch.h from defs.h I touched symtab.h and was surprised to see how many files were rebuilt. I looked into it a bit, and found that defs.h includes gdbarch.h, which in turn includes many things. gdbarch.h is only needed by a minority ofthe files in gdb, so this patch removes the include from defs.h and updates the fallout. I did "wc -l" on the files in build/gdb/.deps; this patch reduces the line count from 139935 to 137030; so there are definitely future build-time savings here. Note that while I configured with --enable-targets=all, it's possible that some *-nat.c file needs an update. I could not test all of these. The buildbot caught a few problems along these lines. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-07-10 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * defs.h: Don't include gdbarch.h. * aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c, aarch64-tdep.c, alpha-bsd-tdep.h, alpha-linux-tdep.c, alpha-mdebug-tdep.c, arch-utils.h, arm-tdep.h, ax-general.c, btrace.c, buildsym-legacy.c, buildsym.h, c-lang.c, cli/cli-decode.h, cli/cli-dump.c, cli/cli-script.h, cli/cli-style.h, coff-pe-read.h, compile/compile-c-support.c, compile/compile-cplus.h, compile/compile-loc2c.c, corefile.c, cp-valprint.c, cris-linux-tdep.c, ctf.c, d-lang.c, d-namespace.c, dcache.c, dicos-tdep.c, dictionary.c, disasm-selftests.c, dummy-frame.c, dummy-frame.h, dwarf2-frame-tailcall.c, dwarf2expr.c, expression.h, f-lang.c, frame-base.c, frame-unwind.c, frv-linux-tdep.c, gdbarch-selftests.c, gdbtypes.h, go-lang.c, hppa-nbsd-tdep.c, hppa-obsd-tdep.c, i386-dicos-tdep.c, i386-tdep.h, ia64-vms-tdep.c, interps.h, language.c, linux-record.c, location.h, m2-lang.c, m32r-linux-tdep.c, mem-break.c, memattr.c, mn10300-linux-tdep.c, nios2-linux-tdep.c, objfiles.h, opencl-lang.c, or1k-linux-tdep.c, p-lang.c, parser-defs.h, ppc-tdep.h, probe.h, python/py-record-btrace.c, record-btrace.c, record.h, regcache-dump.c, regcache.h, riscv-fbsd-tdep.c, riscv-linux-tdep.c, rust-exp.y, sh-linux-tdep.c, sh-nbsd-tdep.c, source-cache.c, sparc-nbsd-tdep.c, sparc-obsd-tdep.c, sparc-ravenscar-thread.c, sparc64-fbsd-tdep.c, std-regs.c, target-descriptions.h, target-float.c, tic6x-linux-tdep.c, tilegx-linux-tdep.c, top.c, tracefile.c, trad-frame.c, type-stack.h, ui-style.c, utils.c, utils.h, valarith.c, valprint.c, varobj.c, x86-tdep.c, xml-support.h, xtensa-linux-tdep.c, cli/cli-cmds.h: Update. * s390-linux-nat.c, procfs.c, inf-ptrace.c: Likewise.
2019-06-10 05:21:02 +08:00
#include "gdbarch.h"
Introduce gdb-specific %p format suffixes This introduces a few gdb-specific %p format suffixes. This is useful for emitting gdb-specific output in an ergonomic way. It also yields code that is more i18n-friendly. The comment before ui_out::message explains the details. Note that the tests had to change a little. When using one of the gdb printf functions with styling, there can be spurious style changes emitted to the output. This did not seem worthwhile to fix, as the low-level output functions are rather spaghetti-ish already, and I didn't want to make them even worse. This change also necessitated adding support for "*" as precision and width in format_pieces. These are used in various spots in gdb, and it seemed better to me to implement them than to remove the uses. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-10-01 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * unittests/format_pieces-selftests.c: Add gdb_format parameter. (test_gdb_formats): New function. (run_tests): Call it. (test_format_specifier): Update. * utils.h (fputs_filtered): Update comment. (vfprintf_styled, vfprintf_styled_no_gdbfmt) (fputs_styled_unfiltered): Declare. * utils.c (fputs_styled_unfiltered): New function. (vfprintf_maybe_filtered): Add gdbfmt parameter. (vfprintf_filtered): Update. (vfprintf_unfiltered, vprintf_filtered): Update. (vfprintf_styled, vfprintf_styled_no_gdbfmt): New functions. * ui-out.h (enum ui_out_flag) <unfiltered_output, disallow_ui_out_field>: New constants. (enum class field_kind): New. (struct base_field_s, struct signed_field_s): New. (signed_field): New function. (struct string_field_s): New. (string_field): New function. (struct styled_string_s): New. (styled_string): New function. (class ui_out) <message>: Add comment. <vmessage, call_do_message>: New methods. <do_message>: Add style parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out::call_do_message, ui_out::vmessage): New methods. (ui_out::message): Rewrite. * mi/mi-out.h (class mi_ui_out) <do_message>: Add style parameter. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out::do_message): Add style parameter. * gdbsupport/format.h (class format_pieces) <format_pieces>: Add gdb_extensions parameter. (class format_piece): Add parameter to constructor. (n_int_args): New field. * gdbsupport/format.c (format_pieces::format_pieces): Add gdb_extensions parameter. Handle '*'. * cli-out.h (class cli_ui_out) <do_message>: Add style parameter. * cli-out.c (cli_ui_out::do_message): Add style parameter. Call vfprintf_styled_no_gdbfmt. (cli_ui_out::do_field_string, cli_ui_out::do_spaces) (cli_ui_out::do_text, cli_ui_out::field_separator): Allow unfiltered output. * ui-style.h (struct ui_file_style) <ptr>: New method. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2019-10-01 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: Update tests.
2019-06-05 16:17:16 +08:00
#include "cli-out.h"
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
#include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h"
gdb: print backtrace for internal error/warning This commit builds on previous work to allow GDB to print a backtrace of itself when GDB encounters an internal-error or internal-warning. This fixes PR gdb/26377. There's not many places where we call internal_warning, and I guess in most cases the user would probably continue their debug session. And so, in order to avoid cluttering up the output, by default, printing of a backtrace is off for internal-warnings. In contrast, printing of a backtrace is on by default for internal-errors, as I figure that in most cases hitting an internal-error is going to be the end of the debug session. Whether a backtrace is printed or not can be controlled with the new settings: maintenance set internal-error backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-error backtrace maintenance set internal-warning backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-warning backtrace Here is an example of what an internal-error now looks like with the backtrace included: (gdb) maintenance internal-error blah ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. ----- Backtrace ----- 0x5c61ca gdb_internal_backtrace_1 ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:123 0x5c626d _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:165 0xe33237 internal_vproblem ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:393 0xe33539 _Z15internal_verrorPKciS0_P13__va_list_tag ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:470 0x1549652 _Z14internal_errorPKciS0_z ../../src.dev-3/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55 0x9c7982 maintenance_internal_error ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82 0x636f57 do_simple_func ../../src.dev-3/gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:97 .... snip, lots more backtrace lines .... --------------------- ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) y This is a bug, please report it. For instructions, see: <https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>. ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Create a core file of GDB? (y or n) n My hope is that this backtrace might make it slightly easier to diagnose GDB issues if all that is provided is the console output, I find that we frequently get reports of an assert being hit that is located in pretty generic code (frame.c, value.c, etc) and it is not always obvious how we might have arrived at the assert. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26377
2021-08-13 01:24:59 +08:00
#include "bt-utils.h"
#include "gdbsupport/buildargv.h"
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
#include "pager.h"
#include "run-on-main-thread.h"
2004-04-21 Andrew Cagney <cagney@redhat.com> * annotate.h (deprecated_annotate_starting_hook) (deprecated_annotate_stopped_hook) (deprecated_annotate_exited_hook) (deprecated_annotate_signal_hook) (deprecated_annotate_signalled_hook): Deprecate. * tracepoint.h (deprecated_create_tracepoint_hook) (deprecated_delete_tracepoint_hook) (deprecated_modify_tracepoint_hook) (deprecated_trace_find_hook) (deprecated_trace_start_stop_hook): Deprecate. * target.h (deprecated_target_new_objfile_hook): Deprecate. * remote.h (deprecated_target_resume_hook) (deprecated_target_wait_loop_hook): Deprecate. * gdbcore.h (deprecated_exec_file_display_hook) (deprecated_file_changed_hook): Deprecate. * frame.h (deprecated_selected_frame_level_changed_hook): Deprecate. * defs.h (deprecated_modify_breakpoint_hook) (deprecated_command_loop_hook, deprecated_show_load_progress) (deprecated_print_frame_info_listing_hook) (deprecated_query_hook, deprecated_warning_hook) (deprecated_flush_hook, deprecated_create_breakpoint_hook) (deprecated_delete_breakpoint_hook) (deprecated_interactive_hook, deprecated_registers_changed_hook) (deprecated_readline_begin_hook, deprecated_readline_hook) (deprecated_readline_end_hook, deprecated_register_changed_hook) (deprecated_memory_changed_hook, deprecated_init_ui_hook) (deprecated_context_hook, deprecated_target_wait_hook) (deprecated_attach_hook, deprecated_detach_hook) (deprecated_call_command_hook, deprecated_set_hook) (deprecated_error_hook, deprecated_error_begin_hook) (deprecated_ui_load_progress_hook): Deprecate. * valops.c, uw-thread.c, utils.c, tui/tui-io.c: Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c, tracepoint.c, top.c, thread-db.c: Update. * target.c, symfile.c, stack.c, sol-thread.c, rs6000-nat.c: Update. * remote.c, remote-mips.c, regcache.c, mi/mi-interp.c: Update. * main.c, interps.c, infcmd.c, hpux-thread.c, frame.c: Update. * exec.c, dsrec.c, d10v-tdep.c, corefile.c, complaints.c: Update. * cli/cli-script.c, cli/cli-setshow.c, breakpoint.c: Update. * annotate.c, aix-thread.c: Update.
2004-04-22 07:52:21 +08:00
void (*deprecated_error_begin_hook) (void);
/* Prototypes for local functions */
static void set_screen_size (void);
2000-05-28 09:12:42 +08:00
static void set_width (void);
/* Time spent in prompt_for_continue in the currently executing command
waiting for user to respond.
Initialized in make_command_stats_cleanup.
Modified in prompt_for_continue and defaulted_query.
Used in report_command_stats. */
gdb: Use C++11 std::chrono This patch fixes a few problems with GDB's time handling. #1 - It avoids problems with gnulib's C++ namespace support On MinGW, the struct timeval that should be passed to gnulib's gettimeofday replacement is incompatible with libiberty's timeval_sub/timeval_add. That's because gnulib also replaces "struct timeval" with its own definition, while libiberty expects the system's. E.g., in code like this: gettimeofday (&prompt_ended, NULL); timeval_sub (&prompt_delta, &prompt_ended, &prompt_started); timeval_add (&prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_delta); That's currently handled in gdb by not using gnulib's gettimeofday at all (see common/gdb_sys_time.h), but that #undef hack won't work with if/when we enable gnulib's C++ namespace support, because that mode adds compile time warnings for uses of ::gettimeofday, which are hard errors with -Werror. #2 - But there's an elephant in the room: gettimeofday is not monotonic... We're using it to: a) check how long functions take, for performance analysis b) compute when in the future to fire events in the event-loop c) print debug timestamps But that's exactly what gettimeofday is NOT meant for. Straight from the man page: ~~~ The time returned by gettimeofday() is affected by discontinuous jumps in the system time (e.g., if the system administrator manually changes the system time). If you need a monotonically increasing clock, see clock_gettime(2). ~~~ std::chrono (part of the C++11 standard library) has a monotonic clock exactly for such purposes (std::chrono::steady_clock). This commit switches to use that instead of gettimeofday, fixing all the issues mentioned above. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/run-time-clock.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/run-time-clock.h. (COMMON_OBS): Add run-time-clock.o. * common/run-time-clock.c, common/run-time-clock.h: New files. * defs.h (struct timeval, print_transfer_performance): Delete declarations. * event-loop.c (struct gdb_timer) <when>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. (create_timer): use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use new instead of malloc. (delete_timer): Use delete instead of xfree. (duration_cast_timeval): New. (update_wait_timeout): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. * maint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h", <time.h> and "timeval-utils.h". (scoped_command_stats::~scoped_command_stats) (scoped_command_stats::scoped_command_stats): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use user_cpu_time_clock instead of get_run_time. * maint.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono>. (scoped_command_stats): <m_start_cpu_time>: Now a user_cpu_time_clock::time_point. <m_start_wall_time>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. * mi/mi-main.c: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h" and <sys/resource.h>. (rusage): Delete. (mi_execute_command): Use new instead of XNEW. (mi_load_progress): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (timestamp): Rewrite in terms of std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. (timeval_diff): Delete. (print_diff): Adjust to use std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. * mi/mi-parse.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct mi_timestamp): Change fields types to std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point, user_cpu_time_clock::time and system_cpu_time_clock::time_point, instead of struct timeval. * symfile.c: Include <chrono> instead of <time.h> and "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct time_range): New. (generic_load): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (print_transfer_performance): Replace timeval parameters with a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration parameter. Adjust. * utils.c: Include <chrono> instead of "timeval-utils.h", "gdb_sys_time.h", and <time.h>. (prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday/timeval_sub/timeval_add. (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Use std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (vfprintf_unfiltered): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use std::string. Use '.' instead of ':'. * utils.h: Include <chrono>. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * debug.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (debug_vprintf): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use '.' instead of ':'. * tracepoint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (get_timestamp): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday.
2016-11-23 23:36:26 +08:00
static std::chrono::steady_clock::duration prompt_for_continue_wait_time;
/* A flag indicating whether to timestamp debugging messages. */
bool debug_timestamp = false;
Change boolean options to bool instead of int This is for add_setshow_boolean_cmd as well as the gdb::option interface. gdb/ChangeLog: 2019-09-17 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com> * ada-lang.c (ada_ignore_descriptive_types_p): Change to bool. (print_signatures): Likewise. (trust_pad_over_xvs): Likewise. * arch/aarch64-insn.c (aarch64_debug): Likewise. * arch/aarch64-insn.h (aarch64_debug): Likewise. * arm-linux-nat.c (arm_apcs_32): Likewise. * arm-linux-tdep.c (arm_apcs_32): Likewise. * arm-nbsd-nat.c (arm_apcs_32): Likewise. * arm-tdep.c (arm_debug): Likewise. (arm_apcs_32): Likewise. * auto-load.c (debug_auto_load): Likewise. (auto_load_gdb_scripts): Likewise. (global_auto_load): Likewise. (auto_load_local_gdbinit): Likewise. (auto_load_local_gdbinit_loaded): Likewise. * auto-load.h (global_auto_load): Likewise. (auto_load_local_gdbinit): Likewise. (auto_load_local_gdbinit_loaded): Likewise. * breakpoint.c (disconnected_dprintf): Likewise. (breakpoint_proceeded): Likewise. (automatic_hardware_breakpoints): Likewise. (always_inserted_mode): Likewise. (target_exact_watchpoints): Likewise. (_initialize_breakpoint): Update. * breakpoint.h (target_exact_watchpoints): Change to bool. * btrace.c (maint_btrace_pt_skip_pad): Likewise. * cli/cli-cmds.c (trace_commands): Likewise. * cli/cli-cmds.h (trace_commands): Likewise. * cli/cli-decode.c (add_setshow_boolean_cmd): Change int* argument to bool*. * cli/cli-logging.c (logging_overwrite): Change to bool. (logging_redirect): Likewise. (debug_redirect): Likewise. * cli/cli-option.h (option_def) <boolean>: Change return type to bool*. (struct boolean_option_def) <get_var_address_cb_>: Change return type to bool. <boolean_option_def>: Update. (struct flag_option_def): Change default type of Context to bool from int. <flag_option_def>: Change return type of var_address_cb_ to bool*. * cli/cli-setshow.c (do_set_command): Cast to bool* instead of int*. (get_setshow_command_value_string): Likewise. * cli/cli-style.c (cli_styling): Change to bool. (source_styling): Likewise. * cli/cli-style.h (source_styling): Likewise. (cli_styling): Likewise. * cli/cli-utils.h (struct qcs_flags) <quiet, cont, silent>: Change to bool. * command.h (var_types): Update comment. (add_setshow_boolean_cmd): Change int* var argument to bool*. * compile/compile-cplus-types.c (debug_compile_cplus_types): Change to bool. (debug_compile_cplus_scopes): Likewise. * compile/compile-internal.h (compile_debug): Likewise. * compile/compile.c (compile_debug): Likewise. (struct compile_options) <raw>: Likewise. * cp-support.c (catch_demangler_crashes): Likewise. * cris-tdep.c (usr_cmd_cris_version_valid): Likewise. (usr_cmd_cris_dwarf2_cfi): Likewise. * csky-tdep.c (csky_debug): Likewise. * darwin-nat.c (enable_mach_exceptions): Likewise. * dcache.c (dcache_enabled_p): Likewise. * defs.h (info_verbose): Likewise. * demangle.c (demangle): Likewise. (asm_demangle): Likewise. * dwarf-index-cache.c (debug_index_cache): Likewise. * dwarf2-frame.c (dwarf2_frame_unwinders_enabled_p): Likewise. * dwarf2-frame.h (dwarf2_frame_unwinders_enabled_p): Likewise. * dwarf2read.c (check_physname): Likewise. (use_deprecated_index_sections): Likewise. (dwarf_always_disassemble): Likewise. * eval.c (overload_resolution): Likewise. * event-top.c (set_editing_cmd_var): Likewise. (exec_done_display_p): Likewise. * event-top.h (set_editing_cmd_var): Likewise. (exec_done_display_p): Likewise. * exec.c (write_files): Likewise. * fbsd-nat.c (debug_fbsd_lwp): Likewise (debug_fbsd_nat): Likewise. * frame.h (struct frame_print_options) <print_raw_frame_arguments>: Likewise. (struct set_backtrace_options) <backtrace_past_main>: Likewise. <backtrace_past_entry> Likewise. * gdb-demangle.h (demangle): Likewise. (asm_demangle): Likewise. * gdb_bfd.c (bfd_sharing): Likewise. * gdbcore.h (write_files): Likewise. * gdbsupport/common-debug.c (show_debug_regs): Likewise. * gdbsupport/common-debug.h (show_debug_regs): Likewise. * gdbthread.h (print_thread_events): Likewise. * gdbtypes.c (opaque_type_resolution): Likewise. (strict_type_checking): Likewise. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_debug_flag): Likewise. * guile/scm-auto-load.c (auto_load_guile_scripts): Likewise. * guile/scm-param.c (pascm_variable): Add boolval. (add_setshow_generic): Update. (pascm_param_value): Update. (pascm_set_param_value_x): Update. * hppa-tdep.c (hppa_debug): Change to bool.. * infcall.c (may_call_functions_p): Likewise. (coerce_float_to_double_p): Likewise. (unwind_on_signal_p): Likewise. (unwind_on_terminating_exception_p): Likewise. * infcmd.c (startup_with_shell): Likewise. * inferior.c (print_inferior_events): Likewise. * inferior.h (startup_with_shell): Likewise. (print_inferior_events): Likewise. * infrun.c (step_stop_if_no_debug): Likewise. (detach_fork): Likewise. (debug_displaced): Likewise. (disable_randomization): Likewise. (non_stop): Likewise. (non_stop_1): Likewise. (observer_mode): Likewise. (observer_mode_1): Likewise. (set_observer_mode): Update. (sched_multi): Change to bool. * infrun.h (debug_displaced): Likewise. (sched_multi): Likewise. (step_stop_if_no_debug): Likewise. (non_stop): Likewise. (disable_randomization): Likewise. * linux-tdep.c (use_coredump_filter): Likewise. (dump_excluded_mappings): Likewise. * linux-thread-db.c (auto_load_thread_db): Likewise. (check_thread_db_on_load): Likewise. * main.c (captured_main_1): Update. * maint-test-options.c (struct test_options_opts) <flag_opt, xx1_opt, xx2_opt, boolean_opt>: Change to bool. * maint-test-settings.c (maintenance_test_settings_boolean): Likewise. * maint.c (maintenance_profile_p): Likewise. (per_command_time): Likewise. (per_command_space): Likewise. (per_command_symtab): Likewise. * memattr.c (inaccessible_by_default): Likewise. * mi/mi-main.c (mi_async): Likewise. (mi_async_1): Likewise. * mips-tdep.c (mips64_transfers_32bit_regs_p): Likewise. * nat/fork-inferior.h (startup_with_shell): Likewise. * nat/linux-namespaces.c (debug_linux_namespaces): Likewise. * nat/linux-namespaces.h (debug_linux_namespaces): Likewise. * nios2-tdep.c (nios2_debug): Likewise. * or1k-tdep.c (or1k_debug): Likewise. * parse.c (parser_debug): Likewise. * parser-defs.h (parser_debug): Likewise. * printcmd.c (print_symbol_filename): Likewise. * proc-api.c (procfs_trace): Likewise. * python/py-auto-load.c (auto_load_python_scripts): Likewise. * python/py-param.c (union parmpy_variable): Add "bool boolval" field. (set_parameter_value): Update. (add_setshow_generic): Update. * python/py-value.c (copy_py_bool_obj): Change argument from int* to bool*. * python/python.c (gdbpy_parameter_value): Cast to bool* instead of int*. * ravenscar-thread.c (ravenscar_task_support): Change to bool. * record-btrace.c (record_btrace_target::store_registers): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_memory_query): Change to bool. (record_full_stop_at_limit): Likewise. * record-full.h (record_full_memory_query): Likewise. * remote-notif.c (notif_debug): Likewise. * remote-notif.h (notif_debug): Likewise. * remote.c (use_range_stepping): Likewise. (interrupt_on_connect): Likewise. (remote_break): Likewise. * ser-tcp.c (tcp_auto_retry): Likewise. * ser-unix.c (serial_hwflow): Likewise. * skip.c (debug_skip): Likewise. * solib-aix.c (solib_aix_debug): Likewise. * spu-tdep.c (spu_stop_on_load_p): Likewise. (spu_auto_flush_cache_p): Likewise. * stack.c (struct backtrace_cmd_options) <full, no_filters, hide>: Likewise. (struct info_print_options) <quiet>: Likewise. * symfile-debug.c (debug_symfile): Likewise. * symfile.c (auto_solib_add): Likewise. (separate_debug_file_debug): Likewise. * symfile.h (auto_solib_add): Likewise. (separate_debug_file_debug): Likewise. * symtab.c (basenames_may_differ): Likewise. (struct filename_partial_match_opts) <dirname, basename>: Likewise. (struct info_print_options) <quiet, exclude_minsyms>: Likewise. (struct info_types_options) <quiet>: Likewise. * symtab.h (demangle): Likewise. (basenames_may_differ): Likewise. * target-dcache.c (stack_cache_enabled_1): Likewise. (code_cache_enabled_1): Likewise. * target.c (trust_readonly): Likewise. (may_write_registers): Likewise. (may_write_memory): Likewise. (may_insert_breakpoints): Likewise. (may_insert_tracepoints): Likewise. (may_insert_fast_tracepoints): Likewise. (may_stop): Likewise. (auto_connect_native_target): Likewise. (target_stop_and_wait): Update. (target_async_permitted): Change to bool. (target_async_permitted_1): Likewise. (may_write_registers_1): Likewise. (may_write_memory_1): Likewise. (may_insert_breakpoints_1): Likewise. (may_insert_tracepoints_1): Likewise. (may_insert_fast_tracepoints_1): Likewise. (may_stop_1): Likewise. * target.h (target_async_permitted): Likewise. (may_write_registers): Likewise. (may_write_memory): Likewise. (may_insert_breakpoints): Likewise. (may_insert_tracepoints): Likewise. (may_insert_fast_tracepoints): Likewise. (may_stop): Likewise. * thread.c (struct info_threads_opts) <show_global_ids>: Likewise. (make_thread_apply_all_options_def_group): Change argument from int* to bool*. (thread_apply_all_command): Update. (print_thread_events): Change to bool. * top.c (confirm): Likewise. (command_editing_p): Likewise. (history_expansion_p): Likewise. (write_history_p): Likewise. (info_verbose): Likewise. * top.h (confirm): Likewise. (history_expansion_p): Likewise. * tracepoint.c (disconnected_tracing): Likewise. (circular_trace_buffer): Likewise. * typeprint.c (print_methods): Likewise. (print_typedefs): Likewise. * utils.c (debug_timestamp): Likewise. (sevenbit_strings): Likewise. (pagination_enabled): Likewise. * utils.h (sevenbit_strings): Likewise. (pagination_enabled): Likewise. * valops.c (overload_resolution): Likewise. * valprint.h (struct value_print_options) <prettyformat_arrays, prettyformat_structs, vtblprint, unionprint, addressprint, objectprint, stop_print_at_null, print_array_indexes, deref_ref, static_field_print, pascal_static_field_print, raw, summary, symbol_print, finish_print>: Likewise. * windows-nat.c (new_console): Likewise. (cygwin_exceptions): Likewise. (new_group): Likewise. (debug_exec): Likewise. (debug_events): Likewise. (debug_memory): Likewise. (debug_exceptions): Likewise. (useshell): Likewise. * windows-tdep.c (maint_display_all_tib): Likewise. * xml-support.c (debug_xml): Likewise.
2019-09-15 03:36:58 +08:00
/* True means that strings with character values >0x7F should be printed
as octal escapes. False means just print the value (e.g. it's an
international character, and the terminal or window can cope.) */
Change boolean options to bool instead of int This is for add_setshow_boolean_cmd as well as the gdb::option interface. gdb/ChangeLog: 2019-09-17 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com> * ada-lang.c (ada_ignore_descriptive_types_p): Change to bool. (print_signatures): Likewise. (trust_pad_over_xvs): Likewise. * arch/aarch64-insn.c (aarch64_debug): Likewise. * arch/aarch64-insn.h (aarch64_debug): Likewise. * arm-linux-nat.c (arm_apcs_32): Likewise. * arm-linux-tdep.c (arm_apcs_32): Likewise. * arm-nbsd-nat.c (arm_apcs_32): Likewise. * arm-tdep.c (arm_debug): Likewise. (arm_apcs_32): Likewise. * auto-load.c (debug_auto_load): Likewise. (auto_load_gdb_scripts): Likewise. (global_auto_load): Likewise. (auto_load_local_gdbinit): Likewise. (auto_load_local_gdbinit_loaded): Likewise. * auto-load.h (global_auto_load): Likewise. (auto_load_local_gdbinit): Likewise. (auto_load_local_gdbinit_loaded): Likewise. * breakpoint.c (disconnected_dprintf): Likewise. (breakpoint_proceeded): Likewise. (automatic_hardware_breakpoints): Likewise. (always_inserted_mode): Likewise. (target_exact_watchpoints): Likewise. (_initialize_breakpoint): Update. * breakpoint.h (target_exact_watchpoints): Change to bool. * btrace.c (maint_btrace_pt_skip_pad): Likewise. * cli/cli-cmds.c (trace_commands): Likewise. * cli/cli-cmds.h (trace_commands): Likewise. * cli/cli-decode.c (add_setshow_boolean_cmd): Change int* argument to bool*. * cli/cli-logging.c (logging_overwrite): Change to bool. (logging_redirect): Likewise. (debug_redirect): Likewise. * cli/cli-option.h (option_def) <boolean>: Change return type to bool*. (struct boolean_option_def) <get_var_address_cb_>: Change return type to bool. <boolean_option_def>: Update. (struct flag_option_def): Change default type of Context to bool from int. <flag_option_def>: Change return type of var_address_cb_ to bool*. * cli/cli-setshow.c (do_set_command): Cast to bool* instead of int*. (get_setshow_command_value_string): Likewise. * cli/cli-style.c (cli_styling): Change to bool. (source_styling): Likewise. * cli/cli-style.h (source_styling): Likewise. (cli_styling): Likewise. * cli/cli-utils.h (struct qcs_flags) <quiet, cont, silent>: Change to bool. * command.h (var_types): Update comment. (add_setshow_boolean_cmd): Change int* var argument to bool*. * compile/compile-cplus-types.c (debug_compile_cplus_types): Change to bool. (debug_compile_cplus_scopes): Likewise. * compile/compile-internal.h (compile_debug): Likewise. * compile/compile.c (compile_debug): Likewise. (struct compile_options) <raw>: Likewise. * cp-support.c (catch_demangler_crashes): Likewise. * cris-tdep.c (usr_cmd_cris_version_valid): Likewise. (usr_cmd_cris_dwarf2_cfi): Likewise. * csky-tdep.c (csky_debug): Likewise. * darwin-nat.c (enable_mach_exceptions): Likewise. * dcache.c (dcache_enabled_p): Likewise. * defs.h (info_verbose): Likewise. * demangle.c (demangle): Likewise. (asm_demangle): Likewise. * dwarf-index-cache.c (debug_index_cache): Likewise. * dwarf2-frame.c (dwarf2_frame_unwinders_enabled_p): Likewise. * dwarf2-frame.h (dwarf2_frame_unwinders_enabled_p): Likewise. * dwarf2read.c (check_physname): Likewise. (use_deprecated_index_sections): Likewise. (dwarf_always_disassemble): Likewise. * eval.c (overload_resolution): Likewise. * event-top.c (set_editing_cmd_var): Likewise. (exec_done_display_p): Likewise. * event-top.h (set_editing_cmd_var): Likewise. (exec_done_display_p): Likewise. * exec.c (write_files): Likewise. * fbsd-nat.c (debug_fbsd_lwp): Likewise (debug_fbsd_nat): Likewise. * frame.h (struct frame_print_options) <print_raw_frame_arguments>: Likewise. (struct set_backtrace_options) <backtrace_past_main>: Likewise. <backtrace_past_entry> Likewise. * gdb-demangle.h (demangle): Likewise. (asm_demangle): Likewise. * gdb_bfd.c (bfd_sharing): Likewise. * gdbcore.h (write_files): Likewise. * gdbsupport/common-debug.c (show_debug_regs): Likewise. * gdbsupport/common-debug.h (show_debug_regs): Likewise. * gdbthread.h (print_thread_events): Likewise. * gdbtypes.c (opaque_type_resolution): Likewise. (strict_type_checking): Likewise. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_debug_flag): Likewise. * guile/scm-auto-load.c (auto_load_guile_scripts): Likewise. * guile/scm-param.c (pascm_variable): Add boolval. (add_setshow_generic): Update. (pascm_param_value): Update. (pascm_set_param_value_x): Update. * hppa-tdep.c (hppa_debug): Change to bool.. * infcall.c (may_call_functions_p): Likewise. (coerce_float_to_double_p): Likewise. (unwind_on_signal_p): Likewise. (unwind_on_terminating_exception_p): Likewise. * infcmd.c (startup_with_shell): Likewise. * inferior.c (print_inferior_events): Likewise. * inferior.h (startup_with_shell): Likewise. (print_inferior_events): Likewise. * infrun.c (step_stop_if_no_debug): Likewise. (detach_fork): Likewise. (debug_displaced): Likewise. (disable_randomization): Likewise. (non_stop): Likewise. (non_stop_1): Likewise. (observer_mode): Likewise. (observer_mode_1): Likewise. (set_observer_mode): Update. (sched_multi): Change to bool. * infrun.h (debug_displaced): Likewise. (sched_multi): Likewise. (step_stop_if_no_debug): Likewise. (non_stop): Likewise. (disable_randomization): Likewise. * linux-tdep.c (use_coredump_filter): Likewise. (dump_excluded_mappings): Likewise. * linux-thread-db.c (auto_load_thread_db): Likewise. (check_thread_db_on_load): Likewise. * main.c (captured_main_1): Update. * maint-test-options.c (struct test_options_opts) <flag_opt, xx1_opt, xx2_opt, boolean_opt>: Change to bool. * maint-test-settings.c (maintenance_test_settings_boolean): Likewise. * maint.c (maintenance_profile_p): Likewise. (per_command_time): Likewise. (per_command_space): Likewise. (per_command_symtab): Likewise. * memattr.c (inaccessible_by_default): Likewise. * mi/mi-main.c (mi_async): Likewise. (mi_async_1): Likewise. * mips-tdep.c (mips64_transfers_32bit_regs_p): Likewise. * nat/fork-inferior.h (startup_with_shell): Likewise. * nat/linux-namespaces.c (debug_linux_namespaces): Likewise. * nat/linux-namespaces.h (debug_linux_namespaces): Likewise. * nios2-tdep.c (nios2_debug): Likewise. * or1k-tdep.c (or1k_debug): Likewise. * parse.c (parser_debug): Likewise. * parser-defs.h (parser_debug): Likewise. * printcmd.c (print_symbol_filename): Likewise. * proc-api.c (procfs_trace): Likewise. * python/py-auto-load.c (auto_load_python_scripts): Likewise. * python/py-param.c (union parmpy_variable): Add "bool boolval" field. (set_parameter_value): Update. (add_setshow_generic): Update. * python/py-value.c (copy_py_bool_obj): Change argument from int* to bool*. * python/python.c (gdbpy_parameter_value): Cast to bool* instead of int*. * ravenscar-thread.c (ravenscar_task_support): Change to bool. * record-btrace.c (record_btrace_target::store_registers): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_memory_query): Change to bool. (record_full_stop_at_limit): Likewise. * record-full.h (record_full_memory_query): Likewise. * remote-notif.c (notif_debug): Likewise. * remote-notif.h (notif_debug): Likewise. * remote.c (use_range_stepping): Likewise. (interrupt_on_connect): Likewise. (remote_break): Likewise. * ser-tcp.c (tcp_auto_retry): Likewise. * ser-unix.c (serial_hwflow): Likewise. * skip.c (debug_skip): Likewise. * solib-aix.c (solib_aix_debug): Likewise. * spu-tdep.c (spu_stop_on_load_p): Likewise. (spu_auto_flush_cache_p): Likewise. * stack.c (struct backtrace_cmd_options) <full, no_filters, hide>: Likewise. (struct info_print_options) <quiet>: Likewise. * symfile-debug.c (debug_symfile): Likewise. * symfile.c (auto_solib_add): Likewise. (separate_debug_file_debug): Likewise. * symfile.h (auto_solib_add): Likewise. (separate_debug_file_debug): Likewise. * symtab.c (basenames_may_differ): Likewise. (struct filename_partial_match_opts) <dirname, basename>: Likewise. (struct info_print_options) <quiet, exclude_minsyms>: Likewise. (struct info_types_options) <quiet>: Likewise. * symtab.h (demangle): Likewise. (basenames_may_differ): Likewise. * target-dcache.c (stack_cache_enabled_1): Likewise. (code_cache_enabled_1): Likewise. * target.c (trust_readonly): Likewise. (may_write_registers): Likewise. (may_write_memory): Likewise. (may_insert_breakpoints): Likewise. (may_insert_tracepoints): Likewise. (may_insert_fast_tracepoints): Likewise. (may_stop): Likewise. (auto_connect_native_target): Likewise. (target_stop_and_wait): Update. (target_async_permitted): Change to bool. (target_async_permitted_1): Likewise. (may_write_registers_1): Likewise. (may_write_memory_1): Likewise. (may_insert_breakpoints_1): Likewise. (may_insert_tracepoints_1): Likewise. (may_insert_fast_tracepoints_1): Likewise. (may_stop_1): Likewise. * target.h (target_async_permitted): Likewise. (may_write_registers): Likewise. (may_write_memory): Likewise. (may_insert_breakpoints): Likewise. (may_insert_tracepoints): Likewise. (may_insert_fast_tracepoints): Likewise. (may_stop): Likewise. * thread.c (struct info_threads_opts) <show_global_ids>: Likewise. (make_thread_apply_all_options_def_group): Change argument from int* to bool*. (thread_apply_all_command): Update. (print_thread_events): Change to bool. * top.c (confirm): Likewise. (command_editing_p): Likewise. (history_expansion_p): Likewise. (write_history_p): Likewise. (info_verbose): Likewise. * top.h (confirm): Likewise. (history_expansion_p): Likewise. * tracepoint.c (disconnected_tracing): Likewise. (circular_trace_buffer): Likewise. * typeprint.c (print_methods): Likewise. (print_typedefs): Likewise. * utils.c (debug_timestamp): Likewise. (sevenbit_strings): Likewise. (pagination_enabled): Likewise. * utils.h (sevenbit_strings): Likewise. (pagination_enabled): Likewise. * valops.c (overload_resolution): Likewise. * valprint.h (struct value_print_options) <prettyformat_arrays, prettyformat_structs, vtblprint, unionprint, addressprint, objectprint, stop_print_at_null, print_array_indexes, deref_ref, static_field_print, pascal_static_field_print, raw, summary, symbol_print, finish_print>: Likewise. * windows-nat.c (new_console): Likewise. (cygwin_exceptions): Likewise. (new_group): Likewise. (debug_exec): Likewise. (debug_events): Likewise. (debug_memory): Likewise. (debug_exceptions): Likewise. (useshell): Likewise. * windows-tdep.c (maint_display_all_tib): Likewise. * xml-support.c (debug_xml): Likewise.
2019-09-15 03:36:58 +08:00
bool sevenbit_strings = false;
2005-02-24 Andrew Cagney <cagney@gnu.org> Add show_VARIABLE functions, update add_setshow call. * varobj.c (_initialize_varobj, show_varobjdebug): Add and update. * valprint.c (_initialize_valprint, show_print_max) (show_stop_print_at_null, show_repeat_count_threshold) (show_prettyprint_structs, show_unionprint) (show_prettyprint_arrays, show_addressprint, show_input_radix) (show_output_radix): Ditto. * valops.c (_initialize_valops, show_overload_resolution): Ditto. * utils.c (initialize_utils, show_chars_per_line) (show_lines_per_page, show_demangle, show_pagination_enabled) (show_sevenbit_strings, show_asm_demangle): Ditto * tui/tui-win.c (_initialize_tui_win, show_tui_border_kind) (show_tui_border_mode, show_tui_active_border_mode): Ditto. * top.c (init_main, show_new_async_prompt) (show_async_command_editing_p, show_write_history_p) (show_history_size, show_history_filename, show_caution) (show_annotation_level, init_main): Ditto. * target.c (initialize_targets, show_targetdebug) (show_trust_readonly): Ditto. * symfile.c (_initialize_symfile, show_symbol_reloading) (show_ext_args, show_download_write_size) (show_debug_file_directory): Ditto. * source.c (_initialize_source, show_lines_to_list): Ditto. * solib.c (_initialize_solib, show_auto_solib_add) (show_solib_search_path): Ditto. * p-valprint.c (_initialize_pascal_valprint) (show_pascal_static_field_print): Ditto. * printcmd.c (_initialize_printcmd, show_max_symbolic_offset) (show_print_symbol_filename): Add and update. * parse.c (_initialize_parse, show_expressiondebug): Dito. * observer.c (_initialize_observer, show_observer_debug): Dito. * maint.c (_initialize_maint_cmds, show_watchdog) (show_maintenance_profile_p): Dito. * linux-nat.c (_initialize_linux_nat, show_debug_linux_nat): Dito. * infrun.c (_initialize_infrun, show_debug_infrun) (show_stop_on_solib_events, show_follow_fork_mode_string) (show_scheduler_mode, show_step_stop_if_no_debug): Ditto. * infcall.c (_initialize_infcall, show_coerce_float_to_double_p) (show_unwind_on_signal_p): Ditto. * gdbtypes.c (build_gdbtypes, show_opaque_type_resolution) (_initialize_gdbtypes, show_overload_debug): Ditto. * gdb-events.c, gdb-events.sh (_initialize_gdb_events) (show_gdb_events_debug): Ditto. * gdbarch.c, gdbarch.sh (show_gdbarch_debug) (_initialize_gdbarch): Ditto. * frame.c (_initialize_frame, show_backtrace_past_main) (show_backtrace_past_entry, show_backtrace_limit) (show_frame_debug): Ditto. * exec.c (_initialize_exec, show_write_files): Ditto. * dwarf2read.c (_initialize_dwarf2_read) (show_dwarf2_max_cache_age): Ditto. * demangle.c (_initialize_demangler) (show_demangling_style_names): Ditto. * dcache.c (_initialize_dcache, show_dcache_enabled_p): Ditto. * cp-valprint.c (show_static_field_print) (_initialize_cp_valprint, show_vtblprint, show_objectprint): Ditto. * corefile.c (_initialize_core, show_gnutarget_string): Ditto. * cli/cli-logging.c (_initialize_cli_logging) (show_logging_overwrite, show_logging_redirect) (show_logging_filename): Ditto. * cli/cli-cmds.c (show_info_verbose, show_history_expansion_p) (init_cli_cmds, show_baud_rate, show_remote_debug) (show_remote_timeout, show_max_user_call_depth): Ditto. * charset.c (show_host_charset_name, show_target_charset_name) (initialize_charset): Ditto. * breakpoint.c (show_can_use_hw_watchpoints) (show_pending_break_support, _initialize_breakpoint): Ditto.
2005-02-24 21:51:36 +08:00
static void
show_sevenbit_strings (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
{
gdb_printf (file, _("Printing of 8-bit characters "
"in strings as \\nnn is %s.\n"),
value);
2005-02-24 Andrew Cagney <cagney@gnu.org> Add show_VARIABLE functions, update add_setshow call. * varobj.c (_initialize_varobj, show_varobjdebug): Add and update. * valprint.c (_initialize_valprint, show_print_max) (show_stop_print_at_null, show_repeat_count_threshold) (show_prettyprint_structs, show_unionprint) (show_prettyprint_arrays, show_addressprint, show_input_radix) (show_output_radix): Ditto. * valops.c (_initialize_valops, show_overload_resolution): Ditto. * utils.c (initialize_utils, show_chars_per_line) (show_lines_per_page, show_demangle, show_pagination_enabled) (show_sevenbit_strings, show_asm_demangle): Ditto * tui/tui-win.c (_initialize_tui_win, show_tui_border_kind) (show_tui_border_mode, show_tui_active_border_mode): Ditto. * top.c (init_main, show_new_async_prompt) (show_async_command_editing_p, show_write_history_p) (show_history_size, show_history_filename, show_caution) (show_annotation_level, init_main): Ditto. * target.c (initialize_targets, show_targetdebug) (show_trust_readonly): Ditto. * symfile.c (_initialize_symfile, show_symbol_reloading) (show_ext_args, show_download_write_size) (show_debug_file_directory): Ditto. * source.c (_initialize_source, show_lines_to_list): Ditto. * solib.c (_initialize_solib, show_auto_solib_add) (show_solib_search_path): Ditto. * p-valprint.c (_initialize_pascal_valprint) (show_pascal_static_field_print): Ditto. * printcmd.c (_initialize_printcmd, show_max_symbolic_offset) (show_print_symbol_filename): Add and update. * parse.c (_initialize_parse, show_expressiondebug): Dito. * observer.c (_initialize_observer, show_observer_debug): Dito. * maint.c (_initialize_maint_cmds, show_watchdog) (show_maintenance_profile_p): Dito. * linux-nat.c (_initialize_linux_nat, show_debug_linux_nat): Dito. * infrun.c (_initialize_infrun, show_debug_infrun) (show_stop_on_solib_events, show_follow_fork_mode_string) (show_scheduler_mode, show_step_stop_if_no_debug): Ditto. * infcall.c (_initialize_infcall, show_coerce_float_to_double_p) (show_unwind_on_signal_p): Ditto. * gdbtypes.c (build_gdbtypes, show_opaque_type_resolution) (_initialize_gdbtypes, show_overload_debug): Ditto. * gdb-events.c, gdb-events.sh (_initialize_gdb_events) (show_gdb_events_debug): Ditto. * gdbarch.c, gdbarch.sh (show_gdbarch_debug) (_initialize_gdbarch): Ditto. * frame.c (_initialize_frame, show_backtrace_past_main) (show_backtrace_past_entry, show_backtrace_limit) (show_frame_debug): Ditto. * exec.c (_initialize_exec, show_write_files): Ditto. * dwarf2read.c (_initialize_dwarf2_read) (show_dwarf2_max_cache_age): Ditto. * demangle.c (_initialize_demangler) (show_demangling_style_names): Ditto. * dcache.c (_initialize_dcache, show_dcache_enabled_p): Ditto. * cp-valprint.c (show_static_field_print) (_initialize_cp_valprint, show_vtblprint, show_objectprint): Ditto. * corefile.c (_initialize_core, show_gnutarget_string): Ditto. * cli/cli-logging.c (_initialize_cli_logging) (show_logging_overwrite, show_logging_redirect) (show_logging_filename): Ditto. * cli/cli-cmds.c (show_info_verbose, show_history_expansion_p) (init_cli_cmds, show_baud_rate, show_remote_debug) (show_remote_timeout, show_max_user_call_depth): Ditto. * charset.c (show_host_charset_name, show_target_charset_name) (initialize_charset): Ditto. * breakpoint.c (show_can_use_hw_watchpoints) (show_pending_break_support, _initialize_breakpoint): Ditto.
2005-02-24 21:51:36 +08:00
}
/* String to be printed before warning messages, if any. */
const char *warning_pre_print = "\nwarning: ";
Change boolean options to bool instead of int This is for add_setshow_boolean_cmd as well as the gdb::option interface. gdb/ChangeLog: 2019-09-17 Christian Biesinger <cbiesinger@google.com> * ada-lang.c (ada_ignore_descriptive_types_p): Change to bool. (print_signatures): Likewise. (trust_pad_over_xvs): Likewise. * arch/aarch64-insn.c (aarch64_debug): Likewise. * arch/aarch64-insn.h (aarch64_debug): Likewise. * arm-linux-nat.c (arm_apcs_32): Likewise. * arm-linux-tdep.c (arm_apcs_32): Likewise. * arm-nbsd-nat.c (arm_apcs_32): Likewise. * arm-tdep.c (arm_debug): Likewise. (arm_apcs_32): Likewise. * auto-load.c (debug_auto_load): Likewise. (auto_load_gdb_scripts): Likewise. (global_auto_load): Likewise. (auto_load_local_gdbinit): Likewise. (auto_load_local_gdbinit_loaded): Likewise. * auto-load.h (global_auto_load): Likewise. (auto_load_local_gdbinit): Likewise. (auto_load_local_gdbinit_loaded): Likewise. * breakpoint.c (disconnected_dprintf): Likewise. (breakpoint_proceeded): Likewise. (automatic_hardware_breakpoints): Likewise. (always_inserted_mode): Likewise. (target_exact_watchpoints): Likewise. (_initialize_breakpoint): Update. * breakpoint.h (target_exact_watchpoints): Change to bool. * btrace.c (maint_btrace_pt_skip_pad): Likewise. * cli/cli-cmds.c (trace_commands): Likewise. * cli/cli-cmds.h (trace_commands): Likewise. * cli/cli-decode.c (add_setshow_boolean_cmd): Change int* argument to bool*. * cli/cli-logging.c (logging_overwrite): Change to bool. (logging_redirect): Likewise. (debug_redirect): Likewise. * cli/cli-option.h (option_def) <boolean>: Change return type to bool*. (struct boolean_option_def) <get_var_address_cb_>: Change return type to bool. <boolean_option_def>: Update. (struct flag_option_def): Change default type of Context to bool from int. <flag_option_def>: Change return type of var_address_cb_ to bool*. * cli/cli-setshow.c (do_set_command): Cast to bool* instead of int*. (get_setshow_command_value_string): Likewise. * cli/cli-style.c (cli_styling): Change to bool. (source_styling): Likewise. * cli/cli-style.h (source_styling): Likewise. (cli_styling): Likewise. * cli/cli-utils.h (struct qcs_flags) <quiet, cont, silent>: Change to bool. * command.h (var_types): Update comment. (add_setshow_boolean_cmd): Change int* var argument to bool*. * compile/compile-cplus-types.c (debug_compile_cplus_types): Change to bool. (debug_compile_cplus_scopes): Likewise. * compile/compile-internal.h (compile_debug): Likewise. * compile/compile.c (compile_debug): Likewise. (struct compile_options) <raw>: Likewise. * cp-support.c (catch_demangler_crashes): Likewise. * cris-tdep.c (usr_cmd_cris_version_valid): Likewise. (usr_cmd_cris_dwarf2_cfi): Likewise. * csky-tdep.c (csky_debug): Likewise. * darwin-nat.c (enable_mach_exceptions): Likewise. * dcache.c (dcache_enabled_p): Likewise. * defs.h (info_verbose): Likewise. * demangle.c (demangle): Likewise. (asm_demangle): Likewise. * dwarf-index-cache.c (debug_index_cache): Likewise. * dwarf2-frame.c (dwarf2_frame_unwinders_enabled_p): Likewise. * dwarf2-frame.h (dwarf2_frame_unwinders_enabled_p): Likewise. * dwarf2read.c (check_physname): Likewise. (use_deprecated_index_sections): Likewise. (dwarf_always_disassemble): Likewise. * eval.c (overload_resolution): Likewise. * event-top.c (set_editing_cmd_var): Likewise. (exec_done_display_p): Likewise. * event-top.h (set_editing_cmd_var): Likewise. (exec_done_display_p): Likewise. * exec.c (write_files): Likewise. * fbsd-nat.c (debug_fbsd_lwp): Likewise (debug_fbsd_nat): Likewise. * frame.h (struct frame_print_options) <print_raw_frame_arguments>: Likewise. (struct set_backtrace_options) <backtrace_past_main>: Likewise. <backtrace_past_entry> Likewise. * gdb-demangle.h (demangle): Likewise. (asm_demangle): Likewise. * gdb_bfd.c (bfd_sharing): Likewise. * gdbcore.h (write_files): Likewise. * gdbsupport/common-debug.c (show_debug_regs): Likewise. * gdbsupport/common-debug.h (show_debug_regs): Likewise. * gdbthread.h (print_thread_events): Likewise. * gdbtypes.c (opaque_type_resolution): Likewise. (strict_type_checking): Likewise. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_debug_flag): Likewise. * guile/scm-auto-load.c (auto_load_guile_scripts): Likewise. * guile/scm-param.c (pascm_variable): Add boolval. (add_setshow_generic): Update. (pascm_param_value): Update. (pascm_set_param_value_x): Update. * hppa-tdep.c (hppa_debug): Change to bool.. * infcall.c (may_call_functions_p): Likewise. (coerce_float_to_double_p): Likewise. (unwind_on_signal_p): Likewise. (unwind_on_terminating_exception_p): Likewise. * infcmd.c (startup_with_shell): Likewise. * inferior.c (print_inferior_events): Likewise. * inferior.h (startup_with_shell): Likewise. (print_inferior_events): Likewise. * infrun.c (step_stop_if_no_debug): Likewise. (detach_fork): Likewise. (debug_displaced): Likewise. (disable_randomization): Likewise. (non_stop): Likewise. (non_stop_1): Likewise. (observer_mode): Likewise. (observer_mode_1): Likewise. (set_observer_mode): Update. (sched_multi): Change to bool. * infrun.h (debug_displaced): Likewise. (sched_multi): Likewise. (step_stop_if_no_debug): Likewise. (non_stop): Likewise. (disable_randomization): Likewise. * linux-tdep.c (use_coredump_filter): Likewise. (dump_excluded_mappings): Likewise. * linux-thread-db.c (auto_load_thread_db): Likewise. (check_thread_db_on_load): Likewise. * main.c (captured_main_1): Update. * maint-test-options.c (struct test_options_opts) <flag_opt, xx1_opt, xx2_opt, boolean_opt>: Change to bool. * maint-test-settings.c (maintenance_test_settings_boolean): Likewise. * maint.c (maintenance_profile_p): Likewise. (per_command_time): Likewise. (per_command_space): Likewise. (per_command_symtab): Likewise. * memattr.c (inaccessible_by_default): Likewise. * mi/mi-main.c (mi_async): Likewise. (mi_async_1): Likewise. * mips-tdep.c (mips64_transfers_32bit_regs_p): Likewise. * nat/fork-inferior.h (startup_with_shell): Likewise. * nat/linux-namespaces.c (debug_linux_namespaces): Likewise. * nat/linux-namespaces.h (debug_linux_namespaces): Likewise. * nios2-tdep.c (nios2_debug): Likewise. * or1k-tdep.c (or1k_debug): Likewise. * parse.c (parser_debug): Likewise. * parser-defs.h (parser_debug): Likewise. * printcmd.c (print_symbol_filename): Likewise. * proc-api.c (procfs_trace): Likewise. * python/py-auto-load.c (auto_load_python_scripts): Likewise. * python/py-param.c (union parmpy_variable): Add "bool boolval" field. (set_parameter_value): Update. (add_setshow_generic): Update. * python/py-value.c (copy_py_bool_obj): Change argument from int* to bool*. * python/python.c (gdbpy_parameter_value): Cast to bool* instead of int*. * ravenscar-thread.c (ravenscar_task_support): Change to bool. * record-btrace.c (record_btrace_target::store_registers): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_memory_query): Change to bool. (record_full_stop_at_limit): Likewise. * record-full.h (record_full_memory_query): Likewise. * remote-notif.c (notif_debug): Likewise. * remote-notif.h (notif_debug): Likewise. * remote.c (use_range_stepping): Likewise. (interrupt_on_connect): Likewise. (remote_break): Likewise. * ser-tcp.c (tcp_auto_retry): Likewise. * ser-unix.c (serial_hwflow): Likewise. * skip.c (debug_skip): Likewise. * solib-aix.c (solib_aix_debug): Likewise. * spu-tdep.c (spu_stop_on_load_p): Likewise. (spu_auto_flush_cache_p): Likewise. * stack.c (struct backtrace_cmd_options) <full, no_filters, hide>: Likewise. (struct info_print_options) <quiet>: Likewise. * symfile-debug.c (debug_symfile): Likewise. * symfile.c (auto_solib_add): Likewise. (separate_debug_file_debug): Likewise. * symfile.h (auto_solib_add): Likewise. (separate_debug_file_debug): Likewise. * symtab.c (basenames_may_differ): Likewise. (struct filename_partial_match_opts) <dirname, basename>: Likewise. (struct info_print_options) <quiet, exclude_minsyms>: Likewise. (struct info_types_options) <quiet>: Likewise. * symtab.h (demangle): Likewise. (basenames_may_differ): Likewise. * target-dcache.c (stack_cache_enabled_1): Likewise. (code_cache_enabled_1): Likewise. * target.c (trust_readonly): Likewise. (may_write_registers): Likewise. (may_write_memory): Likewise. (may_insert_breakpoints): Likewise. (may_insert_tracepoints): Likewise. (may_insert_fast_tracepoints): Likewise. (may_stop): Likewise. (auto_connect_native_target): Likewise. (target_stop_and_wait): Update. (target_async_permitted): Change to bool. (target_async_permitted_1): Likewise. (may_write_registers_1): Likewise. (may_write_memory_1): Likewise. (may_insert_breakpoints_1): Likewise. (may_insert_tracepoints_1): Likewise. (may_insert_fast_tracepoints_1): Likewise. (may_stop_1): Likewise. * target.h (target_async_permitted): Likewise. (may_write_registers): Likewise. (may_write_memory): Likewise. (may_insert_breakpoints): Likewise. (may_insert_tracepoints): Likewise. (may_insert_fast_tracepoints): Likewise. (may_stop): Likewise. * thread.c (struct info_threads_opts) <show_global_ids>: Likewise. (make_thread_apply_all_options_def_group): Change argument from int* to bool*. (thread_apply_all_command): Update. (print_thread_events): Change to bool. * top.c (confirm): Likewise. (command_editing_p): Likewise. (history_expansion_p): Likewise. (write_history_p): Likewise. (info_verbose): Likewise. * top.h (confirm): Likewise. (history_expansion_p): Likewise. * tracepoint.c (disconnected_tracing): Likewise. (circular_trace_buffer): Likewise. * typeprint.c (print_methods): Likewise. (print_typedefs): Likewise. * utils.c (debug_timestamp): Likewise. (sevenbit_strings): Likewise. (pagination_enabled): Likewise. * utils.h (sevenbit_strings): Likewise. (pagination_enabled): Likewise. * valops.c (overload_resolution): Likewise. * valprint.h (struct value_print_options) <prettyformat_arrays, prettyformat_structs, vtblprint, unionprint, addressprint, objectprint, stop_print_at_null, print_array_indexes, deref_ref, static_field_print, pascal_static_field_print, raw, summary, symbol_print, finish_print>: Likewise. * windows-nat.c (new_console): Likewise. (cygwin_exceptions): Likewise. (new_group): Likewise. (debug_exec): Likewise. (debug_events): Likewise. (debug_memory): Likewise. (debug_exceptions): Likewise. (useshell): Likewise. * windows-tdep.c (maint_display_all_tib): Likewise. * xml-support.c (debug_xml): Likewise.
2019-09-15 03:36:58 +08:00
bool pagination_enabled = true;
2005-02-24 Andrew Cagney <cagney@gnu.org> Add show_VARIABLE functions, update add_setshow call. * varobj.c (_initialize_varobj, show_varobjdebug): Add and update. * valprint.c (_initialize_valprint, show_print_max) (show_stop_print_at_null, show_repeat_count_threshold) (show_prettyprint_structs, show_unionprint) (show_prettyprint_arrays, show_addressprint, show_input_radix) (show_output_radix): Ditto. * valops.c (_initialize_valops, show_overload_resolution): Ditto. * utils.c (initialize_utils, show_chars_per_line) (show_lines_per_page, show_demangle, show_pagination_enabled) (show_sevenbit_strings, show_asm_demangle): Ditto * tui/tui-win.c (_initialize_tui_win, show_tui_border_kind) (show_tui_border_mode, show_tui_active_border_mode): Ditto. * top.c (init_main, show_new_async_prompt) (show_async_command_editing_p, show_write_history_p) (show_history_size, show_history_filename, show_caution) (show_annotation_level, init_main): Ditto. * target.c (initialize_targets, show_targetdebug) (show_trust_readonly): Ditto. * symfile.c (_initialize_symfile, show_symbol_reloading) (show_ext_args, show_download_write_size) (show_debug_file_directory): Ditto. * source.c (_initialize_source, show_lines_to_list): Ditto. * solib.c (_initialize_solib, show_auto_solib_add) (show_solib_search_path): Ditto. * p-valprint.c (_initialize_pascal_valprint) (show_pascal_static_field_print): Ditto. * printcmd.c (_initialize_printcmd, show_max_symbolic_offset) (show_print_symbol_filename): Add and update. * parse.c (_initialize_parse, show_expressiondebug): Dito. * observer.c (_initialize_observer, show_observer_debug): Dito. * maint.c (_initialize_maint_cmds, show_watchdog) (show_maintenance_profile_p): Dito. * linux-nat.c (_initialize_linux_nat, show_debug_linux_nat): Dito. * infrun.c (_initialize_infrun, show_debug_infrun) (show_stop_on_solib_events, show_follow_fork_mode_string) (show_scheduler_mode, show_step_stop_if_no_debug): Ditto. * infcall.c (_initialize_infcall, show_coerce_float_to_double_p) (show_unwind_on_signal_p): Ditto. * gdbtypes.c (build_gdbtypes, show_opaque_type_resolution) (_initialize_gdbtypes, show_overload_debug): Ditto. * gdb-events.c, gdb-events.sh (_initialize_gdb_events) (show_gdb_events_debug): Ditto. * gdbarch.c, gdbarch.sh (show_gdbarch_debug) (_initialize_gdbarch): Ditto. * frame.c (_initialize_frame, show_backtrace_past_main) (show_backtrace_past_entry, show_backtrace_limit) (show_frame_debug): Ditto. * exec.c (_initialize_exec, show_write_files): Ditto. * dwarf2read.c (_initialize_dwarf2_read) (show_dwarf2_max_cache_age): Ditto. * demangle.c (_initialize_demangler) (show_demangling_style_names): Ditto. * dcache.c (_initialize_dcache, show_dcache_enabled_p): Ditto. * cp-valprint.c (show_static_field_print) (_initialize_cp_valprint, show_vtblprint, show_objectprint): Ditto. * corefile.c (_initialize_core, show_gnutarget_string): Ditto. * cli/cli-logging.c (_initialize_cli_logging) (show_logging_overwrite, show_logging_redirect) (show_logging_filename): Ditto. * cli/cli-cmds.c (show_info_verbose, show_history_expansion_p) (init_cli_cmds, show_baud_rate, show_remote_debug) (show_remote_timeout, show_max_user_call_depth): Ditto. * charset.c (show_host_charset_name, show_target_charset_name) (initialize_charset): Ditto. * breakpoint.c (show_can_use_hw_watchpoints) (show_pending_break_support, _initialize_breakpoint): Ditto.
2005-02-24 21:51:36 +08:00
static void
show_pagination_enabled (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
{
gdb_printf (file, _("State of pagination is %s.\n"), value);
2005-02-24 Andrew Cagney <cagney@gnu.org> Add show_VARIABLE functions, update add_setshow call. * varobj.c (_initialize_varobj, show_varobjdebug): Add and update. * valprint.c (_initialize_valprint, show_print_max) (show_stop_print_at_null, show_repeat_count_threshold) (show_prettyprint_structs, show_unionprint) (show_prettyprint_arrays, show_addressprint, show_input_radix) (show_output_radix): Ditto. * valops.c (_initialize_valops, show_overload_resolution): Ditto. * utils.c (initialize_utils, show_chars_per_line) (show_lines_per_page, show_demangle, show_pagination_enabled) (show_sevenbit_strings, show_asm_demangle): Ditto * tui/tui-win.c (_initialize_tui_win, show_tui_border_kind) (show_tui_border_mode, show_tui_active_border_mode): Ditto. * top.c (init_main, show_new_async_prompt) (show_async_command_editing_p, show_write_history_p) (show_history_size, show_history_filename, show_caution) (show_annotation_level, init_main): Ditto. * target.c (initialize_targets, show_targetdebug) (show_trust_readonly): Ditto. * symfile.c (_initialize_symfile, show_symbol_reloading) (show_ext_args, show_download_write_size) (show_debug_file_directory): Ditto. * source.c (_initialize_source, show_lines_to_list): Ditto. * solib.c (_initialize_solib, show_auto_solib_add) (show_solib_search_path): Ditto. * p-valprint.c (_initialize_pascal_valprint) (show_pascal_static_field_print): Ditto. * printcmd.c (_initialize_printcmd, show_max_symbolic_offset) (show_print_symbol_filename): Add and update. * parse.c (_initialize_parse, show_expressiondebug): Dito. * observer.c (_initialize_observer, show_observer_debug): Dito. * maint.c (_initialize_maint_cmds, show_watchdog) (show_maintenance_profile_p): Dito. * linux-nat.c (_initialize_linux_nat, show_debug_linux_nat): Dito. * infrun.c (_initialize_infrun, show_debug_infrun) (show_stop_on_solib_events, show_follow_fork_mode_string) (show_scheduler_mode, show_step_stop_if_no_debug): Ditto. * infcall.c (_initialize_infcall, show_coerce_float_to_double_p) (show_unwind_on_signal_p): Ditto. * gdbtypes.c (build_gdbtypes, show_opaque_type_resolution) (_initialize_gdbtypes, show_overload_debug): Ditto. * gdb-events.c, gdb-events.sh (_initialize_gdb_events) (show_gdb_events_debug): Ditto. * gdbarch.c, gdbarch.sh (show_gdbarch_debug) (_initialize_gdbarch): Ditto. * frame.c (_initialize_frame, show_backtrace_past_main) (show_backtrace_past_entry, show_backtrace_limit) (show_frame_debug): Ditto. * exec.c (_initialize_exec, show_write_files): Ditto. * dwarf2read.c (_initialize_dwarf2_read) (show_dwarf2_max_cache_age): Ditto. * demangle.c (_initialize_demangler) (show_demangling_style_names): Ditto. * dcache.c (_initialize_dcache, show_dcache_enabled_p): Ditto. * cp-valprint.c (show_static_field_print) (_initialize_cp_valprint, show_vtblprint, show_objectprint): Ditto. * corefile.c (_initialize_core, show_gnutarget_string): Ditto. * cli/cli-logging.c (_initialize_cli_logging) (show_logging_overwrite, show_logging_redirect) (show_logging_filename): Ditto. * cli/cli-cmds.c (show_info_verbose, show_history_expansion_p) (init_cli_cmds, show_baud_rate, show_remote_debug) (show_remote_timeout, show_max_user_call_depth): Ditto. * charset.c (show_host_charset_name, show_target_charset_name) (initialize_charset): Ditto. * breakpoint.c (show_can_use_hw_watchpoints) (show_pending_break_support, _initialize_breakpoint): Ditto.
2005-02-24 21:51:36 +08:00
}
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
2003-02-01 06:45:22 +08:00
/* Print a warning message. The first argument STRING is the warning
message, used as an fprintf format string, the second is the
va_list of arguments for that string. A warning is unfiltered (not
paginated) so that the user does not need to page through each
screen full of warnings when there are lots of them. */
void
vwarning (const char *string, va_list args)
{
2004-04-21 Andrew Cagney <cagney@redhat.com> * annotate.h (deprecated_annotate_starting_hook) (deprecated_annotate_stopped_hook) (deprecated_annotate_exited_hook) (deprecated_annotate_signal_hook) (deprecated_annotate_signalled_hook): Deprecate. * tracepoint.h (deprecated_create_tracepoint_hook) (deprecated_delete_tracepoint_hook) (deprecated_modify_tracepoint_hook) (deprecated_trace_find_hook) (deprecated_trace_start_stop_hook): Deprecate. * target.h (deprecated_target_new_objfile_hook): Deprecate. * remote.h (deprecated_target_resume_hook) (deprecated_target_wait_loop_hook): Deprecate. * gdbcore.h (deprecated_exec_file_display_hook) (deprecated_file_changed_hook): Deprecate. * frame.h (deprecated_selected_frame_level_changed_hook): Deprecate. * defs.h (deprecated_modify_breakpoint_hook) (deprecated_command_loop_hook, deprecated_show_load_progress) (deprecated_print_frame_info_listing_hook) (deprecated_query_hook, deprecated_warning_hook) (deprecated_flush_hook, deprecated_create_breakpoint_hook) (deprecated_delete_breakpoint_hook) (deprecated_interactive_hook, deprecated_registers_changed_hook) (deprecated_readline_begin_hook, deprecated_readline_hook) (deprecated_readline_end_hook, deprecated_register_changed_hook) (deprecated_memory_changed_hook, deprecated_init_ui_hook) (deprecated_context_hook, deprecated_target_wait_hook) (deprecated_attach_hook, deprecated_detach_hook) (deprecated_call_command_hook, deprecated_set_hook) (deprecated_error_hook, deprecated_error_begin_hook) (deprecated_ui_load_progress_hook): Deprecate. * valops.c, uw-thread.c, utils.c, tui/tui-io.c: Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c, tracepoint.c, top.c, thread-db.c: Update. * target.c, symfile.c, stack.c, sol-thread.c, rs6000-nat.c: Update. * remote.c, remote-mips.c, regcache.c, mi/mi-interp.c: Update. * main.c, interps.c, infcmd.c, hpux-thread.c, frame.c: Update. * exec.c, dsrec.c, d10v-tdep.c, corefile.c, complaints.c: Update. * cli/cli-script.c, cli/cli-setshow.c, breakpoint.c: Update. * annotate.c, aix-thread.c: Update.
2004-04-22 07:52:21 +08:00
if (deprecated_warning_hook)
(*deprecated_warning_hook) (string, args);
else
{
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
gdb::optional<target_terminal::scoped_restore_terminal_state> term_state;
if (target_supports_terminal_ours ())
{
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
term_state.emplace ();
target_terminal::ours_for_output ();
}
if (warning_pre_print)
gdb_puts (warning_pre_print, gdb_stderr);
gdb_vprintf (gdb_stderr, string, args);
gdb_printf (gdb_stderr, "\n");
}
}
/* Print an error message and return to command level.
The first argument STRING is the error message, used as a fprintf string,
and the remaining args are passed as arguments to it. */
void
1999-11-17 10:31:06 +08:00
verror (const char *string, va_list args)
{
throw_verror (GENERIC_ERROR, string, args);
1999-11-17 10:31:06 +08:00
}
/* Emit a message and abort. */
static void ATTRIBUTE_NORETURN
abort_with_message (const char *msg)
{
gdb: Remove check for gdb_stderr == NULL Recent changes made gdb_stderr a macro: #define gdb_stderr (*current_ui_gdb_stderr_ptr ()) and current_ui_gdb_stderr_ptr return this: &current_ui->m_gdb_stderr The problem is that this is undefined if current_ui is NULL, which can happen early on during gdb start up. If we run into an error during early gdb start up then we write the error message to gdb_stderr. However, if we are too early during the start up then current_ui is NULL, and using the gdb_stderr macro triggers undefined behaviour. We try to avoid this using a check 'gdb_stderr == NULL' which was fine before the recent changes, but now, still triggers undefined behaviour. A better check is instead 'current_ui == NULL' which is what I use in this patch. Triggering this failure is pretty hard, most of the really early errors are only triggered if pretty basic things are not as expected, for example, if the default signal handlers are not as expected. Seeing one of these errors trigger usually means that someone working on gdb has made an incorrect change. Still, the errors are present in gdb, and should we ever trigger one it would be nice if gdb didn't crash. For testing this change I've been applying this patch which adds an unconditional error into a function called early during gdb start up. Later in the same function is a real error call which, in some circumstances could be triggered: ## START ## diff --git a/gdb/common/signals-state-save-restore.c b/gdb/common/signals-state-save-restore.c index d11a9ae006c..d75ba70f894 100644 --- a/gdb/common/signals-state-save-restore.c +++ b/gdb/common/signals-state-save-restore.c @@ -37,6 +37,9 @@ static sigset_t original_signal_mask; void save_original_signals_state (void) { + + internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "example error"); + #ifdef HAVE_SIGACTION int i; int res; ## END ## gdb/ChangeLog: * utils.c (abort_with_message): Don't compare gdb_stderr to NULL, check current_ui instead. (internal_vproblem): Likewise.
2017-08-07 04:45:08 +08:00
if (current_ui == NULL)
fputs (msg, stderr);
else
gdb_puts (msg, gdb_stderr);
abort (); /* ARI: abort */
}
/* Dump core trying to increase the core soft limit to hard limit first. */
void
dump_core (void)
{
#ifdef HAVE_SETRLIMIT
struct rlimit rlim = { (rlim_t) RLIM_INFINITY, (rlim_t) RLIM_INFINITY };
setrlimit (RLIMIT_CORE, &rlim);
#endif /* HAVE_SETRLIMIT */
/* Ensure that the SIGABRT we're about to raise will immediately cause
GDB to exit and dump core, we don't want to trigger GDB's printing of
a backtrace to the console here. */
signal (SIGABRT, SIG_DFL);
abort (); /* ARI: abort */
}
2011-01-05 Michael Snyder <msnyder@vmware.com> * addrmap.c: Shorten lines of >= 80 columns. * arch-utils.c: Ditto. * arch-utils.h: Ditto. * ax-gdb.c: Ditto. * ax-general.c: Ditto. * bcache.c: Ditto. * blockframe.c: Ditto. * breakpoint.c: Ditto. * buildsym.c: Ditto. * c-lang.c: Ditto. * c-typeprint.c: Ditto. * charset.c: Ditto. * coffread.c: Ditto. * command.h: Ditto. * corelow.c: Ditto. * cp-abi.c: Ditto. * cp-namespace.c: Ditto. * cp-support.c: Ditto. * dbug-rom.c: Ditto. * dbxread.c: Ditto. * defs.h: Ditto. * dfp.c: Ditto. * dfp.h: Ditto. * dictionary.c: Ditto. * disasm.c: Ditto. * doublest.c: Ditto. * dwarf2-frame.c: Ditto. * dwarf2expr.c: Ditto. * dwarf2loc.c: Ditto. * dwarf2read.c: Ditto. * elfread.c: Ditto. * eval.c: Ditto. * event-loop.c: Ditto. * event-loop.h: Ditto. * exceptions.h: Ditto. * exec.c: Ditto. * expprint.c: Ditto. * expression.h: Ditto. * f-lang.c: Ditto. * f-valprint.c: Ditto. * findcmd.c: Ditto. * frame-base.c: Ditto. * frame-unwind.c: Ditto. * frame-unwind.h: Ditto. * frame.c: Ditto. * frame.h: Ditto. * gcore.c: Ditto. * gdb-stabs.h: Ditto. * gdb_assert.h: Ditto. * gdb_dirent.h: Ditto. * gdb_obstack.h: Ditto. * gdbcore.h: Ditto. * gdbtypes.c: Ditto. * gdbtypes.h: Ditto. * inf-ttrace.c: Ditto. * infcall.c: Ditto. * infcmd.c: Ditto. * inflow.c: Ditto. * infrun.c: Ditto. * inline-frame.h: Ditto. * language.c: Ditto. * language.h: Ditto. * libunwind-frame.c: Ditto. * libunwind-frame.h: Ditto. * linespec.c: Ditto. * linux-nat.c: Ditto. * linux-nat.h: Ditto. * linux-thread-db.c: Ditto. * machoread.c: Ditto. * macroexp.c: Ditto. * macrotab.c: Ditto. * main.c: Ditto. * maint.c: Ditto. * mdebugread.c: Ditto. * memattr.c: Ditto. * minsyms.c: Ditto. * monitor.c: Ditto. * monitor.h: Ditto. * objfiles.c: Ditto. * objfiles.h: Ditto. * osabi.c: Ditto. * p-typeprint.c: Ditto. * p-valprint.c: Ditto. * parse.c: Ditto. * printcmd.c: Ditto. * proc-events.c: Ditto. * procfs.c: Ditto. * progspace.c: Ditto. * progspace.h: Ditto. * psympriv.h: Ditto. * psymtab.c: Ditto. * record.c: Ditto. * regcache.c: Ditto. * regcache.h: Ditto. * remote-fileio.c: Ditto. * remote.c: Ditto. * ser-mingw.c: Ditto. * ser-tcp.c: Ditto. * ser-unix.c: Ditto. * serial.c: Ditto. * serial.h: Ditto. * solib-frv.c: Ditto. * solib-irix.c: Ditto. * solib-osf.c: Ditto. * solib-pa64.c: Ditto. * solib-som.c: Ditto. * solib-sunos.c: Ditto. * solib-svr4.c: Ditto. * solib-target.c: Ditto. * solib.c: Ditto. * somread.c: Ditto. * source.c: Ditto. * stabsread.c: Ditto. * stabsread.c: Ditto. * stack.c: Ditto. * stack.h: Ditto. * symfile-mem.c: Ditto. * symfile.c: Ditto. * symfile.h: Ditto. * symmisc.c: Ditto. * symtab.c: Ditto. * symtab.h: Ditto. * target-descriptions.c: Ditto. * target-memory.c: Ditto. * target.c: Ditto. * target.h: Ditto. * terminal.h: Ditto. * thread.c: Ditto. * top.c: Ditto. * tracepoint.c: Ditto. * tracepoint.h: Ditto. * ui-file.c: Ditto. * ui-file.h: Ditto. * ui-out.h: Ditto. * user-regs.c: Ditto. * user-regs.h: Ditto. * utils.c: Ditto. * valarith.c: Ditto. * valops.c: Ditto. * valprint.c: Ditto. * valprint.h: Ditto. * value.c: Ditto. * varobj.c: Ditto. * varobj.h: Ditto. * vec.h: Ditto. * xcoffread.c: Ditto. * xcoffsolib.c: Ditto. * xcoffsolib.h: Ditto. * xml-syscall.c: Ditto. * xml-tdesc.c: Ditto.
2011-01-06 06:22:53 +08:00
/* Check whether GDB will be able to dump core using the dump_core
function. Returns zero if GDB cannot or should not dump core.
If LIMIT_KIND is LIMIT_CUR the user's soft limit will be respected.
If LIMIT_KIND is LIMIT_MAX only the hard limit will be respected. */
int
can_dump_core (enum resource_limit_kind limit_kind)
{
#ifdef HAVE_GETRLIMIT
struct rlimit rlim;
/* Be quiet and assume we can dump if an error is returned. */
if (getrlimit (RLIMIT_CORE, &rlim) != 0)
return 1;
switch (limit_kind)
{
case LIMIT_CUR:
if (rlim.rlim_cur == 0)
return 0;
/* Fall through. */
case LIMIT_MAX:
if (rlim.rlim_max == 0)
return 0;
}
#endif /* HAVE_GETRLIMIT */
return 1;
}
/* Print a warning that we cannot dump core. */
void
warn_cant_dump_core (const char *reason)
{
gdb_printf (gdb_stderr,
_("%s\nUnable to dump core, use `ulimit -c"
" unlimited' before executing GDB next time.\n"),
reason);
}
/* Check whether GDB will be able to dump core using the dump_core
function, and print a warning if we cannot. */
static int
can_dump_core_warn (enum resource_limit_kind limit_kind,
const char *reason)
{
int core_dump_allowed = can_dump_core (limit_kind);
if (!core_dump_allowed)
warn_cant_dump_core (reason);
return core_dump_allowed;
}
/* Allow the user to configure the debugger behavior with respect to
what to do when an internal problem is detected. */
const char internal_problem_ask[] = "ask";
const char internal_problem_yes[] = "yes";
const char internal_problem_no[] = "no";
gdb/ Code cleanup: Make 1440 bytes of data segment read-only. * arch-utils.c (endian_enum): Make it const char *const []. * arm-tdep.c (fp_model_strings, arm_abi_strings, arm_mode_strings): Likewise. * breakpoint.c (always_inserted_enums): Likewise. * cli/cli-cmds.c (script_ext_enums): Likewise. * cli/cli-decode.c (add_setshow_enum_cmd, complete_on_enum): Make the enumlist parameter const char *const *. * cli/cli-decode.h (struct cmd_list_element): Make the enums field const char *const *. * command.h (complete_on_enum, add_setshow_enum_cmd): Make the enumlist parameter const char *const *. * cris-tdep.c (cris_modes): Make it const char *const []. * filesystem.c (target_file_system_kinds): Likewise. * i386-tdep.c (valid_flavors, valid_conventions): Likewise. * infrun.c (follow_fork_mode_kind_names, follow_exec_mode_names) (can_use_displaced_stepping_enum, scheduler_enums) (exec_direction_names): Likewise. * language.c (_initialize_language): Make the type_or_range_names and case_sensitive_names variables const char *const []. * mips-tdep.c (mips_abi_strings): Make it const char *const []. * python/python.c (python_excp_enums): Likewise. * remote.c (interrupt_sequence_modes): Likewise. * rs6000-tdep.c (powerpc_vector_strings): Likewise. * serial.c (logbase_enums): Likewise. * sh-tdep.c (sh_cc_enum): Likewise. * stack.c (print_frame_arguments_choices, print_entry_values_choices): Likewise. * symtab.c (multiple_symbols_modes): Likewise. * tui/tui-win.c (tui_border_kind_enums, tui_border_mode_enums): Likewise. * utils.c (internal_problem_modes): Likewise.
2012-01-29 02:08:22 +08:00
static const char *const internal_problem_modes[] =
{
internal_problem_ask,
internal_problem_yes,
internal_problem_no,
NULL
};
/* Data structure used to control how the internal_vproblem function
should behave. An instance of this structure is created for each
problem type that GDB supports. */
struct internal_problem
{
/* The name of this problem type. This must not contain white space as
this string is used to build command names. */
const char *name;
/* When this is true then a user command is created (based on NAME) that
allows the SHOULD_QUIT field to be modified, otherwise, SHOULD_QUIT
can't be changed from its default value by the user. */
bool user_settable_should_quit;
/* Reference a value from internal_problem_modes to indicate if GDB
should quit when it hits a problem of this type. */
const char *should_quit;
/* Like USER_SETTABLE_SHOULD_QUIT but for SHOULD_DUMP_CORE. */
bool user_settable_should_dump_core;
/* Like SHOULD_QUIT, but whether GDB should dump core. */
const char *should_dump_core;
gdb: print backtrace for internal error/warning This commit builds on previous work to allow GDB to print a backtrace of itself when GDB encounters an internal-error or internal-warning. This fixes PR gdb/26377. There's not many places where we call internal_warning, and I guess in most cases the user would probably continue their debug session. And so, in order to avoid cluttering up the output, by default, printing of a backtrace is off for internal-warnings. In contrast, printing of a backtrace is on by default for internal-errors, as I figure that in most cases hitting an internal-error is going to be the end of the debug session. Whether a backtrace is printed or not can be controlled with the new settings: maintenance set internal-error backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-error backtrace maintenance set internal-warning backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-warning backtrace Here is an example of what an internal-error now looks like with the backtrace included: (gdb) maintenance internal-error blah ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. ----- Backtrace ----- 0x5c61ca gdb_internal_backtrace_1 ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:123 0x5c626d _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:165 0xe33237 internal_vproblem ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:393 0xe33539 _Z15internal_verrorPKciS0_P13__va_list_tag ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:470 0x1549652 _Z14internal_errorPKciS0_z ../../src.dev-3/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55 0x9c7982 maintenance_internal_error ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82 0x636f57 do_simple_func ../../src.dev-3/gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:97 .... snip, lots more backtrace lines .... --------------------- ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) y This is a bug, please report it. For instructions, see: <https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>. ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Create a core file of GDB? (y or n) n My hope is that this backtrace might make it slightly easier to diagnose GDB issues if all that is provided is the console output, I find that we frequently get reports of an assert being hit that is located in pretty generic code (frame.c, value.c, etc) and it is not always obvious how we might have arrived at the assert. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26377
2021-08-13 01:24:59 +08:00
/* Like USER_SETTABLE_SHOULD_QUIT but for SHOULD_PRINT_BACKTRACE. */
bool user_settable_should_print_backtrace;
/* When this is true GDB will print a backtrace when a problem of this
type is encountered. */
bool should_print_backtrace;
};
gdb: don't try to use readline before it's initialized While working on a different patch, I triggered an assertion from the initialize_current_architecture code, specifically from one of the *_gdbarch_init functions in a *-tdep.c file. This exposes a couple of issues with GDB. This is easy enough to reproduce by adding 'gdb_assert (false)' into a suitable function. For example, I added a line into i386_gdbarch_init and can see the following issue. I start GDB and immediately hit the assert, the output is as you'd expect, except for the very last line: $ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory/ ../../src.dev-1/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed. A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. ----- Backtrace ----- ... snip ... --------------------- ../../src.dev-1/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed. A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) ../../src.dev-1/gdb/ser-event.c:212:16: runtime error: member access within null pointer of type 'struct serial' Something goes wrong when we try to query the user. Note, I configured GDB with --enable-ubsan, I suspect that without this the above "error" would actually just be a crash. The backtrace from ser-event.c:212 looks like this: (gdb) bt 10 #0 serial_event_clear (event=0x675c020) at ../../src/gdb/ser-event.c:212 #1 0x0000000000769456 in invoke_async_signal_handlers () at ../../src/gdb/async-event.c:211 #2 0x000000000295049b in gdb_do_one_event () at ../../src/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:194 #3 0x0000000001f015f8 in gdb_readline_wrapper ( prompt=0x67135c0 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed.\nA problem internal to GDB has been detected,\nfurther debugging may prove unreliable.\nQuit this debugg"...) at ../../src/gdb/top.c:1141 #4 0x0000000002118b64 in defaulted_query(const char *, char, typedef __va_list_tag __va_list_tag *) ( ctlstr=0x2e4eb68 "%s\nQuit this debugging session? ", defchar=0 '\000', args=0x7fffffffa6e0) at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:934 #5 0x0000000002118f72 in query (ctlstr=0x2e4eb68 "%s\nQuit this debugging session? ") at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:1026 #6 0x00000000021170f6 in internal_vproblem(internal_problem *, const char *, int, const char *, typedef __va_list_tag __va_list_tag *) (problem=0x6107bc0 <internal_error_problem>, file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c", line=8455, fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.", ap=0x7fffffffa8e8) at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:417 #7 0x00000000021175a0 in internal_verror (file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c", line=8455, fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.", ap=0x7fffffffa8e8) at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:485 #8 0x00000000029503b3 in internal_error (file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c", line=8455, fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.") at ../../src/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55 #9 0x000000000122d5b6 in i386_gdbarch_init (info=..., arches=0x0) at ../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455 (More stack frames follow...) It turns out that the problem is that the async event handler mechanism has been invoked, but this has not yet been initialized. If we look at gdb_init (in gdb/top.c) we can indeed see the call to gdb_init_signals is after the call to initialize_current_architecture. If I reorder the calls, moving gdb_init_signals earlier, then the initial error is resolved, however, things are still broken. I now see the same "Quit this debugging session? (y or n)" prompt, but when I provide an answer and press return GDB immediately crashes. So what's going on now? The next problem is that the call_readline field within the current_ui structure is not initialized, and this callback is invoked to process the reply I entered. The problem is that call_readline is setup as a result of calling set_top_level_interpreter, which is called from captured_main_1. Unfortunately, set_top_level_interpreter is called after gdb_init is called. I wondered how to solve this problem for a while, however, I don't know if there's an easy "just reorder some lines" solution here. Looking through captured_main_1 there seems to be a bunch of dependencies between printing various things, parsing config files, and setting up the interpreter. I'm sure there is a solution hiding in there somewhere.... I'm just not sure I want to spend any longer looking for it. So. I propose a simpler solution, more of a hack/work-around. In utils.c we already have a function filtered_printing_initialized, this is checked in a few places within internal_vproblem. In some of these cases the call gates whether or not GDB will query the user. My proposal is to add a new readline_initialized function, which checks if the current_ui has had readline initialized yet. If this is not the case then we should not attempt to query the user. After this change GDB prints the error message, the backtrace, and then aborts (including dumping core). This actually seems pretty sane as, if GDB has not yet made it through the initialization then it doesn't make much sense to allow the user to say "no, I don't want to quit the debug session" (I think).
2022-03-30 21:49:11 +08:00
/* Return true if the readline callbacks have been initialized for UI.
This is always true once GDB is fully initialized, but during the early
startup phase this is initially false. */
static bool
readline_initialized (struct ui *ui)
{
return ui->call_readline != nullptr;
}
/* Report a problem, internal to GDB, to the user. Once the problem
has been reported, and assuming GDB didn't quit, the caller can
either allow execution to resume or throw an error. */
gdb/ * ada-lang.c (lim_warning): Change ATTR_FORMAT to ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF. * amd64-tdep.c (amd64_insn_length_fprintf): Likewise. * cli-out.c (cli_field_fmt): New ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF. (cli_message, out_field_fmt): Change ATTR_FORMAT to ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF. * complaints.c (find_complaint): New ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF. (vcomplaint): Change ATTR_FORMAT to ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF. * complaints.h (complaint, internal_complaint): Likewise. * defs.h: Change ATTR_FORMAT to ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF in the top comment. (ATTR_FORMAT): Remove. (query, nquery, yquery, vprintf_filtered, vfprintf_filtered) (fprintf_filtered, fprintfi_filtered, printf_filtered, printfi_filtered) (vprintf_unfiltered, vfprintf_unfiltered, fprintf_unfiltered) (printf_unfiltered, xasprintf, xvasprintf, xstrprintf, xstrvprintf) (xsnprintf, verror, error, vfatal, fatal, internal_verror) (internal_error, internal_vwarning, internal_warning, warning) (vwarning): Change ATTR_FORMAT to ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF. * disasm.c (fprintf_disasm): Likewise. * exceptions.c (throw_it): Likewise. * exceptions.h (exception_fprintf, throw_verror, throw_vfatal) (throw_error): Likewise. * language.h (type_error, range_error): Likewise. * linespec.c (cplusplus_error): Likewise. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_interp_query_hook): Likewise. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_field_fmt, mi_message): Likewise. * monitor.c (monitor_debug): Likewise. * parser-defs.h (parser_fprintf): Likewise. * serial.h (serial_printf): Likewise. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_query_hook): Likewise. * ui-out.c (default_field_fmt, default_message, uo_field_fmt) (uo_message): Likewise. * ui-out.h (ui_out_field_fmt, ui_out_message): Likewise. * utils.c (vfprintf_maybe_filtered, internal_vproblem, defaulted_query): Likewise. * xml-support.h (gdb_xml_debug, gdb_xml_error): Likewise.
2010-05-03 05:14:59 +08:00
static void ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (4, 0)
internal_vproblem (struct internal_problem *problem,
2003-02-01 06:45:22 +08:00
const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
{
static int dejavu;
int quit_p;
1999-08-17 03:57:19 +08:00
int dump_core_p;
std::string reason;
/* Don't allow infinite error/warning recursion. */
{
static const char msg[] = "Recursive internal problem.\n";
switch (dejavu)
{
case 0:
dejavu = 1;
break;
case 1:
dejavu = 2;
abort_with_message (msg);
default:
dejavu = 3;
gdb, gdbserver, gdbsupport: fix leading space vs tabs issues Many spots incorrectly use only spaces for indentation (for example, there are a lot of spots in ada-lang.c). I've always found it awkward when I needed to edit one of these spots: do I keep the original wrong indentation, or do I fix it? What if the lines around it are also wrong, do I fix them too? I probably don't want to fix them in the same patch, to avoid adding noise to my patch. So I propose to fix as much as possible once and for all (hopefully). One typical counter argument for this is that it makes code archeology more difficult, because git-blame will show this commit as the last change for these lines. My counter counter argument is: when git-blaming, you often need to do "blame the file at the parent commit" anyway, to go past some other refactor that touched the line you are interested in, but is not the change you are looking for. So you already need a somewhat efficient way to do this. Using some interactive tool, rather than plain git-blame, makes this trivial. For example, I use "tig blame <file>", where going back past the commit that changed the currently selected line is one keystroke. It looks like Magit in Emacs does it too (though I've never used it). Web viewers of Github and Gitlab do it too. My point is that it won't really make archeology more difficult. The other typical counter argument is that it will cause conflicts with existing patches. That's true... but it's a one time cost, and those are not conflicts that are difficult to resolve. I have also tried "git rebase --ignore-whitespace", it seems to work well. Although that will re-introduce the faulty indentation, so one needs to take care of fixing the indentation in the patch after that (which is easy). gdb/ChangeLog: * aarch64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.c: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.h: Fix indentation. * ada-tasks.c: Fix indentation. * ada-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.h: Fix indentation. * agent.c: Fix indentation. * aix-thread.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-mdebug-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * annotate.c: Fix indentation. * arc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arch-utils.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-pikeos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * arm-wince-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * auto-load.c: Fix indentation. * auxv.c: Fix indentation. * avr-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ax-gdb.c: Fix indentation. * ax-general.c: Fix indentation. * bfin-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * block.c: Fix indentation. * block.h: Fix indentation. * blockframe.c: Fix indentation. * bpf-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-sig.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-throw.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.h: Fix indentation. * bsd-uthread.c: Fix indentation. * btrace.c: Fix indentation. * build-id.c: Fix indentation. * buildsym-legacy.h: Fix indentation. * buildsym.c: Fix indentation. * c-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * charset.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.h: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-script.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-setshow.c: Fix indentation. * coff-pe-read.c: Fix indentation. * coffread.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-cplus-types.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-load.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-run.c: Fix indentation. * completer.c: Fix indentation. * corefile.c: Fix indentation. * corelow.c: Fix indentation. * cp-abi.h: Fix indentation. * cp-namespace.c: Fix indentation. * cp-support.c: Fix indentation. * cp-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * cris-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * cris-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat-info.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.h: Fix indentation. * dbxread.c: Fix indentation. * dcache.c: Fix indentation. * disasm.c: Fix indentation. * dtrace-probe.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/abbrev.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/attribute.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/expr.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/frame.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-cache.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-write.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/line-header.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/loc.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/macro.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.h: Fix indentation. * elfread.c: Fix indentation. * eval.c: Fix indentation. * event-top.c: Fix indentation. * exec.c: Fix indentation. * exec.h: Fix indentation. * expprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-lang.c: Fix indentation. * f-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * findvar.c: Fix indentation. * fork-child.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.h: Fix indentation. * frame.c: Fix indentation. * frv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ft32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gcore.c: Fix indentation. * gdb_bfd.c: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.sh: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.c: Re-generate * gdbarch.h: Re-generate. * gdbcore.h: Fix indentation. * gdbthread.h: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.c: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.h: Fix indentation. * glibc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.h: Fix indentation. * gnu-v2-abi.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-v3-abi.c: Fix indentation. * go32-nat.c: Fix indentation. * guile/guile-internal.h: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-cmd.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-frame.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-iterator.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-math.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-ports.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-pretty-print.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-value.c: Fix indentation. * h8300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-dicos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-sol2-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-vms-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * infcall.c: Fix indentation. * infcmd.c: Fix indentation. * inferior.c: Fix indentation. * infrun.c: Fix indentation. * iq2000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * language.c: Fix indentation. * linespec.c: Fix indentation. * linux-fork.c: Fix indentation. * linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * linux-thread-db.c: Fix indentation. * lm32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m2-lang.c: Fix indentation. * m2-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * m2-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * m32c-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68hc11-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * machoread.c: Fix indentation. * macrocmd.c: Fix indentation. * macroexp.c: Fix indentation. * macroscope.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.h: Fix indentation. * main.c: Fix indentation. * mdebugread.c: Fix indentation. * mep-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-catch.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-disas.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-env.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-stack.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-var.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-main.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-parse.c: Fix indentation. * microblaze-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * minidebug.c: Fix indentation. * minsyms.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * moxie-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * msp430-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * namespace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/fork-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * nat/gdb_ptrace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-namespaces.c: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-osdata.c: Fix indentation. * nat/netbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nat/x86-dregs.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nto-procfs.c: Fix indentation. * nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.h: Fix indentation. * opencl-lang.c: Fix indentation. * or1k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.h: Fix indentation. * osdata.c: Fix indentation. * p-lang.c: Fix indentation. * p-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * p-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * parse.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-sysv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * printcmd.c: Fix indentation. * proc-api.c: Fix indentation. * producer.c: Fix indentation. * producer.h: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.c: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.h: Fix indentation. * psymtab.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-arch.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-bpevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-finishbreakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-frame.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-framefilter.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-infthread.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-objfile.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-prettyprint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-registers.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-signalevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-threadevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-tui.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-value.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-xmethods.c: Fix indentation. * python/python-internal.h: Fix indentation. * python/python.c: Fix indentation. * ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * record-btrace.c: Fix indentation. * record-full.c: Fix indentation. * record.c: Fix indentation. * reggroups.c: Fix indentation. * regset.h: Fix indentation. * remote-fileio.c: Fix indentation. * remote.c: Fix indentation. * reverse.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rl78-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-aix-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-nat.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rust-lang.c: Fix indentation. * rx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s12z-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s390-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * score-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ser-base.c: Fix indentation. * ser-mingw.c: Fix indentation. * ser-uds.c: Fix indentation. * ser-unix.c: Fix indentation. * serial.c: Fix indentation. * sh-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * skip.c: Fix indentation. * sol-thread.c: Fix indentation. * solib-aix.c: Fix indentation. * solib-darwin.c: Fix indentation. * solib-frv.c: Fix indentation. * solib-svr4.c: Fix indentation. * solib.c: Fix indentation. * source.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * stabsread.c: Fix indentation. * stack.c: Fix indentation. * stap-probe.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/ia64vms-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m32r-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m68k-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sh-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sparc-stub.c: Fix indentation. * symfile-mem.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.h: Fix indentation. * symmisc.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.h: Fix indentation. * target-float.c: Fix indentation. * target.c: Fix indentation. * target.h: Fix indentation. * tic6x-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * top.c: Fix indentation. * tracefile-tfile.c: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-disasm.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-io.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-regs.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-stack.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-win.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-winsource.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui.c: Fix indentation. * typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ui-out.h: Fix indentation. * unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * unittests/memory-map-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * utils.c: Fix indentation. * v850-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * valarith.c: Fix indentation. * valops.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.h: Fix indentation. * value.c: Fix indentation. * value.h: Fix indentation. * varobj.c: Fix indentation. * vax-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * windows-nat.c: Fix indentation. * windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xcoffread.c: Fix indentation. * xml-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * xml-tdesc.c: Fix indentation. * xstormy16-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-config.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. gdbserver/ChangeLog: * ax.cc: Fix indentation. * dll.cc: Fix indentation. * inferiors.h: Fix indentation. * linux-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-nios2-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-ipa.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-x86-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-xtensa-low.cc: Fix indentation. * regcache.cc: Fix indentation. * server.cc: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.cc: Fix indentation. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: * common-exceptions.h: Fix indentation. * event-loop.cc: Fix indentation. * fileio.cc: Fix indentation. * filestuff.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb-dlfcn.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb_string_view.h: Fix indentation. * job-control.cc: Fix indentation. * signals.cc: Fix indentation. Change-Id: I4bad7ae6be0fbe14168b8ebafb98ffe14964a695
2020-11-02 23:26:14 +08:00
/* Newer GLIBC versions put the warn_unused_result attribute
on write, but this is one of those rare cases where
ignoring the return value is correct. Casting to (void)
does not fix this problem. This is the solution suggested
at http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=25509. */
if (write (STDERR_FILENO, msg, sizeof (msg)) != sizeof (msg))
gdb, gdbserver, gdbsupport: fix leading space vs tabs issues Many spots incorrectly use only spaces for indentation (for example, there are a lot of spots in ada-lang.c). I've always found it awkward when I needed to edit one of these spots: do I keep the original wrong indentation, or do I fix it? What if the lines around it are also wrong, do I fix them too? I probably don't want to fix them in the same patch, to avoid adding noise to my patch. So I propose to fix as much as possible once and for all (hopefully). One typical counter argument for this is that it makes code archeology more difficult, because git-blame will show this commit as the last change for these lines. My counter counter argument is: when git-blaming, you often need to do "blame the file at the parent commit" anyway, to go past some other refactor that touched the line you are interested in, but is not the change you are looking for. So you already need a somewhat efficient way to do this. Using some interactive tool, rather than plain git-blame, makes this trivial. For example, I use "tig blame <file>", where going back past the commit that changed the currently selected line is one keystroke. It looks like Magit in Emacs does it too (though I've never used it). Web viewers of Github and Gitlab do it too. My point is that it won't really make archeology more difficult. The other typical counter argument is that it will cause conflicts with existing patches. That's true... but it's a one time cost, and those are not conflicts that are difficult to resolve. I have also tried "git rebase --ignore-whitespace", it seems to work well. Although that will re-introduce the faulty indentation, so one needs to take care of fixing the indentation in the patch after that (which is easy). gdb/ChangeLog: * aarch64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.c: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.h: Fix indentation. * ada-tasks.c: Fix indentation. * ada-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.h: Fix indentation. * agent.c: Fix indentation. * aix-thread.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-mdebug-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * annotate.c: Fix indentation. * arc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arch-utils.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-pikeos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * arm-wince-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * auto-load.c: Fix indentation. * auxv.c: Fix indentation. * avr-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ax-gdb.c: Fix indentation. * ax-general.c: Fix indentation. * bfin-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * block.c: Fix indentation. * block.h: Fix indentation. * blockframe.c: Fix indentation. * bpf-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-sig.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-throw.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.h: Fix indentation. * bsd-uthread.c: Fix indentation. * btrace.c: Fix indentation. * build-id.c: Fix indentation. * buildsym-legacy.h: Fix indentation. * buildsym.c: Fix indentation. * c-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * charset.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.h: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-script.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-setshow.c: Fix indentation. * coff-pe-read.c: Fix indentation. * coffread.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-cplus-types.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-load.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-run.c: Fix indentation. * completer.c: Fix indentation. * corefile.c: Fix indentation. * corelow.c: Fix indentation. * cp-abi.h: Fix indentation. * cp-namespace.c: Fix indentation. * cp-support.c: Fix indentation. * cp-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * cris-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * cris-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat-info.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.h: Fix indentation. * dbxread.c: Fix indentation. * dcache.c: Fix indentation. * disasm.c: Fix indentation. * dtrace-probe.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/abbrev.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/attribute.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/expr.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/frame.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-cache.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-write.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/line-header.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/loc.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/macro.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.h: Fix indentation. * elfread.c: Fix indentation. * eval.c: Fix indentation. * event-top.c: Fix indentation. * exec.c: Fix indentation. * exec.h: Fix indentation. * expprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-lang.c: Fix indentation. * f-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * findvar.c: Fix indentation. * fork-child.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.h: Fix indentation. * frame.c: Fix indentation. * frv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ft32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gcore.c: Fix indentation. * gdb_bfd.c: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.sh: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.c: Re-generate * gdbarch.h: Re-generate. * gdbcore.h: Fix indentation. * gdbthread.h: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.c: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.h: Fix indentation. * glibc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.h: Fix indentation. * gnu-v2-abi.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-v3-abi.c: Fix indentation. * go32-nat.c: Fix indentation. * guile/guile-internal.h: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-cmd.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-frame.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-iterator.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-math.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-ports.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-pretty-print.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-value.c: Fix indentation. * h8300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-dicos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-sol2-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-vms-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * infcall.c: Fix indentation. * infcmd.c: Fix indentation. * inferior.c: Fix indentation. * infrun.c: Fix indentation. * iq2000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * language.c: Fix indentation. * linespec.c: Fix indentation. * linux-fork.c: Fix indentation. * linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * linux-thread-db.c: Fix indentation. * lm32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m2-lang.c: Fix indentation. * m2-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * m2-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * m32c-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68hc11-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * machoread.c: Fix indentation. * macrocmd.c: Fix indentation. * macroexp.c: Fix indentation. * macroscope.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.h: Fix indentation. * main.c: Fix indentation. * mdebugread.c: Fix indentation. * mep-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-catch.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-disas.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-env.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-stack.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-var.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-main.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-parse.c: Fix indentation. * microblaze-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * minidebug.c: Fix indentation. * minsyms.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * moxie-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * msp430-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * namespace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/fork-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * nat/gdb_ptrace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-namespaces.c: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-osdata.c: Fix indentation. * nat/netbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nat/x86-dregs.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nto-procfs.c: Fix indentation. * nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.h: Fix indentation. * opencl-lang.c: Fix indentation. * or1k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.h: Fix indentation. * osdata.c: Fix indentation. * p-lang.c: Fix indentation. * p-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * p-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * parse.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-sysv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * printcmd.c: Fix indentation. * proc-api.c: Fix indentation. * producer.c: Fix indentation. * producer.h: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.c: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.h: Fix indentation. * psymtab.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-arch.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-bpevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-finishbreakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-frame.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-framefilter.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-infthread.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-objfile.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-prettyprint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-registers.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-signalevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-threadevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-tui.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-value.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-xmethods.c: Fix indentation. * python/python-internal.h: Fix indentation. * python/python.c: Fix indentation. * ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * record-btrace.c: Fix indentation. * record-full.c: Fix indentation. * record.c: Fix indentation. * reggroups.c: Fix indentation. * regset.h: Fix indentation. * remote-fileio.c: Fix indentation. * remote.c: Fix indentation. * reverse.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rl78-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-aix-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-nat.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rust-lang.c: Fix indentation. * rx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s12z-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s390-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * score-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ser-base.c: Fix indentation. * ser-mingw.c: Fix indentation. * ser-uds.c: Fix indentation. * ser-unix.c: Fix indentation. * serial.c: Fix indentation. * sh-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * skip.c: Fix indentation. * sol-thread.c: Fix indentation. * solib-aix.c: Fix indentation. * solib-darwin.c: Fix indentation. * solib-frv.c: Fix indentation. * solib-svr4.c: Fix indentation. * solib.c: Fix indentation. * source.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * stabsread.c: Fix indentation. * stack.c: Fix indentation. * stap-probe.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/ia64vms-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m32r-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m68k-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sh-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sparc-stub.c: Fix indentation. * symfile-mem.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.h: Fix indentation. * symmisc.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.h: Fix indentation. * target-float.c: Fix indentation. * target.c: Fix indentation. * target.h: Fix indentation. * tic6x-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * top.c: Fix indentation. * tracefile-tfile.c: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-disasm.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-io.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-regs.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-stack.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-win.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-winsource.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui.c: Fix indentation. * typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ui-out.h: Fix indentation. * unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * unittests/memory-map-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * utils.c: Fix indentation. * v850-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * valarith.c: Fix indentation. * valops.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.h: Fix indentation. * value.c: Fix indentation. * value.h: Fix indentation. * varobj.c: Fix indentation. * vax-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * windows-nat.c: Fix indentation. * windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xcoffread.c: Fix indentation. * xml-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * xml-tdesc.c: Fix indentation. * xstormy16-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-config.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. gdbserver/ChangeLog: * ax.cc: Fix indentation. * dll.cc: Fix indentation. * inferiors.h: Fix indentation. * linux-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-nios2-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-ipa.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-x86-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-xtensa-low.cc: Fix indentation. * regcache.cc: Fix indentation. * server.cc: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.cc: Fix indentation. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: * common-exceptions.h: Fix indentation. * event-loop.cc: Fix indentation. * fileio.cc: Fix indentation. * filestuff.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb-dlfcn.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb_string_view.h: Fix indentation. * job-control.cc: Fix indentation. * signals.cc: Fix indentation. Change-Id: I4bad7ae6be0fbe14168b8ebafb98ffe14964a695
2020-11-02 23:26:14 +08:00
abort (); /* ARI: abort */
exit (1);
}
}
gdb/tui: disable tui mode when an assert triggers When an assert triggers in tui mode the output is not great, the internal backtrace that is generated is printed directly to the file descriptor for gdb_stderr, and, as a result, does not currently format itself correctly - the output uses only '\n' at the end of each line, and so, when the terminal is in raw mode, the cursor does not return to the start of each line after the '\n'. This is mostly fixable, we could update bt-utils.c to use '\r\n' instead of just '\n', and this would fix most of the problems. The one we can't easily fix is if/when GDB is built to use execinfo instead of libbacktrace, in this case we use backtrace_symbols_fd to print the symbols, and this function only uses '\n' as the line terminator. Fixing this would require switching to backtrace_symbols, but that API uses malloc, which is something we're trying to avoid (this code is called when GDB hits an error, so ideally we don't want to rely on malloc). However, the execinfo code is only used when libbacktrace is not available (or the user specifically disables libbacktrace) so maybe we can ignore that problem... ... but there is another problem. When the backtrace is printed in raw mode, it is possible that the backtrace fills the screen. With the terminal in raw mode we don't have the ability to scroll back, which means we loose some of the backtrace, which isn't ideal. In this commit I propose that we should disable tui mode whenever we handle a fatal signal, or when we hit the internal error code path (e.g. when an assert triggers). With this done then we don't need to update the bt-utils.c code, and the execinfo version of the code (using backtrace_symbols_fd) works just fine. We also get the ability to scroll back to view the error message and all of the backtrace, assuming the users terminal supports scrolling back. The only downside I see with this change is if the tui_disable call itself causes an error for some reason, or, if we handle a single at a time when it is not safe to call tui_disable, in these cases the extra tui_disable call might cause GDB to loose the original error. However, I think (just from personal experience) that the above two issues are pretty rare and the benefits from this change far out weighs the possible drawbacks.
2023-01-04 17:48:31 +08:00
#ifdef TUI
tui_disable ();
#endif
/* Create a string containing the full error/warning message. Need
to call query with this full string, as otherwize the reason
(error/warning) and question become separated. Format using a
style similar to a compiler error message. Include extra detail
so that the user knows that they are living on the edge. */
{
std::string msg = string_vprintf (fmt, ap);
reason = string_printf ("%s:%d: %s: %s\n"
"A problem internal to GDB has been detected,\n"
"further debugging may prove unreliable.",
file, line, problem->name, msg.c_str ());
}
1999-08-17 03:57:19 +08:00
/* Fall back to abort_with_message if gdb_stderr is not set up. */
gdb: Remove check for gdb_stderr == NULL Recent changes made gdb_stderr a macro: #define gdb_stderr (*current_ui_gdb_stderr_ptr ()) and current_ui_gdb_stderr_ptr return this: &current_ui->m_gdb_stderr The problem is that this is undefined if current_ui is NULL, which can happen early on during gdb start up. If we run into an error during early gdb start up then we write the error message to gdb_stderr. However, if we are too early during the start up then current_ui is NULL, and using the gdb_stderr macro triggers undefined behaviour. We try to avoid this using a check 'gdb_stderr == NULL' which was fine before the recent changes, but now, still triggers undefined behaviour. A better check is instead 'current_ui == NULL' which is what I use in this patch. Triggering this failure is pretty hard, most of the really early errors are only triggered if pretty basic things are not as expected, for example, if the default signal handlers are not as expected. Seeing one of these errors trigger usually means that someone working on gdb has made an incorrect change. Still, the errors are present in gdb, and should we ever trigger one it would be nice if gdb didn't crash. For testing this change I've been applying this patch which adds an unconditional error into a function called early during gdb start up. Later in the same function is a real error call which, in some circumstances could be triggered: ## START ## diff --git a/gdb/common/signals-state-save-restore.c b/gdb/common/signals-state-save-restore.c index d11a9ae006c..d75ba70f894 100644 --- a/gdb/common/signals-state-save-restore.c +++ b/gdb/common/signals-state-save-restore.c @@ -37,6 +37,9 @@ static sigset_t original_signal_mask; void save_original_signals_state (void) { + + internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "example error"); + #ifdef HAVE_SIGACTION int i; int res; ## END ## gdb/ChangeLog: * utils.c (abort_with_message): Don't compare gdb_stderr to NULL, check current_ui instead. (internal_vproblem): Likewise.
2017-08-07 04:45:08 +08:00
if (current_ui == NULL)
{
fputs (reason.c_str (), stderr);
abort_with_message ("\n");
}
/* Try to get the message out and at the start of a new line. */
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
gdb::optional<target_terminal::scoped_restore_terminal_state> term_state;
if (target_supports_terminal_ours ())
{
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
term_state.emplace ();
target_terminal::ours_for_output ();
}
if (filtered_printing_initialized ())
begin_line ();
/* Emit the message unless query will emit it below. */
if (problem->should_quit != internal_problem_ask
|| !confirm
gdb: print backtrace for internal error/warning This commit builds on previous work to allow GDB to print a backtrace of itself when GDB encounters an internal-error or internal-warning. This fixes PR gdb/26377. There's not many places where we call internal_warning, and I guess in most cases the user would probably continue their debug session. And so, in order to avoid cluttering up the output, by default, printing of a backtrace is off for internal-warnings. In contrast, printing of a backtrace is on by default for internal-errors, as I figure that in most cases hitting an internal-error is going to be the end of the debug session. Whether a backtrace is printed or not can be controlled with the new settings: maintenance set internal-error backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-error backtrace maintenance set internal-warning backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-warning backtrace Here is an example of what an internal-error now looks like with the backtrace included: (gdb) maintenance internal-error blah ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. ----- Backtrace ----- 0x5c61ca gdb_internal_backtrace_1 ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:123 0x5c626d _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:165 0xe33237 internal_vproblem ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:393 0xe33539 _Z15internal_verrorPKciS0_P13__va_list_tag ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:470 0x1549652 _Z14internal_errorPKciS0_z ../../src.dev-3/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55 0x9c7982 maintenance_internal_error ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82 0x636f57 do_simple_func ../../src.dev-3/gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:97 .... snip, lots more backtrace lines .... --------------------- ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) y This is a bug, please report it. For instructions, see: <https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>. ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Create a core file of GDB? (y or n) n My hope is that this backtrace might make it slightly easier to diagnose GDB issues if all that is provided is the console output, I find that we frequently get reports of an assert being hit that is located in pretty generic code (frame.c, value.c, etc) and it is not always obvious how we might have arrived at the assert. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26377
2021-08-13 01:24:59 +08:00
|| !filtered_printing_initialized ()
gdb: don't try to use readline before it's initialized While working on a different patch, I triggered an assertion from the initialize_current_architecture code, specifically from one of the *_gdbarch_init functions in a *-tdep.c file. This exposes a couple of issues with GDB. This is easy enough to reproduce by adding 'gdb_assert (false)' into a suitable function. For example, I added a line into i386_gdbarch_init and can see the following issue. I start GDB and immediately hit the assert, the output is as you'd expect, except for the very last line: $ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory/ ../../src.dev-1/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed. A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. ----- Backtrace ----- ... snip ... --------------------- ../../src.dev-1/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed. A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) ../../src.dev-1/gdb/ser-event.c:212:16: runtime error: member access within null pointer of type 'struct serial' Something goes wrong when we try to query the user. Note, I configured GDB with --enable-ubsan, I suspect that without this the above "error" would actually just be a crash. The backtrace from ser-event.c:212 looks like this: (gdb) bt 10 #0 serial_event_clear (event=0x675c020) at ../../src/gdb/ser-event.c:212 #1 0x0000000000769456 in invoke_async_signal_handlers () at ../../src/gdb/async-event.c:211 #2 0x000000000295049b in gdb_do_one_event () at ../../src/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:194 #3 0x0000000001f015f8 in gdb_readline_wrapper ( prompt=0x67135c0 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed.\nA problem internal to GDB has been detected,\nfurther debugging may prove unreliable.\nQuit this debugg"...) at ../../src/gdb/top.c:1141 #4 0x0000000002118b64 in defaulted_query(const char *, char, typedef __va_list_tag __va_list_tag *) ( ctlstr=0x2e4eb68 "%s\nQuit this debugging session? ", defchar=0 '\000', args=0x7fffffffa6e0) at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:934 #5 0x0000000002118f72 in query (ctlstr=0x2e4eb68 "%s\nQuit this debugging session? ") at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:1026 #6 0x00000000021170f6 in internal_vproblem(internal_problem *, const char *, int, const char *, typedef __va_list_tag __va_list_tag *) (problem=0x6107bc0 <internal_error_problem>, file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c", line=8455, fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.", ap=0x7fffffffa8e8) at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:417 #7 0x00000000021175a0 in internal_verror (file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c", line=8455, fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.", ap=0x7fffffffa8e8) at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:485 #8 0x00000000029503b3 in internal_error (file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c", line=8455, fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.") at ../../src/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55 #9 0x000000000122d5b6 in i386_gdbarch_init (info=..., arches=0x0) at ../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455 (More stack frames follow...) It turns out that the problem is that the async event handler mechanism has been invoked, but this has not yet been initialized. If we look at gdb_init (in gdb/top.c) we can indeed see the call to gdb_init_signals is after the call to initialize_current_architecture. If I reorder the calls, moving gdb_init_signals earlier, then the initial error is resolved, however, things are still broken. I now see the same "Quit this debugging session? (y or n)" prompt, but when I provide an answer and press return GDB immediately crashes. So what's going on now? The next problem is that the call_readline field within the current_ui structure is not initialized, and this callback is invoked to process the reply I entered. The problem is that call_readline is setup as a result of calling set_top_level_interpreter, which is called from captured_main_1. Unfortunately, set_top_level_interpreter is called after gdb_init is called. I wondered how to solve this problem for a while, however, I don't know if there's an easy "just reorder some lines" solution here. Looking through captured_main_1 there seems to be a bunch of dependencies between printing various things, parsing config files, and setting up the interpreter. I'm sure there is a solution hiding in there somewhere.... I'm just not sure I want to spend any longer looking for it. So. I propose a simpler solution, more of a hack/work-around. In utils.c we already have a function filtered_printing_initialized, this is checked in a few places within internal_vproblem. In some of these cases the call gates whether or not GDB will query the user. My proposal is to add a new readline_initialized function, which checks if the current_ui has had readline initialized yet. If this is not the case then we should not attempt to query the user. After this change GDB prints the error message, the backtrace, and then aborts (including dumping core). This actually seems pretty sane as, if GDB has not yet made it through the initialization then it doesn't make much sense to allow the user to say "no, I don't want to quit the debug session" (I think).
2022-03-30 21:49:11 +08:00
|| !readline_initialized (current_ui)
gdb: print backtrace for internal error/warning This commit builds on previous work to allow GDB to print a backtrace of itself when GDB encounters an internal-error or internal-warning. This fixes PR gdb/26377. There's not many places where we call internal_warning, and I guess in most cases the user would probably continue their debug session. And so, in order to avoid cluttering up the output, by default, printing of a backtrace is off for internal-warnings. In contrast, printing of a backtrace is on by default for internal-errors, as I figure that in most cases hitting an internal-error is going to be the end of the debug session. Whether a backtrace is printed or not can be controlled with the new settings: maintenance set internal-error backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-error backtrace maintenance set internal-warning backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-warning backtrace Here is an example of what an internal-error now looks like with the backtrace included: (gdb) maintenance internal-error blah ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. ----- Backtrace ----- 0x5c61ca gdb_internal_backtrace_1 ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:123 0x5c626d _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:165 0xe33237 internal_vproblem ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:393 0xe33539 _Z15internal_verrorPKciS0_P13__va_list_tag ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:470 0x1549652 _Z14internal_errorPKciS0_z ../../src.dev-3/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55 0x9c7982 maintenance_internal_error ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82 0x636f57 do_simple_func ../../src.dev-3/gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:97 .... snip, lots more backtrace lines .... --------------------- ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) y This is a bug, please report it. For instructions, see: <https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>. ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Create a core file of GDB? (y or n) n My hope is that this backtrace might make it slightly easier to diagnose GDB issues if all that is provided is the console output, I find that we frequently get reports of an assert being hit that is located in pretty generic code (frame.c, value.c, etc) and it is not always obvious how we might have arrived at the assert. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26377
2021-08-13 01:24:59 +08:00
|| problem->should_print_backtrace)
gdb_printf (gdb_stderr, "%s\n", reason.c_str ());
gdb: print backtrace for internal error/warning This commit builds on previous work to allow GDB to print a backtrace of itself when GDB encounters an internal-error or internal-warning. This fixes PR gdb/26377. There's not many places where we call internal_warning, and I guess in most cases the user would probably continue their debug session. And so, in order to avoid cluttering up the output, by default, printing of a backtrace is off for internal-warnings. In contrast, printing of a backtrace is on by default for internal-errors, as I figure that in most cases hitting an internal-error is going to be the end of the debug session. Whether a backtrace is printed or not can be controlled with the new settings: maintenance set internal-error backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-error backtrace maintenance set internal-warning backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-warning backtrace Here is an example of what an internal-error now looks like with the backtrace included: (gdb) maintenance internal-error blah ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. ----- Backtrace ----- 0x5c61ca gdb_internal_backtrace_1 ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:123 0x5c626d _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:165 0xe33237 internal_vproblem ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:393 0xe33539 _Z15internal_verrorPKciS0_P13__va_list_tag ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:470 0x1549652 _Z14internal_errorPKciS0_z ../../src.dev-3/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55 0x9c7982 maintenance_internal_error ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82 0x636f57 do_simple_func ../../src.dev-3/gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:97 .... snip, lots more backtrace lines .... --------------------- ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) y This is a bug, please report it. For instructions, see: <https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>. ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Create a core file of GDB? (y or n) n My hope is that this backtrace might make it slightly easier to diagnose GDB issues if all that is provided is the console output, I find that we frequently get reports of an assert being hit that is located in pretty generic code (frame.c, value.c, etc) and it is not always obvious how we might have arrived at the assert. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26377
2021-08-13 01:24:59 +08:00
if (problem->should_print_backtrace)
gdb_internal_backtrace ();
if (problem->should_quit == internal_problem_ask)
{
/* Default (yes/batch case) is to quit GDB. When in batch mode
this lessens the likelihood of GDB going into an infinite
loop. */
gdb: don't try to use readline before it's initialized While working on a different patch, I triggered an assertion from the initialize_current_architecture code, specifically from one of the *_gdbarch_init functions in a *-tdep.c file. This exposes a couple of issues with GDB. This is easy enough to reproduce by adding 'gdb_assert (false)' into a suitable function. For example, I added a line into i386_gdbarch_init and can see the following issue. I start GDB and immediately hit the assert, the output is as you'd expect, except for the very last line: $ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory/ ../../src.dev-1/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed. A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. ----- Backtrace ----- ... snip ... --------------------- ../../src.dev-1/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed. A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) ../../src.dev-1/gdb/ser-event.c:212:16: runtime error: member access within null pointer of type 'struct serial' Something goes wrong when we try to query the user. Note, I configured GDB with --enable-ubsan, I suspect that without this the above "error" would actually just be a crash. The backtrace from ser-event.c:212 looks like this: (gdb) bt 10 #0 serial_event_clear (event=0x675c020) at ../../src/gdb/ser-event.c:212 #1 0x0000000000769456 in invoke_async_signal_handlers () at ../../src/gdb/async-event.c:211 #2 0x000000000295049b in gdb_do_one_event () at ../../src/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:194 #3 0x0000000001f015f8 in gdb_readline_wrapper ( prompt=0x67135c0 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed.\nA problem internal to GDB has been detected,\nfurther debugging may prove unreliable.\nQuit this debugg"...) at ../../src/gdb/top.c:1141 #4 0x0000000002118b64 in defaulted_query(const char *, char, typedef __va_list_tag __va_list_tag *) ( ctlstr=0x2e4eb68 "%s\nQuit this debugging session? ", defchar=0 '\000', args=0x7fffffffa6e0) at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:934 #5 0x0000000002118f72 in query (ctlstr=0x2e4eb68 "%s\nQuit this debugging session? ") at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:1026 #6 0x00000000021170f6 in internal_vproblem(internal_problem *, const char *, int, const char *, typedef __va_list_tag __va_list_tag *) (problem=0x6107bc0 <internal_error_problem>, file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c", line=8455, fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.", ap=0x7fffffffa8e8) at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:417 #7 0x00000000021175a0 in internal_verror (file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c", line=8455, fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.", ap=0x7fffffffa8e8) at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:485 #8 0x00000000029503b3 in internal_error (file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c", line=8455, fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.") at ../../src/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55 #9 0x000000000122d5b6 in i386_gdbarch_init (info=..., arches=0x0) at ../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455 (More stack frames follow...) It turns out that the problem is that the async event handler mechanism has been invoked, but this has not yet been initialized. If we look at gdb_init (in gdb/top.c) we can indeed see the call to gdb_init_signals is after the call to initialize_current_architecture. If I reorder the calls, moving gdb_init_signals earlier, then the initial error is resolved, however, things are still broken. I now see the same "Quit this debugging session? (y or n)" prompt, but when I provide an answer and press return GDB immediately crashes. So what's going on now? The next problem is that the call_readline field within the current_ui structure is not initialized, and this callback is invoked to process the reply I entered. The problem is that call_readline is setup as a result of calling set_top_level_interpreter, which is called from captured_main_1. Unfortunately, set_top_level_interpreter is called after gdb_init is called. I wondered how to solve this problem for a while, however, I don't know if there's an easy "just reorder some lines" solution here. Looking through captured_main_1 there seems to be a bunch of dependencies between printing various things, parsing config files, and setting up the interpreter. I'm sure there is a solution hiding in there somewhere.... I'm just not sure I want to spend any longer looking for it. So. I propose a simpler solution, more of a hack/work-around. In utils.c we already have a function filtered_printing_initialized, this is checked in a few places within internal_vproblem. In some of these cases the call gates whether or not GDB will query the user. My proposal is to add a new readline_initialized function, which checks if the current_ui has had readline initialized yet. If this is not the case then we should not attempt to query the user. After this change GDB prints the error message, the backtrace, and then aborts (including dumping core). This actually seems pretty sane as, if GDB has not yet made it through the initialization then it doesn't make much sense to allow the user to say "no, I don't want to quit the debug session" (I think).
2022-03-30 21:49:11 +08:00
if (!confirm || !filtered_printing_initialized ()
|| !readline_initialized (current_ui))
quit_p = 1;
else
gdb, gdbserver, gdbsupport: fix leading space vs tabs issues Many spots incorrectly use only spaces for indentation (for example, there are a lot of spots in ada-lang.c). I've always found it awkward when I needed to edit one of these spots: do I keep the original wrong indentation, or do I fix it? What if the lines around it are also wrong, do I fix them too? I probably don't want to fix them in the same patch, to avoid adding noise to my patch. So I propose to fix as much as possible once and for all (hopefully). One typical counter argument for this is that it makes code archeology more difficult, because git-blame will show this commit as the last change for these lines. My counter counter argument is: when git-blaming, you often need to do "blame the file at the parent commit" anyway, to go past some other refactor that touched the line you are interested in, but is not the change you are looking for. So you already need a somewhat efficient way to do this. Using some interactive tool, rather than plain git-blame, makes this trivial. For example, I use "tig blame <file>", where going back past the commit that changed the currently selected line is one keystroke. It looks like Magit in Emacs does it too (though I've never used it). Web viewers of Github and Gitlab do it too. My point is that it won't really make archeology more difficult. The other typical counter argument is that it will cause conflicts with existing patches. That's true... but it's a one time cost, and those are not conflicts that are difficult to resolve. I have also tried "git rebase --ignore-whitespace", it seems to work well. Although that will re-introduce the faulty indentation, so one needs to take care of fixing the indentation in the patch after that (which is easy). gdb/ChangeLog: * aarch64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.c: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.h: Fix indentation. * ada-tasks.c: Fix indentation. * ada-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.h: Fix indentation. * agent.c: Fix indentation. * aix-thread.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-mdebug-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * annotate.c: Fix indentation. * arc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arch-utils.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-pikeos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * arm-wince-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * auto-load.c: Fix indentation. * auxv.c: Fix indentation. * avr-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ax-gdb.c: Fix indentation. * ax-general.c: Fix indentation. * bfin-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * block.c: Fix indentation. * block.h: Fix indentation. * blockframe.c: Fix indentation. * bpf-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-sig.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-throw.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.h: Fix indentation. * bsd-uthread.c: Fix indentation. * btrace.c: Fix indentation. * build-id.c: Fix indentation. * buildsym-legacy.h: Fix indentation. * buildsym.c: Fix indentation. * c-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * charset.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.h: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-script.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-setshow.c: Fix indentation. * coff-pe-read.c: Fix indentation. * coffread.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-cplus-types.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-load.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-run.c: Fix indentation. * completer.c: Fix indentation. * corefile.c: Fix indentation. * corelow.c: Fix indentation. * cp-abi.h: Fix indentation. * cp-namespace.c: Fix indentation. * cp-support.c: Fix indentation. * cp-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * cris-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * cris-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat-info.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.h: Fix indentation. * dbxread.c: Fix indentation. * dcache.c: Fix indentation. * disasm.c: Fix indentation. * dtrace-probe.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/abbrev.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/attribute.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/expr.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/frame.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-cache.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-write.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/line-header.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/loc.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/macro.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.h: Fix indentation. * elfread.c: Fix indentation. * eval.c: Fix indentation. * event-top.c: Fix indentation. * exec.c: Fix indentation. * exec.h: Fix indentation. * expprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-lang.c: Fix indentation. * f-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * findvar.c: Fix indentation. * fork-child.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.h: Fix indentation. * frame.c: Fix indentation. * frv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ft32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gcore.c: Fix indentation. * gdb_bfd.c: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.sh: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.c: Re-generate * gdbarch.h: Re-generate. * gdbcore.h: Fix indentation. * gdbthread.h: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.c: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.h: Fix indentation. * glibc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.h: Fix indentation. * gnu-v2-abi.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-v3-abi.c: Fix indentation. * go32-nat.c: Fix indentation. * guile/guile-internal.h: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-cmd.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-frame.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-iterator.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-math.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-ports.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-pretty-print.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-value.c: Fix indentation. * h8300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-dicos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-sol2-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-vms-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * infcall.c: Fix indentation. * infcmd.c: Fix indentation. * inferior.c: Fix indentation. * infrun.c: Fix indentation. * iq2000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * language.c: Fix indentation. * linespec.c: Fix indentation. * linux-fork.c: Fix indentation. * linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * linux-thread-db.c: Fix indentation. * lm32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m2-lang.c: Fix indentation. * m2-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * m2-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * m32c-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68hc11-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * machoread.c: Fix indentation. * macrocmd.c: Fix indentation. * macroexp.c: Fix indentation. * macroscope.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.h: Fix indentation. * main.c: Fix indentation. * mdebugread.c: Fix indentation. * mep-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-catch.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-disas.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-env.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-stack.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-var.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-main.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-parse.c: Fix indentation. * microblaze-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * minidebug.c: Fix indentation. * minsyms.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * moxie-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * msp430-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * namespace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/fork-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * nat/gdb_ptrace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-namespaces.c: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-osdata.c: Fix indentation. * nat/netbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nat/x86-dregs.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nto-procfs.c: Fix indentation. * nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.h: Fix indentation. * opencl-lang.c: Fix indentation. * or1k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.h: Fix indentation. * osdata.c: Fix indentation. * p-lang.c: Fix indentation. * p-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * p-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * parse.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-sysv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * printcmd.c: Fix indentation. * proc-api.c: Fix indentation. * producer.c: Fix indentation. * producer.h: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.c: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.h: Fix indentation. * psymtab.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-arch.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-bpevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-finishbreakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-frame.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-framefilter.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-infthread.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-objfile.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-prettyprint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-registers.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-signalevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-threadevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-tui.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-value.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-xmethods.c: Fix indentation. * python/python-internal.h: Fix indentation. * python/python.c: Fix indentation. * ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * record-btrace.c: Fix indentation. * record-full.c: Fix indentation. * record.c: Fix indentation. * reggroups.c: Fix indentation. * regset.h: Fix indentation. * remote-fileio.c: Fix indentation. * remote.c: Fix indentation. * reverse.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rl78-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-aix-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-nat.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rust-lang.c: Fix indentation. * rx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s12z-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s390-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * score-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ser-base.c: Fix indentation. * ser-mingw.c: Fix indentation. * ser-uds.c: Fix indentation. * ser-unix.c: Fix indentation. * serial.c: Fix indentation. * sh-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * skip.c: Fix indentation. * sol-thread.c: Fix indentation. * solib-aix.c: Fix indentation. * solib-darwin.c: Fix indentation. * solib-frv.c: Fix indentation. * solib-svr4.c: Fix indentation. * solib.c: Fix indentation. * source.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * stabsread.c: Fix indentation. * stack.c: Fix indentation. * stap-probe.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/ia64vms-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m32r-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m68k-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sh-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sparc-stub.c: Fix indentation. * symfile-mem.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.h: Fix indentation. * symmisc.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.h: Fix indentation. * target-float.c: Fix indentation. * target.c: Fix indentation. * target.h: Fix indentation. * tic6x-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * top.c: Fix indentation. * tracefile-tfile.c: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-disasm.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-io.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-regs.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-stack.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-win.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-winsource.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui.c: Fix indentation. * typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ui-out.h: Fix indentation. * unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * unittests/memory-map-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * utils.c: Fix indentation. * v850-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * valarith.c: Fix indentation. * valops.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.h: Fix indentation. * value.c: Fix indentation. * value.h: Fix indentation. * varobj.c: Fix indentation. * vax-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * windows-nat.c: Fix indentation. * windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xcoffread.c: Fix indentation. * xml-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * xml-tdesc.c: Fix indentation. * xstormy16-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-config.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. gdbserver/ChangeLog: * ax.cc: Fix indentation. * dll.cc: Fix indentation. * inferiors.h: Fix indentation. * linux-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-nios2-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-ipa.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-x86-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-xtensa-low.cc: Fix indentation. * regcache.cc: Fix indentation. * server.cc: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.cc: Fix indentation. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: * common-exceptions.h: Fix indentation. * event-loop.cc: Fix indentation. * fileio.cc: Fix indentation. * filestuff.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb-dlfcn.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb_string_view.h: Fix indentation. * job-control.cc: Fix indentation. * signals.cc: Fix indentation. Change-Id: I4bad7ae6be0fbe14168b8ebafb98ffe14964a695
2020-11-02 23:26:14 +08:00
quit_p = query (_("%s\nQuit this debugging session? "),
reason.c_str ());
}
else if (problem->should_quit == internal_problem_yes)
quit_p = 1;
else if (problem->should_quit == internal_problem_no)
quit_p = 0;
else
internal_error (_("bad switch"));
gdb_puts (_("\nThis is a bug, please report it."), gdb_stderr);
if (REPORT_BUGS_TO[0])
gdb_printf (gdb_stderr, _(" For instructions, see:\n%ps."),
styled_string (file_name_style.style (),
REPORT_BUGS_TO));
gdb_puts ("\n\n", gdb_stderr);
if (problem->should_dump_core == internal_problem_ask)
{
if (!can_dump_core_warn (LIMIT_MAX, reason.c_str ()))
dump_core_p = 0;
gdb: don't try to use readline before it's initialized While working on a different patch, I triggered an assertion from the initialize_current_architecture code, specifically from one of the *_gdbarch_init functions in a *-tdep.c file. This exposes a couple of issues with GDB. This is easy enough to reproduce by adding 'gdb_assert (false)' into a suitable function. For example, I added a line into i386_gdbarch_init and can see the following issue. I start GDB and immediately hit the assert, the output is as you'd expect, except for the very last line: $ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory/ ../../src.dev-1/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed. A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. ----- Backtrace ----- ... snip ... --------------------- ../../src.dev-1/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed. A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) ../../src.dev-1/gdb/ser-event.c:212:16: runtime error: member access within null pointer of type 'struct serial' Something goes wrong when we try to query the user. Note, I configured GDB with --enable-ubsan, I suspect that without this the above "error" would actually just be a crash. The backtrace from ser-event.c:212 looks like this: (gdb) bt 10 #0 serial_event_clear (event=0x675c020) at ../../src/gdb/ser-event.c:212 #1 0x0000000000769456 in invoke_async_signal_handlers () at ../../src/gdb/async-event.c:211 #2 0x000000000295049b in gdb_do_one_event () at ../../src/gdbsupport/event-loop.cc:194 #3 0x0000000001f015f8 in gdb_readline_wrapper ( prompt=0x67135c0 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455: internal-error: i386_gdbarch_init: Assertion `false' failed.\nA problem internal to GDB has been detected,\nfurther debugging may prove unreliable.\nQuit this debugg"...) at ../../src/gdb/top.c:1141 #4 0x0000000002118b64 in defaulted_query(const char *, char, typedef __va_list_tag __va_list_tag *) ( ctlstr=0x2e4eb68 "%s\nQuit this debugging session? ", defchar=0 '\000', args=0x7fffffffa6e0) at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:934 #5 0x0000000002118f72 in query (ctlstr=0x2e4eb68 "%s\nQuit this debugging session? ") at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:1026 #6 0x00000000021170f6 in internal_vproblem(internal_problem *, const char *, int, const char *, typedef __va_list_tag __va_list_tag *) (problem=0x6107bc0 <internal_error_problem>, file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c", line=8455, fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.", ap=0x7fffffffa8e8) at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:417 #7 0x00000000021175a0 in internal_verror (file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c", line=8455, fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.", ap=0x7fffffffa8e8) at ../../src/gdb/utils.c:485 #8 0x00000000029503b3 in internal_error (file=0x2b976c8 "../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c", line=8455, fmt=0x2b96d7f "%s: Assertion `%s' failed.") at ../../src/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55 #9 0x000000000122d5b6 in i386_gdbarch_init (info=..., arches=0x0) at ../../src/gdb/i386-tdep.c:8455 (More stack frames follow...) It turns out that the problem is that the async event handler mechanism has been invoked, but this has not yet been initialized. If we look at gdb_init (in gdb/top.c) we can indeed see the call to gdb_init_signals is after the call to initialize_current_architecture. If I reorder the calls, moving gdb_init_signals earlier, then the initial error is resolved, however, things are still broken. I now see the same "Quit this debugging session? (y or n)" prompt, but when I provide an answer and press return GDB immediately crashes. So what's going on now? The next problem is that the call_readline field within the current_ui structure is not initialized, and this callback is invoked to process the reply I entered. The problem is that call_readline is setup as a result of calling set_top_level_interpreter, which is called from captured_main_1. Unfortunately, set_top_level_interpreter is called after gdb_init is called. I wondered how to solve this problem for a while, however, I don't know if there's an easy "just reorder some lines" solution here. Looking through captured_main_1 there seems to be a bunch of dependencies between printing various things, parsing config files, and setting up the interpreter. I'm sure there is a solution hiding in there somewhere.... I'm just not sure I want to spend any longer looking for it. So. I propose a simpler solution, more of a hack/work-around. In utils.c we already have a function filtered_printing_initialized, this is checked in a few places within internal_vproblem. In some of these cases the call gates whether or not GDB will query the user. My proposal is to add a new readline_initialized function, which checks if the current_ui has had readline initialized yet. If this is not the case then we should not attempt to query the user. After this change GDB prints the error message, the backtrace, and then aborts (including dumping core). This actually seems pretty sane as, if GDB has not yet made it through the initialization then it doesn't make much sense to allow the user to say "no, I don't want to quit the debug session" (I think).
2022-03-30 21:49:11 +08:00
else if (!filtered_printing_initialized ()
|| !readline_initialized (current_ui))
dump_core_p = 1;
else
{
/* Default (yes/batch case) is to dump core. This leaves a GDB
`dropping' so that it is easier to see that something went
wrong in GDB. */
dump_core_p = query (_("%s\nCreate a core file of GDB? "),
reason.c_str ());
}
}
else if (problem->should_dump_core == internal_problem_yes)
dump_core_p = can_dump_core_warn (LIMIT_MAX, reason.c_str ());
else if (problem->should_dump_core == internal_problem_no)
dump_core_p = 0;
else
internal_error (_("bad switch"));
1999-08-17 03:57:19 +08:00
if (quit_p)
1999-08-17 03:57:19 +08:00
{
if (dump_core_p)
dump_core ();
else
exit (1);
1999-08-17 03:57:19 +08:00
}
else
{
if (dump_core_p)
{
#ifdef HAVE_WORKING_FORK
if (fork () == 0)
dump_core ();
#endif
}
1999-08-17 03:57:19 +08:00
}
1999-08-10 05:36:23 +08:00
dejavu = 0;
}
static struct internal_problem internal_error_problem = {
"internal-error", true, internal_problem_ask, true, internal_problem_ask,
gdb: print backtrace for internal error/warning This commit builds on previous work to allow GDB to print a backtrace of itself when GDB encounters an internal-error or internal-warning. This fixes PR gdb/26377. There's not many places where we call internal_warning, and I guess in most cases the user would probably continue their debug session. And so, in order to avoid cluttering up the output, by default, printing of a backtrace is off for internal-warnings. In contrast, printing of a backtrace is on by default for internal-errors, as I figure that in most cases hitting an internal-error is going to be the end of the debug session. Whether a backtrace is printed or not can be controlled with the new settings: maintenance set internal-error backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-error backtrace maintenance set internal-warning backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-warning backtrace Here is an example of what an internal-error now looks like with the backtrace included: (gdb) maintenance internal-error blah ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. ----- Backtrace ----- 0x5c61ca gdb_internal_backtrace_1 ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:123 0x5c626d _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:165 0xe33237 internal_vproblem ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:393 0xe33539 _Z15internal_verrorPKciS0_P13__va_list_tag ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:470 0x1549652 _Z14internal_errorPKciS0_z ../../src.dev-3/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55 0x9c7982 maintenance_internal_error ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82 0x636f57 do_simple_func ../../src.dev-3/gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:97 .... snip, lots more backtrace lines .... --------------------- ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) y This is a bug, please report it. For instructions, see: <https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>. ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Create a core file of GDB? (y or n) n My hope is that this backtrace might make it slightly easier to diagnose GDB issues if all that is provided is the console output, I find that we frequently get reports of an assert being hit that is located in pretty generic code (frame.c, value.c, etc) and it is not always obvious how we might have arrived at the assert. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26377
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true, GDB_PRINT_INTERNAL_BACKTRACE_INIT_ON
};
void
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internal_verror (const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
{
internal_vproblem (&internal_error_problem, file, line, fmt, ap);
Rationalize "fatal" error handling outside of gdbserver GDB and gdbserver have functions named "fatal" that are used in completely different ways. In gdbserver "fatal" is used to handle critical errors: it differs from "error" in that "fatal" causes gdbserver to exit whereas "error" does not. In GDB "fatal" is used to abort the current operation and return to the command level. This is implemented by throwing a non-error "RETURN_QUIT" exception. This commit removes GDB's "fatal" and "vfatal" functions entirely. The exception-throwing function "throw_vfatal" is renamed as "throw_vquit", and a new convenience function "throw_quit" is added. The small number of calls to "fatal" are replaced with calls to "throw_quit", making what is happening more obvious. This commit also modifies GDB's "throw_error" to call "throw_verror" rather than calling "throw_it" directly. This change means the assignment of RETURN_ERROR as the exception type now happens in precisely one place in GDB rather than two. gdb/ 2014-07-24 Gary Benson <gbenson@redhat.com> * exceptions.h (throw_vfatal): Renamed to... (throw_vquit): New declaration. (throw_quit): Likewise. * exceptions.c (throw_vfatal): Renamed to... (throw_vquit): New function. (throw_quit): Likewise. (throw_error): Call throw_verror rather than throw_it. * utils.h (vfatal): Removed. (fatal): Likewise. * utils.c (vfatal): Removed. (fatal): Likewise. (internal_verror): Replaced call to fatal with call to throw_quit. (quit): Replaced calls to fatal with calls to throw_quit.
2014-07-23 21:51:26 +08:00
throw_quit (_("Command aborted."));
}
static struct internal_problem internal_warning_problem = {
"internal-warning", true, internal_problem_ask, true, internal_problem_ask,
gdb: print backtrace for internal error/warning This commit builds on previous work to allow GDB to print a backtrace of itself when GDB encounters an internal-error or internal-warning. This fixes PR gdb/26377. There's not many places where we call internal_warning, and I guess in most cases the user would probably continue their debug session. And so, in order to avoid cluttering up the output, by default, printing of a backtrace is off for internal-warnings. In contrast, printing of a backtrace is on by default for internal-errors, as I figure that in most cases hitting an internal-error is going to be the end of the debug session. Whether a backtrace is printed or not can be controlled with the new settings: maintenance set internal-error backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-error backtrace maintenance set internal-warning backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-warning backtrace Here is an example of what an internal-error now looks like with the backtrace included: (gdb) maintenance internal-error blah ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. ----- Backtrace ----- 0x5c61ca gdb_internal_backtrace_1 ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:123 0x5c626d _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:165 0xe33237 internal_vproblem ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:393 0xe33539 _Z15internal_verrorPKciS0_P13__va_list_tag ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:470 0x1549652 _Z14internal_errorPKciS0_z ../../src.dev-3/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55 0x9c7982 maintenance_internal_error ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82 0x636f57 do_simple_func ../../src.dev-3/gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:97 .... snip, lots more backtrace lines .... --------------------- ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) y This is a bug, please report it. For instructions, see: <https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>. ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Create a core file of GDB? (y or n) n My hope is that this backtrace might make it slightly easier to diagnose GDB issues if all that is provided is the console output, I find that we frequently get reports of an assert being hit that is located in pretty generic code (frame.c, value.c, etc) and it is not always obvious how we might have arrived at the assert. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26377
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true, false
};
void
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internal_vwarning (const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
{
internal_vproblem (&internal_warning_problem, file, line, fmt, ap);
}
static struct internal_problem demangler_warning_problem = {
"demangler-warning", true, internal_problem_ask, false, internal_problem_no,
gdb: print backtrace for internal error/warning This commit builds on previous work to allow GDB to print a backtrace of itself when GDB encounters an internal-error or internal-warning. This fixes PR gdb/26377. There's not many places where we call internal_warning, and I guess in most cases the user would probably continue their debug session. And so, in order to avoid cluttering up the output, by default, printing of a backtrace is off for internal-warnings. In contrast, printing of a backtrace is on by default for internal-errors, as I figure that in most cases hitting an internal-error is going to be the end of the debug session. Whether a backtrace is printed or not can be controlled with the new settings: maintenance set internal-error backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-error backtrace maintenance set internal-warning backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-warning backtrace Here is an example of what an internal-error now looks like with the backtrace included: (gdb) maintenance internal-error blah ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. ----- Backtrace ----- 0x5c61ca gdb_internal_backtrace_1 ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:123 0x5c626d _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:165 0xe33237 internal_vproblem ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:393 0xe33539 _Z15internal_verrorPKciS0_P13__va_list_tag ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:470 0x1549652 _Z14internal_errorPKciS0_z ../../src.dev-3/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55 0x9c7982 maintenance_internal_error ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82 0x636f57 do_simple_func ../../src.dev-3/gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:97 .... snip, lots more backtrace lines .... --------------------- ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) y This is a bug, please report it. For instructions, see: <https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>. ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Create a core file of GDB? (y or n) n My hope is that this backtrace might make it slightly easier to diagnose GDB issues if all that is provided is the console output, I find that we frequently get reports of an assert being hit that is located in pretty generic code (frame.c, value.c, etc) and it is not always obvious how we might have arrived at the assert. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26377
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false, false
};
void
demangler_vwarning (const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
{
internal_vproblem (&demangler_warning_problem, file, line, fmt, ap);
}
void
demangler_warning (const char *file, int line, const char *string, ...)
{
va_list ap;
va_start (ap, string);
demangler_vwarning (file, line, string, ap);
va_end (ap);
}
/* When GDB reports an internal problem (error or warning) it gives
the user the opportunity to quit GDB and/or create a core file of
the current debug session. This function registers a few commands
that make it possible to specify that GDB should always or never
quit or create a core file, without asking. The commands look
like:
maint set PROBLEM-NAME quit ask|yes|no
maint show PROBLEM-NAME quit
maint set PROBLEM-NAME corefile ask|yes|no
maint show PROBLEM-NAME corefile
Where PROBLEM-NAME is currently "internal-error" or
"internal-warning". */
static void
add_internal_problem_command (struct internal_problem *problem)
{
struct cmd_list_element **set_cmd_list;
struct cmd_list_element **show_cmd_list;
Replace some xmalloc-family functions with XNEW-family ones This patch is part of the make-gdb-buildable-in-C++ effort. The idea is to change some calls to the xmalloc family of functions to calls to the equivalents in the XNEW family. This avoids adding an explicit cast, so it keeps the code a bit more readable. Some of them also map relatively well to a C++ equivalent (XNEW (struct foo) -> new foo), so it will be possible to do scripted replacements if needed. I only changed calls that were obviously allocating memory for one or multiple "objects". Allocation of variable sizes (such as strings or buffer handling) will be for later (and won't use XNEW). - xmalloc (sizeof (struct foo)) -> XNEW (struct foo) - xmalloc (num * sizeof (struct foo)) -> XNEWVEC (struct foo, num) - xcalloc (1, sizeof (struct foo)) -> XCNEW (struct foo) - xcalloc (num, sizeof (struct foo)) -> XCNEWVEC (struct foo, num) - xrealloc (p, num * sizeof (struct foo) -> XRESIZEVEC (struct foo, p, num) - obstack_alloc (ob, sizeof (struct foo)) -> XOBNEW (ob, struct foo) - obstack_alloc (ob, num * sizeof (struct foo)) -> XOBNEWVEC (ob, struct foo, num) - alloca (sizeof (struct foo)) -> XALLOCA (struct foo) - alloca (num * sizeof (struct foo)) -> XALLOCAVEC (struct foo, num) Some instances of xmalloc followed by memset to zero the buffer were replaced by XCNEW or XCNEWVEC. I regtested on x86-64, Ubuntu 14.04, but the patch touches many architecture-specific files. For those I'll have to rely on the buildbot or people complaining that I broke their gdb. gdb/ChangeLog: * aarch64-linux-nat.c (aarch64_add_process): Likewise. * aarch64-tdep.c (aarch64_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * ada-exp.y (write_ambiguous_var): Likewise. * ada-lang.c (resolve_subexp): Likewise. (user_select_syms): Likewise. (assign_aggregate): Likewise. (ada_evaluate_subexp): Likewise. (cache_symbol): Likewise. * addrmap.c (allocate_key): Likewise. (addrmap_create_mutable): Likewise. * aix-thread.c (sync_threadlists): Likewise. * alpha-tdep.c (alpha_push_dummy_call): Likewise. (alpha_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * amd64-windows-tdep.c (amd64_windows_push_arguments): Likewise. * arm-linux-nat.c (arm_linux_add_process): Likewise. * arm-linux-tdep.c (arm_linux_displaced_step_copy_insn): Likewise. * arm-tdep.c (push_stack_item): Likewise. (arm_displaced_step_copy_insn): Likewise. (arm_gdbarch_init): Likewise. (_initialize_arm_tdep): Likewise. * avr-tdep.c (push_stack_item): Likewise. * ax-general.c (new_agent_expr): Likewise. * block.c (block_initialize_namespace): Likewise. * breakpoint.c (alloc_counted_command_line): Likewise. (update_dprintf_command_list): Likewise. (parse_breakpoint_sals): Likewise. (decode_static_tracepoint_spec): Likewise. (until_break_command): Likewise. (clear_command): Likewise. (update_global_location_list): Likewise. (get_breakpoint_objfile_data) Likewise. * btrace.c (ftrace_new_function): Likewise. (btrace_set_insn_history): Likewise. (btrace_set_call_history): Likewise. * buildsym.c (add_symbol_to_list): Likewise. (record_pending_block): Likewise. (start_subfile): Likewise. (start_buildsym_compunit): Likewise. (push_subfile): Likewise. (end_symtab_get_static_block): Likewise. (buildsym_init): Likewise. * cli/cli-cmds.c (source_command): Likewise. * cli/cli-decode.c (add_cmd): Likewise. * cli/cli-script.c (build_command_line): Likewise. (setup_user_args): Likewise. (realloc_body_list): Likewise. (process_next_line): Likewise. (copy_command_lines): Likewise. * cli/cli-setshow.c (do_set_command): Likewise. * coff-pe-read.c (read_pe_exported_syms): Likewise. * coffread.c (coff_locate_sections): Likewise. (coff_symtab_read): Likewise. (coff_read_struct_type): Likewise. * common/cleanups.c (make_my_cleanup2): Likewise. * common/common-exceptions.c (throw_it): Likewise. * common/filestuff.c (make_cleanup_close): Likewise. * common/format.c (parse_format_string): Likewise. * common/queue.h (DEFINE_QUEUE_P): Likewise. * compile/compile-object-load.c (munmap_list_add): Likewise. (compile_object_load): Likewise. * compile/compile-object-run.c (compile_object_run): Likewise. * compile/compile.c (append_args): Likewise. * corefile.c (specify_exec_file_hook): Likewise. * cp-support.c (make_symbol_overload_list): Likewise. * cris-tdep.c (push_stack_item): Likewise. (cris_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * ctf.c (ctf_trace_file_writer_new): Likewise. * dbxread.c (init_header_files): Likewise. (add_new_header_file): Likewise. (init_bincl_list): Likewise. (dbx_end_psymtab): Likewise. (start_psymtab): Likewise. (dbx_end_psymtab): Likewise. * dcache.c (dcache_init): Likewise. * dictionary.c (dict_create_hashed): Likewise. (dict_create_hashed_expandable): Likewise. (dict_create_linear): Likewise. (dict_create_linear_expandable): Likewise. * dtrace-probe.c (dtrace_process_dof_probe): Likewise. * dummy-frame.c (register_dummy_frame_dtor): Likewise. * dwarf2-frame-tailcall.c (cache_new_ref1): Likewise. * dwarf2-frame.c (dwarf2_build_frame_info): Likewise. (decode_frame_entry_1): Likewise. * dwarf2expr.c (new_dwarf_expr_context): Likewise. * dwarf2loc.c (dwarf2_compile_expr_to_ax): Likewise. * dwarf2read.c (dwarf2_has_info): Likewise. (create_signatured_type_table_from_index): Likewise. (dwarf2_read_index): Likewise. (dw2_get_file_names_reader): Likewise. (create_all_type_units): Likewise. (read_cutu_die_from_dwo): Likewise. (init_tu_and_read_dwo_dies): Likewise. (init_cutu_and_read_dies): Likewise. (create_all_comp_units): Likewise. (queue_comp_unit): Likewise. (inherit_abstract_dies): Likewise. (read_call_site_scope): Likewise. (dwarf2_add_field): Likewise. (dwarf2_add_typedef): Likewise. (dwarf2_add_member_fn): Likewise. (attr_to_dynamic_prop): Likewise. (abbrev_table_alloc_abbrev): Likewise. (abbrev_table_read_table): Likewise. (add_include_dir): Likewise. (add_file_name): Likewise. (dwarf_decode_line_header): Likewise. (dwarf2_const_value_attr): Likewise. (dwarf_alloc_block): Likewise. (parse_macro_definition): Likewise. (set_die_type): Likewise. (write_psymtabs_to_index): Likewise. (create_cus_from_index): Likewise. (dwarf2_create_include_psymtab): Likewise. (process_psymtab_comp_unit_reader): Likewise. (build_type_psymtab_dependencies): Likewise. (read_comp_units_from_section): Likewise. (compute_compunit_symtab_includes): Likewise. (create_dwo_unit_in_dwp_v1): Likewise. (create_dwo_unit_in_dwp_v2): Likewise. (read_func_scope): Likewise. (process_structure_scope): Likewise. (mark_common_block_symbol_computed): Likewise. (load_partial_dies): Likewise. (dwarf2_symbol_mark_computed): Likewise. * elfread.c (elf_symfile_segments): Likewise. (elf_read_minimal_symbols): Likewise. * environ.c (make_environ): Likewise. * eval.c (evaluate_subexp_standard): Likewise. * event-loop.c (create_file_handler): Likewise. (create_async_signal_handler): Likewise. (create_async_event_handler): Likewise. (create_timer): Likewise. * exec.c (build_section_table): Likewise. * fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_remember_child): Likewise. * fork-child.c (fork_inferior): Likewise. * frv-tdep.c (new_variant): Likewise. * gdbarch.sh (gdbarch_alloc): Likewise. (append_name): Likewise. * gdbtypes.c (rank_function): Likewise. (copy_type_recursive): Likewise. (add_dyn_prop): Likewise. * gnu-nat.c (make_proc): Likewise. (make_inf): Likewise. (gnu_write_inferior): Likewise. * gnu-v3-abi.c (build_gdb_vtable_type): Likewise. (build_std_type_info_type): Likewise. * guile/scm-param.c (compute_enum_list): Likewise. * guile/scm-utils.c (gdbscm_parse_function_args): Likewise. * guile/scm-value.c (gdbscm_value_call): Likewise. * h8300-tdep.c (h8300_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * hppa-tdep.c (hppa_init_objfile_priv_data): Likewise. (read_unwind_info): Likewise. * ia64-tdep.c (ia64_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * infcall.c (dummy_frame_context_saver_setup): Likewise. (call_function_by_hand_dummy): Likewise. * infcmd.c (step_once): Likewise. (finish_forward): Likewise. (attach_command): Likewise. (notice_new_inferior): Likewise. * inferior.c (add_inferior_silent): Likewise. * infrun.c (add_displaced_stepping_state): Likewise. (save_infcall_control_state): Likewise. (save_inferior_ptid): Likewise. (_initialize_infrun): Likewise. * jit.c (bfd_open_from_target_memory): Likewise. (jit_gdbarch_data_init): Likewise. * language.c (add_language): Likewise. * linespec.c (decode_line_2): Likewise. * linux-nat.c (add_to_pid_list): Likewise. (add_initial_lwp): Likewise. * linux-thread-db.c (add_thread_db_info): Likewise. (record_thread): Likewise. (info_auto_load_libthread_db): Likewise. * m32c-tdep.c (m32c_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * m68hc11-tdep.c (m68hc11_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * m68k-tdep.c (m68k_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * m88k-tdep.c (m88k_analyze_prologue): Likewise. * macrocmd.c (macro_define_command): Likewise. * macroexp.c (gather_arguments): Likewise. * macroscope.c (sal_macro_scope): Likewise. * macrotab.c (new_macro_table): Likewise. * mdebugread.c (push_parse_stack): Likewise. (parse_partial_symbols): Likewise. (parse_symbol): Likewise. (psymtab_to_symtab_1): Likewise. (new_block): Likewise. (new_psymtab): Likewise. (mdebug_build_psymtabs): Likewise. (add_pending): Likewise. (elfmdebug_build_psymtabs): Likewise. * mep-tdep.c (mep_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * mi/mi-main.c (mi_execute_command): Likewise. * mi/mi-parse.c (mi_parse_argv): Likewise. * minidebug.c (lzma_open): Likewise. * minsyms.c (terminate_minimal_symbol_table): Likewise. * mips-linux-nat.c (mips_linux_insert_watchpoint): Likewise. * mips-tdep.c (mips_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * mn10300-tdep.c (mn10300_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * msp430-tdep.c (msp430_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * mt-tdep.c (mt_registers_info): Likewise. * nat/aarch64-linux.c (aarch64_linux_new_thread): Likewise. * nat/linux-btrace.c (linux_enable_bts): Likewise. (linux_enable_pt): Likewise. * nat/linux-osdata.c (linux_xfer_osdata_processes): Likewise. (linux_xfer_osdata_processgroups): Likewise. * nios2-tdep.c (nios2_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_meminfo): Likewise. * objc-lang.c (start_msglist): Likewise. (selectors_info): Likewise. (classes_info): Likewise. (find_methods): Likewise. * objfiles.c (allocate_objfile): Likewise. (update_section_map): Likewise. * osabi.c (gdbarch_register_osabi): Likewise. (gdbarch_register_osabi_sniffer): Likewise. * parse.c (start_arglist): Likewise. * ppc-linux-nat.c (hwdebug_find_thread_points_by_tid): Likewise. (hwdebug_insert_point): Likewise. * printcmd.c (display_command): Likewise. (ui_printf): Likewise. * procfs.c (create_procinfo): Likewise. (load_syscalls): Likewise. (proc_get_LDT_entry): Likewise. (proc_update_threads): Likewise. * prologue-value.c (make_pv_area): Likewise. (pv_area_store): Likewise. * psymtab.c (extend_psymbol_list): Likewise. (init_psymbol_list): Likewise. (allocate_psymtab): Likewise. * python/py-inferior.c (add_thread_object): Likewise. * python/py-param.c (compute_enum_values): Likewise. * python/py-value.c (valpy_call): Likewise. * python/py-varobj.c (py_varobj_iter_next): Likewise. * python/python.c (ensure_python_env): Likewise. * record-btrace.c (record_btrace_start_replaying): Likewise. * record-full.c (record_full_reg_alloc): Likewise. (record_full_mem_alloc): Likewise. (record_full_end_alloc): Likewise. (record_full_core_xfer_partial): Likewise. * regcache.c (get_thread_arch_aspace_regcache): Likewise. * remote-fileio.c (remote_fileio_init_fd_map): Likewise. * remote-notif.c (remote_notif_state_allocate): Likewise. * remote.c (demand_private_info): Likewise. (remote_notif_stop_alloc_reply): Likewise. (remote_enable_btrace): Likewise. * reverse.c (save_bookmark_command): Likewise. * rl78-tdep.c (rl78_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * rx-tdep.c (rx_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * s390-linux-nat.c (s390_insert_watchpoint): Likewise. * ser-go32.c (dos_get_tty_state): Likewise. (dos_copy_tty_state): Likewise. * ser-mingw.c (ser_windows_open): Likewise. (ser_console_wait_handle): Likewise. (ser_console_get_tty_state): Likewise. (make_pipe_state): Likewise. (net_windows_open): Likewise. * ser-unix.c (hardwire_get_tty_state): Likewise. (hardwire_copy_tty_state): Likewise. * solib-aix.c (solib_aix_new_lm_info): Likewise. * solib-dsbt.c (dsbt_current_sos): Likewise. (dsbt_relocate_main_executable): Likewise. * solib-frv.c (frv_current_sos): Likewise. (frv_relocate_main_executable): Likewise. * solib-spu.c (spu_bfd_fopen): Likewise. * solib-svr4.c (lm_info_read): Likewise. (svr4_copy_library_list): Likewise. (svr4_default_sos): Likewise. * source.c (find_source_lines): Likewise. (line_info): Likewise. (add_substitute_path_rule): Likewise. * spu-linux-nat.c (spu_bfd_open): Likewise. * spu-tdep.c (info_spu_dma_cmdlist): Likewise. * stabsread.c (dbx_lookup_type): Likewise. (read_type): Likewise. (read_member_functions): Likewise. (read_struct_fields): Likewise. (read_baseclasses): Likewise. (read_args): Likewise. (_initialize_stabsread): Likewise. * stack.c (func_command): Likewise. * stap-probe.c (handle_stap_probe): Likewise. * symfile.c (addrs_section_sort): Likewise. (addr_info_make_relative): Likewise. (load_section_callback): Likewise. (add_symbol_file_command): Likewise. (init_filename_language_table): Likewise. * symtab.c (create_filename_seen_cache): Likewise. (sort_search_symbols_remove_dups): Likewise. (search_symbols): Likewise. * target.c (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Likewise. * thread.c (new_thread): Likewise. (enable_thread_stack_temporaries): Likewise. (make_cleanup_restore_current_thread): Likewise. (thread_apply_all_command): Likewise. * tic6x-tdep.c (tic6x_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * top.c (gdb_readline_wrapper): Likewise. * tracefile-tfile.c (tfile_trace_file_writer_new): Likewise. * tracepoint.c (trace_find_line_command): Likewise. (all_tracepoint_actions_and_cleanup): Likewise. (make_cleanup_restore_current_traceframe): Likewise. (get_uploaded_tp): Likewise. (get_uploaded_tsv): Likewise. * tui/tui-data.c (tui_alloc_generic_win_info): Likewise. (tui_alloc_win_info): Likewise. (tui_alloc_content): Likewise. (tui_add_content_elements): Likewise. * tui/tui-disasm.c (tui_find_disassembly_address): Likewise. (tui_set_disassem_content): Likewise. * ui-file.c (ui_file_new): Likewise. (stdio_file_new): Likewise. (tee_file_new): Likewise. * utils.c (make_cleanup_restore_integer): Likewise. (add_internal_problem_command): Likewise. * v850-tdep.c (v850_gdbarch_init): Likewise. * valops.c (find_oload_champ): Likewise. * value.c (allocate_value_lazy): Likewise. (record_latest_value): Likewise. (create_internalvar): Likewise. * varobj.c (install_variable): Likewise. (new_variable): Likewise. (new_root_variable): Likewise. (cppush): Likewise. (_initialize_varobj): Likewise. * windows-nat.c (windows_make_so): Likewise. * x86-nat.c (x86_add_process): Likewise. * xcoffread.c (arrange_linetable): Likewise. (allocate_include_entry): Likewise. (process_linenos): Likewise. (SYMBOL_DUP): Likewise. (xcoff_start_psymtab): Likewise. (xcoff_end_psymtab): Likewise. * xml-support.c (gdb_xml_parse_attr_ulongest): Likewise. * xtensa-tdep.c (xtensa_register_type): Likewise. * gdbarch.c: Regenerate. * gdbarch.h: Regenerate. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * ax.c (gdb_parse_agent_expr): Likewise. (compile_bytecodes): Likewise. * dll.c (loaded_dll): Likewise. * event-loop.c (append_callback_event): Likewise. (create_file_handler): Likewise. (create_file_event): Likewise. * hostio.c (handle_open): Likewise. * inferiors.c (add_thread): Likewise. (add_process): Likewise. * linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_linux_new_process): Likewise. * linux-arm-low.c (arm_new_process): Likewise. (arm_new_thread): Likewise. * linux-low.c (add_to_pid_list): Likewise. (linux_add_process): Likewise. (handle_extended_wait): Likewise. (add_lwp): Likewise. (enqueue_one_deferred_signal): Likewise. (enqueue_pending_signal): Likewise. (linux_resume_one_lwp_throw): Likewise. (linux_resume_one_thread): Likewise. (linux_read_memory): Likewise. (linux_write_memory): Likewise. * linux-mips-low.c (mips_linux_new_process): Likewise. (mips_linux_new_thread): Likewise. (mips_add_watchpoint): Likewise. * linux-x86-low.c (initialize_low_arch): Likewise. * lynx-low.c (lynx_add_process): Likewise. * mem-break.c (set_raw_breakpoint_at): Likewise. (set_breakpoint): Likewise. (add_condition_to_breakpoint): Likewise. (add_commands_to_breakpoint): Likewise. (clone_agent_expr): Likewise. (clone_one_breakpoint): Likewise. * regcache.c (new_register_cache): Likewise. * remote-utils.c (look_up_one_symbol): Likewise. * server.c (queue_stop_reply): Likewise. (start_inferior): Likewise. (queue_stop_reply_callback): Likewise. (handle_target_event): Likewise. * spu-low.c (fetch_ppc_memory): Likewise. (store_ppc_memory): Likewise. * target.c (set_target_ops): Likewise. * thread-db.c (thread_db_load_search): Likewise. (try_thread_db_load_1): Likewise. * tracepoint.c (add_tracepoint): Likewise. (add_tracepoint_action): Likewise. (create_trace_state_variable): Likewise. (cmd_qtdpsrc): Likewise. (cmd_qtro): Likewise. (add_while_stepping_state): Likewise. * win32-low.c (child_add_thread): Likewise. (get_image_name): Likewise.
2015-08-27 05:16:07 +08:00
set_cmd_list = XNEW (struct cmd_list_element *);
show_cmd_list = XNEW (struct cmd_list_element *);
*set_cmd_list = NULL;
*show_cmd_list = NULL;
/* The add_basic_prefix_cmd and add_show_prefix_cmd functions take
ownership of the string passed in, which is why we don't need to free
set_doc and show_doc in this function. */
const char *set_doc
= xstrprintf (_("Configure what GDB does when %s is detected."),
problem->name).release ();
const char *show_doc
= xstrprintf (_("Show what GDB does when %s is detected."),
problem->name).release ();
add_setshow_prefix_cmd (problem->name, class_maintenance,
set_doc, show_doc, set_cmd_list, show_cmd_list,
&maintenance_set_cmdlist, &maintenance_show_cmdlist);
if (problem->user_settable_should_quit)
{
std::string set_quit_doc
= string_printf (_("Set whether GDB should quit when an %s is "
"detected."), problem->name);
std::string show_quit_doc
= string_printf (_("Show whether GDB will quit when an %s is "
"detected."), problem->name);
add_setshow_enum_cmd ("quit", class_maintenance,
internal_problem_modes,
&problem->should_quit,
set_quit_doc.c_str (),
show_quit_doc.c_str (),
NULL, /* help_doc */
NULL, /* setfunc */
NULL, /* showfunc */
set_cmd_list,
show_cmd_list);
}
if (problem->user_settable_should_dump_core)
{
std::string set_core_doc
= string_printf (_("Set whether GDB should create a core file of "
"GDB when %s is detected."), problem->name);
std::string show_core_doc
= string_printf (_("Show whether GDB will create a core file of "
"GDB when %s is detected."), problem->name);
add_setshow_enum_cmd ("corefile", class_maintenance,
internal_problem_modes,
&problem->should_dump_core,
set_core_doc.c_str (),
show_core_doc.c_str (),
NULL, /* help_doc */
NULL, /* setfunc */
NULL, /* showfunc */
set_cmd_list,
show_cmd_list);
}
gdb: print backtrace for internal error/warning This commit builds on previous work to allow GDB to print a backtrace of itself when GDB encounters an internal-error or internal-warning. This fixes PR gdb/26377. There's not many places where we call internal_warning, and I guess in most cases the user would probably continue their debug session. And so, in order to avoid cluttering up the output, by default, printing of a backtrace is off for internal-warnings. In contrast, printing of a backtrace is on by default for internal-errors, as I figure that in most cases hitting an internal-error is going to be the end of the debug session. Whether a backtrace is printed or not can be controlled with the new settings: maintenance set internal-error backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-error backtrace maintenance set internal-warning backtrace on|off maintenance show internal-warning backtrace Here is an example of what an internal-error now looks like with the backtrace included: (gdb) maintenance internal-error blah ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. ----- Backtrace ----- 0x5c61ca gdb_internal_backtrace_1 ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:123 0x5c626d _Z22gdb_internal_backtracev ../../src.dev-3/gdb/bt-utils.c:165 0xe33237 internal_vproblem ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:393 0xe33539 _Z15internal_verrorPKciS0_P13__va_list_tag ../../src.dev-3/gdb/utils.c:470 0x1549652 _Z14internal_errorPKciS0_z ../../src.dev-3/gdbsupport/errors.cc:55 0x9c7982 maintenance_internal_error ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82 0x636f57 do_simple_func ../../src.dev-3/gdb/cli/cli-decode.c:97 .... snip, lots more backtrace lines .... --------------------- ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) y This is a bug, please report it. For instructions, see: <https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>. ../../src.dev-3/gdb/maint.c:82: internal-error: blah A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Create a core file of GDB? (y or n) n My hope is that this backtrace might make it slightly easier to diagnose GDB issues if all that is provided is the console output, I find that we frequently get reports of an assert being hit that is located in pretty generic code (frame.c, value.c, etc) and it is not always obvious how we might have arrived at the assert. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26377
2021-08-13 01:24:59 +08:00
if (problem->user_settable_should_print_backtrace)
{
std::string set_bt_doc
= string_printf (_("Set whether GDB should print a backtrace of "
"GDB when %s is detected."), problem->name);
std::string show_bt_doc
= string_printf (_("Show whether GDB will print a backtrace of "
"GDB when %s is detected."), problem->name);
add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("backtrace", class_maintenance,
&problem->should_print_backtrace,
set_bt_doc.c_str (),
show_bt_doc.c_str (),
NULL, /* help_doc */
gdb_internal_backtrace_set_cmd,
NULL, /* showfunc */
set_cmd_list,
show_cmd_list);
}
}
/* Same as perror_with_name except that it prints a warning instead
of throwing an error. */
void
perror_warning_with_name (const char *string)
{
std::string combined = perror_string (string);
warning (_("%s"), combined.c_str ());
}
gdb: remove print_sys_errmsg This started with me running into this comment in symfile.c: /* FIXME, should use print_sys_errmsg but it's not filtered. */ gdb_printf (_("`%ps' has disappeared; keeping its symbols.\n"), styled_string (file_name_style.style (), filename)); In this particular case I think I disagree with the comment; I think the output should be a warning rather than just a message printed to gdb_stdout, I think when the executable, or some other objfile that is currently being debugged, disappears from disk, this is likely an unexpected situation, and worth warning the user about. So, in theory, I could just call print_sys_errmsg and remove the comment, but that would mean loosing the filename styling in the output... so in the end I remove the comment and updated the code to call warning. But that got me looking at print_sys_errmsg and how it's used. Currently the function takes a string and an errno, and prints, to stderr, the string followed by the result of calling strerror on the errno. In some places the string passed to print_sys_errmsg is just a filename, and this is used when something goes wrong. In these cases, I think calling warning rather than gdb_printf to gdb_stderr, would be better, and in fact, in a couple of places we manually print a "warning" prefix, and then call print_sys_errmsg. And so, for these users I have added a new function warning_filename_and_errno, which takes a filename, which is printed with styling, and an errno, which is passed through strerror and the resulting string printed. This new function calls warning to print its output. I then updated some of the print_sys_errmsg users to use this new function. Some other users of print_sys_errmsg are also emitting what is clearly a warning, however, the string being passed in is more than just a filename, so the new warning_filename_and_errno function can't be used, it would style the whole string. For these users I have switched to calling warning directly, this allows me to style the warning message correctly. Finally, in inflow.c there is one last call to print_sys_errmsg, in this case I just inlined the definition of print_sys_errmsg. This is a really weird case, as after printing this message GDB just does a hard exit. This is pretty old code, dating back to the initial GDB import, I guess it should be updated to call error() maybe, but I'm reluctant to make this change as part of this commit, just in case there's some reason why we can't throw an error at this point. With that done there are now no users of print_sys_errmsg, and so the old function can be removed. While I was doing all of the above I added some additional filename styling in soure.c, this is in an else block where the if contained the print_sys_errmsg call, so these felt related. And finally, while I was updating the uses of print_sys_errmsg in procfs.c, I noticed that we used a static errmsg buffer to format some error strings. As the above changes got rid of one of the users of errmsg I also removed the other two users, and the static buffer. There were a couple of tests that depended on the existing output message format that needed updating. In one case we gained an extra 'warning: ' prefix, and in the other 'Warning: ' becomes 'warning: ', I think in both cases the new output is an improvement. Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-09-24 19:37:40 +08:00
/* See utils.h. */
void
gdb: remove print_sys_errmsg This started with me running into this comment in symfile.c: /* FIXME, should use print_sys_errmsg but it's not filtered. */ gdb_printf (_("`%ps' has disappeared; keeping its symbols.\n"), styled_string (file_name_style.style (), filename)); In this particular case I think I disagree with the comment; I think the output should be a warning rather than just a message printed to gdb_stdout, I think when the executable, or some other objfile that is currently being debugged, disappears from disk, this is likely an unexpected situation, and worth warning the user about. So, in theory, I could just call print_sys_errmsg and remove the comment, but that would mean loosing the filename styling in the output... so in the end I remove the comment and updated the code to call warning. But that got me looking at print_sys_errmsg and how it's used. Currently the function takes a string and an errno, and prints, to stderr, the string followed by the result of calling strerror on the errno. In some places the string passed to print_sys_errmsg is just a filename, and this is used when something goes wrong. In these cases, I think calling warning rather than gdb_printf to gdb_stderr, would be better, and in fact, in a couple of places we manually print a "warning" prefix, and then call print_sys_errmsg. And so, for these users I have added a new function warning_filename_and_errno, which takes a filename, which is printed with styling, and an errno, which is passed through strerror and the resulting string printed. This new function calls warning to print its output. I then updated some of the print_sys_errmsg users to use this new function. Some other users of print_sys_errmsg are also emitting what is clearly a warning, however, the string being passed in is more than just a filename, so the new warning_filename_and_errno function can't be used, it would style the whole string. For these users I have switched to calling warning directly, this allows me to style the warning message correctly. Finally, in inflow.c there is one last call to print_sys_errmsg, in this case I just inlined the definition of print_sys_errmsg. This is a really weird case, as after printing this message GDB just does a hard exit. This is pretty old code, dating back to the initial GDB import, I guess it should be updated to call error() maybe, but I'm reluctant to make this change as part of this commit, just in case there's some reason why we can't throw an error at this point. With that done there are now no users of print_sys_errmsg, and so the old function can be removed. While I was doing all of the above I added some additional filename styling in soure.c, this is in an else block where the if contained the print_sys_errmsg call, so these felt related. And finally, while I was updating the uses of print_sys_errmsg in procfs.c, I noticed that we used a static errmsg buffer to format some error strings. As the above changes got rid of one of the users of errmsg I also removed the other two users, and the static buffer. There were a couple of tests that depended on the existing output message format that needed updating. In one case we gained an extra 'warning: ' prefix, and in the other 'Warning: ' becomes 'warning: ', I think in both cases the new output is an improvement. Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-09-24 19:37:40 +08:00
warning_filename_and_errno (const char *filename, int saved_errno)
{
gdb: remove print_sys_errmsg This started with me running into this comment in symfile.c: /* FIXME, should use print_sys_errmsg but it's not filtered. */ gdb_printf (_("`%ps' has disappeared; keeping its symbols.\n"), styled_string (file_name_style.style (), filename)); In this particular case I think I disagree with the comment; I think the output should be a warning rather than just a message printed to gdb_stdout, I think when the executable, or some other objfile that is currently being debugged, disappears from disk, this is likely an unexpected situation, and worth warning the user about. So, in theory, I could just call print_sys_errmsg and remove the comment, but that would mean loosing the filename styling in the output... so in the end I remove the comment and updated the code to call warning. But that got me looking at print_sys_errmsg and how it's used. Currently the function takes a string and an errno, and prints, to stderr, the string followed by the result of calling strerror on the errno. In some places the string passed to print_sys_errmsg is just a filename, and this is used when something goes wrong. In these cases, I think calling warning rather than gdb_printf to gdb_stderr, would be better, and in fact, in a couple of places we manually print a "warning" prefix, and then call print_sys_errmsg. And so, for these users I have added a new function warning_filename_and_errno, which takes a filename, which is printed with styling, and an errno, which is passed through strerror and the resulting string printed. This new function calls warning to print its output. I then updated some of the print_sys_errmsg users to use this new function. Some other users of print_sys_errmsg are also emitting what is clearly a warning, however, the string being passed in is more than just a filename, so the new warning_filename_and_errno function can't be used, it would style the whole string. For these users I have switched to calling warning directly, this allows me to style the warning message correctly. Finally, in inflow.c there is one last call to print_sys_errmsg, in this case I just inlined the definition of print_sys_errmsg. This is a really weird case, as after printing this message GDB just does a hard exit. This is pretty old code, dating back to the initial GDB import, I guess it should be updated to call error() maybe, but I'm reluctant to make this change as part of this commit, just in case there's some reason why we can't throw an error at this point. With that done there are now no users of print_sys_errmsg, and so the old function can be removed. While I was doing all of the above I added some additional filename styling in soure.c, this is in an else block where the if contained the print_sys_errmsg call, so these felt related. And finally, while I was updating the uses of print_sys_errmsg in procfs.c, I noticed that we used a static errmsg buffer to format some error strings. As the above changes got rid of one of the users of errmsg I also removed the other two users, and the static buffer. There were a couple of tests that depended on the existing output message format that needed updating. In one case we gained an extra 'warning: ' prefix, and in the other 'Warning: ' becomes 'warning: ', I think in both cases the new output is an improvement. Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-09-24 19:37:40 +08:00
warning (_("%ps: %s"), styled_string (file_name_style.style (), filename),
safe_strerror (saved_errno));
}
/* Control C eventually causes this to be called, at a convenient time. */
void
2000-07-30 09:48:28 +08:00
quit (void)
{
if (sync_quit_force_run)
{
sync_quit_force_run = false;
Handle gdb SIGTERM by throwing / catching gdb_exception_force_quit When a GDB process receives the SIGTERM signal, handle_sigterm() in event-top.c is called. The global variable 'sync_quit_force_run' is set by this signal handler. It does some other things too, but the setting of this global is the important bit for the SIGTERM part of this discussion. GDB will periodically check to see whether a Ctrl-C or SIGTERM has been received. This is performed via use of the QUIT macro in GDB's code. QUIT is defined to invoke maybe_quit(), which will be periodically called during any lengthy operation. This is supposed to ensure that the user won't have to wait too long for a Ctrl-C or SIGTERM to be acted upon. When a Ctrl-C / SIGINT is received, quit_handler() will decide whether to pass the SIGINT onto the inferior or to call quit() which causes gdb_exception_quit to be thrown. This exception (usually) propagates to the top level. Control is then returned to the top level event loop. At the moment, SIGTERM is handled very differently. Instead of throwing an exception, quit_force() is called. This does eventually cause GDB to exit(), but prior to that happening, the inferiors are killed or detached and other target related cleanup occurs. As shown in this discussion between Pedro Alves and myself... https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-July/180802.html https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-July/180902.html https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-July/180903.html ...we found that it is possible for inferior_ptid and current_thread_ to get out of sync. When that happens, the "current_thread_ != nullptr" assertion in inferior_thread() can fail resulting in a GDB internal error. Pedro recommended that we "let the normal quit exception propagate all the way to the top level, and then have the top level call quit_force if sync_quit_force_run is set." However, after the v2 series for this patch set, we tweaked that idea by introducing a new exception for handling SIGTERM. This commit implements the obvious part of Pedro's suggestion: Instead of calling quit_force from quit(), throw_forced_quit() is now called instead. This causes the new exception 'gdb_exception_forced_quit' to be thrown. At the top level, I changed catch_command_errors() and captured_main() to catch gdb_exception_forced_quit and then call quit_force() from the catch block. I also changed start_event_loop() to also catch gdb_exception_forced_quit; while we could also call quit_force() from that catch block, it's sufficient to simply rethrow the exception since it'll be caught by the newly added code in captured_main(). Making these changes fixed the failure / regression that I was seeing for gdb.base/gdb-sigterm.exp when run on a machine with glibc-2.34. However, there are many other paths back to the top level which this test case does not test. I did an audit of all of the try / catch code in GDB in which calls in the try-block might (eventually) call QUIT. I found many cases where gdb_exception_quit and the new gdb_exception_forced_quit will be swallowed. (When using GDB, have you ever hit Ctrl-C and not have it do anything; if so, it could be due to a swallowed gdb_exception_quit in one of the cases I've identified.) The rest of the patches in this series deal with this concern. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26761 Tested-by: Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de> Approved-by: Pedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>
2023-02-28 07:11:37 +08:00
throw_forced_quit ("SIGTERM");
}
1999-08-17 03:57:19 +08:00
#ifdef __MSDOS__
/* No steenking SIGINT will ever be coming our way when the
program is resumed. Don't lie. */
Rationalize "fatal" error handling outside of gdbserver GDB and gdbserver have functions named "fatal" that are used in completely different ways. In gdbserver "fatal" is used to handle critical errors: it differs from "error" in that "fatal" causes gdbserver to exit whereas "error" does not. In GDB "fatal" is used to abort the current operation and return to the command level. This is implemented by throwing a non-error "RETURN_QUIT" exception. This commit removes GDB's "fatal" and "vfatal" functions entirely. The exception-throwing function "throw_vfatal" is renamed as "throw_vquit", and a new convenience function "throw_quit" is added. The small number of calls to "fatal" are replaced with calls to "throw_quit", making what is happening more obvious. This commit also modifies GDB's "throw_error" to call "throw_verror" rather than calling "throw_it" directly. This change means the assignment of RETURN_ERROR as the exception type now happens in precisely one place in GDB rather than two. gdb/ 2014-07-24 Gary Benson <gbenson@redhat.com> * exceptions.h (throw_vfatal): Renamed to... (throw_vquit): New declaration. (throw_quit): Likewise. * exceptions.c (throw_vfatal): Renamed to... (throw_vquit): New function. (throw_quit): Likewise. (throw_error): Call throw_verror rather than throw_it. * utils.h (vfatal): Removed. (fatal): Likewise. * utils.c (vfatal): Removed. (fatal): Likewise. (internal_verror): Replaced call to fatal with call to throw_quit. (quit): Replaced calls to fatal with calls to throw_quit.
2014-07-23 21:51:26 +08:00
throw_quit ("Quit");
1999-08-17 03:57:19 +08:00
#else
if (job_control
2003-02-01 06:45:22 +08:00
/* If there is no terminal switching for this target, then we can't
gdb, gdbserver, gdbsupport: fix leading space vs tabs issues Many spots incorrectly use only spaces for indentation (for example, there are a lot of spots in ada-lang.c). I've always found it awkward when I needed to edit one of these spots: do I keep the original wrong indentation, or do I fix it? What if the lines around it are also wrong, do I fix them too? I probably don't want to fix them in the same patch, to avoid adding noise to my patch. So I propose to fix as much as possible once and for all (hopefully). One typical counter argument for this is that it makes code archeology more difficult, because git-blame will show this commit as the last change for these lines. My counter counter argument is: when git-blaming, you often need to do "blame the file at the parent commit" anyway, to go past some other refactor that touched the line you are interested in, but is not the change you are looking for. So you already need a somewhat efficient way to do this. Using some interactive tool, rather than plain git-blame, makes this trivial. For example, I use "tig blame <file>", where going back past the commit that changed the currently selected line is one keystroke. It looks like Magit in Emacs does it too (though I've never used it). Web viewers of Github and Gitlab do it too. My point is that it won't really make archeology more difficult. The other typical counter argument is that it will cause conflicts with existing patches. That's true... but it's a one time cost, and those are not conflicts that are difficult to resolve. I have also tried "git rebase --ignore-whitespace", it seems to work well. Although that will re-introduce the faulty indentation, so one needs to take care of fixing the indentation in the patch after that (which is easy). gdb/ChangeLog: * aarch64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.c: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.h: Fix indentation. * ada-tasks.c: Fix indentation. * ada-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.h: Fix indentation. * agent.c: Fix indentation. * aix-thread.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-mdebug-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * annotate.c: Fix indentation. * arc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arch-utils.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-pikeos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * arm-wince-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * auto-load.c: Fix indentation. * auxv.c: Fix indentation. * avr-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ax-gdb.c: Fix indentation. * ax-general.c: Fix indentation. * bfin-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * block.c: Fix indentation. * block.h: Fix indentation. * blockframe.c: Fix indentation. * bpf-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-sig.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-throw.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.h: Fix indentation. * bsd-uthread.c: Fix indentation. * btrace.c: Fix indentation. * build-id.c: Fix indentation. * buildsym-legacy.h: Fix indentation. * buildsym.c: Fix indentation. * c-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * charset.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.h: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-script.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-setshow.c: Fix indentation. * coff-pe-read.c: Fix indentation. * coffread.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-cplus-types.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-load.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-run.c: Fix indentation. * completer.c: Fix indentation. * corefile.c: Fix indentation. * corelow.c: Fix indentation. * cp-abi.h: Fix indentation. * cp-namespace.c: Fix indentation. * cp-support.c: Fix indentation. * cp-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * cris-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * cris-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat-info.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.h: Fix indentation. * dbxread.c: Fix indentation. * dcache.c: Fix indentation. * disasm.c: Fix indentation. * dtrace-probe.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/abbrev.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/attribute.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/expr.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/frame.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-cache.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-write.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/line-header.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/loc.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/macro.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.h: Fix indentation. * elfread.c: Fix indentation. * eval.c: Fix indentation. * event-top.c: Fix indentation. * exec.c: Fix indentation. * exec.h: Fix indentation. * expprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-lang.c: Fix indentation. * f-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * findvar.c: Fix indentation. * fork-child.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.h: Fix indentation. * frame.c: Fix indentation. * frv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ft32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gcore.c: Fix indentation. * gdb_bfd.c: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.sh: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.c: Re-generate * gdbarch.h: Re-generate. * gdbcore.h: Fix indentation. * gdbthread.h: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.c: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.h: Fix indentation. * glibc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.h: Fix indentation. * gnu-v2-abi.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-v3-abi.c: Fix indentation. * go32-nat.c: Fix indentation. * guile/guile-internal.h: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-cmd.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-frame.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-iterator.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-math.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-ports.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-pretty-print.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-value.c: Fix indentation. * h8300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-dicos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-sol2-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-vms-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * infcall.c: Fix indentation. * infcmd.c: Fix indentation. * inferior.c: Fix indentation. * infrun.c: Fix indentation. * iq2000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * language.c: Fix indentation. * linespec.c: Fix indentation. * linux-fork.c: Fix indentation. * linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * linux-thread-db.c: Fix indentation. * lm32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m2-lang.c: Fix indentation. * m2-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * m2-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * m32c-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68hc11-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * machoread.c: Fix indentation. * macrocmd.c: Fix indentation. * macroexp.c: Fix indentation. * macroscope.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.h: Fix indentation. * main.c: Fix indentation. * mdebugread.c: Fix indentation. * mep-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-catch.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-disas.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-env.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-stack.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-var.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-main.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-parse.c: Fix indentation. * microblaze-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * minidebug.c: Fix indentation. * minsyms.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * moxie-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * msp430-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * namespace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/fork-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * nat/gdb_ptrace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-namespaces.c: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-osdata.c: Fix indentation. * nat/netbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nat/x86-dregs.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nto-procfs.c: Fix indentation. * nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.h: Fix indentation. * opencl-lang.c: Fix indentation. * or1k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.h: Fix indentation. * osdata.c: Fix indentation. * p-lang.c: Fix indentation. * p-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * p-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * parse.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-sysv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * printcmd.c: Fix indentation. * proc-api.c: Fix indentation. * producer.c: Fix indentation. * producer.h: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.c: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.h: Fix indentation. * psymtab.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-arch.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-bpevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-finishbreakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-frame.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-framefilter.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-infthread.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-objfile.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-prettyprint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-registers.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-signalevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-threadevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-tui.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-value.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-xmethods.c: Fix indentation. * python/python-internal.h: Fix indentation. * python/python.c: Fix indentation. * ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * record-btrace.c: Fix indentation. * record-full.c: Fix indentation. * record.c: Fix indentation. * reggroups.c: Fix indentation. * regset.h: Fix indentation. * remote-fileio.c: Fix indentation. * remote.c: Fix indentation. * reverse.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rl78-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-aix-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-nat.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rust-lang.c: Fix indentation. * rx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s12z-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s390-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * score-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ser-base.c: Fix indentation. * ser-mingw.c: Fix indentation. * ser-uds.c: Fix indentation. * ser-unix.c: Fix indentation. * serial.c: Fix indentation. * sh-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * skip.c: Fix indentation. * sol-thread.c: Fix indentation. * solib-aix.c: Fix indentation. * solib-darwin.c: Fix indentation. * solib-frv.c: Fix indentation. * solib-svr4.c: Fix indentation. * solib.c: Fix indentation. * source.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * stabsread.c: Fix indentation. * stack.c: Fix indentation. * stap-probe.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/ia64vms-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m32r-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m68k-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sh-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sparc-stub.c: Fix indentation. * symfile-mem.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.h: Fix indentation. * symmisc.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.h: Fix indentation. * target-float.c: Fix indentation. * target.c: Fix indentation. * target.h: Fix indentation. * tic6x-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * top.c: Fix indentation. * tracefile-tfile.c: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-disasm.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-io.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-regs.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-stack.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-win.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-winsource.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui.c: Fix indentation. * typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ui-out.h: Fix indentation. * unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * unittests/memory-map-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * utils.c: Fix indentation. * v850-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * valarith.c: Fix indentation. * valops.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.h: Fix indentation. * value.c: Fix indentation. * value.h: Fix indentation. * varobj.c: Fix indentation. * vax-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * windows-nat.c: Fix indentation. * windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xcoffread.c: Fix indentation. * xml-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * xml-tdesc.c: Fix indentation. * xstormy16-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-config.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. gdbserver/ChangeLog: * ax.cc: Fix indentation. * dll.cc: Fix indentation. * inferiors.h: Fix indentation. * linux-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-nios2-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-ipa.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-x86-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-xtensa-low.cc: Fix indentation. * regcache.cc: Fix indentation. * server.cc: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.cc: Fix indentation. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: * common-exceptions.h: Fix indentation. * event-loop.cc: Fix indentation. * fileio.cc: Fix indentation. * filestuff.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb-dlfcn.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb_string_view.h: Fix indentation. * job-control.cc: Fix indentation. * signals.cc: Fix indentation. Change-Id: I4bad7ae6be0fbe14168b8ebafb98ffe14964a695
2020-11-02 23:26:14 +08:00
possibly get screwed by the lack of job control. */
|| !target_supports_terminal_ours ())
Rationalize "fatal" error handling outside of gdbserver GDB and gdbserver have functions named "fatal" that are used in completely different ways. In gdbserver "fatal" is used to handle critical errors: it differs from "error" in that "fatal" causes gdbserver to exit whereas "error" does not. In GDB "fatal" is used to abort the current operation and return to the command level. This is implemented by throwing a non-error "RETURN_QUIT" exception. This commit removes GDB's "fatal" and "vfatal" functions entirely. The exception-throwing function "throw_vfatal" is renamed as "throw_vquit", and a new convenience function "throw_quit" is added. The small number of calls to "fatal" are replaced with calls to "throw_quit", making what is happening more obvious. This commit also modifies GDB's "throw_error" to call "throw_verror" rather than calling "throw_it" directly. This change means the assignment of RETURN_ERROR as the exception type now happens in precisely one place in GDB rather than two. gdb/ 2014-07-24 Gary Benson <gbenson@redhat.com> * exceptions.h (throw_vfatal): Renamed to... (throw_vquit): New declaration. (throw_quit): Likewise. * exceptions.c (throw_vfatal): Renamed to... (throw_vquit): New function. (throw_quit): Likewise. (throw_error): Call throw_verror rather than throw_it. * utils.h (vfatal): Removed. (fatal): Likewise. * utils.c (vfatal): Removed. (fatal): Likewise. (internal_verror): Replaced call to fatal with call to throw_quit. (quit): Replaced calls to fatal with calls to throw_quit.
2014-07-23 21:51:26 +08:00
throw_quit ("Quit");
else
Rationalize "fatal" error handling outside of gdbserver GDB and gdbserver have functions named "fatal" that are used in completely different ways. In gdbserver "fatal" is used to handle critical errors: it differs from "error" in that "fatal" causes gdbserver to exit whereas "error" does not. In GDB "fatal" is used to abort the current operation and return to the command level. This is implemented by throwing a non-error "RETURN_QUIT" exception. This commit removes GDB's "fatal" and "vfatal" functions entirely. The exception-throwing function "throw_vfatal" is renamed as "throw_vquit", and a new convenience function "throw_quit" is added. The small number of calls to "fatal" are replaced with calls to "throw_quit", making what is happening more obvious. This commit also modifies GDB's "throw_error" to call "throw_verror" rather than calling "throw_it" directly. This change means the assignment of RETURN_ERROR as the exception type now happens in precisely one place in GDB rather than two. gdb/ 2014-07-24 Gary Benson <gbenson@redhat.com> * exceptions.h (throw_vfatal): Renamed to... (throw_vquit): New declaration. (throw_quit): Likewise. * exceptions.c (throw_vfatal): Renamed to... (throw_vquit): New function. (throw_quit): Likewise. (throw_error): Call throw_verror rather than throw_it. * utils.h (vfatal): Removed. (fatal): Likewise. * utils.c (vfatal): Removed. (fatal): Likewise. (internal_verror): Replaced call to fatal with call to throw_quit. (quit): Replaced calls to fatal with calls to throw_quit.
2014-07-23 21:51:26 +08:00
throw_quit ("Quit (expect signal SIGINT when the program is resumed)");
1999-08-17 03:57:19 +08:00
#endif
}
remote: allow aborting long operations (e.g., file transfers) Currently, when remote debugging, if you type Ctrl-C just while the target stopped for an internal event, and GDB is busy doing something that takes a while (e.g., fetching chunks of a shared library off of the target, with vFile, to process ELF headers and debug info), the Ctrl-C is lost. The patch hooks up the QUIT macro to a new target method that lets the target react to the double-Ctrl-C before the event loop is reached, which allows reacting to a double-Ctrl-C even when GDB is busy doing some long operation and not waiting for a stop reply. That end result is: (gdb) c Continuing. ^C ^C Interrupted while waiting for the program. Give up waiting? (y or n) y Quit (gdb) info threads Id Target Id Frame * 1 Thread 11673 0x00007ffff7deb240 in _dl_debug_state () from target:/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 (gdb) If, however, GDB is waiting for a stop reply (because the target has been resumed, with e.g., vCont;c), but the target isn't responding, we now get: (gdb) c Continuing. ^C ^C The target is not responding to interrupt requests. Stop debugging it? (y or n) y Disconnected from target. (gdb) info threads No threads. This offers to disconnect, because when we're waiting for a stop reply, there's nothing else we can send the target other than an interrupt request. And if that doesn't work, there's nothing else we can do. The Ctrl-C is presently lost because until we get to a user-visible stop, the SIGINT handler that is installed is the one that forwards the interrupt to the remote side, with the \003 "packet" [1]. But, gdbserver ignores an interrupt request if the program is stopped. Still, even if it didn't, the server can only report back a stop-because-of-SIGINT when the program is next resumed. And it may take a while to actually re-resume the target. [1] - In the old sync days, the remote target would react to a double-Ctrl-C by asking users whether they wanted to give up waiting and disconnect. The code is still there, but it it isn't reacheable on most hosts, which support serial connections in async mode (probably only DJGPP doesn't). Even then, in sync mode, remote.c's SIGINT handler is only installed while the target is resumed, and is removed as soon as the target sends back a stop reply. That means that a Ctrl-C just while GDB is processing an internal event can end up with an odd "Quit" at the prompt instead of "Program stopped by SIGINT". In contrast, in async mode, remote.c's SIGINT handler is set up as long as target_terminal_inferior or target_terminal_ours_for_output are in effect (IOW, until we get a user-visible stop and call target_terminal_ours), so the user shouldn't get back a spurious Quit. However, it's still desirable to be able to interrupt a long-running GDB operation, if GDB takes a while to re-resume the target or get back to the event loop. Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20. gdb/ChangeLog: 2015-08-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * defs.h (maybe_quit): Declare. (QUIT): Now calls maybe_quit. * event-loop.c (clear_async_signal_handler) (async_signal_handler_is_marked): New functions. * event-loop.h (async_signal_handler_is_marked) (clear_async_signal_handler): New declarations. * remote.c (remote_check_pending_interrupt): New function. (interrupt_query): Use make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal. No longer check whether the target is async. If waiting for a stop reply, and a Ctrl-C as been sent to the target, offer to disconnect, and throw TARGET_CLOSE_ERROR instead of a quit. Otherwise do not disconnect and throw a quit. (_initialize_remote): Install remote_check_pending_interrupt as to_check_pending_interrupt. * target.c (target_check_pending_interrupt): New function. * target.h (struct target_ops) <to_check_pending_interrupt>: New field. (target_check_pending_interrupt): New declaration. * utils.c (maybe_quit): New function. * target-delegates.c: Regenerate.
2015-08-25 23:12:11 +08:00
/* See defs.h. */
void
maybe_quit (void)
{
if (!is_main_thread ())
return;
target remote: Don't rely on immediate_quit (introduce quit handlers) remote.c is the last user of immediate_quit. It's relied on to immediately break the initial remote connection sync up, if the user does Ctrl-C, assuming that was because the target isn't responding. At that stage, since the connection isn't synced yet, disconnecting is the only safe thing to do. This commit reworks that, to not rely on throwing from the SIGINT signal handler. So, this commit: - Introduces the concept of a "quit handler". This is used to override what does the QUIT macro do when the quit flag is set. - Makes the "struct serial" reachar / write code call QUIT in the partial read/write loops, so the current quit handler is invoked whenever a serial->read_prim / serial->write_prim returns EINTR. - Makes the "struct serial" reachar / write code call interruptible_select instead of gdb_select, so that QUITs are detected in a race-free manner. - Stops remote.c from setting immediate_quit during the initial connection. - Instead, we install a custom quit handler whenever we're calling into the serial code. This custom quit handler knows to immediately throw a quit when we're in the initial connection setup, and otherwise defer handling the quit/Ctrl-C request to later, when we're safely out of a packet command/response sequence. This also is what is now responsible for handling "double Ctrl-C because target connection is stuck/wedged." - remote.c no longer installs a specialized SIGINT handlers, and instead re-uses the quit flag. Since we want to rely on the QUIT macro, the SIGINT handler must also set the quit. And the easiest is just to not install custom SIGINT handler in remote.c. Let the standard SIGINT handler do its job of setting the quit flag. Centralizing SIGINT handlers seems like a good thing to me, anyway. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-04-12 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * defs.h (quit_handler_ftype, quit_handler) (make_cleanup_override_quit_handler, default_quit_handler): New. (QUIT): Adjust comments. * event-top.c (default_quit_handler): New function. (quit_handler): New global. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data): New. (restore_quit_handler, restore_quit_handler_dtor) (make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): New. (async_request_quit): Call QUIT. * remote.c (struct remote_state) <got_ctrlc_during_io>: New field. (async_sigint_remote_twice_token, async_sigint_remote_token): Delete. (remote_close): Update comments. (remote_start_remote): Don't set immediate_quit. Set starting_up earlier. (remote_serial_quit_handler, remote_unpush_and_throw): New functions. (remote_open_1): Clear got_ctrlc_during_io. Set remote_async_terminal_ours_p unconditionally. (async_initialize_sigint_signal_handler) (async_handle_remote_sigint, async_handle_remote_sigint_twice) (remote_check_pending_interrupt, async_remote_interrupt) (async_remote_interrupt_twice) (async_cleanup_sigint_signal_handler, ofunc) (sync_remote_interrupt, sync_remote_interrupt_twice): Delete. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_terminal_ours): Remove async checks. (remote_wait_as): Don't install a SIGINT handler in sync mode. (readchar, remote_serial_write): Override the quit handler with remote_serial_quit_handler. (getpkt_or_notif_sane_1): Don't call QUIT. (initialize_remote_ops): Don't install remote_check_pending_interrupt. (_initialize_remote): Don't create async_sigint_remote_token and async_sigint_remote_twice_token. * ser-base.c (ser_base_wait_for): Call QUIT and use interruptible_select. (ser_base_write): Call QUIT. * ser-go32.c (dos_readchar, dos_write): Call QUIT. * ser-unix.c (wait_for): Don't use VTIME. Always take the gdb_select path, but call QUIT and interruptible_select. * utils.c (maybe_quit): Call the current quit handler. Don't call target_check_pending_interrupt. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Override the quit handler with the default quit handler.
2016-04-12 23:49:32 +08:00
if (sync_quit_force_run)
remote: allow aborting long operations (e.g., file transfers) Currently, when remote debugging, if you type Ctrl-C just while the target stopped for an internal event, and GDB is busy doing something that takes a while (e.g., fetching chunks of a shared library off of the target, with vFile, to process ELF headers and debug info), the Ctrl-C is lost. The patch hooks up the QUIT macro to a new target method that lets the target react to the double-Ctrl-C before the event loop is reached, which allows reacting to a double-Ctrl-C even when GDB is busy doing some long operation and not waiting for a stop reply. That end result is: (gdb) c Continuing. ^C ^C Interrupted while waiting for the program. Give up waiting? (y or n) y Quit (gdb) info threads Id Target Id Frame * 1 Thread 11673 0x00007ffff7deb240 in _dl_debug_state () from target:/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 (gdb) If, however, GDB is waiting for a stop reply (because the target has been resumed, with e.g., vCont;c), but the target isn't responding, we now get: (gdb) c Continuing. ^C ^C The target is not responding to interrupt requests. Stop debugging it? (y or n) y Disconnected from target. (gdb) info threads No threads. This offers to disconnect, because when we're waiting for a stop reply, there's nothing else we can send the target other than an interrupt request. And if that doesn't work, there's nothing else we can do. The Ctrl-C is presently lost because until we get to a user-visible stop, the SIGINT handler that is installed is the one that forwards the interrupt to the remote side, with the \003 "packet" [1]. But, gdbserver ignores an interrupt request if the program is stopped. Still, even if it didn't, the server can only report back a stop-because-of-SIGINT when the program is next resumed. And it may take a while to actually re-resume the target. [1] - In the old sync days, the remote target would react to a double-Ctrl-C by asking users whether they wanted to give up waiting and disconnect. The code is still there, but it it isn't reacheable on most hosts, which support serial connections in async mode (probably only DJGPP doesn't). Even then, in sync mode, remote.c's SIGINT handler is only installed while the target is resumed, and is removed as soon as the target sends back a stop reply. That means that a Ctrl-C just while GDB is processing an internal event can end up with an odd "Quit" at the prompt instead of "Program stopped by SIGINT". In contrast, in async mode, remote.c's SIGINT handler is set up as long as target_terminal_inferior or target_terminal_ours_for_output are in effect (IOW, until we get a user-visible stop and call target_terminal_ours), so the user shouldn't get back a spurious Quit. However, it's still desirable to be able to interrupt a long-running GDB operation, if GDB takes a while to re-resume the target or get back to the event loop. Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20. gdb/ChangeLog: 2015-08-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * defs.h (maybe_quit): Declare. (QUIT): Now calls maybe_quit. * event-loop.c (clear_async_signal_handler) (async_signal_handler_is_marked): New functions. * event-loop.h (async_signal_handler_is_marked) (clear_async_signal_handler): New declarations. * remote.c (remote_check_pending_interrupt): New function. (interrupt_query): Use make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal. No longer check whether the target is async. If waiting for a stop reply, and a Ctrl-C as been sent to the target, offer to disconnect, and throw TARGET_CLOSE_ERROR instead of a quit. Otherwise do not disconnect and throw a quit. (_initialize_remote): Install remote_check_pending_interrupt as to_check_pending_interrupt. * target.c (target_check_pending_interrupt): New function. * target.h (struct target_ops) <to_check_pending_interrupt>: New field. (target_check_pending_interrupt): New declaration. * utils.c (maybe_quit): New function. * target-delegates.c: Regenerate.
2015-08-25 23:12:11 +08:00
quit ();
target remote: Don't rely on immediate_quit (introduce quit handlers) remote.c is the last user of immediate_quit. It's relied on to immediately break the initial remote connection sync up, if the user does Ctrl-C, assuming that was because the target isn't responding. At that stage, since the connection isn't synced yet, disconnecting is the only safe thing to do. This commit reworks that, to not rely on throwing from the SIGINT signal handler. So, this commit: - Introduces the concept of a "quit handler". This is used to override what does the QUIT macro do when the quit flag is set. - Makes the "struct serial" reachar / write code call QUIT in the partial read/write loops, so the current quit handler is invoked whenever a serial->read_prim / serial->write_prim returns EINTR. - Makes the "struct serial" reachar / write code call interruptible_select instead of gdb_select, so that QUITs are detected in a race-free manner. - Stops remote.c from setting immediate_quit during the initial connection. - Instead, we install a custom quit handler whenever we're calling into the serial code. This custom quit handler knows to immediately throw a quit when we're in the initial connection setup, and otherwise defer handling the quit/Ctrl-C request to later, when we're safely out of a packet command/response sequence. This also is what is now responsible for handling "double Ctrl-C because target connection is stuck/wedged." - remote.c no longer installs a specialized SIGINT handlers, and instead re-uses the quit flag. Since we want to rely on the QUIT macro, the SIGINT handler must also set the quit. And the easiest is just to not install custom SIGINT handler in remote.c. Let the standard SIGINT handler do its job of setting the quit flag. Centralizing SIGINT handlers seems like a good thing to me, anyway. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-04-12 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * defs.h (quit_handler_ftype, quit_handler) (make_cleanup_override_quit_handler, default_quit_handler): New. (QUIT): Adjust comments. * event-top.c (default_quit_handler): New function. (quit_handler): New global. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data): New. (restore_quit_handler, restore_quit_handler_dtor) (make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): New. (async_request_quit): Call QUIT. * remote.c (struct remote_state) <got_ctrlc_during_io>: New field. (async_sigint_remote_twice_token, async_sigint_remote_token): Delete. (remote_close): Update comments. (remote_start_remote): Don't set immediate_quit. Set starting_up earlier. (remote_serial_quit_handler, remote_unpush_and_throw): New functions. (remote_open_1): Clear got_ctrlc_during_io. Set remote_async_terminal_ours_p unconditionally. (async_initialize_sigint_signal_handler) (async_handle_remote_sigint, async_handle_remote_sigint_twice) (remote_check_pending_interrupt, async_remote_interrupt) (async_remote_interrupt_twice) (async_cleanup_sigint_signal_handler, ofunc) (sync_remote_interrupt, sync_remote_interrupt_twice): Delete. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_terminal_ours): Remove async checks. (remote_wait_as): Don't install a SIGINT handler in sync mode. (readchar, remote_serial_write): Override the quit handler with remote_serial_quit_handler. (getpkt_or_notif_sane_1): Don't call QUIT. (initialize_remote_ops): Don't install remote_check_pending_interrupt. (_initialize_remote): Don't create async_sigint_remote_token and async_sigint_remote_twice_token. * ser-base.c (ser_base_wait_for): Call QUIT and use interruptible_select. (ser_base_write): Call QUIT. * ser-go32.c (dos_readchar, dos_write): Call QUIT. * ser-unix.c (wait_for): Don't use VTIME. Always take the gdb_select path, but call QUIT and interruptible_select. * utils.c (maybe_quit): Call the current quit handler. Don't call target_check_pending_interrupt. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Override the quit handler with the default quit handler.
2016-04-12 23:49:32 +08:00
quit_handler ();
remote: allow aborting long operations (e.g., file transfers) Currently, when remote debugging, if you type Ctrl-C just while the target stopped for an internal event, and GDB is busy doing something that takes a while (e.g., fetching chunks of a shared library off of the target, with vFile, to process ELF headers and debug info), the Ctrl-C is lost. The patch hooks up the QUIT macro to a new target method that lets the target react to the double-Ctrl-C before the event loop is reached, which allows reacting to a double-Ctrl-C even when GDB is busy doing some long operation and not waiting for a stop reply. That end result is: (gdb) c Continuing. ^C ^C Interrupted while waiting for the program. Give up waiting? (y or n) y Quit (gdb) info threads Id Target Id Frame * 1 Thread 11673 0x00007ffff7deb240 in _dl_debug_state () from target:/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 (gdb) If, however, GDB is waiting for a stop reply (because the target has been resumed, with e.g., vCont;c), but the target isn't responding, we now get: (gdb) c Continuing. ^C ^C The target is not responding to interrupt requests. Stop debugging it? (y or n) y Disconnected from target. (gdb) info threads No threads. This offers to disconnect, because when we're waiting for a stop reply, there's nothing else we can send the target other than an interrupt request. And if that doesn't work, there's nothing else we can do. The Ctrl-C is presently lost because until we get to a user-visible stop, the SIGINT handler that is installed is the one that forwards the interrupt to the remote side, with the \003 "packet" [1]. But, gdbserver ignores an interrupt request if the program is stopped. Still, even if it didn't, the server can only report back a stop-because-of-SIGINT when the program is next resumed. And it may take a while to actually re-resume the target. [1] - In the old sync days, the remote target would react to a double-Ctrl-C by asking users whether they wanted to give up waiting and disconnect. The code is still there, but it it isn't reacheable on most hosts, which support serial connections in async mode (probably only DJGPP doesn't). Even then, in sync mode, remote.c's SIGINT handler is only installed while the target is resumed, and is removed as soon as the target sends back a stop reply. That means that a Ctrl-C just while GDB is processing an internal event can end up with an odd "Quit" at the prompt instead of "Program stopped by SIGINT". In contrast, in async mode, remote.c's SIGINT handler is set up as long as target_terminal_inferior or target_terminal_ours_for_output are in effect (IOW, until we get a user-visible stop and call target_terminal_ours), so the user shouldn't get back a spurious Quit. However, it's still desirable to be able to interrupt a long-running GDB operation, if GDB takes a while to re-resume the target or get back to the event loop. Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20. gdb/ChangeLog: 2015-08-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * defs.h (maybe_quit): Declare. (QUIT): Now calls maybe_quit. * event-loop.c (clear_async_signal_handler) (async_signal_handler_is_marked): New functions. * event-loop.h (async_signal_handler_is_marked) (clear_async_signal_handler): New declarations. * remote.c (remote_check_pending_interrupt): New function. (interrupt_query): Use make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal. No longer check whether the target is async. If waiting for a stop reply, and a Ctrl-C as been sent to the target, offer to disconnect, and throw TARGET_CLOSE_ERROR instead of a quit. Otherwise do not disconnect and throw a quit. (_initialize_remote): Install remote_check_pending_interrupt as to_check_pending_interrupt. * target.c (target_check_pending_interrupt): New function. * target.h (struct target_ops) <to_check_pending_interrupt>: New field. (target_check_pending_interrupt): New declaration. * utils.c (maybe_quit): New function. * target-delegates.c: Regenerate.
2015-08-25 23:12:11 +08:00
}
/* Called when a memory allocation fails, with the number of bytes of
memory requested in SIZE. */
void
2011-07-22 Kwok Cheung Yeung <kcy@codesourcery.com> gdb/ * defs.h: Add guard against inclusion in gdbserver. (struct ptid, ptid_t): Move to common/ptid.h. (xfree, xzalloc, xasprintf, xvasprintf, xstrprintf, xstrvprintf, xsnprintf, internal_error): Move to common/common-utils.h. (nomem): Delete. * gdb_assert.h: Move into common/ sub-directory. * gdb_locale.h: Ditto. * gdb_dirent.h: Ditto. * inferior.h (minus_one_ptid, null_ptid, ptid_build, pid_to_ptid, ptid_get_pid, ptid_get_lwp, ptid_get_tid, ptid_equal, ptid_is_pid): Move into common/ptid.h. * xml-support.c (xml_escape_text): Move into common/xml-utils.c. (gdb_xml_create_parser_and_cleanup_1, xml_fetch_context_from_file): Change nomem to malloc_failure. * xml-support.h (xml_escape_text): Move into common/xml-utils.h. * utils.c (nomem): Rename to malloc_failure. (xmalloc, xzalloc, xrealloc, xcalloc, xfree, xstrprintf, xasprintf, xvasprintf, xstrvprintf, xsnprintf): Move to common/common-utils.c. (gdb_buildargv): Change nomem to malloc_failure. * infrun.c (null_ptid, minus_one_ptid, ptid_build, pid_to_ptid, ptid_get_pid, ptid_get_lwp, ptid_get_tid, ptid_equal, ptid_is_pid): Move into common/ptid.c. (initialize_infrun): Delete initialization of null_ptid and minus_one_ptid. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_xfer_osdata): Defer to linux_common_xfer_osdata. * Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/common-utils.c, common/xml-utils.c, common/ptid.c and common/buffer.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/common-utils.h, common/xml-utils.h, common/ptid.h, common/buffer.h and common/linux-osdata.h. (COMMON_OBS): Add xml-utils.o, common-utils.o, buffer.o and ptid.o. (common-utils.o, xml-utils.o, ptid.o, buffer.o, linux-osdata.o): New rules. * common/gdb_assert.h: New. * common/gdb_dirent.h: New. * common/gdb_locale.h: New. * common/buffer.c: New. * common/buffer.h: New. * common/ptid.c: New. * common/ptid.h: New. * common/xml-utils.c: New. * common/xml-utils.h: New. * common/common-utils.c: New. * common/common-utils.h: New. * common/linux-osdata.c: New. * common/linux-osdata.h: New. * config/alpha/alpha-linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Add linux-osdata.o. * config/arm/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/i386/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/i386/linux64.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/ia64/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/m32r/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/m68k/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/mips/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/pa/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/powerpc/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/powerpc/ppc64-linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/s390/s390.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/sparc/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/sparc/linux64.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/xtensa/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. gdbserver/ * linux-low.c (compare_ints, unique, list_threads, show_process, linux_core_of_thread): Delete. (linux_target_ops): Change linux_core_of_thread to linux_common_core_of_thread. (linux_qxfer_osdata): Defer to linux_common_xfer_osdata. * utils.c (malloc_failure): Change type of argument. (xmalloc, xrealloc, xcalloc, xsnprintf): Delete. * Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/common-utils.c, common/xml-utils.c, common/linux-osdata.c, common/ptid.c and common/buffer.c. (OBS): Add xml-utils.o, common-utils.o, ptid.o and buffer.o. (IPA_OBJS): Add common-utils-ipa.o. (ptid_h, linux_osdata_h): New macros. (server_h): Add common/common-utils.h, common/xml-utils.h, common/buffer.h, common/gdb_assert.h, common/gdb_locale.h and common/ptid.h. (common-utils-ipa.o, common-utils.o, xml-utils.o, linux-osdata.o, ptid.o, buffer.o): New rules. (linux-low.o): Add common/linux-osdata.h as a dependency. * configure.srv (srv_tgtobj): Add linux-osdata.o to Linux targets. * configure.ac: Add AC_HEADER_DIRENT check. * config.in: Regenerate. * configure: Regenerate. * remote-utils.c (xml_escape_text): Delete. (buffer_grow, buffer_free, buffer_init, buffer_finish, buffer_xml_printf): Move to common/buffer.c. * server.c (main): Remove call to initialize_inferiors. * server.h (struct ptid, ptid_t, minus_one_ptid, null_ptid, ptid_build, pid_to_ptid, ptid_get_pid, ptid_get_lwp, ptid_get_tid, ptid_equal, ptid_is_pid, initialize_inferiors, xml_escape_text, internal_error, gdb_assert, gdb_assert_fail): Delete. (struct buffer, buffer_grow, buffer_free, buffer_init, buffer_finish, buffer_xml_printf, buffer_grow_str, buffer_grow_str0): Move to common/buffer.h. * inferiors.c (null_ptid, minus_one_ptid, ptid_build, pid_to_ptid, ptid_get_pid, ptid_get_lwp, ptid_get_tid, ptid_equal, ptid_is_pid, initialize_inferiors): Delete.
2011-07-22 07:46:12 +08:00
malloc_failure (long size)
{
if (size > 0)
{
internal_error (_("virtual memory exhausted: can't allocate %ld bytes."),
2003-02-01 06:45:22 +08:00
size);
}
else
{
internal_error (_("virtual memory exhausted."));
}
}
/* See common/errors.h. */
void
flush_streams ()
{
gdb_stdout->flush ();
gdb_stderr->flush ();
}
/* My replacement for the read system call.
Used like `read' but keeps going if `read' returns too soon. */
int
2000-07-30 09:48:28 +08:00
myread (int desc, char *addr, int len)
{
int val;
int orglen = len;
while (len > 0)
{
val = read (desc, addr, len);
if (val < 0)
return val;
if (val == 0)
return orglen - len;
len -= val;
addr += val;
}
return orglen;
}
2011-07-22 Kwok Cheung Yeung <kcy@codesourcery.com> gdb/ * defs.h: Add guard against inclusion in gdbserver. (struct ptid, ptid_t): Move to common/ptid.h. (xfree, xzalloc, xasprintf, xvasprintf, xstrprintf, xstrvprintf, xsnprintf, internal_error): Move to common/common-utils.h. (nomem): Delete. * gdb_assert.h: Move into common/ sub-directory. * gdb_locale.h: Ditto. * gdb_dirent.h: Ditto. * inferior.h (minus_one_ptid, null_ptid, ptid_build, pid_to_ptid, ptid_get_pid, ptid_get_lwp, ptid_get_tid, ptid_equal, ptid_is_pid): Move into common/ptid.h. * xml-support.c (xml_escape_text): Move into common/xml-utils.c. (gdb_xml_create_parser_and_cleanup_1, xml_fetch_context_from_file): Change nomem to malloc_failure. * xml-support.h (xml_escape_text): Move into common/xml-utils.h. * utils.c (nomem): Rename to malloc_failure. (xmalloc, xzalloc, xrealloc, xcalloc, xfree, xstrprintf, xasprintf, xvasprintf, xstrvprintf, xsnprintf): Move to common/common-utils.c. (gdb_buildargv): Change nomem to malloc_failure. * infrun.c (null_ptid, minus_one_ptid, ptid_build, pid_to_ptid, ptid_get_pid, ptid_get_lwp, ptid_get_tid, ptid_equal, ptid_is_pid): Move into common/ptid.c. (initialize_infrun): Delete initialization of null_ptid and minus_one_ptid. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_xfer_osdata): Defer to linux_common_xfer_osdata. * Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/common-utils.c, common/xml-utils.c, common/ptid.c and common/buffer.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/common-utils.h, common/xml-utils.h, common/ptid.h, common/buffer.h and common/linux-osdata.h. (COMMON_OBS): Add xml-utils.o, common-utils.o, buffer.o and ptid.o. (common-utils.o, xml-utils.o, ptid.o, buffer.o, linux-osdata.o): New rules. * common/gdb_assert.h: New. * common/gdb_dirent.h: New. * common/gdb_locale.h: New. * common/buffer.c: New. * common/buffer.h: New. * common/ptid.c: New. * common/ptid.h: New. * common/xml-utils.c: New. * common/xml-utils.h: New. * common/common-utils.c: New. * common/common-utils.h: New. * common/linux-osdata.c: New. * common/linux-osdata.h: New. * config/alpha/alpha-linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Add linux-osdata.o. * config/arm/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/i386/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/i386/linux64.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/ia64/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/m32r/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/m68k/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/mips/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/pa/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/powerpc/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/powerpc/ppc64-linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/s390/s390.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/sparc/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/sparc/linux64.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. * config/xtensa/linux.mh (NATDEPFILES): Ditto. gdbserver/ * linux-low.c (compare_ints, unique, list_threads, show_process, linux_core_of_thread): Delete. (linux_target_ops): Change linux_core_of_thread to linux_common_core_of_thread. (linux_qxfer_osdata): Defer to linux_common_xfer_osdata. * utils.c (malloc_failure): Change type of argument. (xmalloc, xrealloc, xcalloc, xsnprintf): Delete. * Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/common-utils.c, common/xml-utils.c, common/linux-osdata.c, common/ptid.c and common/buffer.c. (OBS): Add xml-utils.o, common-utils.o, ptid.o and buffer.o. (IPA_OBJS): Add common-utils-ipa.o. (ptid_h, linux_osdata_h): New macros. (server_h): Add common/common-utils.h, common/xml-utils.h, common/buffer.h, common/gdb_assert.h, common/gdb_locale.h and common/ptid.h. (common-utils-ipa.o, common-utils.o, xml-utils.o, linux-osdata.o, ptid.o, buffer.o): New rules. (linux-low.o): Add common/linux-osdata.h as a dependency. * configure.srv (srv_tgtobj): Add linux-osdata.o to Linux targets. * configure.ac: Add AC_HEADER_DIRENT check. * config.in: Regenerate. * configure: Regenerate. * remote-utils.c (xml_escape_text): Delete. (buffer_grow, buffer_free, buffer_init, buffer_finish, buffer_xml_printf): Move to common/buffer.c. * server.c (main): Remove call to initialize_inferiors. * server.h (struct ptid, ptid_t, minus_one_ptid, null_ptid, ptid_build, pid_to_ptid, ptid_get_pid, ptid_get_lwp, ptid_get_tid, ptid_equal, ptid_is_pid, initialize_inferiors, xml_escape_text, internal_error, gdb_assert, gdb_assert_fail): Delete. (struct buffer, buffer_grow, buffer_free, buffer_init, buffer_finish, buffer_xml_printf, buffer_grow_str, buffer_grow_str0): Move to common/buffer.h. * inferiors.c (null_ptid, minus_one_ptid, ptid_build, pid_to_ptid, ptid_get_pid, ptid_get_lwp, ptid_get_tid, ptid_equal, ptid_is_pid, initialize_inferiors): Delete.
2011-07-22 07:46:12 +08:00
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
/* An RAII class that sets up to handle input and then tears down
during destruction. */
Fix PR gdb/20418 - Problems with synchronous commands and new-ui When executing commands on a secondary UI running the MI interpreter, some commands that should be synchronous are not. MI incorrectly continues processing input right after the synchronous command is sent, before the target stops. The problem happens when we emit MI async events (=library-loaded, etc.), and we go about restoring the previous terminal state, we end up calling target_terminal_ours, which incorrectly always installs the current UI's input_fd in the event loop... That is, code like this: old_chain = make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal (); target_terminal_ours_for_output (); fprintf_unfiltered (mi->event_channel, "library-loaded"); ... do_cleanups (old_chain); The fix is to move the add_file_handler/delete_file_handler calls out of target_terminal_$foo, making these completely no-ops unless called with the main UI as current UI. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR gdb/20418 * event-top.c (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New functions. (async_enable_stdin): Register input in the event loop. (async_disable_stdin): Unregister input from the event loop. (gdb_setup_readline): Register input in the event loop. * infrun.c (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done): Register input in the event loop. * target.c (target_terminal_inferior): Don't unregister input from the event loop. (target_terminal_ours): Don't register input in the event loop. * target.h (target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours_for_output, target_terminal_ours): Update comments. * top.h (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New declarations. * utils.c (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): New functions. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use prepare_to_handle_input. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@ericsson.com> PR gdb/20418 * gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.c, gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.exp: New files. * lib/mi-support.exp (mi_expect_interrupt): Remove anchors.
2016-08-10 05:45:40 +08:00
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
class scoped_input_handler
Fix PR gdb/20418 - Problems with synchronous commands and new-ui When executing commands on a secondary UI running the MI interpreter, some commands that should be synchronous are not. MI incorrectly continues processing input right after the synchronous command is sent, before the target stops. The problem happens when we emit MI async events (=library-loaded, etc.), and we go about restoring the previous terminal state, we end up calling target_terminal_ours, which incorrectly always installs the current UI's input_fd in the event loop... That is, code like this: old_chain = make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal (); target_terminal_ours_for_output (); fprintf_unfiltered (mi->event_channel, "library-loaded"); ... do_cleanups (old_chain); The fix is to move the add_file_handler/delete_file_handler calls out of target_terminal_$foo, making these completely no-ops unless called with the main UI as current UI. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR gdb/20418 * event-top.c (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New functions. (async_enable_stdin): Register input in the event loop. (async_disable_stdin): Unregister input from the event loop. (gdb_setup_readline): Register input in the event loop. * infrun.c (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done): Register input in the event loop. * target.c (target_terminal_inferior): Don't unregister input from the event loop. (target_terminal_ours): Don't register input in the event loop. * target.h (target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours_for_output, target_terminal_ours): Update comments. * top.h (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New declarations. * utils.c (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): New functions. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use prepare_to_handle_input. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@ericsson.com> PR gdb/20418 * gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.c, gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.exp: New files. * lib/mi-support.exp (mi_expect_interrupt): Remove anchors.
2016-08-10 05:45:40 +08:00
{
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
public:
Fix PR gdb/20418 - Problems with synchronous commands and new-ui When executing commands on a secondary UI running the MI interpreter, some commands that should be synchronous are not. MI incorrectly continues processing input right after the synchronous command is sent, before the target stops. The problem happens when we emit MI async events (=library-loaded, etc.), and we go about restoring the previous terminal state, we end up calling target_terminal_ours, which incorrectly always installs the current UI's input_fd in the event loop... That is, code like this: old_chain = make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal (); target_terminal_ours_for_output (); fprintf_unfiltered (mi->event_channel, "library-loaded"); ... do_cleanups (old_chain); The fix is to move the add_file_handler/delete_file_handler calls out of target_terminal_$foo, making these completely no-ops unless called with the main UI as current UI. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR gdb/20418 * event-top.c (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New functions. (async_enable_stdin): Register input in the event loop. (async_disable_stdin): Unregister input from the event loop. (gdb_setup_readline): Register input in the event loop. * infrun.c (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done): Register input in the event loop. * target.c (target_terminal_inferior): Don't unregister input from the event loop. (target_terminal_ours): Don't register input in the event loop. * target.h (target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours_for_output, target_terminal_ours): Update comments. * top.h (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New declarations. * utils.c (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): New functions. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use prepare_to_handle_input. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@ericsson.com> PR gdb/20418 * gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.c, gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.exp: New files. * lib/mi-support.exp (mi_expect_interrupt): Remove anchors.
2016-08-10 05:45:40 +08:00
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
scoped_input_handler ()
: m_quit_handler (&quit_handler, default_quit_handler),
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
m_ui (NULL)
{
target_terminal::ours ();
current_ui->register_file_handler ();
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
if (current_ui->prompt_state == PROMPT_BLOCKED)
m_ui = current_ui;
}
Fix PR gdb/20418 - Problems with synchronous commands and new-ui When executing commands on a secondary UI running the MI interpreter, some commands that should be synchronous are not. MI incorrectly continues processing input right after the synchronous command is sent, before the target stops. The problem happens when we emit MI async events (=library-loaded, etc.), and we go about restoring the previous terminal state, we end up calling target_terminal_ours, which incorrectly always installs the current UI's input_fd in the event loop... That is, code like this: old_chain = make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal (); target_terminal_ours_for_output (); fprintf_unfiltered (mi->event_channel, "library-loaded"); ... do_cleanups (old_chain); The fix is to move the add_file_handler/delete_file_handler calls out of target_terminal_$foo, making these completely no-ops unless called with the main UI as current UI. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR gdb/20418 * event-top.c (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New functions. (async_enable_stdin): Register input in the event loop. (async_disable_stdin): Unregister input from the event loop. (gdb_setup_readline): Register input in the event loop. * infrun.c (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done): Register input in the event loop. * target.c (target_terminal_inferior): Don't unregister input from the event loop. (target_terminal_ours): Don't register input in the event loop. * target.h (target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours_for_output, target_terminal_ours): Update comments. * top.h (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New declarations. * utils.c (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): New functions. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use prepare_to_handle_input. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@ericsson.com> PR gdb/20418 * gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.c, gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.exp: New files. * lib/mi-support.exp (mi_expect_interrupt): Remove anchors.
2016-08-10 05:45:40 +08:00
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
~scoped_input_handler ()
{
if (m_ui != NULL)
m_ui->unregister_file_handler ();
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
}
Fix PR gdb/20418 - Problems with synchronous commands and new-ui When executing commands on a secondary UI running the MI interpreter, some commands that should be synchronous are not. MI incorrectly continues processing input right after the synchronous command is sent, before the target stops. The problem happens when we emit MI async events (=library-loaded, etc.), and we go about restoring the previous terminal state, we end up calling target_terminal_ours, which incorrectly always installs the current UI's input_fd in the event loop... That is, code like this: old_chain = make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal (); target_terminal_ours_for_output (); fprintf_unfiltered (mi->event_channel, "library-loaded"); ... do_cleanups (old_chain); The fix is to move the add_file_handler/delete_file_handler calls out of target_terminal_$foo, making these completely no-ops unless called with the main UI as current UI. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR gdb/20418 * event-top.c (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New functions. (async_enable_stdin): Register input in the event loop. (async_disable_stdin): Unregister input from the event loop. (gdb_setup_readline): Register input in the event loop. * infrun.c (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done): Register input in the event loop. * target.c (target_terminal_inferior): Don't unregister input from the event loop. (target_terminal_ours): Don't register input in the event loop. * target.h (target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours_for_output, target_terminal_ours): Update comments. * top.h (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New declarations. * utils.c (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): New functions. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use prepare_to_handle_input. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@ericsson.com> PR gdb/20418 * gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.c, gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.exp: New files. * lib/mi-support.exp (mi_expect_interrupt): Remove anchors.
2016-08-10 05:45:40 +08:00
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
DISABLE_COPY_AND_ASSIGN (scoped_input_handler);
Fix PR gdb/20418 - Problems with synchronous commands and new-ui When executing commands on a secondary UI running the MI interpreter, some commands that should be synchronous are not. MI incorrectly continues processing input right after the synchronous command is sent, before the target stops. The problem happens when we emit MI async events (=library-loaded, etc.), and we go about restoring the previous terminal state, we end up calling target_terminal_ours, which incorrectly always installs the current UI's input_fd in the event loop... That is, code like this: old_chain = make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal (); target_terminal_ours_for_output (); fprintf_unfiltered (mi->event_channel, "library-loaded"); ... do_cleanups (old_chain); The fix is to move the add_file_handler/delete_file_handler calls out of target_terminal_$foo, making these completely no-ops unless called with the main UI as current UI. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR gdb/20418 * event-top.c (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New functions. (async_enable_stdin): Register input in the event loop. (async_disable_stdin): Unregister input from the event loop. (gdb_setup_readline): Register input in the event loop. * infrun.c (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done): Register input in the event loop. * target.c (target_terminal_inferior): Don't unregister input from the event loop. (target_terminal_ours): Don't register input in the event loop. * target.h (target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours_for_output, target_terminal_ours): Update comments. * top.h (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New declarations. * utils.c (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): New functions. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use prepare_to_handle_input. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@ericsson.com> PR gdb/20418 * gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.c, gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.exp: New files. * lib/mi-support.exp (mi_expect_interrupt): Remove anchors.
2016-08-10 05:45:40 +08:00
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
private:
Fix PR gdb/20418 - Problems with synchronous commands and new-ui When executing commands on a secondary UI running the MI interpreter, some commands that should be synchronous are not. MI incorrectly continues processing input right after the synchronous command is sent, before the target stops. The problem happens when we emit MI async events (=library-loaded, etc.), and we go about restoring the previous terminal state, we end up calling target_terminal_ours, which incorrectly always installs the current UI's input_fd in the event loop... That is, code like this: old_chain = make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal (); target_terminal_ours_for_output (); fprintf_unfiltered (mi->event_channel, "library-loaded"); ... do_cleanups (old_chain); The fix is to move the add_file_handler/delete_file_handler calls out of target_terminal_$foo, making these completely no-ops unless called with the main UI as current UI. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR gdb/20418 * event-top.c (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New functions. (async_enable_stdin): Register input in the event loop. (async_disable_stdin): Unregister input from the event loop. (gdb_setup_readline): Register input in the event loop. * infrun.c (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done): Register input in the event loop. * target.c (target_terminal_inferior): Don't unregister input from the event loop. (target_terminal_ours): Don't register input in the event loop. * target.h (target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours_for_output, target_terminal_ours): Update comments. * top.h (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New declarations. * utils.c (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): New functions. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use prepare_to_handle_input. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@ericsson.com> PR gdb/20418 * gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.c, gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.exp: New files. * lib/mi-support.exp (mi_expect_interrupt): Remove anchors.
2016-08-10 05:45:40 +08:00
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
/* Save and restore the terminal state. */
target_terminal::scoped_restore_terminal_state m_term_state;
Fix PR gdb/20418 - Problems with synchronous commands and new-ui When executing commands on a secondary UI running the MI interpreter, some commands that should be synchronous are not. MI incorrectly continues processing input right after the synchronous command is sent, before the target stops. The problem happens when we emit MI async events (=library-loaded, etc.), and we go about restoring the previous terminal state, we end up calling target_terminal_ours, which incorrectly always installs the current UI's input_fd in the event loop... That is, code like this: old_chain = make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal (); target_terminal_ours_for_output (); fprintf_unfiltered (mi->event_channel, "library-loaded"); ... do_cleanups (old_chain); The fix is to move the add_file_handler/delete_file_handler calls out of target_terminal_$foo, making these completely no-ops unless called with the main UI as current UI. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR gdb/20418 * event-top.c (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New functions. (async_enable_stdin): Register input in the event loop. (async_disable_stdin): Unregister input from the event loop. (gdb_setup_readline): Register input in the event loop. * infrun.c (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done): Register input in the event loop. * target.c (target_terminal_inferior): Don't unregister input from the event loop. (target_terminal_ours): Don't register input in the event loop. * target.h (target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours_for_output, target_terminal_ours): Update comments. * top.h (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New declarations. * utils.c (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): New functions. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use prepare_to_handle_input. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@ericsson.com> PR gdb/20418 * gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.c, gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.exp: New files. * lib/mi-support.exp (mi_expect_interrupt): Remove anchors.
2016-08-10 05:45:40 +08:00
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
/* Save and restore the quit handler. */
scoped_restore_tmpl<quit_handler_ftype *> m_quit_handler;
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
/* The saved UI, if non-NULL. */
struct ui *m_ui;
};
Fix PR gdb/20418 - Problems with synchronous commands and new-ui When executing commands on a secondary UI running the MI interpreter, some commands that should be synchronous are not. MI incorrectly continues processing input right after the synchronous command is sent, before the target stops. The problem happens when we emit MI async events (=library-loaded, etc.), and we go about restoring the previous terminal state, we end up calling target_terminal_ours, which incorrectly always installs the current UI's input_fd in the event loop... That is, code like this: old_chain = make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal (); target_terminal_ours_for_output (); fprintf_unfiltered (mi->event_channel, "library-loaded"); ... do_cleanups (old_chain); The fix is to move the add_file_handler/delete_file_handler calls out of target_terminal_$foo, making these completely no-ops unless called with the main UI as current UI. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR gdb/20418 * event-top.c (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New functions. (async_enable_stdin): Register input in the event loop. (async_disable_stdin): Unregister input from the event loop. (gdb_setup_readline): Register input in the event loop. * infrun.c (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done): Register input in the event loop. * target.c (target_terminal_inferior): Don't unregister input from the event loop. (target_terminal_ours): Don't register input in the event loop. * target.h (target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours_for_output, target_terminal_ours): Update comments. * top.h (ui_register_input_event_handler) (ui_unregister_input_event_handler): New declarations. * utils.c (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): New functions. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use prepare_to_handle_input. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2016-08-09 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@ericsson.com> PR gdb/20418 * gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.c, gdb.mi/new-ui-mi-sync.exp: New files. * lib/mi-support.exp (mi_expect_interrupt): Remove anchors.
2016-08-10 05:45:40 +08:00
Revert the previous 7 commits of: Validate binary before use ddc98fbf2fd9e244a215a4d09e559180dc573a14 Create empty nat/linux-maps.[ch] and common/target-utils.[ch] 6e5b4429db0d66e2d0b27e1bcfe4709f3dae73ed Move gdb_regex* to common/ f7af1fcd759fa126612018a5916cf808df7bb8bc Prepare linux_find_memory_regions_full & co. for move 9904185cfde13d6c6849f1f042c8e3b74974cf08 Move linux_find_memory_regions_full & co. 700ca40f6fc1addd7238f4ab57f76c095ad3c99f gdbserver build-id attribute generator ca5268b6be265580b91ef75c1a1a9815f581ae42 Validate symbol file using build-id 0a94970d663a053c523f23ac0d71deb25a77f709 Tests for validate symbol file using build-id gdb/ChangeLog 2015-07-15 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com> Revert the previous 6 commits: Create empty nat/linux-maps.[ch] and common/target-utils.[ch]. Move gdb_regex* to common/ Prepare linux_find_memory_regions_full & co. for move Move linux_find_memory_regions_full & co. gdbserver build-id attribute generator Validate symbol file using build-id gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2015-07-15 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com> Revert the previous 3 commits: Move gdb_regex* to common/ Move linux_find_memory_regions_full & co. gdbserver build-id attribute generator gdb/doc/ChangeLog 2015-07-15 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com> Revert the previous 2 commits: gdbserver build-id attribute generator Validate symbol file using build-id gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2015-07-15 Jan Kratochvil <jan.kratochvil@redhat.com> Revert the previous commit: Tests for validate symbol file using build-id.
2015-07-16 02:27:32 +08:00
/* This function supports the query, nquery, and yquery functions.
Ask user a y-or-n question and return 0 if answer is no, 1 if
answer is yes, or default the answer to the specified default
(for yquery or nquery). DEFCHAR may be 'y' or 'n' to provide a
default answer, or '\0' for no default.
CTLSTR is the control string and should end in "? ". It should
not say how to answer, because we do that.
ARGS are the arguments passed along with the CTLSTR argument to
printf. */
gdb/ * ada-lang.c (lim_warning): Change ATTR_FORMAT to ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF. * amd64-tdep.c (amd64_insn_length_fprintf): Likewise. * cli-out.c (cli_field_fmt): New ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF. (cli_message, out_field_fmt): Change ATTR_FORMAT to ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF. * complaints.c (find_complaint): New ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF. (vcomplaint): Change ATTR_FORMAT to ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF. * complaints.h (complaint, internal_complaint): Likewise. * defs.h: Change ATTR_FORMAT to ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF in the top comment. (ATTR_FORMAT): Remove. (query, nquery, yquery, vprintf_filtered, vfprintf_filtered) (fprintf_filtered, fprintfi_filtered, printf_filtered, printfi_filtered) (vprintf_unfiltered, vfprintf_unfiltered, fprintf_unfiltered) (printf_unfiltered, xasprintf, xvasprintf, xstrprintf, xstrvprintf) (xsnprintf, verror, error, vfatal, fatal, internal_verror) (internal_error, internal_vwarning, internal_warning, warning) (vwarning): Change ATTR_FORMAT to ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF. * disasm.c (fprintf_disasm): Likewise. * exceptions.c (throw_it): Likewise. * exceptions.h (exception_fprintf, throw_verror, throw_vfatal) (throw_error): Likewise. * language.h (type_error, range_error): Likewise. * linespec.c (cplusplus_error): Likewise. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_interp_query_hook): Likewise. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_field_fmt, mi_message): Likewise. * monitor.c (monitor_debug): Likewise. * parser-defs.h (parser_fprintf): Likewise. * serial.h (serial_printf): Likewise. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_query_hook): Likewise. * ui-out.c (default_field_fmt, default_message, uo_field_fmt) (uo_message): Likewise. * ui-out.h (ui_out_field_fmt, ui_out_message): Likewise. * utils.c (vfprintf_maybe_filtered, internal_vproblem, defaulted_query): Likewise. * xml-support.h (gdb_xml_debug, gdb_xml_error): Likewise.
2010-05-03 05:14:59 +08:00
static int ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (1, 0)
defaulted_query (const char *ctlstr, const char defchar, va_list args)
{
int retval;
int def_value;
char def_answer, not_def_answer;
-Wwrite-strings: The Rest This is the remainder boring constification that all looks more of less borderline obvious IMO. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-05 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * ada-exp.y (yyerror): Constify. * ada-lang.c (bound_name, get_selections) (ada_variant_discrim_type) (ada_variant_discrim_name, ada_value_struct_elt) (ada_lookup_struct_elt_type, is_unchecked_variant) (ada_which_variant_applies, standard_exc, ada_get_next_arg) (catch_ada_exception_command_split) (catch_ada_assert_command_split, catch_assert_command) (ada_op_name): Constify. * ada-lang.h (ada_yyerror, get_selections) (ada_variant_discrim_name, ada_value_struct_elt): Constify. * arc-tdep.c (arc_print_frame_cache): Constify. * arm-tdep.c (arm_skip_stub): Constify. * ax-gdb.c (gen_binop, gen_struct_ref_recursive, gen_struct_ref) (gen_aggregate_elt_ref): Constify. * bcache.c (print_bcache_statistics): Constify. * bcache.h (print_bcache_statistics): Constify. * break-catch-throw.c (catch_exception_command_1): * breakpoint.c (struct ep_type_description::description): Constify. (add_solib_catchpoint): Constify. (catch_fork_command_1): Add cast. (add_catch_command): Constify. * breakpoint.h (add_catch_command, add_solib_catchpoint): Constify. * bsd-uthread.c (bsd_uthread_state): Constify. * buildsym.c (patch_subfile_names): Constify. * buildsym.h (next_symbol_text_func, patch_subfile_names): Constify. * c-exp.y (yyerror): Constify. (token::oper): Constify. * c-lang.h (c_yyerror, cp_print_class_member): Constify. * c-varobj.c (cplus_describe_child): Constify. * charset.c (find_charset_names): Add cast. (find_charset_names): Constify array and add const_cast. * cli/cli-cmds.c (complete_command, cd_command): Constify. (edit_command): Constify. * cli/cli-decode.c (lookup_cmd): Constify. * cli/cli-dump.c (dump_memory_command, dump_value_command): Constify. (struct dump_context): Constify. (add_dump_command, restore_command): Constify. * cli/cli-script.c (get_command_line): Constify. * cli/cli-script.h (get_command_line): Constify. * cli/cli-utils.c (check_for_argument): Constify. * cli/cli-utils.h (check_for_argument): Constify. * coff-pe-read.c (struct read_pe_section_data): Constify. * command.h (lookup_cmd): Constify. * common/print-utils.c (decimal2str): Constify. * completer.c (gdb_print_filename): Constify. * corefile.c (set_gnutarget): Constify. * cp-name-parser.y (yyerror): Constify. * cp-valprint.c (cp_print_class_member): Constify. * cris-tdep.c (cris_register_name, crisv32_register_name): Constify. * d-exp.y (yyerror): Constify. (struct token::oper): Constify. * d-lang.h (d_yyerror): Constify. * dbxread.c (struct header_file_location::name): Constify. (add_old_header_file, add_new_header_file, last_function_name) (dbx_next_symbol_text, add_bincl_to_list) (find_corresponding_bincl_psymtab, set_namestring) (find_stab_function_addr, read_dbx_symtab, start_psymtab) (dbx_end_psymtab, read_ofile_symtab, process_one_symbol): * defs.h (command_line_input, print_address_symbolic) (deprecated_readline_begin_hook): Constify. * dwarf2read.c (anonymous_struct_prefix, dwarf_bool_name): Constify. * event-top.c (handle_line_of_input): Constify and add cast. * exceptions.c (catch_errors): Constify. * exceptions.h (catch_errors): Constify. * expprint.c (print_subexp_standard, op_string, op_name) (op_name_standard, dump_raw_expression, dump_raw_expression): * expression.h (op_name, op_string, dump_raw_expression): Constify. * f-exp.y (yyerror): Constify. (struct token::oper): Constify. (struct f77_boolean_val::name): Constify. * f-lang.c (f_word_break_characters): Constify. * f-lang.h (f_yyerror): Constify. * fork-child.c (fork_inferior): Add cast. * frv-tdep.c (struct gdbarch_tdep::register_names): Constify. (new_variant): Constify. * gdbarch.sh (pstring_ptr, pstring_list): Constify. * gdbarch.c: Regenerate. * gdbcore.h (set_gnutarget): Constify. * go-exp.y (yyerror): Constify. (token::oper): Constify. * go-lang.h (go_yyerror): Constify. * go32-nat.c (go32_sysinfo): Constify. * guile/scm-breakpoint.c (gdbscm_breakpoint_expression): Constify. * guile/scm-cmd.c (cmdscm_function): Constify. * guile/scm-param.c (pascm_param_value): Constify. * h8300-tdep.c (h8300_register_name, h8300s_register_name) (h8300sx_register_name): Constify. * hppa-tdep.c (hppa32_register_name, hppa64_register_name): Constify. * ia64-tdep.c (ia64_register_names): Constify. * infcmd.c (construct_inferior_arguments): Constify. (path_command, attach_post_wait): Constify. * language.c (show_range_command, show_case_command) (unk_lang_error): Constify. * language.h (language_defn::la_error) (language_defn::la_name_of_this): Constify. * linespec.c (decode_line_2): Constify. * linux-thread-db.c (thread_db_err_str): Constify. * lm32-tdep.c (lm32_register_name): Constify. * m2-exp.y (yyerror): Constify. * m2-lang.h (m2_yyerror): Constify. * m32r-tdep.c (m32r_register_names): Constify and make static. * m68hc11-tdep.c (m68hc11_register_names): Constify. * m88k-tdep.c (m88k_register_name): Constify. * macroexp.c (appendmem): Constify. * mdebugread.c (fdr_name, add_data_symbol, parse_type) (upgrade_type, parse_external, parse_partial_symbols) (mdebug_next_symbol_text, cross_ref, mylookup_symbol, new_psymtab) (new_symbol): Constify. * memattr.c (mem_info_command): Constify. * mep-tdep.c (register_name_from_keyword): Constify. * mi/mi-cmd-env.c (mi_cmd_env_path, _initialize_mi_cmd_env): Constify. * mi/mi-cmd-stack.c (list_args_or_locals): Constify. * mi/mi-cmd-var.c (mi_cmd_var_show_attributes): Constify. * mi/mi-main.c (captured_mi_execute_command): Constify and add cast. (mi_execute_async_cli_command): Constify. * mips-tdep.c (mips_register_name): Constify. * mn10300-tdep.c (register_name, mn10300_generic_register_name) (am33_register_name, am33_2_register_name) * moxie-tdep.c (moxie_register_names): Constify. * nat/linux-osdata.c (osdata_type): Constify fields. * nto-tdep.c (nto_parse_redirection): Constify. * objc-lang.c (lookup_struct_typedef, lookup_objc_class) (lookup_child_selector): Constify. (objc_methcall::name): Constify. * objc-lang.h (lookup_objc_class, lookup_child_selector) (lookup_struct_typedef): Constify. * objfiles.c (pc_in_section): Constify. * objfiles.h (pc_in_section): Constify. * p-exp.y (struct token::oper): Constify. (yyerror): Constify. * p-lang.h (pascal_yyerror): Constify. * parser-defs.h (op_name_standard): Constify. (op_print::string): Constify. (exp_descriptor::op_name): Constify. * printcmd.c (print_address_symbolic): Constify. * psymtab.c (print_partial_symbols): Constify. * python/py-breakpoint.c (stop_func): Constify. (bppy_get_expression): Constify. * python/py-cmd.c (cmdpy_completer::name): Constify. (cmdpy_function): Constify. * python/py-event.c (evpy_add_attribute) (gdbpy_initialize_event_generic): Constify. * python/py-event.h (evpy_add_attribute) (gdbpy_initialize_event_generic): Constify. * python/py-evts.c (add_new_registry): Constify. * python/py-finishbreakpoint.c (outofscope_func): Constify. * python/py-framefilter.c (get_py_iter_from_func): Constify. * python/py-inferior.c (get_buffer): Add cast. * python/py-param.c (parm_constant::name): Constify. * python/py-unwind.c (fprint_frame_id): Constify. * python/python.c (gdbpy_parameter_value): Constify. * remote-fileio.c (remote_fio_func_map): Make 'name' const. * remote.c (memory_packet_config::name): Constify. (show_packet_config_cmd, remote_write_bytes) (remote_buffer_add_string): * reverse.c (exec_reverse_once): Constify. * rs6000-tdep.c (variant::name, variant::description): Constify. * rust-exp.y (rustyyerror): Constify. * rust-lang.c (rust_op_name): Constify. * rust-lang.h (rustyyerror): Constify. * serial.h (serial_ops::name): Constify. * sh-tdep.c (sh_sh_register_name, sh_sh3_register_name) (sh_sh3e_register_name, sh_sh2e_register_name) (sh_sh2a_register_name, sh_sh2a_nofpu_register_name) (sh_sh_dsp_register_name, sh_sh3_dsp_register_name) (sh_sh4_register_name, sh_sh4_nofpu_register_name) (sh_sh4al_dsp_register_name): Constify. * sh64-tdep.c (sh64_register_name): Constify. * solib-darwin.c (lookup_symbol_from_bfd): Constify. * spu-tdep.c (spu_register_name, info_spu_dma_cmdlist): Constify. * stabsread.c (patch_block_stabs, read_type_number) (ref_map::stabs, ref_add, process_reference) (symbol_reference_defined, define_symbol, define_symbol) (error_type, read_type, read_member_functions, read_cpp_abbrev) (read_one_struct_field, read_struct_fields, read_baseclasses) (read_tilde_fields, read_struct_type, read_array_type) (read_enum_type, read_sun_builtin_type, read_sun_floating_type) (read_huge_number, read_range_type, read_args, common_block_start) (find_name_end): Constify. * stabsread.h (common_block_start, define_symbol) (process_one_symbol, symbol_reference_defined, ref_add): * symfile.c (get_section_index, add_symbol_file_command): * symfile.h (get_section_index): Constify. * target-descriptions.c (tdesc_type::name): Constify. (tdesc_free_type): Add cast. * target.c (find_default_run_target): (add_deprecated_target_alias, find_default_run_target) (target_announce_detach): Constify. (do_option): Constify. * target.h (add_deprecated_target_alias): Constify. * thread.c (print_thread_info_1): Constify. * top.c (deprecated_readline_begin_hook, command_line_input): Constify. (init_main): Add casts. * top.h (handle_line_of_input): Constify. * tracefile-tfile.c (tfile_write_uploaded_tsv): Constify. * tracepoint.c (tvariables_info_1, trace_status_mi): Constify. (tfind_command): Rename to ... (tfind_command_1): ... this and constify. (tfind_command): New function. (tfind_end_command, tfind_start_command): Adjust. (encode_source_string): Constify. * tracepoint.h (encode_source_string): Constify. * tui/tui-data.c (tui_partial_win_by_name): Constify. * tui/tui-data.h (tui_partial_win_by_name): Constify. * tui/tui-source.c (tui_set_source_content_nil): Constify. * tui/tui-source.h (tui_set_source_content_nil): Constify. * tui/tui-win.c (parse_scrolling_args): Constify. * tui/tui-windata.c (tui_erase_data_content): Constify. * tui/tui-windata.h (tui_erase_data_content): Constify. * tui/tui-winsource.c (tui_erase_source_content): Constify. * tui/tui.c (tui_enable): Add cast. * utils.c (defaulted_query): Constify. (init_page_info): Add cast. (puts_debug, subset_compare): Constify. * utils.h (subset_compare): Constify. * varobj.c (varobj_format_string): Constify. * varobj.h (varobj_format_string): Constify. * vax-tdep.c (vax_register_name): Constify. * windows-nat.c (windows_detach): Constify. * xcoffread.c (process_linenos, xcoff_next_symbol_text): Constify. * xml-support.c (gdb_xml_end_element): Constify. * xml-tdesc.c (tdesc_start_reg): Constify. * xstormy16-tdep.c (xstormy16_register_name): Constify. * xtensa-tdep.c (xtensa_find_register_by_name): Constify. * xtensa-tdep.h (xtensa_register_t::name): Constify. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: 2017-04-05 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdbreplay.c (sync_error): Constify. * linux-x86-low.c (push_opcode): Constify.
2017-04-06 02:21:37 +08:00
const char *y_string, *n_string;
/* Set up according to which answer is the default. */
if (defchar == '\0')
{
def_value = 1;
def_answer = 'Y';
not_def_answer = 'N';
y_string = "y";
n_string = "n";
}
else if (defchar == 'y')
{
def_value = 1;
def_answer = 'Y';
not_def_answer = 'N';
y_string = "[y]";
n_string = "n";
}
else
{
def_value = 0;
def_answer = 'N';
not_def_answer = 'Y';
y_string = "y";
n_string = "[n]";
}
/* Automatically answer the default value if the user did not want
prompts or the command was issued with the server prefix. */
if (!confirm || server_command)
return def_value;
/* If input isn't coming from the user directly, just say what
question we're asking, and then answer the default automatically. This
way, important error messages don't get lost when talking to GDB
over a pipe. */
Make stdin be per UI This commit makes each UI have its own "stdin" stream pointer. This is used to determine whether the "from_tty" argument to execute_command, etc. should be true. Related, this commit makes input_from_terminal_p take an UI parameter, and then avoids the gdb_has_a_terminal in it. gdb_has_a_terminal only returns info on gdb's own main/primary terminal (the real stdin). However, the places that call input_from_terminal_p really want to know is whether the command came from an interactive tty. This patch thus renames input_from_terminal_p to input_interactive_p for clarity, and then makes input_interactive_p check for "set interactive" itself, along with ISATTY, instead of calling gdb_has_a_terminal. Actually, quit_force wants to call input_interactive_p _after_ stdin is closed, we can't call ISATTY that late. So instead we save the result of ISATTY in a field of the UI. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-06-21 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cli/cli-script.c (read_next_line): Adjust to per-UI stdin. (read_command_lines): Use input_interactive_p instead of input_from_terminal_p. * defs.h (struct ui): Forward declare. (input_from_terminal_p): Rename to ... (input_interactive_p): ... this. * event-top.c (stdin_event_handler): Pass 0 as from_tty argument to quit_command. (command_handler): Adjust to per-UI stdin. (handle_line_of_input): Adjust to per-UI stdin and use input_interactive_p instead of ISATTY and input_from_terminal_p. (gdb_readline_no_editing_callback): Adjust to per-UI stdin. (command_line_handler): Always pass true as "from_tty" parameter of handle_line_of_input and execute_command. (async_sigterm_handler): Pass 0 as from_tty argument to quit_command. * inflow.c (interactive_mode, show_interactive_mode): Moved to ... (gdb_has_a_terminal): Don't check interactive_mode here. (_initialize_inflow): Don't install "set interactive-mode" here. * main.c (captured_command_loop): Adjust to per-UI stdin. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_execute_command_wrapper): Adjust to per-UI stdin. * top.c (new_ui): Save the stdin stream and whether it's a tty. (dont_repeat): Adjust to per-UI stdin. (command_line_input): Adjust to per-UI stdin and to use input_interactive_p. (quit_force): Write history if any UI supports interactive input. (interactive_mode, show_interactive_mode): Move here, from inflow.c. (input_from_terminal_p): Rename to ... (input_interactive_p): ... this, and check the "interactive_mode" global instead of calling gdb_has_a_terminal. (_initialize_top): Install "set interactive-mode" here. * top.h (struct ui) <stdin_stream, input_interactive_p>: New fields. * utils.c (quit): Pass 0 as from_tty argument to quit_force. (defaulted_query): Adjust to per-UI stdin and to use input_interactive_p.
2016-06-21 08:11:54 +08:00
if (current_ui->instream != current_ui->stdin_stream
|| !current_ui->input_interactive_p ()
Do not send queries on secondary UIs This is a follow-up to https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2017-02/msg00261.html This patch restricts queries to the main UI, which allows to avoid two different problems. The first one is that GDB is issuing queries on secondary MI channels for which a TTY is allocated. The second one is that GDB is not able to handle queries on two (CLI) UIs simultaneously. Restricting queries to the main UI allows to bypass these two problems. More details on how/why these two problems happen: 1. Queries on secondary MI UI The current criterion to decide if we should query the user is whether the input stream is a TTY. The original way to start GDB in MI mode from a front-end was to create a subprocess with pipes to its stdin/stdout. In this case, the input was considered non-interactive and queries were auto-answered. Now that front-ends can create the MI channel as a separate UI connected to a dedicated TTY, GDB now considers this input stream as interactive and sends queries to it. By restricting queries to the main UI, we make sure we never query on the secondary MI UI. 2. Simultaneous queries As Pedro stated it, when you have two queries on two different CLI UIs at the same time, you end up with the following pseudo stack: #0 gdb_readline_wrapper #1 defaulted_query // for UI #2 #2 handle_command #3 execute_command ("handle SIGTRAP" .... #4 stdin_event_handler // input on UI #2 #5 gdb_do_one_event #7 gdb_readline_wrapper #8 defaulted_query // for UI #1 #9 handle_command #10 execute_command ("handle SIGINT" .... #11 stdin_event_handler // input on UI #1 #12 gdb_do_one_event #13 gdb_readline_wrapper trying to answer the query on UI #1 will therefore answer for UI #2. By restricting the queries to the main UI, we ensure that there will never be more than one pending query, since you can't have two queries on a UI at the same time. I added a snippet to gdb.base/new-ui.exp to verify that we get a query on the main UI, but that we don't on the secondary one (or, more precisely, that it gets auto-answered). gdb/ChangeLog: * utils.c (defaulted_query): Don't query on secondary UIs. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.base/new-ui.exp (do_test): Test queries behavior on main and extra UIs.
2017-02-11 05:29:50 +08:00
/* Restrict queries to the main UI. */
|| current_ui != main_ui)
{
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
target_terminal::scoped_restore_terminal_state term_state;
target_terminal::ours_for_output ();
gdb_stdout->wrap_here (0);
gdb_vprintf (gdb_stdout, ctlstr, args);
gdb_printf (_("(%s or %s) [answered %c; "
"input not from terminal]\n"),
y_string, n_string, def_answer);
return def_value;
}
2004-04-21 Andrew Cagney <cagney@redhat.com> * annotate.h (deprecated_annotate_starting_hook) (deprecated_annotate_stopped_hook) (deprecated_annotate_exited_hook) (deprecated_annotate_signal_hook) (deprecated_annotate_signalled_hook): Deprecate. * tracepoint.h (deprecated_create_tracepoint_hook) (deprecated_delete_tracepoint_hook) (deprecated_modify_tracepoint_hook) (deprecated_trace_find_hook) (deprecated_trace_start_stop_hook): Deprecate. * target.h (deprecated_target_new_objfile_hook): Deprecate. * remote.h (deprecated_target_resume_hook) (deprecated_target_wait_loop_hook): Deprecate. * gdbcore.h (deprecated_exec_file_display_hook) (deprecated_file_changed_hook): Deprecate. * frame.h (deprecated_selected_frame_level_changed_hook): Deprecate. * defs.h (deprecated_modify_breakpoint_hook) (deprecated_command_loop_hook, deprecated_show_load_progress) (deprecated_print_frame_info_listing_hook) (deprecated_query_hook, deprecated_warning_hook) (deprecated_flush_hook, deprecated_create_breakpoint_hook) (deprecated_delete_breakpoint_hook) (deprecated_interactive_hook, deprecated_registers_changed_hook) (deprecated_readline_begin_hook, deprecated_readline_hook) (deprecated_readline_end_hook, deprecated_register_changed_hook) (deprecated_memory_changed_hook, deprecated_init_ui_hook) (deprecated_context_hook, deprecated_target_wait_hook) (deprecated_attach_hook, deprecated_detach_hook) (deprecated_call_command_hook, deprecated_set_hook) (deprecated_error_hook, deprecated_error_begin_hook) (deprecated_ui_load_progress_hook): Deprecate. * valops.c, uw-thread.c, utils.c, tui/tui-io.c: Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c, tracepoint.c, top.c, thread-db.c: Update. * target.c, symfile.c, stack.c, sol-thread.c, rs6000-nat.c: Update. * remote.c, remote-mips.c, regcache.c, mi/mi-interp.c: Update. * main.c, interps.c, infcmd.c, hpux-thread.c, frame.c: Update. * exec.c, dsrec.c, d10v-tdep.c, corefile.c, complaints.c: Update. * cli/cli-script.c, cli/cli-setshow.c, breakpoint.c: Update. * annotate.c, aix-thread.c: Update.
2004-04-22 07:52:21 +08:00
if (deprecated_query_hook)
{
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
target_terminal::scoped_restore_terminal_state term_state;
return deprecated_query_hook (ctlstr, args);
Do target_terminal_ours in query & friends instead of in all callers Any time a caller calls query & friends / prompt_for_continue without ensuring that gdb owns the terminal for input is a bug. So do that in defaulted_query / prompt_for_continue directly instead. An example of a case where we currently miss calling target_terminal_ours is internal_error. Ever since defaulted_query was made to use gdb_readline_callback, there's no way to answer the internal error query if the internal error happens while the target is has the terminal: (gdb) c Continuing. .../src/gdb/linux-nat.c:1676: internal-error: linux_nat_resume: Assertion `dummy_counter < 10' failed. A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) _ Entering 'y' or 'n' does not work, GDB does not respond. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-04-12 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR gdb/19828 * gnu-nat.c (inf_validate_task_sc): Don't call target_terminal_ours / target_terminal_inferior around query. * i386-tdep.c (i386_record_lea_modrm, i386_process_record): Don't call target_terminal_ours / target_terminal_inferior around yquery. * linux-record.c (record_linux_system_call): Don't call target_terminal_ours / target_terminal_inferior around yquery. * nto-procfs.c (interrupt_query): Don't call target_terminal_ours / target_terminal_inferior around query. * record-full.c (record_full_check_insn_num): Remove 'set_terminal' parameter. Don't call target_terminal_ours / target_terminal_inferior around query. (record_full_message, record_full_registers_change) (record_full_xfer_partial): Adjust. * remote.c (interrupt_query): Don't call target_terminal_ours / target_terminal_inferior around query. * utils.c (defaulted_query): Install cleanup to restore target terminal. Put target_terminal_ours_for_output in effect while defaulted producing, and target_terminal_ours in in effect while handling input. (prompt_for_continue): Install cleanup to restore target terminal. Put target_terminal_ours in in effect while handling input.
2016-04-12 23:49:32 +08:00
}
/* Format the question outside of the loop, to avoid reusing args. */
std::string question = string_vprintf (ctlstr, args);
std::string prompt
= string_printf (_("%s%s(%s or %s) %s"),
annotation_level > 1 ? "\n\032\032pre-query\n" : "",
question.c_str (), y_string, n_string,
annotation_level > 1 ? "\n\032\032query\n" : "");
gdb: Use C++11 std::chrono This patch fixes a few problems with GDB's time handling. #1 - It avoids problems with gnulib's C++ namespace support On MinGW, the struct timeval that should be passed to gnulib's gettimeofday replacement is incompatible with libiberty's timeval_sub/timeval_add. That's because gnulib also replaces "struct timeval" with its own definition, while libiberty expects the system's. E.g., in code like this: gettimeofday (&prompt_ended, NULL); timeval_sub (&prompt_delta, &prompt_ended, &prompt_started); timeval_add (&prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_delta); That's currently handled in gdb by not using gnulib's gettimeofday at all (see common/gdb_sys_time.h), but that #undef hack won't work with if/when we enable gnulib's C++ namespace support, because that mode adds compile time warnings for uses of ::gettimeofday, which are hard errors with -Werror. #2 - But there's an elephant in the room: gettimeofday is not monotonic... We're using it to: a) check how long functions take, for performance analysis b) compute when in the future to fire events in the event-loop c) print debug timestamps But that's exactly what gettimeofday is NOT meant for. Straight from the man page: ~~~ The time returned by gettimeofday() is affected by discontinuous jumps in the system time (e.g., if the system administrator manually changes the system time). If you need a monotonically increasing clock, see clock_gettime(2). ~~~ std::chrono (part of the C++11 standard library) has a monotonic clock exactly for such purposes (std::chrono::steady_clock). This commit switches to use that instead of gettimeofday, fixing all the issues mentioned above. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/run-time-clock.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/run-time-clock.h. (COMMON_OBS): Add run-time-clock.o. * common/run-time-clock.c, common/run-time-clock.h: New files. * defs.h (struct timeval, print_transfer_performance): Delete declarations. * event-loop.c (struct gdb_timer) <when>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. (create_timer): use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use new instead of malloc. (delete_timer): Use delete instead of xfree. (duration_cast_timeval): New. (update_wait_timeout): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. * maint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h", <time.h> and "timeval-utils.h". (scoped_command_stats::~scoped_command_stats) (scoped_command_stats::scoped_command_stats): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use user_cpu_time_clock instead of get_run_time. * maint.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono>. (scoped_command_stats): <m_start_cpu_time>: Now a user_cpu_time_clock::time_point. <m_start_wall_time>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. * mi/mi-main.c: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h" and <sys/resource.h>. (rusage): Delete. (mi_execute_command): Use new instead of XNEW. (mi_load_progress): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (timestamp): Rewrite in terms of std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. (timeval_diff): Delete. (print_diff): Adjust to use std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. * mi/mi-parse.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct mi_timestamp): Change fields types to std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point, user_cpu_time_clock::time and system_cpu_time_clock::time_point, instead of struct timeval. * symfile.c: Include <chrono> instead of <time.h> and "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct time_range): New. (generic_load): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (print_transfer_performance): Replace timeval parameters with a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration parameter. Adjust. * utils.c: Include <chrono> instead of "timeval-utils.h", "gdb_sys_time.h", and <time.h>. (prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday/timeval_sub/timeval_add. (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Use std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (vfprintf_unfiltered): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use std::string. Use '.' instead of ':'. * utils.h: Include <chrono>. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * debug.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (debug_vprintf): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use '.' instead of ':'. * tracepoint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (get_timestamp): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday.
2016-11-23 23:36:26 +08:00
/* Used to add duration we waited for user to respond to
prompt_for_continue_wait_time. */
using namespace std::chrono;
steady_clock::time_point prompt_started = steady_clock::now ();
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
scoped_input_handler prepare_input;
Do target_terminal_ours in query & friends instead of in all callers Any time a caller calls query & friends / prompt_for_continue without ensuring that gdb owns the terminal for input is a bug. So do that in defaulted_query / prompt_for_continue directly instead. An example of a case where we currently miss calling target_terminal_ours is internal_error. Ever since defaulted_query was made to use gdb_readline_callback, there's no way to answer the internal error query if the internal error happens while the target is has the terminal: (gdb) c Continuing. .../src/gdb/linux-nat.c:1676: internal-error: linux_nat_resume: Assertion `dummy_counter < 10' failed. A problem internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging may prove unreliable. Quit this debugging session? (y or n) _ Entering 'y' or 'n' does not work, GDB does not respond. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-04-12 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR gdb/19828 * gnu-nat.c (inf_validate_task_sc): Don't call target_terminal_ours / target_terminal_inferior around query. * i386-tdep.c (i386_record_lea_modrm, i386_process_record): Don't call target_terminal_ours / target_terminal_inferior around yquery. * linux-record.c (record_linux_system_call): Don't call target_terminal_ours / target_terminal_inferior around yquery. * nto-procfs.c (interrupt_query): Don't call target_terminal_ours / target_terminal_inferior around query. * record-full.c (record_full_check_insn_num): Remove 'set_terminal' parameter. Don't call target_terminal_ours / target_terminal_inferior around query. (record_full_message, record_full_registers_change) (record_full_xfer_partial): Adjust. * remote.c (interrupt_query): Don't call target_terminal_ours / target_terminal_inferior around query. * utils.c (defaulted_query): Install cleanup to restore target terminal. Put target_terminal_ours_for_output in effect while defaulted producing, and target_terminal_ours in in effect while handling input. (prompt_for_continue): Install cleanup to restore target terminal. Put target_terminal_ours in in effect while handling input.
2016-04-12 23:49:32 +08:00
while (1)
{
Consolidate the custom TUI query hook with the default query hook This patch primarily rewrites defaulted_query() to use gdb_readline_wrapper() to prompt the user for input, like prompt_for_continue() does. The motivation for this rewrite is to be able to reuse the default query hook in TUI, obviating the need for a custom TUI query hook. However, having TUI use the default query mechanism exposed a couple of latent bugs in tui_redisplay_readline() related to the handling of multi-line prompts, in particular GDB's multi-line quit prompt. The first issue is an off-by-one error in the calculation of the height of the prompt. The check in question should be col <= prev_col, not c < prev_col, to properly account for the case when a prompt contains multiple consecutive newlines. Failing to do so makes TUI have the wrong idea of the vertical height of the prompt. This patch fixes the column check. The second issue is that cur_line does not get updated to reflect the cursor position if the user's prompt cursor is at the end of the prompt (i.e. if rl_point == rl_end). cur_line only gets updated if rl_point lies between 0..rl_end-1 because that is the bounds of the for loop responsible for updating cur_line. This patch changes the loop's bounds to 0..rl_end so that cur_line always gets updated. With these two bug fixes out of the way, the default query mechanism works well in TUI even with multi-line prompts like GDB's quit prompt. gdb/ChangeLog: * utils.c (defaulted_query): Rewrite to use gdb_readline_wrapper to prompt for input. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_query_hook): Remove. (tui_install_hooks): Don't set deprecated_query_hook. * tui/tui-io.c (tui_redisplay_readline): Fix off-by-one error in height calculation. Always update the command window's cur_line.
2015-01-10 02:27:56 +08:00
char *response, answer;
gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
response = gdb_readline_wrapper (prompt.c_str ());
Consolidate the custom TUI query hook with the default query hook This patch primarily rewrites defaulted_query() to use gdb_readline_wrapper() to prompt the user for input, like prompt_for_continue() does. The motivation for this rewrite is to be able to reuse the default query hook in TUI, obviating the need for a custom TUI query hook. However, having TUI use the default query mechanism exposed a couple of latent bugs in tui_redisplay_readline() related to the handling of multi-line prompts, in particular GDB's multi-line quit prompt. The first issue is an off-by-one error in the calculation of the height of the prompt. The check in question should be col <= prev_col, not c < prev_col, to properly account for the case when a prompt contains multiple consecutive newlines. Failing to do so makes TUI have the wrong idea of the vertical height of the prompt. This patch fixes the column check. The second issue is that cur_line does not get updated to reflect the cursor position if the user's prompt cursor is at the end of the prompt (i.e. if rl_point == rl_end). cur_line only gets updated if rl_point lies between 0..rl_end-1 because that is the bounds of the for loop responsible for updating cur_line. This patch changes the loop's bounds to 0..rl_end so that cur_line always gets updated. With these two bug fixes out of the way, the default query mechanism works well in TUI even with multi-line prompts like GDB's quit prompt. gdb/ChangeLog: * utils.c (defaulted_query): Rewrite to use gdb_readline_wrapper to prompt for input. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_query_hook): Remove. (tui_install_hooks): Don't set deprecated_query_hook. * tui/tui-io.c (tui_redisplay_readline): Fix off-by-one error in height calculation. Always update the command window's cur_line.
2015-01-10 02:27:56 +08:00
if (response == NULL) /* C-d */
{
gdb_printf ("EOF [assumed %c]\n", def_answer);
retval = def_value;
break;
}
Consolidate the custom TUI query hook with the default query hook This patch primarily rewrites defaulted_query() to use gdb_readline_wrapper() to prompt the user for input, like prompt_for_continue() does. The motivation for this rewrite is to be able to reuse the default query hook in TUI, obviating the need for a custom TUI query hook. However, having TUI use the default query mechanism exposed a couple of latent bugs in tui_redisplay_readline() related to the handling of multi-line prompts, in particular GDB's multi-line quit prompt. The first issue is an off-by-one error in the calculation of the height of the prompt. The check in question should be col <= prev_col, not c < prev_col, to properly account for the case when a prompt contains multiple consecutive newlines. Failing to do so makes TUI have the wrong idea of the vertical height of the prompt. This patch fixes the column check. The second issue is that cur_line does not get updated to reflect the cursor position if the user's prompt cursor is at the end of the prompt (i.e. if rl_point == rl_end). cur_line only gets updated if rl_point lies between 0..rl_end-1 because that is the bounds of the for loop responsible for updating cur_line. This patch changes the loop's bounds to 0..rl_end so that cur_line always gets updated. With these two bug fixes out of the way, the default query mechanism works well in TUI even with multi-line prompts like GDB's quit prompt. gdb/ChangeLog: * utils.c (defaulted_query): Rewrite to use gdb_readline_wrapper to prompt for input. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_query_hook): Remove. (tui_install_hooks): Don't set deprecated_query_hook. * tui/tui-io.c (tui_redisplay_readline): Fix off-by-one error in height calculation. Always update the command window's cur_line.
2015-01-10 02:27:56 +08:00
answer = response[0];
xfree (response);
if (answer >= 'a')
answer -= 040;
/* Check answer. For the non-default, the user must specify
gdb, gdbserver, gdbsupport: fix leading space vs tabs issues Many spots incorrectly use only spaces for indentation (for example, there are a lot of spots in ada-lang.c). I've always found it awkward when I needed to edit one of these spots: do I keep the original wrong indentation, or do I fix it? What if the lines around it are also wrong, do I fix them too? I probably don't want to fix them in the same patch, to avoid adding noise to my patch. So I propose to fix as much as possible once and for all (hopefully). One typical counter argument for this is that it makes code archeology more difficult, because git-blame will show this commit as the last change for these lines. My counter counter argument is: when git-blaming, you often need to do "blame the file at the parent commit" anyway, to go past some other refactor that touched the line you are interested in, but is not the change you are looking for. So you already need a somewhat efficient way to do this. Using some interactive tool, rather than plain git-blame, makes this trivial. For example, I use "tig blame <file>", where going back past the commit that changed the currently selected line is one keystroke. It looks like Magit in Emacs does it too (though I've never used it). Web viewers of Github and Gitlab do it too. My point is that it won't really make archeology more difficult. The other typical counter argument is that it will cause conflicts with existing patches. That's true... but it's a one time cost, and those are not conflicts that are difficult to resolve. I have also tried "git rebase --ignore-whitespace", it seems to work well. Although that will re-introduce the faulty indentation, so one needs to take care of fixing the indentation in the patch after that (which is easy). gdb/ChangeLog: * aarch64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.c: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.h: Fix indentation. * ada-tasks.c: Fix indentation. * ada-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.h: Fix indentation. * agent.c: Fix indentation. * aix-thread.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-mdebug-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * annotate.c: Fix indentation. * arc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arch-utils.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-pikeos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * arm-wince-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * auto-load.c: Fix indentation. * auxv.c: Fix indentation. * avr-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ax-gdb.c: Fix indentation. * ax-general.c: Fix indentation. * bfin-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * block.c: Fix indentation. * block.h: Fix indentation. * blockframe.c: Fix indentation. * bpf-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-sig.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-throw.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.h: Fix indentation. * bsd-uthread.c: Fix indentation. * btrace.c: Fix indentation. * build-id.c: Fix indentation. * buildsym-legacy.h: Fix indentation. * buildsym.c: Fix indentation. * c-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * charset.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.h: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-script.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-setshow.c: Fix indentation. * coff-pe-read.c: Fix indentation. * coffread.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-cplus-types.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-load.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-run.c: Fix indentation. * completer.c: Fix indentation. * corefile.c: Fix indentation. * corelow.c: Fix indentation. * cp-abi.h: Fix indentation. * cp-namespace.c: Fix indentation. * cp-support.c: Fix indentation. * cp-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * cris-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * cris-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat-info.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.h: Fix indentation. * dbxread.c: Fix indentation. * dcache.c: Fix indentation. * disasm.c: Fix indentation. * dtrace-probe.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/abbrev.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/attribute.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/expr.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/frame.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-cache.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-write.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/line-header.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/loc.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/macro.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.h: Fix indentation. * elfread.c: Fix indentation. * eval.c: Fix indentation. * event-top.c: Fix indentation. * exec.c: Fix indentation. * exec.h: Fix indentation. * expprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-lang.c: Fix indentation. * f-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * findvar.c: Fix indentation. * fork-child.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.h: Fix indentation. * frame.c: Fix indentation. * frv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ft32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gcore.c: Fix indentation. * gdb_bfd.c: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.sh: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.c: Re-generate * gdbarch.h: Re-generate. * gdbcore.h: Fix indentation. * gdbthread.h: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.c: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.h: Fix indentation. * glibc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.h: Fix indentation. * gnu-v2-abi.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-v3-abi.c: Fix indentation. * go32-nat.c: Fix indentation. * guile/guile-internal.h: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-cmd.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-frame.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-iterator.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-math.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-ports.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-pretty-print.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-value.c: Fix indentation. * h8300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-dicos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-sol2-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-vms-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * infcall.c: Fix indentation. * infcmd.c: Fix indentation. * inferior.c: Fix indentation. * infrun.c: Fix indentation. * iq2000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * language.c: Fix indentation. * linespec.c: Fix indentation. * linux-fork.c: Fix indentation. * linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * linux-thread-db.c: Fix indentation. * lm32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m2-lang.c: Fix indentation. * m2-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * m2-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * m32c-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68hc11-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * machoread.c: Fix indentation. * macrocmd.c: Fix indentation. * macroexp.c: Fix indentation. * macroscope.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.h: Fix indentation. * main.c: Fix indentation. * mdebugread.c: Fix indentation. * mep-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-catch.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-disas.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-env.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-stack.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-var.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-main.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-parse.c: Fix indentation. * microblaze-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * minidebug.c: Fix indentation. * minsyms.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * moxie-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * msp430-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * namespace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/fork-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * nat/gdb_ptrace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-namespaces.c: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-osdata.c: Fix indentation. * nat/netbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nat/x86-dregs.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nto-procfs.c: Fix indentation. * nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.h: Fix indentation. * opencl-lang.c: Fix indentation. * or1k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.h: Fix indentation. * osdata.c: Fix indentation. * p-lang.c: Fix indentation. * p-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * p-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * parse.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-sysv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * printcmd.c: Fix indentation. * proc-api.c: Fix indentation. * producer.c: Fix indentation. * producer.h: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.c: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.h: Fix indentation. * psymtab.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-arch.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-bpevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-finishbreakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-frame.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-framefilter.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-infthread.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-objfile.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-prettyprint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-registers.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-signalevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-threadevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-tui.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-value.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-xmethods.c: Fix indentation. * python/python-internal.h: Fix indentation. * python/python.c: Fix indentation. * ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * record-btrace.c: Fix indentation. * record-full.c: Fix indentation. * record.c: Fix indentation. * reggroups.c: Fix indentation. * regset.h: Fix indentation. * remote-fileio.c: Fix indentation. * remote.c: Fix indentation. * reverse.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rl78-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-aix-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-nat.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rust-lang.c: Fix indentation. * rx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s12z-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s390-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * score-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ser-base.c: Fix indentation. * ser-mingw.c: Fix indentation. * ser-uds.c: Fix indentation. * ser-unix.c: Fix indentation. * serial.c: Fix indentation. * sh-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * skip.c: Fix indentation. * sol-thread.c: Fix indentation. * solib-aix.c: Fix indentation. * solib-darwin.c: Fix indentation. * solib-frv.c: Fix indentation. * solib-svr4.c: Fix indentation. * solib.c: Fix indentation. * source.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * stabsread.c: Fix indentation. * stack.c: Fix indentation. * stap-probe.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/ia64vms-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m32r-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m68k-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sh-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sparc-stub.c: Fix indentation. * symfile-mem.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.h: Fix indentation. * symmisc.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.h: Fix indentation. * target-float.c: Fix indentation. * target.c: Fix indentation. * target.h: Fix indentation. * tic6x-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * top.c: Fix indentation. * tracefile-tfile.c: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-disasm.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-io.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-regs.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-stack.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-win.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-winsource.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui.c: Fix indentation. * typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ui-out.h: Fix indentation. * unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * unittests/memory-map-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * utils.c: Fix indentation. * v850-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * valarith.c: Fix indentation. * valops.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.h: Fix indentation. * value.c: Fix indentation. * value.h: Fix indentation. * varobj.c: Fix indentation. * vax-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * windows-nat.c: Fix indentation. * windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xcoffread.c: Fix indentation. * xml-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * xml-tdesc.c: Fix indentation. * xstormy16-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-config.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. gdbserver/ChangeLog: * ax.cc: Fix indentation. * dll.cc: Fix indentation. * inferiors.h: Fix indentation. * linux-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-nios2-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-ipa.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-x86-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-xtensa-low.cc: Fix indentation. * regcache.cc: Fix indentation. * server.cc: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.cc: Fix indentation. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: * common-exceptions.h: Fix indentation. * event-loop.cc: Fix indentation. * fileio.cc: Fix indentation. * filestuff.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb-dlfcn.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb_string_view.h: Fix indentation. * job-control.cc: Fix indentation. * signals.cc: Fix indentation. Change-Id: I4bad7ae6be0fbe14168b8ebafb98ffe14964a695
2020-11-02 23:26:14 +08:00
the non-default explicitly. */
if (answer == not_def_answer)
{
retval = !def_value;
break;
}
/* Otherwise, if a default was specified, the user may either
gdb, gdbserver, gdbsupport: fix leading space vs tabs issues Many spots incorrectly use only spaces for indentation (for example, there are a lot of spots in ada-lang.c). I've always found it awkward when I needed to edit one of these spots: do I keep the original wrong indentation, or do I fix it? What if the lines around it are also wrong, do I fix them too? I probably don't want to fix them in the same patch, to avoid adding noise to my patch. So I propose to fix as much as possible once and for all (hopefully). One typical counter argument for this is that it makes code archeology more difficult, because git-blame will show this commit as the last change for these lines. My counter counter argument is: when git-blaming, you often need to do "blame the file at the parent commit" anyway, to go past some other refactor that touched the line you are interested in, but is not the change you are looking for. So you already need a somewhat efficient way to do this. Using some interactive tool, rather than plain git-blame, makes this trivial. For example, I use "tig blame <file>", where going back past the commit that changed the currently selected line is one keystroke. It looks like Magit in Emacs does it too (though I've never used it). Web viewers of Github and Gitlab do it too. My point is that it won't really make archeology more difficult. The other typical counter argument is that it will cause conflicts with existing patches. That's true... but it's a one time cost, and those are not conflicts that are difficult to resolve. I have also tried "git rebase --ignore-whitespace", it seems to work well. Although that will re-introduce the faulty indentation, so one needs to take care of fixing the indentation in the patch after that (which is easy). gdb/ChangeLog: * aarch64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.c: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.h: Fix indentation. * ada-tasks.c: Fix indentation. * ada-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.h: Fix indentation. * agent.c: Fix indentation. * aix-thread.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-mdebug-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * annotate.c: Fix indentation. * arc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arch-utils.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-pikeos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * arm-wince-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * auto-load.c: Fix indentation. * auxv.c: Fix indentation. * avr-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ax-gdb.c: Fix indentation. * ax-general.c: Fix indentation. * bfin-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * block.c: Fix indentation. * block.h: Fix indentation. * blockframe.c: Fix indentation. * bpf-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-sig.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-throw.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.h: Fix indentation. * bsd-uthread.c: Fix indentation. * btrace.c: Fix indentation. * build-id.c: Fix indentation. * buildsym-legacy.h: Fix indentation. * buildsym.c: Fix indentation. * c-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * charset.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.h: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-script.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-setshow.c: Fix indentation. * coff-pe-read.c: Fix indentation. * coffread.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-cplus-types.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-load.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-run.c: Fix indentation. * completer.c: Fix indentation. * corefile.c: Fix indentation. * corelow.c: Fix indentation. * cp-abi.h: Fix indentation. * cp-namespace.c: Fix indentation. * cp-support.c: Fix indentation. * cp-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * cris-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * cris-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat-info.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.h: Fix indentation. * dbxread.c: Fix indentation. * dcache.c: Fix indentation. * disasm.c: Fix indentation. * dtrace-probe.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/abbrev.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/attribute.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/expr.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/frame.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-cache.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-write.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/line-header.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/loc.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/macro.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.h: Fix indentation. * elfread.c: Fix indentation. * eval.c: Fix indentation. * event-top.c: Fix indentation. * exec.c: Fix indentation. * exec.h: Fix indentation. * expprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-lang.c: Fix indentation. * f-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * findvar.c: Fix indentation. * fork-child.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.h: Fix indentation. * frame.c: Fix indentation. * frv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ft32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gcore.c: Fix indentation. * gdb_bfd.c: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.sh: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.c: Re-generate * gdbarch.h: Re-generate. * gdbcore.h: Fix indentation. * gdbthread.h: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.c: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.h: Fix indentation. * glibc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.h: Fix indentation. * gnu-v2-abi.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-v3-abi.c: Fix indentation. * go32-nat.c: Fix indentation. * guile/guile-internal.h: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-cmd.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-frame.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-iterator.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-math.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-ports.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-pretty-print.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-value.c: Fix indentation. * h8300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-dicos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-sol2-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-vms-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * infcall.c: Fix indentation. * infcmd.c: Fix indentation. * inferior.c: Fix indentation. * infrun.c: Fix indentation. * iq2000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * language.c: Fix indentation. * linespec.c: Fix indentation. * linux-fork.c: Fix indentation. * linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * linux-thread-db.c: Fix indentation. * lm32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m2-lang.c: Fix indentation. * m2-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * m2-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * m32c-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68hc11-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * machoread.c: Fix indentation. * macrocmd.c: Fix indentation. * macroexp.c: Fix indentation. * macroscope.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.h: Fix indentation. * main.c: Fix indentation. * mdebugread.c: Fix indentation. * mep-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-catch.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-disas.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-env.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-stack.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-var.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-main.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-parse.c: Fix indentation. * microblaze-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * minidebug.c: Fix indentation. * minsyms.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * moxie-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * msp430-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * namespace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/fork-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * nat/gdb_ptrace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-namespaces.c: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-osdata.c: Fix indentation. * nat/netbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nat/x86-dregs.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nto-procfs.c: Fix indentation. * nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.h: Fix indentation. * opencl-lang.c: Fix indentation. * or1k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.h: Fix indentation. * osdata.c: Fix indentation. * p-lang.c: Fix indentation. * p-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * p-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * parse.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-sysv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * printcmd.c: Fix indentation. * proc-api.c: Fix indentation. * producer.c: Fix indentation. * producer.h: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.c: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.h: Fix indentation. * psymtab.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-arch.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-bpevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-finishbreakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-frame.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-framefilter.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-infthread.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-objfile.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-prettyprint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-registers.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-signalevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-threadevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-tui.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-value.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-xmethods.c: Fix indentation. * python/python-internal.h: Fix indentation. * python/python.c: Fix indentation. * ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * record-btrace.c: Fix indentation. * record-full.c: Fix indentation. * record.c: Fix indentation. * reggroups.c: Fix indentation. * regset.h: Fix indentation. * remote-fileio.c: Fix indentation. * remote.c: Fix indentation. * reverse.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rl78-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-aix-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-nat.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rust-lang.c: Fix indentation. * rx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s12z-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s390-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * score-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ser-base.c: Fix indentation. * ser-mingw.c: Fix indentation. * ser-uds.c: Fix indentation. * ser-unix.c: Fix indentation. * serial.c: Fix indentation. * sh-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * skip.c: Fix indentation. * sol-thread.c: Fix indentation. * solib-aix.c: Fix indentation. * solib-darwin.c: Fix indentation. * solib-frv.c: Fix indentation. * solib-svr4.c: Fix indentation. * solib.c: Fix indentation. * source.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * stabsread.c: Fix indentation. * stack.c: Fix indentation. * stap-probe.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/ia64vms-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m32r-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m68k-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sh-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sparc-stub.c: Fix indentation. * symfile-mem.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.h: Fix indentation. * symmisc.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.h: Fix indentation. * target-float.c: Fix indentation. * target.c: Fix indentation. * target.h: Fix indentation. * tic6x-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * top.c: Fix indentation. * tracefile-tfile.c: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-disasm.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-io.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-regs.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-stack.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-win.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-winsource.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui.c: Fix indentation. * typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ui-out.h: Fix indentation. * unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * unittests/memory-map-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * utils.c: Fix indentation. * v850-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * valarith.c: Fix indentation. * valops.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.h: Fix indentation. * value.c: Fix indentation. * value.h: Fix indentation. * varobj.c: Fix indentation. * vax-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * windows-nat.c: Fix indentation. * windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xcoffread.c: Fix indentation. * xml-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * xml-tdesc.c: Fix indentation. * xstormy16-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-config.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. gdbserver/ChangeLog: * ax.cc: Fix indentation. * dll.cc: Fix indentation. * inferiors.h: Fix indentation. * linux-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-nios2-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-ipa.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-x86-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-xtensa-low.cc: Fix indentation. * regcache.cc: Fix indentation. * server.cc: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.cc: Fix indentation. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: * common-exceptions.h: Fix indentation. * event-loop.cc: Fix indentation. * fileio.cc: Fix indentation. * filestuff.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb-dlfcn.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb_string_view.h: Fix indentation. * job-control.cc: Fix indentation. * signals.cc: Fix indentation. Change-Id: I4bad7ae6be0fbe14168b8ebafb98ffe14964a695
2020-11-02 23:26:14 +08:00
specify the required input or have it default by entering
nothing. */
if (answer == def_answer
Consolidate the custom TUI query hook with the default query hook This patch primarily rewrites defaulted_query() to use gdb_readline_wrapper() to prompt the user for input, like prompt_for_continue() does. The motivation for this rewrite is to be able to reuse the default query hook in TUI, obviating the need for a custom TUI query hook. However, having TUI use the default query mechanism exposed a couple of latent bugs in tui_redisplay_readline() related to the handling of multi-line prompts, in particular GDB's multi-line quit prompt. The first issue is an off-by-one error in the calculation of the height of the prompt. The check in question should be col <= prev_col, not c < prev_col, to properly account for the case when a prompt contains multiple consecutive newlines. Failing to do so makes TUI have the wrong idea of the vertical height of the prompt. This patch fixes the column check. The second issue is that cur_line does not get updated to reflect the cursor position if the user's prompt cursor is at the end of the prompt (i.e. if rl_point == rl_end). cur_line only gets updated if rl_point lies between 0..rl_end-1 because that is the bounds of the for loop responsible for updating cur_line. This patch changes the loop's bounds to 0..rl_end so that cur_line always gets updated. With these two bug fixes out of the way, the default query mechanism works well in TUI even with multi-line prompts like GDB's quit prompt. gdb/ChangeLog: * utils.c (defaulted_query): Rewrite to use gdb_readline_wrapper to prompt for input. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_query_hook): Remove. (tui_install_hooks): Don't set deprecated_query_hook. * tui/tui-io.c (tui_redisplay_readline): Fix off-by-one error in height calculation. Always update the command window's cur_line.
2015-01-10 02:27:56 +08:00
|| (defchar != '\0' && answer == '\0'))
{
retval = def_value;
break;
}
/* Invalid entries are not defaulted and require another selection. */
gdb_printf (_("Please answer %s or %s.\n"),
y_string, n_string);
}
/* Add time spend in this routine to prompt_for_continue_wait_time. */
gdb: Use C++11 std::chrono This patch fixes a few problems with GDB's time handling. #1 - It avoids problems with gnulib's C++ namespace support On MinGW, the struct timeval that should be passed to gnulib's gettimeofday replacement is incompatible with libiberty's timeval_sub/timeval_add. That's because gnulib also replaces "struct timeval" with its own definition, while libiberty expects the system's. E.g., in code like this: gettimeofday (&prompt_ended, NULL); timeval_sub (&prompt_delta, &prompt_ended, &prompt_started); timeval_add (&prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_delta); That's currently handled in gdb by not using gnulib's gettimeofday at all (see common/gdb_sys_time.h), but that #undef hack won't work with if/when we enable gnulib's C++ namespace support, because that mode adds compile time warnings for uses of ::gettimeofday, which are hard errors with -Werror. #2 - But there's an elephant in the room: gettimeofday is not monotonic... We're using it to: a) check how long functions take, for performance analysis b) compute when in the future to fire events in the event-loop c) print debug timestamps But that's exactly what gettimeofday is NOT meant for. Straight from the man page: ~~~ The time returned by gettimeofday() is affected by discontinuous jumps in the system time (e.g., if the system administrator manually changes the system time). If you need a monotonically increasing clock, see clock_gettime(2). ~~~ std::chrono (part of the C++11 standard library) has a monotonic clock exactly for such purposes (std::chrono::steady_clock). This commit switches to use that instead of gettimeofday, fixing all the issues mentioned above. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/run-time-clock.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/run-time-clock.h. (COMMON_OBS): Add run-time-clock.o. * common/run-time-clock.c, common/run-time-clock.h: New files. * defs.h (struct timeval, print_transfer_performance): Delete declarations. * event-loop.c (struct gdb_timer) <when>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. (create_timer): use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use new instead of malloc. (delete_timer): Use delete instead of xfree. (duration_cast_timeval): New. (update_wait_timeout): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. * maint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h", <time.h> and "timeval-utils.h". (scoped_command_stats::~scoped_command_stats) (scoped_command_stats::scoped_command_stats): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use user_cpu_time_clock instead of get_run_time. * maint.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono>. (scoped_command_stats): <m_start_cpu_time>: Now a user_cpu_time_clock::time_point. <m_start_wall_time>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. * mi/mi-main.c: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h" and <sys/resource.h>. (rusage): Delete. (mi_execute_command): Use new instead of XNEW. (mi_load_progress): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (timestamp): Rewrite in terms of std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. (timeval_diff): Delete. (print_diff): Adjust to use std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. * mi/mi-parse.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct mi_timestamp): Change fields types to std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point, user_cpu_time_clock::time and system_cpu_time_clock::time_point, instead of struct timeval. * symfile.c: Include <chrono> instead of <time.h> and "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct time_range): New. (generic_load): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (print_transfer_performance): Replace timeval parameters with a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration parameter. Adjust. * utils.c: Include <chrono> instead of "timeval-utils.h", "gdb_sys_time.h", and <time.h>. (prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday/timeval_sub/timeval_add. (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Use std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (vfprintf_unfiltered): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use std::string. Use '.' instead of ':'. * utils.h: Include <chrono>. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * debug.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (debug_vprintf): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use '.' instead of ':'. * tracepoint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (get_timestamp): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday.
2016-11-23 23:36:26 +08:00
prompt_for_continue_wait_time += steady_clock::now () - prompt_started;
if (annotation_level > 1)
gdb_printf (("\n\032\032post-query\n"));
return retval;
}
/* Ask user a y-or-n question and return 0 if answer is no, 1 if
answer is yes, or 0 if answer is defaulted.
Takes three args which are given to printf to print the question.
The first, a control string, should end in "? ".
It should not say how to answer, because we do that. */
int
nquery (const char *ctlstr, ...)
{
va_list args;
int ret;
va_start (args, ctlstr);
ret = defaulted_query (ctlstr, 'n', args);
va_end (args);
return ret;
}
/* Ask user a y-or-n question and return 0 if answer is no, 1 if
answer is yes, or 1 if answer is defaulted.
Takes three args which are given to printf to print the question.
The first, a control string, should end in "? ".
It should not say how to answer, because we do that. */
int
yquery (const char *ctlstr, ...)
{
va_list args;
int ret;
va_start (args, ctlstr);
ret = defaulted_query (ctlstr, 'y', args);
va_end (args);
return ret;
}
/* Ask user a y-or-n question and return 1 iff answer is yes.
Takes three args which are given to printf to print the question.
The first, a control string, should end in "? ".
It should not say how to answer, because we do that. */
int
query (const char *ctlstr, ...)
{
va_list args;
int ret;
va_start (args, ctlstr);
ret = defaulted_query (ctlstr, '\0', args);
va_end (args);
return ret;
}
gdb: 2009-03-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com> Julian Brown <julian@codesourcery.com> PR i18n/7220, PR i18n/7821, PR exp/8815, PR exp/9103, PR i18n/9401, PR exp/9613: * NEWS: Update * value.h (value_typed_string): Declare. (val_print_string): Update. * valprint.h (print_char_chars): Update. * valprint.c (print_char_chars): Add type argument. Update. (val_print_string): Likewise. * valops.c (value_typed_string): New function. * utils.c (host_char_to_target): New function. (parse_escape): Use host_char_to_target, host_hex_value. Update. Remove '^' case. (no_control_char_error): Remove. * typeprint.c (print_type_scalar): Update. * scm-valprint.c (scm_scmval_print): Update. * scm-lang.h (scm_printchar, scm_printstr): Update. * scm-lang.c (scm_printchar): Add type argument. (scm_printstr): Likewise. * printcmd.c (print_formatted): Update. (print_scalar_formatted): Update. (printf_command) <wide_string_arg, wide_char_arg>: New constants. Handle '%lc' and '%ls'. * parser-defs.h (struct typed_stoken): New type. (struct stoken_vector): Likewise. (write_exp_string_vector): Declare. * parse.c (write_exp_string_vector): New function. * p-valprint.c (pascal_val_print): Update. * p-lang.h (is_pascal_string_type, pascal_printchar, pascal_printstr): Update. * p-lang.c (is_pascal_string_type): Remove 'char_size' argument. Add 'char_type' argument. (pascal_emit_char): Add type argument. (pascal_printchar): Likewise. (pascal_printstr): Likewise. * objc-lang.c (objc_emit_char): Add type argument. (objc_printchar): Likewise. (objc_printstr): Likewise. * macroexp.c (get_character_constant): Handle unicode characters. Use c_parse_escape. (get_string_literal): Handle unicode strings. Use c_parse_escape. * m2-valprint.c (print_unpacked_pointer): Update. (m2_print_array_contents): Update. (m2_val_print): Update. * m2-lang.c (m2_emit_char): Add type argument. (m2_printchar): Likewise. (m2_printstr): Likewise. * language.h (struct language_defn) <la_printchar>: Add type argument. <la_printstr, la_emitchar>: Likewise. (LA_PRINT_CHAR): Likewise. (LA_PRINT_STRING): Likewise. (LA_EMIT_CHAR): Likewise. * language.c (unk_lang_emit_char): Add type argument. (unk_lang_printchar): Likewise. (unk_lang_printstr): Likewise. * jv-valprint.c (java_val_print): Update. * jv-lang.c (java_emit_char): Add type argument. * f-valprint.c (f_val_print): Update. * f-lang.c (f_emit_char): Add type argument. (f_printchar): Likewise. (f_printstr): Likewise. * expprint.c (print_subexp_standard): Update. * charset.h (target_wide_charset): Declare. (c_target_char_has_backslash_escape, c_parse_backslash, host_char_print_literally, host_char_to_target, target_char_to_host, target_char_to_control_char): Remove. (enum transliterations): New type. (convert_between_encodings): Declare. (HOST_ESCAPE_CHAR): New define. (host_letter_to_control_character, host_hex_value): Declare. (enum wchar_iterate_result): New enum. (struct wchar_iterator): Declare. (make_wchar_iterator, make_cleanup_wchar_iterator, wchar_iterator, wchar_push_back): Declare. * charset-list.h: New file. * c-valprint.c (textual_name): New function. (textual_element_type): Handle wide character types. (c_val_print): Pass original type to textual_element_type. Handle wide character types. (c_value_print): Use textual_element_type. Pass original type of value to val_print. * c-lang.h (enum c_string_type): New type. (c_printchar, c_printstr): Update. * c-lang.c (classify_type): New function. (print_wchar): Likewise. (c_emit_char): Add type argument. Handle wide characters. (c_printchar): Likewise. (c_printstr): Add type argument. Handle wide and multibyte character sets. (convert_ucn): New function. (emit_numeric_character): Likewise. (convert_octal): Likewise. (convert_hex): Likewise. (ADVANCE): New macro. (convert_escape): New function. (parse_one_string): Likewise. (evaluate_subexp_c): Likewise. (exp_descriptor_c): New global. (c_language_defn): Use exp_descriptor_c. (cplus_language_defn): Likewise. (asm_language_defn): Likewise. (minimal_language_defn): Likewise. (charset_for_string_type): New function. * c-exp.y (%union): Add 'svec' and 'tsval'. (CHAR): New token. (exp): Add CHAR production. (string_exp): Rewrite. (exp) <string_exp>: Rewrite. (tempbuf): Now global. (tempbuf_init): New global. (parse_string_or_char): New function. (yylex) <tempbuf>: Now global. <tokptr, tempbufindex, tempbufsize, token_string, class_prefix>: Remove. Handle 'u', 'U', and 'L' prefixes. Call parse_string_or_char. (c_parse_escape): New function. * auxv.c (fprint_target_auxv): Update. * ada-valprint.c (ada_emit_char): Add type argument. (ada_printchar): Likewise. (ada_print_scalar): Update. (printstr): Add type argument. Update calls to ada_emit_char. (ada_printstr): Add type argument. (ada_val_print_array): Update. (ada_val_print_1): Likewise. * ada-lang.c (emit_char): Add type argument. * ada-lang.h (ada_emit_char, ada_printchar, ada_printstr): Add type arguments. * gdb_locale.h: Include langinfo.h. * charset.c (_initialize_charset): Set default host charset from the locale. Don't register charsets. Add target-wide-charset commands. Call find_charset_names. (struct charset, struct translation): Remove. (GDB_DEFAULT_HOST_CHARSET): Remove. (GDB_DEFAULT_TARGET_WIDE_CHARSET): New define. (target_wide_charset_name): New global. (show_host_charset_name): Handle "auto". (show_target_wide_charset_name): New function. (host_charset_enum, target_charset_enum): Remove. (charset_enum): New global. (all_charsets, register_charset, lookup_charset, all_translations, register_translation, lookup_translation): Remove. (simple_charset, ascii_print_literally, ascii_to_control): Remove. (iso_8859_print_literally, iso_8859_to_control, iso_8859_family_charset): Remove. (ebcdic_print_literally, ebcdic_to_control, ebcdic_family_charset): Remove. (struct cached_iconv, check_iconv_cache, cached_iconv_convert, register_iconv_charsets): Remove. (target_wide_charset_be_name, target_wide_charset_le_name): New globals. (identity_either_char_to_other): Remove. (set_be_le_names, validate): New functions. (backslashable, backslashed, represented): Remove. (default_c_target_char_has_backslash_escape): Remove. (default_c_parse_backslash, iconv_convert): Remove. (ascii_to_iso_8859_1_table, ascii_to_ebcdic_us_table, ascii_to_ibm1047_table, iso_8859_1_to_ascii_table, iso_8859_1_to_ebcdic_us_table, iso_8859_1_to_ibm1047_table, ebcdic_us_to_ascii_table, ebcdic_us_to_iso_8859_1_table, ebcdic_us_to_ibm1047_table, ibm1047_to_ascii_table, ibm1047_to_iso_8859_1_table, ibm1047_to_ebcdic_us_table): Remove. (table_convert_char, table_translation, simple_table_translation): Remove. (current_host_charset, current_target_charset, c_target_char_has_backslash_escape_func, c_target_char_has_backslash_escape_baton): Remove. (c_parse_backslash_func, c_parse_backslash_baton): Remove. (host_char_to_target_func, host_char_to_target_baton): Remove. (target_char_to_host_func, target_char_to_host_baton): Remove. (cached_iconv_host_to_target, cached_iconv_target_to_host): Remove. (lookup_charset_or_error, check_valid_host_charset): Remove. (set_host_and_target_charsets): Remove. (set_host_charset, set_target_charset): Remove. (set_host_charset_sfunc, set_target_charset_sfunc): Rewrite. (set_target_wide_charset_sfunc): New function. (show_charset): Print target wide character set. (host_charset, target_charset): Rewrite. (target_wide_charset): New function. (c_target_char_has_backslash_escape): Remove. (c_parse_backslash): Remove. (host_letter_to_control_character): New function. (host_char_print_literally): Remove. (host_hex_value): New function. (target_char_to_control_char): Remove. (cleanup_iconv): New function. (convert_between_encodings): New function. (target_char_to_host): Remove. (struct wchar_iterator): Define. (make_wchar_iterator, make_cleanup_wchar_iterator, wchar_iterator, wchar_push_back): New functions. (do_cleanup_iterator): New function. (char_ptr): New typedef. (charsets): New global. (add_one, find_charset_names): New functions. (default_charset_names): New global. (auto_host_charset_name): Likewise. * aclocal.m4, config.in, configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Call AM_LANGINFO_CODESET. (GDB_DEFAULT_HOST_CHARSET): Default to UTF-8. (AM_ICONV): Invoke earlier. * acinclude.m4: Include codeset.m4. Subst LIBICONV_INCLUDE and LIBICONV_LIBDIR. Check for libiconv in build tree. * Makefile.in (LIBICONV_LIBDIR, LIBICONV_INCLUDE): New macros. (INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE): Add LIBICONV_INCLUDE. (INTERNAL_LDFLAGS): Add LIBICONV_LIBDIR. * gdb_obstack.h (obstack_grow_wstr): New define. * gdb_wchar.h: New file. * defs.h: Include it. gdb/testsuite: * gdb.base/store.exp: Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/callfuncs.exp (fetch_all_registers): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/pointers.exp: Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/long_long.exp (gdb_test_long_long): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/constvars.exp (do_constvar_tests): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/call-rt-st.exp (print_struct_call): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.cp/ref-types.exp (gdb_start_again): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/setvar.exp: Update for change to escape output. * lib/gdb.exp (default_gdb_start): Set LC_CTYPE to C. * gdb.base/printcmds.exp (test_print_all_chars): Update for change to escape output. (test_print_string_constants): Likewise. * gdb.base/charset.exp (valid_host_charset): Check size of wchar_t. Handle UCS-2 and UCS-4. Add tests for wide and unicode cases. Handle "auto"-related output. * gdb.base/charset.c (char16_t, char32_t): New typedefs. (uvar, Uvar): New globals. gdb/doc: * gdb.texinfo (Character Sets): Remove obsolete text. Document set target-wide-charset. (Requirements): Mention iconv.
2009-03-21 07:04:40 +08:00
/* A helper for parse_escape that converts a host character to a
target character. C is the host character. If conversion is
possible, then the target character is stored in *TARGET_C and the
function returns 1. Otherwise, the function returns 0. */
static int
gdb 2010-03-05 Corinna Vinschen <vinschen@redhat.com> Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com> * utils.c (host_char_to_target): Add 'gdbarch' argument. (parse_escape): Likewise. * python/py-utils.c (unicode_to_target_string): Update. (unicode_to_target_python_string): Update. (target_string_to_unicode): Update. * printcmd.c (printf_command): Update. * p-exp.y (yylex): Update. * objc-exp.y (yylex): Update. * mi/mi-parse.c: Include charset.h. (mi_parse_escape): New function. (mi_parse_argv): Use it. * jv-exp.y (yylex): Update. * i386-cygwin-tdep.c (i386_cygwin_auto_wide_charset): New function. (i386_cygwin_init_abi): Call set_gdbarch_auto_wide_charset. * gdbarch.sh (auto_charset, auto_wide_charset): New. * gdbarch.c: Rebuild. * gdbarch.h: Rebuild. * defs.h (parse_escape): Update. * cli/cli-setshow.c: Include arch-utils.h. (do_setshow_command): Update. * cli/cli-cmds.c (echo_command): Update. * charset.h (target_charset, target_wide_charset): Update. * charset.c: Include arch-utils.h. (target_charset_name): Default to "auto". (target_wide_charset_name): Likewise. (show_target_charset_name): Handle "auto". (show_target_wide_charset_name): Likewise. (be_le_arch): New global. (set_be_le_names): Add 'gdbarch' argument. (validate): Likewise. Don't call set_be_le_names. (set_charset_sfunc, set_host_charset_sfunc) (set_target_charset_sfunc, set_target_wide_charset_sfunc): Update. (target_charset): Add 'gdbarch' argument. (target_wide_charset): Likewise. Remove 'byte_order' argument. (auto_target_charset_name): New global. (default_auto_charset, default_auto_wide_charset): New functions. (_initialize_charset): Set auto_target_charset_name. Allow "auto" for target charsets. Copy result of nl_langinfo. Use GetACP if USE_WIN32API. * c-lang.c (charset_for_string_type): Add 'gdbarch' argument, remove 'byte_order' argument. Update. (classify_type): Likewise. (c_emit_char): Update. (c_printchar): Update. (c_printstr): Update. (c_get_string): Update. (evaluate_subexp_c): Update. * arch-utils.h (default_auto_charset, default_auto_wide_charset): Declare. * python/python.c (gdbpy_target_charset): New function. (gdbpy_target_wide_charset): Likewise. (GdbMethods): Update. * NEWS: Update. gdb/doc * gdb.texinfo (Basic Python): Document target_charset and target_wide_charset. gdb/testsuite * gdb.python/py-prettyprint.py (pp_nullstr.to_string): Use gdb.target_charset. (pp_ns.to_string): Likewise.
2010-03-06 04:18:19 +08:00
host_char_to_target (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int c, int *target_c)
{
gdb: 2009-03-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com> Julian Brown <julian@codesourcery.com> PR i18n/7220, PR i18n/7821, PR exp/8815, PR exp/9103, PR i18n/9401, PR exp/9613: * NEWS: Update * value.h (value_typed_string): Declare. (val_print_string): Update. * valprint.h (print_char_chars): Update. * valprint.c (print_char_chars): Add type argument. Update. (val_print_string): Likewise. * valops.c (value_typed_string): New function. * utils.c (host_char_to_target): New function. (parse_escape): Use host_char_to_target, host_hex_value. Update. Remove '^' case. (no_control_char_error): Remove. * typeprint.c (print_type_scalar): Update. * scm-valprint.c (scm_scmval_print): Update. * scm-lang.h (scm_printchar, scm_printstr): Update. * scm-lang.c (scm_printchar): Add type argument. (scm_printstr): Likewise. * printcmd.c (print_formatted): Update. (print_scalar_formatted): Update. (printf_command) <wide_string_arg, wide_char_arg>: New constants. Handle '%lc' and '%ls'. * parser-defs.h (struct typed_stoken): New type. (struct stoken_vector): Likewise. (write_exp_string_vector): Declare. * parse.c (write_exp_string_vector): New function. * p-valprint.c (pascal_val_print): Update. * p-lang.h (is_pascal_string_type, pascal_printchar, pascal_printstr): Update. * p-lang.c (is_pascal_string_type): Remove 'char_size' argument. Add 'char_type' argument. (pascal_emit_char): Add type argument. (pascal_printchar): Likewise. (pascal_printstr): Likewise. * objc-lang.c (objc_emit_char): Add type argument. (objc_printchar): Likewise. (objc_printstr): Likewise. * macroexp.c (get_character_constant): Handle unicode characters. Use c_parse_escape. (get_string_literal): Handle unicode strings. Use c_parse_escape. * m2-valprint.c (print_unpacked_pointer): Update. (m2_print_array_contents): Update. (m2_val_print): Update. * m2-lang.c (m2_emit_char): Add type argument. (m2_printchar): Likewise. (m2_printstr): Likewise. * language.h (struct language_defn) <la_printchar>: Add type argument. <la_printstr, la_emitchar>: Likewise. (LA_PRINT_CHAR): Likewise. (LA_PRINT_STRING): Likewise. (LA_EMIT_CHAR): Likewise. * language.c (unk_lang_emit_char): Add type argument. (unk_lang_printchar): Likewise. (unk_lang_printstr): Likewise. * jv-valprint.c (java_val_print): Update. * jv-lang.c (java_emit_char): Add type argument. * f-valprint.c (f_val_print): Update. * f-lang.c (f_emit_char): Add type argument. (f_printchar): Likewise. (f_printstr): Likewise. * expprint.c (print_subexp_standard): Update. * charset.h (target_wide_charset): Declare. (c_target_char_has_backslash_escape, c_parse_backslash, host_char_print_literally, host_char_to_target, target_char_to_host, target_char_to_control_char): Remove. (enum transliterations): New type. (convert_between_encodings): Declare. (HOST_ESCAPE_CHAR): New define. (host_letter_to_control_character, host_hex_value): Declare. (enum wchar_iterate_result): New enum. (struct wchar_iterator): Declare. (make_wchar_iterator, make_cleanup_wchar_iterator, wchar_iterator, wchar_push_back): Declare. * charset-list.h: New file. * c-valprint.c (textual_name): New function. (textual_element_type): Handle wide character types. (c_val_print): Pass original type to textual_element_type. Handle wide character types. (c_value_print): Use textual_element_type. Pass original type of value to val_print. * c-lang.h (enum c_string_type): New type. (c_printchar, c_printstr): Update. * c-lang.c (classify_type): New function. (print_wchar): Likewise. (c_emit_char): Add type argument. Handle wide characters. (c_printchar): Likewise. (c_printstr): Add type argument. Handle wide and multibyte character sets. (convert_ucn): New function. (emit_numeric_character): Likewise. (convert_octal): Likewise. (convert_hex): Likewise. (ADVANCE): New macro. (convert_escape): New function. (parse_one_string): Likewise. (evaluate_subexp_c): Likewise. (exp_descriptor_c): New global. (c_language_defn): Use exp_descriptor_c. (cplus_language_defn): Likewise. (asm_language_defn): Likewise. (minimal_language_defn): Likewise. (charset_for_string_type): New function. * c-exp.y (%union): Add 'svec' and 'tsval'. (CHAR): New token. (exp): Add CHAR production. (string_exp): Rewrite. (exp) <string_exp>: Rewrite. (tempbuf): Now global. (tempbuf_init): New global. (parse_string_or_char): New function. (yylex) <tempbuf>: Now global. <tokptr, tempbufindex, tempbufsize, token_string, class_prefix>: Remove. Handle 'u', 'U', and 'L' prefixes. Call parse_string_or_char. (c_parse_escape): New function. * auxv.c (fprint_target_auxv): Update. * ada-valprint.c (ada_emit_char): Add type argument. (ada_printchar): Likewise. (ada_print_scalar): Update. (printstr): Add type argument. Update calls to ada_emit_char. (ada_printstr): Add type argument. (ada_val_print_array): Update. (ada_val_print_1): Likewise. * ada-lang.c (emit_char): Add type argument. * ada-lang.h (ada_emit_char, ada_printchar, ada_printstr): Add type arguments. * gdb_locale.h: Include langinfo.h. * charset.c (_initialize_charset): Set default host charset from the locale. Don't register charsets. Add target-wide-charset commands. Call find_charset_names. (struct charset, struct translation): Remove. (GDB_DEFAULT_HOST_CHARSET): Remove. (GDB_DEFAULT_TARGET_WIDE_CHARSET): New define. (target_wide_charset_name): New global. (show_host_charset_name): Handle "auto". (show_target_wide_charset_name): New function. (host_charset_enum, target_charset_enum): Remove. (charset_enum): New global. (all_charsets, register_charset, lookup_charset, all_translations, register_translation, lookup_translation): Remove. (simple_charset, ascii_print_literally, ascii_to_control): Remove. (iso_8859_print_literally, iso_8859_to_control, iso_8859_family_charset): Remove. (ebcdic_print_literally, ebcdic_to_control, ebcdic_family_charset): Remove. (struct cached_iconv, check_iconv_cache, cached_iconv_convert, register_iconv_charsets): Remove. (target_wide_charset_be_name, target_wide_charset_le_name): New globals. (identity_either_char_to_other): Remove. (set_be_le_names, validate): New functions. (backslashable, backslashed, represented): Remove. (default_c_target_char_has_backslash_escape): Remove. (default_c_parse_backslash, iconv_convert): Remove. (ascii_to_iso_8859_1_table, ascii_to_ebcdic_us_table, ascii_to_ibm1047_table, iso_8859_1_to_ascii_table, iso_8859_1_to_ebcdic_us_table, iso_8859_1_to_ibm1047_table, ebcdic_us_to_ascii_table, ebcdic_us_to_iso_8859_1_table, ebcdic_us_to_ibm1047_table, ibm1047_to_ascii_table, ibm1047_to_iso_8859_1_table, ibm1047_to_ebcdic_us_table): Remove. (table_convert_char, table_translation, simple_table_translation): Remove. (current_host_charset, current_target_charset, c_target_char_has_backslash_escape_func, c_target_char_has_backslash_escape_baton): Remove. (c_parse_backslash_func, c_parse_backslash_baton): Remove. (host_char_to_target_func, host_char_to_target_baton): Remove. (target_char_to_host_func, target_char_to_host_baton): Remove. (cached_iconv_host_to_target, cached_iconv_target_to_host): Remove. (lookup_charset_or_error, check_valid_host_charset): Remove. (set_host_and_target_charsets): Remove. (set_host_charset, set_target_charset): Remove. (set_host_charset_sfunc, set_target_charset_sfunc): Rewrite. (set_target_wide_charset_sfunc): New function. (show_charset): Print target wide character set. (host_charset, target_charset): Rewrite. (target_wide_charset): New function. (c_target_char_has_backslash_escape): Remove. (c_parse_backslash): Remove. (host_letter_to_control_character): New function. (host_char_print_literally): Remove. (host_hex_value): New function. (target_char_to_control_char): Remove. (cleanup_iconv): New function. (convert_between_encodings): New function. (target_char_to_host): Remove. (struct wchar_iterator): Define. (make_wchar_iterator, make_cleanup_wchar_iterator, wchar_iterator, wchar_push_back): New functions. (do_cleanup_iterator): New function. (char_ptr): New typedef. (charsets): New global. (add_one, find_charset_names): New functions. (default_charset_names): New global. (auto_host_charset_name): Likewise. * aclocal.m4, config.in, configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Call AM_LANGINFO_CODESET. (GDB_DEFAULT_HOST_CHARSET): Default to UTF-8. (AM_ICONV): Invoke earlier. * acinclude.m4: Include codeset.m4. Subst LIBICONV_INCLUDE and LIBICONV_LIBDIR. Check for libiconv in build tree. * Makefile.in (LIBICONV_LIBDIR, LIBICONV_INCLUDE): New macros. (INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE): Add LIBICONV_INCLUDE. (INTERNAL_LDFLAGS): Add LIBICONV_LIBDIR. * gdb_obstack.h (obstack_grow_wstr): New define. * gdb_wchar.h: New file. * defs.h: Include it. gdb/testsuite: * gdb.base/store.exp: Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/callfuncs.exp (fetch_all_registers): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/pointers.exp: Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/long_long.exp (gdb_test_long_long): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/constvars.exp (do_constvar_tests): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/call-rt-st.exp (print_struct_call): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.cp/ref-types.exp (gdb_start_again): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/setvar.exp: Update for change to escape output. * lib/gdb.exp (default_gdb_start): Set LC_CTYPE to C. * gdb.base/printcmds.exp (test_print_all_chars): Update for change to escape output. (test_print_string_constants): Likewise. * gdb.base/charset.exp (valid_host_charset): Check size of wchar_t. Handle UCS-2 and UCS-4. Add tests for wide and unicode cases. Handle "auto"-related output. * gdb.base/charset.c (char16_t, char32_t): New typedefs. (uvar, Uvar): New globals. gdb/doc: * gdb.texinfo (Character Sets): Remove obsolete text. Document set target-wide-charset. (Requirements): Mention iconv.
2009-03-21 07:04:40 +08:00
char the_char = c;
int result = 0;
Eliminate make_cleanup_obstack_free, introduce auto_obstack This commit eliminates make_cleanup_obstack_free, replacing it with a new auto_obstack type that inherits obstack to add cdtors. These changes in the parsers may not be obvious: - obstack_init (&name_obstack); - make_cleanup_obstack_free (&name_obstack); + name_obstack.clear (); Here, the 'name_obstack' variable is a global. The change means that the obstack's contents from a previous parse will stay around until the next parsing starts. I.e., memory won't be reclaimed until then. I don't think that's a problem, these objects don't really grow much at all. The other option I tried was to add a separate type that is like auto_obstack but manages an external obstack, just for those cases. I like the current approach better as that other approach adds more boilerplate and yet another type to learn. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-06-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * c-exp.y (name_obstack): Now an auto_obstack. (yylex): Use auto_obstack::clear. (c_parse): Use auto_obstack::clear instead of reinitializing and freeing the obstack. * c-lang.c (evaluate_subexp_c): Use auto_obstack. * d-exp.y (name_obstack): Now an auto_obstack. (yylex): Use auto_obstack::clear. (d_parse): Use auto_obstack::clear instead of reinitializing and freeing the obstack. * dwarf2loc.c (fetch_const_value_from_synthetic_pointer): Use auto_obstack. * dwarf2read.c (create_addrmap_from_index) (dwarf2_build_psymtabs_hard) (update_enumeration_type_from_children): Likewise. * gdb_obstack.h (auto_obstack): New type. * go-exp.y (name_obstack): Now an auto_obstack. (build_packaged_name): Use auto_obstack::clear. (go_parse): Use auto_obstack::clear instead of reinitializing and freeing the obstack. * linux-tdep.c (linux_make_mappings_corefile_notes): Use auto_obstack. * printcmd.c (printf_wide_c_string, ui_printf): Use auto_obstack. * rust-exp.y (work_obstack): Now an auto_obstack. (rust_parse, rust_lex_tests): Use auto_obstack::clear instead of reinitializing and freeing the obstack. * utils.c (do_obstack_free, make_cleanup_obstack_free): Delete. (host_char_to_target): Use auto_obstack. * utils.h (make_cleanup_obstack_free): Delete declaration. * valprint.c (generic_emit_char, generic_printstr): Use auto_obstack.
2017-06-27 18:07:14 +08:00
auto_obstack host_data;
gdb 2010-03-05 Corinna Vinschen <vinschen@redhat.com> Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com> * utils.c (host_char_to_target): Add 'gdbarch' argument. (parse_escape): Likewise. * python/py-utils.c (unicode_to_target_string): Update. (unicode_to_target_python_string): Update. (target_string_to_unicode): Update. * printcmd.c (printf_command): Update. * p-exp.y (yylex): Update. * objc-exp.y (yylex): Update. * mi/mi-parse.c: Include charset.h. (mi_parse_escape): New function. (mi_parse_argv): Use it. * jv-exp.y (yylex): Update. * i386-cygwin-tdep.c (i386_cygwin_auto_wide_charset): New function. (i386_cygwin_init_abi): Call set_gdbarch_auto_wide_charset. * gdbarch.sh (auto_charset, auto_wide_charset): New. * gdbarch.c: Rebuild. * gdbarch.h: Rebuild. * defs.h (parse_escape): Update. * cli/cli-setshow.c: Include arch-utils.h. (do_setshow_command): Update. * cli/cli-cmds.c (echo_command): Update. * charset.h (target_charset, target_wide_charset): Update. * charset.c: Include arch-utils.h. (target_charset_name): Default to "auto". (target_wide_charset_name): Likewise. (show_target_charset_name): Handle "auto". (show_target_wide_charset_name): Likewise. (be_le_arch): New global. (set_be_le_names): Add 'gdbarch' argument. (validate): Likewise. Don't call set_be_le_names. (set_charset_sfunc, set_host_charset_sfunc) (set_target_charset_sfunc, set_target_wide_charset_sfunc): Update. (target_charset): Add 'gdbarch' argument. (target_wide_charset): Likewise. Remove 'byte_order' argument. (auto_target_charset_name): New global. (default_auto_charset, default_auto_wide_charset): New functions. (_initialize_charset): Set auto_target_charset_name. Allow "auto" for target charsets. Copy result of nl_langinfo. Use GetACP if USE_WIN32API. * c-lang.c (charset_for_string_type): Add 'gdbarch' argument, remove 'byte_order' argument. Update. (classify_type): Likewise. (c_emit_char): Update. (c_printchar): Update. (c_printstr): Update. (c_get_string): Update. (evaluate_subexp_c): Update. * arch-utils.h (default_auto_charset, default_auto_wide_charset): Declare. * python/python.c (gdbpy_target_charset): New function. (gdbpy_target_wide_charset): Likewise. (GdbMethods): Update. * NEWS: Update. gdb/doc * gdb.texinfo (Basic Python): Document target_charset and target_wide_charset. gdb/testsuite * gdb.python/py-prettyprint.py (pp_nullstr.to_string): Use gdb.target_charset. (pp_ns.to_string): Likewise.
2010-03-06 04:18:19 +08:00
convert_between_encodings (target_charset (gdbarch), host_charset (),
Fix -Wpointer-sign around strings/encoding conversions. Trimmed for brevity: $ make WERROR_CFLAGS="-Wpointer-sign -Werror" c-lang.o expprint.o utils.o valprint.o varobj.o -k 2>&1 1>/dev/null ../../src/gdb/c-lang.c: In function ‘parse_one_string’: ../../src/gdb/c-lang.c:540:8: error: pointer targets in passing argument 3 of ‘convert_between_encodings’ differ in signedness [-Werror=pointer-sign] In file included from ../../src/gdb/c-lang.c:30:0: ../../src/gdb/charset.h:64:6: note: expected ‘const gdb_byte *’ but argument is of type ‘char *’ ../../src/gdb/expprint.c: In function ‘print_subexp_standard’: ../../src/gdb/expprint.c:205:2: error: pointer targets in passing argument 3 of ‘current_language->la_printstr’ differ in signedness [-Werror=pointer-sign] ../../src/gdb/expprint.c:205:2: note: expected ‘const gdb_byte *’ but argument is of type ‘char *’ cc1: all warnings being treated as errors make: *** [expprint.o] Error 1 ../../src/gdb/utils.c: In function ‘host_char_to_target’: ../../src/gdb/utils.c:1474:9: error: pointer targets in passing argument 3 of ‘convert_between_encodings’ differ in signedness [-Werror=pointer-sign] ../../src/gdb/varobj.c: In function ‘value_get_print_value’: ../../src/gdb/varobj.c:2934:8: error: pointer targets in return differ in signedness [-Werror=pointer-sign] ../../src/gdb/varobj.c:2968:12: error: pointer targets in assignment differ in signedness [-Werror=pointer-sign] ../../src/gdb/varobj.c:2971:3: error: pointer targets in return differ in signedness [-Werror=pointer-sign] cc1: all warnings being treated as errors make: *** [varobj.o] Error 1 As with the previous patch, the encoding conversion code works with gdb_byte arrays as the generic buffers that hold strings of any encoding/width. This patch adds casts where appropriate. gdb/ 2013-03-07 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * c-lang.c (parse_one_string): Cast argument to gdb_byte *. * expprint.c (print_subexp_standard): Likewise. * utils.c (host_char_to_target): Likewise. * valprint.c (generic_emit_char, generic_printstr): Likewise. * varobj.c (value_get_print_value): Change type of local to char*. Cast it gdb_byte * in call to language printer.
2013-03-08 03:24:32 +08:00
(gdb_byte *) &the_char, 1, 1,
&host_data, translit_none);
gdb: 2009-03-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com> Julian Brown <julian@codesourcery.com> PR i18n/7220, PR i18n/7821, PR exp/8815, PR exp/9103, PR i18n/9401, PR exp/9613: * NEWS: Update * value.h (value_typed_string): Declare. (val_print_string): Update. * valprint.h (print_char_chars): Update. * valprint.c (print_char_chars): Add type argument. Update. (val_print_string): Likewise. * valops.c (value_typed_string): New function. * utils.c (host_char_to_target): New function. (parse_escape): Use host_char_to_target, host_hex_value. Update. Remove '^' case. (no_control_char_error): Remove. * typeprint.c (print_type_scalar): Update. * scm-valprint.c (scm_scmval_print): Update. * scm-lang.h (scm_printchar, scm_printstr): Update. * scm-lang.c (scm_printchar): Add type argument. (scm_printstr): Likewise. * printcmd.c (print_formatted): Update. (print_scalar_formatted): Update. (printf_command) <wide_string_arg, wide_char_arg>: New constants. Handle '%lc' and '%ls'. * parser-defs.h (struct typed_stoken): New type. (struct stoken_vector): Likewise. (write_exp_string_vector): Declare. * parse.c (write_exp_string_vector): New function. * p-valprint.c (pascal_val_print): Update. * p-lang.h (is_pascal_string_type, pascal_printchar, pascal_printstr): Update. * p-lang.c (is_pascal_string_type): Remove 'char_size' argument. Add 'char_type' argument. (pascal_emit_char): Add type argument. (pascal_printchar): Likewise. (pascal_printstr): Likewise. * objc-lang.c (objc_emit_char): Add type argument. (objc_printchar): Likewise. (objc_printstr): Likewise. * macroexp.c (get_character_constant): Handle unicode characters. Use c_parse_escape. (get_string_literal): Handle unicode strings. Use c_parse_escape. * m2-valprint.c (print_unpacked_pointer): Update. (m2_print_array_contents): Update. (m2_val_print): Update. * m2-lang.c (m2_emit_char): Add type argument. (m2_printchar): Likewise. (m2_printstr): Likewise. * language.h (struct language_defn) <la_printchar>: Add type argument. <la_printstr, la_emitchar>: Likewise. (LA_PRINT_CHAR): Likewise. (LA_PRINT_STRING): Likewise. (LA_EMIT_CHAR): Likewise. * language.c (unk_lang_emit_char): Add type argument. (unk_lang_printchar): Likewise. (unk_lang_printstr): Likewise. * jv-valprint.c (java_val_print): Update. * jv-lang.c (java_emit_char): Add type argument. * f-valprint.c (f_val_print): Update. * f-lang.c (f_emit_char): Add type argument. (f_printchar): Likewise. (f_printstr): Likewise. * expprint.c (print_subexp_standard): Update. * charset.h (target_wide_charset): Declare. (c_target_char_has_backslash_escape, c_parse_backslash, host_char_print_literally, host_char_to_target, target_char_to_host, target_char_to_control_char): Remove. (enum transliterations): New type. (convert_between_encodings): Declare. (HOST_ESCAPE_CHAR): New define. (host_letter_to_control_character, host_hex_value): Declare. (enum wchar_iterate_result): New enum. (struct wchar_iterator): Declare. (make_wchar_iterator, make_cleanup_wchar_iterator, wchar_iterator, wchar_push_back): Declare. * charset-list.h: New file. * c-valprint.c (textual_name): New function. (textual_element_type): Handle wide character types. (c_val_print): Pass original type to textual_element_type. Handle wide character types. (c_value_print): Use textual_element_type. Pass original type of value to val_print. * c-lang.h (enum c_string_type): New type. (c_printchar, c_printstr): Update. * c-lang.c (classify_type): New function. (print_wchar): Likewise. (c_emit_char): Add type argument. Handle wide characters. (c_printchar): Likewise. (c_printstr): Add type argument. Handle wide and multibyte character sets. (convert_ucn): New function. (emit_numeric_character): Likewise. (convert_octal): Likewise. (convert_hex): Likewise. (ADVANCE): New macro. (convert_escape): New function. (parse_one_string): Likewise. (evaluate_subexp_c): Likewise. (exp_descriptor_c): New global. (c_language_defn): Use exp_descriptor_c. (cplus_language_defn): Likewise. (asm_language_defn): Likewise. (minimal_language_defn): Likewise. (charset_for_string_type): New function. * c-exp.y (%union): Add 'svec' and 'tsval'. (CHAR): New token. (exp): Add CHAR production. (string_exp): Rewrite. (exp) <string_exp>: Rewrite. (tempbuf): Now global. (tempbuf_init): New global. (parse_string_or_char): New function. (yylex) <tempbuf>: Now global. <tokptr, tempbufindex, tempbufsize, token_string, class_prefix>: Remove. Handle 'u', 'U', and 'L' prefixes. Call parse_string_or_char. (c_parse_escape): New function. * auxv.c (fprint_target_auxv): Update. * ada-valprint.c (ada_emit_char): Add type argument. (ada_printchar): Likewise. (ada_print_scalar): Update. (printstr): Add type argument. Update calls to ada_emit_char. (ada_printstr): Add type argument. (ada_val_print_array): Update. (ada_val_print_1): Likewise. * ada-lang.c (emit_char): Add type argument. * ada-lang.h (ada_emit_char, ada_printchar, ada_printstr): Add type arguments. * gdb_locale.h: Include langinfo.h. * charset.c (_initialize_charset): Set default host charset from the locale. Don't register charsets. Add target-wide-charset commands. Call find_charset_names. (struct charset, struct translation): Remove. (GDB_DEFAULT_HOST_CHARSET): Remove. (GDB_DEFAULT_TARGET_WIDE_CHARSET): New define. (target_wide_charset_name): New global. (show_host_charset_name): Handle "auto". (show_target_wide_charset_name): New function. (host_charset_enum, target_charset_enum): Remove. (charset_enum): New global. (all_charsets, register_charset, lookup_charset, all_translations, register_translation, lookup_translation): Remove. (simple_charset, ascii_print_literally, ascii_to_control): Remove. (iso_8859_print_literally, iso_8859_to_control, iso_8859_family_charset): Remove. (ebcdic_print_literally, ebcdic_to_control, ebcdic_family_charset): Remove. (struct cached_iconv, check_iconv_cache, cached_iconv_convert, register_iconv_charsets): Remove. (target_wide_charset_be_name, target_wide_charset_le_name): New globals. (identity_either_char_to_other): Remove. (set_be_le_names, validate): New functions. (backslashable, backslashed, represented): Remove. (default_c_target_char_has_backslash_escape): Remove. (default_c_parse_backslash, iconv_convert): Remove. (ascii_to_iso_8859_1_table, ascii_to_ebcdic_us_table, ascii_to_ibm1047_table, iso_8859_1_to_ascii_table, iso_8859_1_to_ebcdic_us_table, iso_8859_1_to_ibm1047_table, ebcdic_us_to_ascii_table, ebcdic_us_to_iso_8859_1_table, ebcdic_us_to_ibm1047_table, ibm1047_to_ascii_table, ibm1047_to_iso_8859_1_table, ibm1047_to_ebcdic_us_table): Remove. (table_convert_char, table_translation, simple_table_translation): Remove. (current_host_charset, current_target_charset, c_target_char_has_backslash_escape_func, c_target_char_has_backslash_escape_baton): Remove. (c_parse_backslash_func, c_parse_backslash_baton): Remove. (host_char_to_target_func, host_char_to_target_baton): Remove. (target_char_to_host_func, target_char_to_host_baton): Remove. (cached_iconv_host_to_target, cached_iconv_target_to_host): Remove. (lookup_charset_or_error, check_valid_host_charset): Remove. (set_host_and_target_charsets): Remove. (set_host_charset, set_target_charset): Remove. (set_host_charset_sfunc, set_target_charset_sfunc): Rewrite. (set_target_wide_charset_sfunc): New function. (show_charset): Print target wide character set. (host_charset, target_charset): Rewrite. (target_wide_charset): New function. (c_target_char_has_backslash_escape): Remove. (c_parse_backslash): Remove. (host_letter_to_control_character): New function. (host_char_print_literally): Remove. (host_hex_value): New function. (target_char_to_control_char): Remove. (cleanup_iconv): New function. (convert_between_encodings): New function. (target_char_to_host): Remove. (struct wchar_iterator): Define. (make_wchar_iterator, make_cleanup_wchar_iterator, wchar_iterator, wchar_push_back): New functions. (do_cleanup_iterator): New function. (char_ptr): New typedef. (charsets): New global. (add_one, find_charset_names): New functions. (default_charset_names): New global. (auto_host_charset_name): Likewise. * aclocal.m4, config.in, configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Call AM_LANGINFO_CODESET. (GDB_DEFAULT_HOST_CHARSET): Default to UTF-8. (AM_ICONV): Invoke earlier. * acinclude.m4: Include codeset.m4. Subst LIBICONV_INCLUDE and LIBICONV_LIBDIR. Check for libiconv in build tree. * Makefile.in (LIBICONV_LIBDIR, LIBICONV_INCLUDE): New macros. (INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE): Add LIBICONV_INCLUDE. (INTERNAL_LDFLAGS): Add LIBICONV_LIBDIR. * gdb_obstack.h (obstack_grow_wstr): New define. * gdb_wchar.h: New file. * defs.h: Include it. gdb/testsuite: * gdb.base/store.exp: Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/callfuncs.exp (fetch_all_registers): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/pointers.exp: Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/long_long.exp (gdb_test_long_long): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/constvars.exp (do_constvar_tests): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/call-rt-st.exp (print_struct_call): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.cp/ref-types.exp (gdb_start_again): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/setvar.exp: Update for change to escape output. * lib/gdb.exp (default_gdb_start): Set LC_CTYPE to C. * gdb.base/printcmds.exp (test_print_all_chars): Update for change to escape output. (test_print_string_constants): Likewise. * gdb.base/charset.exp (valid_host_charset): Check size of wchar_t. Handle UCS-2 and UCS-4. Add tests for wide and unicode cases. Handle "auto"-related output. * gdb.base/charset.c (char16_t, char32_t): New typedefs. (uvar, Uvar): New globals. gdb/doc: * gdb.texinfo (Character Sets): Remove obsolete text. Document set target-wide-charset. (Requirements): Mention iconv.
2009-03-21 07:04:40 +08:00
if (obstack_object_size (&host_data) == 1)
{
result = 1;
*target_c = *(char *) obstack_base (&host_data);
}
return result;
}
/* Parse a C escape sequence. STRING_PTR points to a variable
containing a pointer to the string to parse. That pointer
should point to the character after the \. That pointer
is updated past the characters we use. The value of the
escape sequence is returned.
A negative value means the sequence \ newline was seen,
which is supposed to be equivalent to nothing at all.
If \ is followed by a null character, we return a negative
value and leave the string pointer pointing at the null character.
If \ is followed by 000, we return 0 and leave the string pointer
after the zeros. A value of 0 does not mean end of string. */
int
parse_escape (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, const char **string_ptr)
{
int target_char = -2; /* Initialize to avoid GCC warnings. */
int c = *(*string_ptr)++;
gdb: 2009-03-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com> Julian Brown <julian@codesourcery.com> PR i18n/7220, PR i18n/7821, PR exp/8815, PR exp/9103, PR i18n/9401, PR exp/9613: * NEWS: Update * value.h (value_typed_string): Declare. (val_print_string): Update. * valprint.h (print_char_chars): Update. * valprint.c (print_char_chars): Add type argument. Update. (val_print_string): Likewise. * valops.c (value_typed_string): New function. * utils.c (host_char_to_target): New function. (parse_escape): Use host_char_to_target, host_hex_value. Update. Remove '^' case. (no_control_char_error): Remove. * typeprint.c (print_type_scalar): Update. * scm-valprint.c (scm_scmval_print): Update. * scm-lang.h (scm_printchar, scm_printstr): Update. * scm-lang.c (scm_printchar): Add type argument. (scm_printstr): Likewise. * printcmd.c (print_formatted): Update. (print_scalar_formatted): Update. (printf_command) <wide_string_arg, wide_char_arg>: New constants. Handle '%lc' and '%ls'. * parser-defs.h (struct typed_stoken): New type. (struct stoken_vector): Likewise. (write_exp_string_vector): Declare. * parse.c (write_exp_string_vector): New function. * p-valprint.c (pascal_val_print): Update. * p-lang.h (is_pascal_string_type, pascal_printchar, pascal_printstr): Update. * p-lang.c (is_pascal_string_type): Remove 'char_size' argument. Add 'char_type' argument. (pascal_emit_char): Add type argument. (pascal_printchar): Likewise. (pascal_printstr): Likewise. * objc-lang.c (objc_emit_char): Add type argument. (objc_printchar): Likewise. (objc_printstr): Likewise. * macroexp.c (get_character_constant): Handle unicode characters. Use c_parse_escape. (get_string_literal): Handle unicode strings. Use c_parse_escape. * m2-valprint.c (print_unpacked_pointer): Update. (m2_print_array_contents): Update. (m2_val_print): Update. * m2-lang.c (m2_emit_char): Add type argument. (m2_printchar): Likewise. (m2_printstr): Likewise. * language.h (struct language_defn) <la_printchar>: Add type argument. <la_printstr, la_emitchar>: Likewise. (LA_PRINT_CHAR): Likewise. (LA_PRINT_STRING): Likewise. (LA_EMIT_CHAR): Likewise. * language.c (unk_lang_emit_char): Add type argument. (unk_lang_printchar): Likewise. (unk_lang_printstr): Likewise. * jv-valprint.c (java_val_print): Update. * jv-lang.c (java_emit_char): Add type argument. * f-valprint.c (f_val_print): Update. * f-lang.c (f_emit_char): Add type argument. (f_printchar): Likewise. (f_printstr): Likewise. * expprint.c (print_subexp_standard): Update. * charset.h (target_wide_charset): Declare. (c_target_char_has_backslash_escape, c_parse_backslash, host_char_print_literally, host_char_to_target, target_char_to_host, target_char_to_control_char): Remove. (enum transliterations): New type. (convert_between_encodings): Declare. (HOST_ESCAPE_CHAR): New define. (host_letter_to_control_character, host_hex_value): Declare. (enum wchar_iterate_result): New enum. (struct wchar_iterator): Declare. (make_wchar_iterator, make_cleanup_wchar_iterator, wchar_iterator, wchar_push_back): Declare. * charset-list.h: New file. * c-valprint.c (textual_name): New function. (textual_element_type): Handle wide character types. (c_val_print): Pass original type to textual_element_type. Handle wide character types. (c_value_print): Use textual_element_type. Pass original type of value to val_print. * c-lang.h (enum c_string_type): New type. (c_printchar, c_printstr): Update. * c-lang.c (classify_type): New function. (print_wchar): Likewise. (c_emit_char): Add type argument. Handle wide characters. (c_printchar): Likewise. (c_printstr): Add type argument. Handle wide and multibyte character sets. (convert_ucn): New function. (emit_numeric_character): Likewise. (convert_octal): Likewise. (convert_hex): Likewise. (ADVANCE): New macro. (convert_escape): New function. (parse_one_string): Likewise. (evaluate_subexp_c): Likewise. (exp_descriptor_c): New global. (c_language_defn): Use exp_descriptor_c. (cplus_language_defn): Likewise. (asm_language_defn): Likewise. (minimal_language_defn): Likewise. (charset_for_string_type): New function. * c-exp.y (%union): Add 'svec' and 'tsval'. (CHAR): New token. (exp): Add CHAR production. (string_exp): Rewrite. (exp) <string_exp>: Rewrite. (tempbuf): Now global. (tempbuf_init): New global. (parse_string_or_char): New function. (yylex) <tempbuf>: Now global. <tokptr, tempbufindex, tempbufsize, token_string, class_prefix>: Remove. Handle 'u', 'U', and 'L' prefixes. Call parse_string_or_char. (c_parse_escape): New function. * auxv.c (fprint_target_auxv): Update. * ada-valprint.c (ada_emit_char): Add type argument. (ada_printchar): Likewise. (ada_print_scalar): Update. (printstr): Add type argument. Update calls to ada_emit_char. (ada_printstr): Add type argument. (ada_val_print_array): Update. (ada_val_print_1): Likewise. * ada-lang.c (emit_char): Add type argument. * ada-lang.h (ada_emit_char, ada_printchar, ada_printstr): Add type arguments. * gdb_locale.h: Include langinfo.h. * charset.c (_initialize_charset): Set default host charset from the locale. Don't register charsets. Add target-wide-charset commands. Call find_charset_names. (struct charset, struct translation): Remove. (GDB_DEFAULT_HOST_CHARSET): Remove. (GDB_DEFAULT_TARGET_WIDE_CHARSET): New define. (target_wide_charset_name): New global. (show_host_charset_name): Handle "auto". (show_target_wide_charset_name): New function. (host_charset_enum, target_charset_enum): Remove. (charset_enum): New global. (all_charsets, register_charset, lookup_charset, all_translations, register_translation, lookup_translation): Remove. (simple_charset, ascii_print_literally, ascii_to_control): Remove. (iso_8859_print_literally, iso_8859_to_control, iso_8859_family_charset): Remove. (ebcdic_print_literally, ebcdic_to_control, ebcdic_family_charset): Remove. (struct cached_iconv, check_iconv_cache, cached_iconv_convert, register_iconv_charsets): Remove. (target_wide_charset_be_name, target_wide_charset_le_name): New globals. (identity_either_char_to_other): Remove. (set_be_le_names, validate): New functions. (backslashable, backslashed, represented): Remove. (default_c_target_char_has_backslash_escape): Remove. (default_c_parse_backslash, iconv_convert): Remove. (ascii_to_iso_8859_1_table, ascii_to_ebcdic_us_table, ascii_to_ibm1047_table, iso_8859_1_to_ascii_table, iso_8859_1_to_ebcdic_us_table, iso_8859_1_to_ibm1047_table, ebcdic_us_to_ascii_table, ebcdic_us_to_iso_8859_1_table, ebcdic_us_to_ibm1047_table, ibm1047_to_ascii_table, ibm1047_to_iso_8859_1_table, ibm1047_to_ebcdic_us_table): Remove. (table_convert_char, table_translation, simple_table_translation): Remove. (current_host_charset, current_target_charset, c_target_char_has_backslash_escape_func, c_target_char_has_backslash_escape_baton): Remove. (c_parse_backslash_func, c_parse_backslash_baton): Remove. (host_char_to_target_func, host_char_to_target_baton): Remove. (target_char_to_host_func, target_char_to_host_baton): Remove. (cached_iconv_host_to_target, cached_iconv_target_to_host): Remove. (lookup_charset_or_error, check_valid_host_charset): Remove. (set_host_and_target_charsets): Remove. (set_host_charset, set_target_charset): Remove. (set_host_charset_sfunc, set_target_charset_sfunc): Rewrite. (set_target_wide_charset_sfunc): New function. (show_charset): Print target wide character set. (host_charset, target_charset): Rewrite. (target_wide_charset): New function. (c_target_char_has_backslash_escape): Remove. (c_parse_backslash): Remove. (host_letter_to_control_character): New function. (host_char_print_literally): Remove. (host_hex_value): New function. (target_char_to_control_char): Remove. (cleanup_iconv): New function. (convert_between_encodings): New function. (target_char_to_host): Remove. (struct wchar_iterator): Define. (make_wchar_iterator, make_cleanup_wchar_iterator, wchar_iterator, wchar_push_back): New functions. (do_cleanup_iterator): New function. (char_ptr): New typedef. (charsets): New global. (add_one, find_charset_names): New functions. (default_charset_names): New global. (auto_host_charset_name): Likewise. * aclocal.m4, config.in, configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Call AM_LANGINFO_CODESET. (GDB_DEFAULT_HOST_CHARSET): Default to UTF-8. (AM_ICONV): Invoke earlier. * acinclude.m4: Include codeset.m4. Subst LIBICONV_INCLUDE and LIBICONV_LIBDIR. Check for libiconv in build tree. * Makefile.in (LIBICONV_LIBDIR, LIBICONV_INCLUDE): New macros. (INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE): Add LIBICONV_INCLUDE. (INTERNAL_LDFLAGS): Add LIBICONV_LIBDIR. * gdb_obstack.h (obstack_grow_wstr): New define. * gdb_wchar.h: New file. * defs.h: Include it. gdb/testsuite: * gdb.base/store.exp: Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/callfuncs.exp (fetch_all_registers): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/pointers.exp: Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/long_long.exp (gdb_test_long_long): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/constvars.exp (do_constvar_tests): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/call-rt-st.exp (print_struct_call): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.cp/ref-types.exp (gdb_start_again): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/setvar.exp: Update for change to escape output. * lib/gdb.exp (default_gdb_start): Set LC_CTYPE to C. * gdb.base/printcmds.exp (test_print_all_chars): Update for change to escape output. (test_print_string_constants): Likewise. * gdb.base/charset.exp (valid_host_charset): Check size of wchar_t. Handle UCS-2 and UCS-4. Add tests for wide and unicode cases. Handle "auto"-related output. * gdb.base/charset.c (char16_t, char32_t): New typedefs. (uvar, Uvar): New globals. gdb/doc: * gdb.texinfo (Character Sets): Remove obsolete text. Document set target-wide-charset. (Requirements): Mention iconv.
2009-03-21 07:04:40 +08:00
switch (c)
{
2003-02-01 06:45:22 +08:00
case '\n':
return -2;
case 0:
(*string_ptr)--;
return 0;
case '0':
case '1':
case '2':
case '3':
case '4':
case '5':
case '6':
case '7':
{
int i = fromhex (c);
int count = 0;
2003-02-01 06:45:22 +08:00
while (++count < 3)
{
c = (**string_ptr);
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
if (ISDIGIT (c) && c != '8' && c != '9')
2003-02-01 06:45:22 +08:00
{
(*string_ptr)++;
2003-02-01 06:45:22 +08:00
i *= 8;
i += fromhex (c);
2003-02-01 06:45:22 +08:00
}
else
{
break;
}
}
return i;
}
gdb: 2009-03-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com> Julian Brown <julian@codesourcery.com> PR i18n/7220, PR i18n/7821, PR exp/8815, PR exp/9103, PR i18n/9401, PR exp/9613: * NEWS: Update * value.h (value_typed_string): Declare. (val_print_string): Update. * valprint.h (print_char_chars): Update. * valprint.c (print_char_chars): Add type argument. Update. (val_print_string): Likewise. * valops.c (value_typed_string): New function. * utils.c (host_char_to_target): New function. (parse_escape): Use host_char_to_target, host_hex_value. Update. Remove '^' case. (no_control_char_error): Remove. * typeprint.c (print_type_scalar): Update. * scm-valprint.c (scm_scmval_print): Update. * scm-lang.h (scm_printchar, scm_printstr): Update. * scm-lang.c (scm_printchar): Add type argument. (scm_printstr): Likewise. * printcmd.c (print_formatted): Update. (print_scalar_formatted): Update. (printf_command) <wide_string_arg, wide_char_arg>: New constants. Handle '%lc' and '%ls'. * parser-defs.h (struct typed_stoken): New type. (struct stoken_vector): Likewise. (write_exp_string_vector): Declare. * parse.c (write_exp_string_vector): New function. * p-valprint.c (pascal_val_print): Update. * p-lang.h (is_pascal_string_type, pascal_printchar, pascal_printstr): Update. * p-lang.c (is_pascal_string_type): Remove 'char_size' argument. Add 'char_type' argument. (pascal_emit_char): Add type argument. (pascal_printchar): Likewise. (pascal_printstr): Likewise. * objc-lang.c (objc_emit_char): Add type argument. (objc_printchar): Likewise. (objc_printstr): Likewise. * macroexp.c (get_character_constant): Handle unicode characters. Use c_parse_escape. (get_string_literal): Handle unicode strings. Use c_parse_escape. * m2-valprint.c (print_unpacked_pointer): Update. (m2_print_array_contents): Update. (m2_val_print): Update. * m2-lang.c (m2_emit_char): Add type argument. (m2_printchar): Likewise. (m2_printstr): Likewise. * language.h (struct language_defn) <la_printchar>: Add type argument. <la_printstr, la_emitchar>: Likewise. (LA_PRINT_CHAR): Likewise. (LA_PRINT_STRING): Likewise. (LA_EMIT_CHAR): Likewise. * language.c (unk_lang_emit_char): Add type argument. (unk_lang_printchar): Likewise. (unk_lang_printstr): Likewise. * jv-valprint.c (java_val_print): Update. * jv-lang.c (java_emit_char): Add type argument. * f-valprint.c (f_val_print): Update. * f-lang.c (f_emit_char): Add type argument. (f_printchar): Likewise. (f_printstr): Likewise. * expprint.c (print_subexp_standard): Update. * charset.h (target_wide_charset): Declare. (c_target_char_has_backslash_escape, c_parse_backslash, host_char_print_literally, host_char_to_target, target_char_to_host, target_char_to_control_char): Remove. (enum transliterations): New type. (convert_between_encodings): Declare. (HOST_ESCAPE_CHAR): New define. (host_letter_to_control_character, host_hex_value): Declare. (enum wchar_iterate_result): New enum. (struct wchar_iterator): Declare. (make_wchar_iterator, make_cleanup_wchar_iterator, wchar_iterator, wchar_push_back): Declare. * charset-list.h: New file. * c-valprint.c (textual_name): New function. (textual_element_type): Handle wide character types. (c_val_print): Pass original type to textual_element_type. Handle wide character types. (c_value_print): Use textual_element_type. Pass original type of value to val_print. * c-lang.h (enum c_string_type): New type. (c_printchar, c_printstr): Update. * c-lang.c (classify_type): New function. (print_wchar): Likewise. (c_emit_char): Add type argument. Handle wide characters. (c_printchar): Likewise. (c_printstr): Add type argument. Handle wide and multibyte character sets. (convert_ucn): New function. (emit_numeric_character): Likewise. (convert_octal): Likewise. (convert_hex): Likewise. (ADVANCE): New macro. (convert_escape): New function. (parse_one_string): Likewise. (evaluate_subexp_c): Likewise. (exp_descriptor_c): New global. (c_language_defn): Use exp_descriptor_c. (cplus_language_defn): Likewise. (asm_language_defn): Likewise. (minimal_language_defn): Likewise. (charset_for_string_type): New function. * c-exp.y (%union): Add 'svec' and 'tsval'. (CHAR): New token. (exp): Add CHAR production. (string_exp): Rewrite. (exp) <string_exp>: Rewrite. (tempbuf): Now global. (tempbuf_init): New global. (parse_string_or_char): New function. (yylex) <tempbuf>: Now global. <tokptr, tempbufindex, tempbufsize, token_string, class_prefix>: Remove. Handle 'u', 'U', and 'L' prefixes. Call parse_string_or_char. (c_parse_escape): New function. * auxv.c (fprint_target_auxv): Update. * ada-valprint.c (ada_emit_char): Add type argument. (ada_printchar): Likewise. (ada_print_scalar): Update. (printstr): Add type argument. Update calls to ada_emit_char. (ada_printstr): Add type argument. (ada_val_print_array): Update. (ada_val_print_1): Likewise. * ada-lang.c (emit_char): Add type argument. * ada-lang.h (ada_emit_char, ada_printchar, ada_printstr): Add type arguments. * gdb_locale.h: Include langinfo.h. * charset.c (_initialize_charset): Set default host charset from the locale. Don't register charsets. Add target-wide-charset commands. Call find_charset_names. (struct charset, struct translation): Remove. (GDB_DEFAULT_HOST_CHARSET): Remove. (GDB_DEFAULT_TARGET_WIDE_CHARSET): New define. (target_wide_charset_name): New global. (show_host_charset_name): Handle "auto". (show_target_wide_charset_name): New function. (host_charset_enum, target_charset_enum): Remove. (charset_enum): New global. (all_charsets, register_charset, lookup_charset, all_translations, register_translation, lookup_translation): Remove. (simple_charset, ascii_print_literally, ascii_to_control): Remove. (iso_8859_print_literally, iso_8859_to_control, iso_8859_family_charset): Remove. (ebcdic_print_literally, ebcdic_to_control, ebcdic_family_charset): Remove. (struct cached_iconv, check_iconv_cache, cached_iconv_convert, register_iconv_charsets): Remove. (target_wide_charset_be_name, target_wide_charset_le_name): New globals. (identity_either_char_to_other): Remove. (set_be_le_names, validate): New functions. (backslashable, backslashed, represented): Remove. (default_c_target_char_has_backslash_escape): Remove. (default_c_parse_backslash, iconv_convert): Remove. (ascii_to_iso_8859_1_table, ascii_to_ebcdic_us_table, ascii_to_ibm1047_table, iso_8859_1_to_ascii_table, iso_8859_1_to_ebcdic_us_table, iso_8859_1_to_ibm1047_table, ebcdic_us_to_ascii_table, ebcdic_us_to_iso_8859_1_table, ebcdic_us_to_ibm1047_table, ibm1047_to_ascii_table, ibm1047_to_iso_8859_1_table, ibm1047_to_ebcdic_us_table): Remove. (table_convert_char, table_translation, simple_table_translation): Remove. (current_host_charset, current_target_charset, c_target_char_has_backslash_escape_func, c_target_char_has_backslash_escape_baton): Remove. (c_parse_backslash_func, c_parse_backslash_baton): Remove. (host_char_to_target_func, host_char_to_target_baton): Remove. (target_char_to_host_func, target_char_to_host_baton): Remove. (cached_iconv_host_to_target, cached_iconv_target_to_host): Remove. (lookup_charset_or_error, check_valid_host_charset): Remove. (set_host_and_target_charsets): Remove. (set_host_charset, set_target_charset): Remove. (set_host_charset_sfunc, set_target_charset_sfunc): Rewrite. (set_target_wide_charset_sfunc): New function. (show_charset): Print target wide character set. (host_charset, target_charset): Rewrite. (target_wide_charset): New function. (c_target_char_has_backslash_escape): Remove. (c_parse_backslash): Remove. (host_letter_to_control_character): New function. (host_char_print_literally): Remove. (host_hex_value): New function. (target_char_to_control_char): Remove. (cleanup_iconv): New function. (convert_between_encodings): New function. (target_char_to_host): Remove. (struct wchar_iterator): Define. (make_wchar_iterator, make_cleanup_wchar_iterator, wchar_iterator, wchar_push_back): New functions. (do_cleanup_iterator): New function. (char_ptr): New typedef. (charsets): New global. (add_one, find_charset_names): New functions. (default_charset_names): New global. (auto_host_charset_name): Likewise. * aclocal.m4, config.in, configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Call AM_LANGINFO_CODESET. (GDB_DEFAULT_HOST_CHARSET): Default to UTF-8. (AM_ICONV): Invoke earlier. * acinclude.m4: Include codeset.m4. Subst LIBICONV_INCLUDE and LIBICONV_LIBDIR. Check for libiconv in build tree. * Makefile.in (LIBICONV_LIBDIR, LIBICONV_INCLUDE): New macros. (INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE): Add LIBICONV_INCLUDE. (INTERNAL_LDFLAGS): Add LIBICONV_LIBDIR. * gdb_obstack.h (obstack_grow_wstr): New define. * gdb_wchar.h: New file. * defs.h: Include it. gdb/testsuite: * gdb.base/store.exp: Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/callfuncs.exp (fetch_all_registers): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/pointers.exp: Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/long_long.exp (gdb_test_long_long): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/constvars.exp (do_constvar_tests): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/call-rt-st.exp (print_struct_call): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.cp/ref-types.exp (gdb_start_again): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/setvar.exp: Update for change to escape output. * lib/gdb.exp (default_gdb_start): Set LC_CTYPE to C. * gdb.base/printcmds.exp (test_print_all_chars): Update for change to escape output. (test_print_string_constants): Likewise. * gdb.base/charset.exp (valid_host_charset): Check size of wchar_t. Handle UCS-2 and UCS-4. Add tests for wide and unicode cases. Handle "auto"-related output. * gdb.base/charset.c (char16_t, char32_t): New typedefs. (uvar, Uvar): New globals. gdb/doc: * gdb.texinfo (Character Sets): Remove obsolete text. Document set target-wide-charset. (Requirements): Mention iconv.
2009-03-21 07:04:40 +08:00
case 'a':
c = '\a';
break;
case 'b':
c = '\b';
break;
case 'f':
c = '\f';
break;
case 'n':
c = '\n';
break;
case 'r':
c = '\r';
break;
case 't':
c = '\t';
break;
case 'v':
c = '\v';
break;
default:
break;
}
gdb 2010-03-05 Corinna Vinschen <vinschen@redhat.com> Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com> * utils.c (host_char_to_target): Add 'gdbarch' argument. (parse_escape): Likewise. * python/py-utils.c (unicode_to_target_string): Update. (unicode_to_target_python_string): Update. (target_string_to_unicode): Update. * printcmd.c (printf_command): Update. * p-exp.y (yylex): Update. * objc-exp.y (yylex): Update. * mi/mi-parse.c: Include charset.h. (mi_parse_escape): New function. (mi_parse_argv): Use it. * jv-exp.y (yylex): Update. * i386-cygwin-tdep.c (i386_cygwin_auto_wide_charset): New function. (i386_cygwin_init_abi): Call set_gdbarch_auto_wide_charset. * gdbarch.sh (auto_charset, auto_wide_charset): New. * gdbarch.c: Rebuild. * gdbarch.h: Rebuild. * defs.h (parse_escape): Update. * cli/cli-setshow.c: Include arch-utils.h. (do_setshow_command): Update. * cli/cli-cmds.c (echo_command): Update. * charset.h (target_charset, target_wide_charset): Update. * charset.c: Include arch-utils.h. (target_charset_name): Default to "auto". (target_wide_charset_name): Likewise. (show_target_charset_name): Handle "auto". (show_target_wide_charset_name): Likewise. (be_le_arch): New global. (set_be_le_names): Add 'gdbarch' argument. (validate): Likewise. Don't call set_be_le_names. (set_charset_sfunc, set_host_charset_sfunc) (set_target_charset_sfunc, set_target_wide_charset_sfunc): Update. (target_charset): Add 'gdbarch' argument. (target_wide_charset): Likewise. Remove 'byte_order' argument. (auto_target_charset_name): New global. (default_auto_charset, default_auto_wide_charset): New functions. (_initialize_charset): Set auto_target_charset_name. Allow "auto" for target charsets. Copy result of nl_langinfo. Use GetACP if USE_WIN32API. * c-lang.c (charset_for_string_type): Add 'gdbarch' argument, remove 'byte_order' argument. Update. (classify_type): Likewise. (c_emit_char): Update. (c_printchar): Update. (c_printstr): Update. (c_get_string): Update. (evaluate_subexp_c): Update. * arch-utils.h (default_auto_charset, default_auto_wide_charset): Declare. * python/python.c (gdbpy_target_charset): New function. (gdbpy_target_wide_charset): Likewise. (GdbMethods): Update. * NEWS: Update. gdb/doc * gdb.texinfo (Basic Python): Document target_charset and target_wide_charset. gdb/testsuite * gdb.python/py-prettyprint.py (pp_nullstr.to_string): Use gdb.target_charset. (pp_ns.to_string): Likewise.
2010-03-06 04:18:19 +08:00
if (!host_char_to_target (gdbarch, c, &target_char))
error (_("The escape sequence `\\%c' is equivalent to plain `%c',"
" which has no equivalent\nin the `%s' character set."),
c, c, target_charset (gdbarch));
gdb: 2009-03-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com> Julian Brown <julian@codesourcery.com> PR i18n/7220, PR i18n/7821, PR exp/8815, PR exp/9103, PR i18n/9401, PR exp/9613: * NEWS: Update * value.h (value_typed_string): Declare. (val_print_string): Update. * valprint.h (print_char_chars): Update. * valprint.c (print_char_chars): Add type argument. Update. (val_print_string): Likewise. * valops.c (value_typed_string): New function. * utils.c (host_char_to_target): New function. (parse_escape): Use host_char_to_target, host_hex_value. Update. Remove '^' case. (no_control_char_error): Remove. * typeprint.c (print_type_scalar): Update. * scm-valprint.c (scm_scmval_print): Update. * scm-lang.h (scm_printchar, scm_printstr): Update. * scm-lang.c (scm_printchar): Add type argument. (scm_printstr): Likewise. * printcmd.c (print_formatted): Update. (print_scalar_formatted): Update. (printf_command) <wide_string_arg, wide_char_arg>: New constants. Handle '%lc' and '%ls'. * parser-defs.h (struct typed_stoken): New type. (struct stoken_vector): Likewise. (write_exp_string_vector): Declare. * parse.c (write_exp_string_vector): New function. * p-valprint.c (pascal_val_print): Update. * p-lang.h (is_pascal_string_type, pascal_printchar, pascal_printstr): Update. * p-lang.c (is_pascal_string_type): Remove 'char_size' argument. Add 'char_type' argument. (pascal_emit_char): Add type argument. (pascal_printchar): Likewise. (pascal_printstr): Likewise. * objc-lang.c (objc_emit_char): Add type argument. (objc_printchar): Likewise. (objc_printstr): Likewise. * macroexp.c (get_character_constant): Handle unicode characters. Use c_parse_escape. (get_string_literal): Handle unicode strings. Use c_parse_escape. * m2-valprint.c (print_unpacked_pointer): Update. (m2_print_array_contents): Update. (m2_val_print): Update. * m2-lang.c (m2_emit_char): Add type argument. (m2_printchar): Likewise. (m2_printstr): Likewise. * language.h (struct language_defn) <la_printchar>: Add type argument. <la_printstr, la_emitchar>: Likewise. (LA_PRINT_CHAR): Likewise. (LA_PRINT_STRING): Likewise. (LA_EMIT_CHAR): Likewise. * language.c (unk_lang_emit_char): Add type argument. (unk_lang_printchar): Likewise. (unk_lang_printstr): Likewise. * jv-valprint.c (java_val_print): Update. * jv-lang.c (java_emit_char): Add type argument. * f-valprint.c (f_val_print): Update. * f-lang.c (f_emit_char): Add type argument. (f_printchar): Likewise. (f_printstr): Likewise. * expprint.c (print_subexp_standard): Update. * charset.h (target_wide_charset): Declare. (c_target_char_has_backslash_escape, c_parse_backslash, host_char_print_literally, host_char_to_target, target_char_to_host, target_char_to_control_char): Remove. (enum transliterations): New type. (convert_between_encodings): Declare. (HOST_ESCAPE_CHAR): New define. (host_letter_to_control_character, host_hex_value): Declare. (enum wchar_iterate_result): New enum. (struct wchar_iterator): Declare. (make_wchar_iterator, make_cleanup_wchar_iterator, wchar_iterator, wchar_push_back): Declare. * charset-list.h: New file. * c-valprint.c (textual_name): New function. (textual_element_type): Handle wide character types. (c_val_print): Pass original type to textual_element_type. Handle wide character types. (c_value_print): Use textual_element_type. Pass original type of value to val_print. * c-lang.h (enum c_string_type): New type. (c_printchar, c_printstr): Update. * c-lang.c (classify_type): New function. (print_wchar): Likewise. (c_emit_char): Add type argument. Handle wide characters. (c_printchar): Likewise. (c_printstr): Add type argument. Handle wide and multibyte character sets. (convert_ucn): New function. (emit_numeric_character): Likewise. (convert_octal): Likewise. (convert_hex): Likewise. (ADVANCE): New macro. (convert_escape): New function. (parse_one_string): Likewise. (evaluate_subexp_c): Likewise. (exp_descriptor_c): New global. (c_language_defn): Use exp_descriptor_c. (cplus_language_defn): Likewise. (asm_language_defn): Likewise. (minimal_language_defn): Likewise. (charset_for_string_type): New function. * c-exp.y (%union): Add 'svec' and 'tsval'. (CHAR): New token. (exp): Add CHAR production. (string_exp): Rewrite. (exp) <string_exp>: Rewrite. (tempbuf): Now global. (tempbuf_init): New global. (parse_string_or_char): New function. (yylex) <tempbuf>: Now global. <tokptr, tempbufindex, tempbufsize, token_string, class_prefix>: Remove. Handle 'u', 'U', and 'L' prefixes. Call parse_string_or_char. (c_parse_escape): New function. * auxv.c (fprint_target_auxv): Update. * ada-valprint.c (ada_emit_char): Add type argument. (ada_printchar): Likewise. (ada_print_scalar): Update. (printstr): Add type argument. Update calls to ada_emit_char. (ada_printstr): Add type argument. (ada_val_print_array): Update. (ada_val_print_1): Likewise. * ada-lang.c (emit_char): Add type argument. * ada-lang.h (ada_emit_char, ada_printchar, ada_printstr): Add type arguments. * gdb_locale.h: Include langinfo.h. * charset.c (_initialize_charset): Set default host charset from the locale. Don't register charsets. Add target-wide-charset commands. Call find_charset_names. (struct charset, struct translation): Remove. (GDB_DEFAULT_HOST_CHARSET): Remove. (GDB_DEFAULT_TARGET_WIDE_CHARSET): New define. (target_wide_charset_name): New global. (show_host_charset_name): Handle "auto". (show_target_wide_charset_name): New function. (host_charset_enum, target_charset_enum): Remove. (charset_enum): New global. (all_charsets, register_charset, lookup_charset, all_translations, register_translation, lookup_translation): Remove. (simple_charset, ascii_print_literally, ascii_to_control): Remove. (iso_8859_print_literally, iso_8859_to_control, iso_8859_family_charset): Remove. (ebcdic_print_literally, ebcdic_to_control, ebcdic_family_charset): Remove. (struct cached_iconv, check_iconv_cache, cached_iconv_convert, register_iconv_charsets): Remove. (target_wide_charset_be_name, target_wide_charset_le_name): New globals. (identity_either_char_to_other): Remove. (set_be_le_names, validate): New functions. (backslashable, backslashed, represented): Remove. (default_c_target_char_has_backslash_escape): Remove. (default_c_parse_backslash, iconv_convert): Remove. (ascii_to_iso_8859_1_table, ascii_to_ebcdic_us_table, ascii_to_ibm1047_table, iso_8859_1_to_ascii_table, iso_8859_1_to_ebcdic_us_table, iso_8859_1_to_ibm1047_table, ebcdic_us_to_ascii_table, ebcdic_us_to_iso_8859_1_table, ebcdic_us_to_ibm1047_table, ibm1047_to_ascii_table, ibm1047_to_iso_8859_1_table, ibm1047_to_ebcdic_us_table): Remove. (table_convert_char, table_translation, simple_table_translation): Remove. (current_host_charset, current_target_charset, c_target_char_has_backslash_escape_func, c_target_char_has_backslash_escape_baton): Remove. (c_parse_backslash_func, c_parse_backslash_baton): Remove. (host_char_to_target_func, host_char_to_target_baton): Remove. (target_char_to_host_func, target_char_to_host_baton): Remove. (cached_iconv_host_to_target, cached_iconv_target_to_host): Remove. (lookup_charset_or_error, check_valid_host_charset): Remove. (set_host_and_target_charsets): Remove. (set_host_charset, set_target_charset): Remove. (set_host_charset_sfunc, set_target_charset_sfunc): Rewrite. (set_target_wide_charset_sfunc): New function. (show_charset): Print target wide character set. (host_charset, target_charset): Rewrite. (target_wide_charset): New function. (c_target_char_has_backslash_escape): Remove. (c_parse_backslash): Remove. (host_letter_to_control_character): New function. (host_char_print_literally): Remove. (host_hex_value): New function. (target_char_to_control_char): Remove. (cleanup_iconv): New function. (convert_between_encodings): New function. (target_char_to_host): Remove. (struct wchar_iterator): Define. (make_wchar_iterator, make_cleanup_wchar_iterator, wchar_iterator, wchar_push_back): New functions. (do_cleanup_iterator): New function. (char_ptr): New typedef. (charsets): New global. (add_one, find_charset_names): New functions. (default_charset_names): New global. (auto_host_charset_name): Likewise. * aclocal.m4, config.in, configure: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Call AM_LANGINFO_CODESET. (GDB_DEFAULT_HOST_CHARSET): Default to UTF-8. (AM_ICONV): Invoke earlier. * acinclude.m4: Include codeset.m4. Subst LIBICONV_INCLUDE and LIBICONV_LIBDIR. Check for libiconv in build tree. * Makefile.in (LIBICONV_LIBDIR, LIBICONV_INCLUDE): New macros. (INTERNAL_CFLAGS_BASE): Add LIBICONV_INCLUDE. (INTERNAL_LDFLAGS): Add LIBICONV_LIBDIR. * gdb_obstack.h (obstack_grow_wstr): New define. * gdb_wchar.h: New file. * defs.h: Include it. gdb/testsuite: * gdb.base/store.exp: Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/callfuncs.exp (fetch_all_registers): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/pointers.exp: Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/long_long.exp (gdb_test_long_long): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/constvars.exp (do_constvar_tests): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/call-rt-st.exp (print_struct_call): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.cp/ref-types.exp (gdb_start_again): Update for change to escape output. * gdb.base/setvar.exp: Update for change to escape output. * lib/gdb.exp (default_gdb_start): Set LC_CTYPE to C. * gdb.base/printcmds.exp (test_print_all_chars): Update for change to escape output. (test_print_string_constants): Likewise. * gdb.base/charset.exp (valid_host_charset): Check size of wchar_t. Handle UCS-2 and UCS-4. Add tests for wide and unicode cases. Handle "auto"-related output. * gdb.base/charset.c (char16_t, char32_t): New typedefs. (uvar, Uvar): New globals. gdb/doc: * gdb.texinfo (Character Sets): Remove obsolete text. Document set target-wide-charset. (Requirements): Mention iconv.
2009-03-21 07:04:40 +08:00
return target_char;
}
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
/* Number of lines per page or UINT_MAX if paging is disabled. */
static unsigned int lines_per_page;
2005-02-24 Andrew Cagney <cagney@gnu.org> Add show_VARIABLE functions, update add_setshow call. * varobj.c (_initialize_varobj, show_varobjdebug): Add and update. * valprint.c (_initialize_valprint, show_print_max) (show_stop_print_at_null, show_repeat_count_threshold) (show_prettyprint_structs, show_unionprint) (show_prettyprint_arrays, show_addressprint, show_input_radix) (show_output_radix): Ditto. * valops.c (_initialize_valops, show_overload_resolution): Ditto. * utils.c (initialize_utils, show_chars_per_line) (show_lines_per_page, show_demangle, show_pagination_enabled) (show_sevenbit_strings, show_asm_demangle): Ditto * tui/tui-win.c (_initialize_tui_win, show_tui_border_kind) (show_tui_border_mode, show_tui_active_border_mode): Ditto. * top.c (init_main, show_new_async_prompt) (show_async_command_editing_p, show_write_history_p) (show_history_size, show_history_filename, show_caution) (show_annotation_level, init_main): Ditto. * target.c (initialize_targets, show_targetdebug) (show_trust_readonly): Ditto. * symfile.c (_initialize_symfile, show_symbol_reloading) (show_ext_args, show_download_write_size) (show_debug_file_directory): Ditto. * source.c (_initialize_source, show_lines_to_list): Ditto. * solib.c (_initialize_solib, show_auto_solib_add) (show_solib_search_path): Ditto. * p-valprint.c (_initialize_pascal_valprint) (show_pascal_static_field_print): Ditto. * printcmd.c (_initialize_printcmd, show_max_symbolic_offset) (show_print_symbol_filename): Add and update. * parse.c (_initialize_parse, show_expressiondebug): Dito. * observer.c (_initialize_observer, show_observer_debug): Dito. * maint.c (_initialize_maint_cmds, show_watchdog) (show_maintenance_profile_p): Dito. * linux-nat.c (_initialize_linux_nat, show_debug_linux_nat): Dito. * infrun.c (_initialize_infrun, show_debug_infrun) (show_stop_on_solib_events, show_follow_fork_mode_string) (show_scheduler_mode, show_step_stop_if_no_debug): Ditto. * infcall.c (_initialize_infcall, show_coerce_float_to_double_p) (show_unwind_on_signal_p): Ditto. * gdbtypes.c (build_gdbtypes, show_opaque_type_resolution) (_initialize_gdbtypes, show_overload_debug): Ditto. * gdb-events.c, gdb-events.sh (_initialize_gdb_events) (show_gdb_events_debug): Ditto. * gdbarch.c, gdbarch.sh (show_gdbarch_debug) (_initialize_gdbarch): Ditto. * frame.c (_initialize_frame, show_backtrace_past_main) (show_backtrace_past_entry, show_backtrace_limit) (show_frame_debug): Ditto. * exec.c (_initialize_exec, show_write_files): Ditto. * dwarf2read.c (_initialize_dwarf2_read) (show_dwarf2_max_cache_age): Ditto. * demangle.c (_initialize_demangler) (show_demangling_style_names): Ditto. * dcache.c (_initialize_dcache, show_dcache_enabled_p): Ditto. * cp-valprint.c (show_static_field_print) (_initialize_cp_valprint, show_vtblprint, show_objectprint): Ditto. * corefile.c (_initialize_core, show_gnutarget_string): Ditto. * cli/cli-logging.c (_initialize_cli_logging) (show_logging_overwrite, show_logging_redirect) (show_logging_filename): Ditto. * cli/cli-cmds.c (show_info_verbose, show_history_expansion_p) (init_cli_cmds, show_baud_rate, show_remote_debug) (show_remote_timeout, show_max_user_call_depth): Ditto. * charset.c (show_host_charset_name, show_target_charset_name) (initialize_charset): Ditto. * breakpoint.c (show_can_use_hw_watchpoints) (show_pending_break_support, _initialize_breakpoint): Ditto.
2005-02-24 21:51:36 +08:00
static void
show_lines_per_page (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
{
gdb_printf (file,
_("Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is %s.\n"),
value);
2005-02-24 Andrew Cagney <cagney@gnu.org> Add show_VARIABLE functions, update add_setshow call. * varobj.c (_initialize_varobj, show_varobjdebug): Add and update. * valprint.c (_initialize_valprint, show_print_max) (show_stop_print_at_null, show_repeat_count_threshold) (show_prettyprint_structs, show_unionprint) (show_prettyprint_arrays, show_addressprint, show_input_radix) (show_output_radix): Ditto. * valops.c (_initialize_valops, show_overload_resolution): Ditto. * utils.c (initialize_utils, show_chars_per_line) (show_lines_per_page, show_demangle, show_pagination_enabled) (show_sevenbit_strings, show_asm_demangle): Ditto * tui/tui-win.c (_initialize_tui_win, show_tui_border_kind) (show_tui_border_mode, show_tui_active_border_mode): Ditto. * top.c (init_main, show_new_async_prompt) (show_async_command_editing_p, show_write_history_p) (show_history_size, show_history_filename, show_caution) (show_annotation_level, init_main): Ditto. * target.c (initialize_targets, show_targetdebug) (show_trust_readonly): Ditto. * symfile.c (_initialize_symfile, show_symbol_reloading) (show_ext_args, show_download_write_size) (show_debug_file_directory): Ditto. * source.c (_initialize_source, show_lines_to_list): Ditto. * solib.c (_initialize_solib, show_auto_solib_add) (show_solib_search_path): Ditto. * p-valprint.c (_initialize_pascal_valprint) (show_pascal_static_field_print): Ditto. * printcmd.c (_initialize_printcmd, show_max_symbolic_offset) (show_print_symbol_filename): Add and update. * parse.c (_initialize_parse, show_expressiondebug): Dito. * observer.c (_initialize_observer, show_observer_debug): Dito. * maint.c (_initialize_maint_cmds, show_watchdog) (show_maintenance_profile_p): Dito. * linux-nat.c (_initialize_linux_nat, show_debug_linux_nat): Dito. * infrun.c (_initialize_infrun, show_debug_infrun) (show_stop_on_solib_events, show_follow_fork_mode_string) (show_scheduler_mode, show_step_stop_if_no_debug): Ditto. * infcall.c (_initialize_infcall, show_coerce_float_to_double_p) (show_unwind_on_signal_p): Ditto. * gdbtypes.c (build_gdbtypes, show_opaque_type_resolution) (_initialize_gdbtypes, show_overload_debug): Ditto. * gdb-events.c, gdb-events.sh (_initialize_gdb_events) (show_gdb_events_debug): Ditto. * gdbarch.c, gdbarch.sh (show_gdbarch_debug) (_initialize_gdbarch): Ditto. * frame.c (_initialize_frame, show_backtrace_past_main) (show_backtrace_past_entry, show_backtrace_limit) (show_frame_debug): Ditto. * exec.c (_initialize_exec, show_write_files): Ditto. * dwarf2read.c (_initialize_dwarf2_read) (show_dwarf2_max_cache_age): Ditto. * demangle.c (_initialize_demangler) (show_demangling_style_names): Ditto. * dcache.c (_initialize_dcache, show_dcache_enabled_p): Ditto. * cp-valprint.c (show_static_field_print) (_initialize_cp_valprint, show_vtblprint, show_objectprint): Ditto. * corefile.c (_initialize_core, show_gnutarget_string): Ditto. * cli/cli-logging.c (_initialize_cli_logging) (show_logging_overwrite, show_logging_redirect) (show_logging_filename): Ditto. * cli/cli-cmds.c (show_info_verbose, show_history_expansion_p) (init_cli_cmds, show_baud_rate, show_remote_debug) (show_remote_timeout, show_max_user_call_depth): Ditto. * charset.c (show_host_charset_name, show_target_charset_name) (initialize_charset): Ditto. * breakpoint.c (show_can_use_hw_watchpoints) (show_pending_break_support, _initialize_breakpoint): Ditto.
2005-02-24 21:51:36 +08:00
}
/* Number of chars per line or UINT_MAX if line folding is disabled. */
static unsigned int chars_per_line;
2005-02-24 Andrew Cagney <cagney@gnu.org> Add show_VARIABLE functions, update add_setshow call. * varobj.c (_initialize_varobj, show_varobjdebug): Add and update. * valprint.c (_initialize_valprint, show_print_max) (show_stop_print_at_null, show_repeat_count_threshold) (show_prettyprint_structs, show_unionprint) (show_prettyprint_arrays, show_addressprint, show_input_radix) (show_output_radix): Ditto. * valops.c (_initialize_valops, show_overload_resolution): Ditto. * utils.c (initialize_utils, show_chars_per_line) (show_lines_per_page, show_demangle, show_pagination_enabled) (show_sevenbit_strings, show_asm_demangle): Ditto * tui/tui-win.c (_initialize_tui_win, show_tui_border_kind) (show_tui_border_mode, show_tui_active_border_mode): Ditto. * top.c (init_main, show_new_async_prompt) (show_async_command_editing_p, show_write_history_p) (show_history_size, show_history_filename, show_caution) (show_annotation_level, init_main): Ditto. * target.c (initialize_targets, show_targetdebug) (show_trust_readonly): Ditto. * symfile.c (_initialize_symfile, show_symbol_reloading) (show_ext_args, show_download_write_size) (show_debug_file_directory): Ditto. * source.c (_initialize_source, show_lines_to_list): Ditto. * solib.c (_initialize_solib, show_auto_solib_add) (show_solib_search_path): Ditto. * p-valprint.c (_initialize_pascal_valprint) (show_pascal_static_field_print): Ditto. * printcmd.c (_initialize_printcmd, show_max_symbolic_offset) (show_print_symbol_filename): Add and update. * parse.c (_initialize_parse, show_expressiondebug): Dito. * observer.c (_initialize_observer, show_observer_debug): Dito. * maint.c (_initialize_maint_cmds, show_watchdog) (show_maintenance_profile_p): Dito. * linux-nat.c (_initialize_linux_nat, show_debug_linux_nat): Dito. * infrun.c (_initialize_infrun, show_debug_infrun) (show_stop_on_solib_events, show_follow_fork_mode_string) (show_scheduler_mode, show_step_stop_if_no_debug): Ditto. * infcall.c (_initialize_infcall, show_coerce_float_to_double_p) (show_unwind_on_signal_p): Ditto. * gdbtypes.c (build_gdbtypes, show_opaque_type_resolution) (_initialize_gdbtypes, show_overload_debug): Ditto. * gdb-events.c, gdb-events.sh (_initialize_gdb_events) (show_gdb_events_debug): Ditto. * gdbarch.c, gdbarch.sh (show_gdbarch_debug) (_initialize_gdbarch): Ditto. * frame.c (_initialize_frame, show_backtrace_past_main) (show_backtrace_past_entry, show_backtrace_limit) (show_frame_debug): Ditto. * exec.c (_initialize_exec, show_write_files): Ditto. * dwarf2read.c (_initialize_dwarf2_read) (show_dwarf2_max_cache_age): Ditto. * demangle.c (_initialize_demangler) (show_demangling_style_names): Ditto. * dcache.c (_initialize_dcache, show_dcache_enabled_p): Ditto. * cp-valprint.c (show_static_field_print) (_initialize_cp_valprint, show_vtblprint, show_objectprint): Ditto. * corefile.c (_initialize_core, show_gnutarget_string): Ditto. * cli/cli-logging.c (_initialize_cli_logging) (show_logging_overwrite, show_logging_redirect) (show_logging_filename): Ditto. * cli/cli-cmds.c (show_info_verbose, show_history_expansion_p) (init_cli_cmds, show_baud_rate, show_remote_debug) (show_remote_timeout, show_max_user_call_depth): Ditto. * charset.c (show_host_charset_name, show_target_charset_name) (initialize_charset): Ditto. * breakpoint.c (show_can_use_hw_watchpoints) (show_pending_break_support, _initialize_breakpoint): Ditto.
2005-02-24 21:51:36 +08:00
static void
show_chars_per_line (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
{
gdb_printf (file,
_("Number of characters gdb thinks "
"are in a line is %s.\n"),
value);
2005-02-24 Andrew Cagney <cagney@gnu.org> Add show_VARIABLE functions, update add_setshow call. * varobj.c (_initialize_varobj, show_varobjdebug): Add and update. * valprint.c (_initialize_valprint, show_print_max) (show_stop_print_at_null, show_repeat_count_threshold) (show_prettyprint_structs, show_unionprint) (show_prettyprint_arrays, show_addressprint, show_input_radix) (show_output_radix): Ditto. * valops.c (_initialize_valops, show_overload_resolution): Ditto. * utils.c (initialize_utils, show_chars_per_line) (show_lines_per_page, show_demangle, show_pagination_enabled) (show_sevenbit_strings, show_asm_demangle): Ditto * tui/tui-win.c (_initialize_tui_win, show_tui_border_kind) (show_tui_border_mode, show_tui_active_border_mode): Ditto. * top.c (init_main, show_new_async_prompt) (show_async_command_editing_p, show_write_history_p) (show_history_size, show_history_filename, show_caution) (show_annotation_level, init_main): Ditto. * target.c (initialize_targets, show_targetdebug) (show_trust_readonly): Ditto. * symfile.c (_initialize_symfile, show_symbol_reloading) (show_ext_args, show_download_write_size) (show_debug_file_directory): Ditto. * source.c (_initialize_source, show_lines_to_list): Ditto. * solib.c (_initialize_solib, show_auto_solib_add) (show_solib_search_path): Ditto. * p-valprint.c (_initialize_pascal_valprint) (show_pascal_static_field_print): Ditto. * printcmd.c (_initialize_printcmd, show_max_symbolic_offset) (show_print_symbol_filename): Add and update. * parse.c (_initialize_parse, show_expressiondebug): Dito. * observer.c (_initialize_observer, show_observer_debug): Dito. * maint.c (_initialize_maint_cmds, show_watchdog) (show_maintenance_profile_p): Dito. * linux-nat.c (_initialize_linux_nat, show_debug_linux_nat): Dito. * infrun.c (_initialize_infrun, show_debug_infrun) (show_stop_on_solib_events, show_follow_fork_mode_string) (show_scheduler_mode, show_step_stop_if_no_debug): Ditto. * infcall.c (_initialize_infcall, show_coerce_float_to_double_p) (show_unwind_on_signal_p): Ditto. * gdbtypes.c (build_gdbtypes, show_opaque_type_resolution) (_initialize_gdbtypes, show_overload_debug): Ditto. * gdb-events.c, gdb-events.sh (_initialize_gdb_events) (show_gdb_events_debug): Ditto. * gdbarch.c, gdbarch.sh (show_gdbarch_debug) (_initialize_gdbarch): Ditto. * frame.c (_initialize_frame, show_backtrace_past_main) (show_backtrace_past_entry, show_backtrace_limit) (show_frame_debug): Ditto. * exec.c (_initialize_exec, show_write_files): Ditto. * dwarf2read.c (_initialize_dwarf2_read) (show_dwarf2_max_cache_age): Ditto. * demangle.c (_initialize_demangler) (show_demangling_style_names): Ditto. * dcache.c (_initialize_dcache, show_dcache_enabled_p): Ditto. * cp-valprint.c (show_static_field_print) (_initialize_cp_valprint, show_vtblprint, show_objectprint): Ditto. * corefile.c (_initialize_core, show_gnutarget_string): Ditto. * cli/cli-logging.c (_initialize_cli_logging) (show_logging_overwrite, show_logging_redirect) (show_logging_filename): Ditto. * cli/cli-cmds.c (show_info_verbose, show_history_expansion_p) (init_cli_cmds, show_baud_rate, show_remote_debug) (show_remote_timeout, show_max_user_call_depth): Ditto. * charset.c (show_host_charset_name, show_target_charset_name) (initialize_charset): Ditto. * breakpoint.c (show_can_use_hw_watchpoints) (show_pending_break_support, _initialize_breakpoint): Ditto.
2005-02-24 21:51:36 +08:00
}
/* Current count of lines printed on this page, chars on this line. */
static unsigned int lines_printed, chars_printed;
/* True if pagination is disabled for just one command. */
static bool pagination_disabled_for_command;
/* Buffer and start column of buffered text, for doing smarter word-
wrapping. When someone calls wrap_here(), we start buffering output
that comes through gdb_puts(). If we see a newline, we just
spit it out and forget about the wrap_here(). If we see another
wrap_here(), we spit it out and remember the newer one. If we see
the end of the line, we spit out a newline, the indent, and then
the buffered output. */
static bool filter_initialized = false;
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
[gdb/tui] Fix TUI resizing for TERM=ansi With TERM=ansi, when resizing a TUI window from LINES/COLUMNS 31/118 (maximized) to 20/78 (de-maximized), I get a garbled screen (that ^L doesn't fix) and a message: ... @@ resize done 0, size = 77x20 ... with the resulting width being 77 instead of the expected 78. [ The discrepancy also manifests in CLI, filed as PR30346. ] The discrepancy comes from tui_resize_all, where we ask readline for the screen size: ... rl_get_screen_size (&screenheight, &screenwidth); ... As it happens, when TERM is set to ansi, readline decides that the terminal cannot auto-wrap lines, and reserves one column to deal with that, and as a result reports back one less than the actual screen width: ... $ echo $COLUMNS 78 $ TERM=xterm gdb -ex "show width" -ex q Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 78. $ TERM=ansi gdb -ex "show width" -ex q Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 77. ... In tui_resize_all, we need the actual screen width, and using a screenwidth of one less than the actual value garbles the screen. This is currently not causing trouble in testing because we have a workaround in place in proc Term::resize. If we disable the workaround: ... - stty columns [expr {$_cols + 1}] < $::gdb_tty_name + stty columns $_cols < $::gdb_tty_name ... and dump the screen we get the same type of screen garbling: ... 0 +---------------------------------------+| 1 || 2 || 3 || ... Another way to reproduce the problem is using command "maint info screen". After starting gdb with TERM=ansi, entering TUI, and issuing the command, we get: ... Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 78. ... and after maximizing and demaximizing the window we get: ... Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 77. ... If we use TERM=xterm, we do get the expected 78. Fix this by: - detecting when readline will report back less than the actual screen width, - accordingly setting a new variable readline_hidden_cols, - using readline_hidden_cols in tui_resize_all to fix the resize problem, and - removing the workaround in Term::resize. The test-case gdb.tui/empty.exp serves as regression test. I've applied the same fix in tui_async_resize_screen, the new test-case gdb.tui/resize-2.exp serves as a regression test for that change. Without that fix, we have: ... FAIL: gdb.tui/resize-2.exp: again: gdb width 80 ... Tested on x86_64-linux. PR tui/30337 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=30337
2023-04-30 19:06:23 +08:00
/* See readline's rlprivate.h. */
EXTERN_C int _rl_term_autowrap;
/* See utils.h. */
int readline_hidden_cols = 0;
/* Initialize the number of lines per page and chars per line. */
void
2000-07-30 09:48:28 +08:00
init_page_info (void)
{
if (batch_flag)
{
lines_per_page = UINT_MAX;
chars_per_line = UINT_MAX;
}
else
#if defined(TUI)
if (!tui_get_command_dimension (&chars_per_line, &lines_per_page))
#endif
{
int rows, cols;
#if defined(__GO32__)
rows = ScreenRows ();
cols = ScreenCols ();
lines_per_page = rows;
chars_per_line = cols;
#else
/* Make sure Readline has initialized its terminal settings. */
rl_reset_terminal (NULL);
/* Get the screen size from Readline. */
rl_get_screen_size (&rows, &cols);
[gdb/tui] Fix TUI resizing for TERM=ansi With TERM=ansi, when resizing a TUI window from LINES/COLUMNS 31/118 (maximized) to 20/78 (de-maximized), I get a garbled screen (that ^L doesn't fix) and a message: ... @@ resize done 0, size = 77x20 ... with the resulting width being 77 instead of the expected 78. [ The discrepancy also manifests in CLI, filed as PR30346. ] The discrepancy comes from tui_resize_all, where we ask readline for the screen size: ... rl_get_screen_size (&screenheight, &screenwidth); ... As it happens, when TERM is set to ansi, readline decides that the terminal cannot auto-wrap lines, and reserves one column to deal with that, and as a result reports back one less than the actual screen width: ... $ echo $COLUMNS 78 $ TERM=xterm gdb -ex "show width" -ex q Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 78. $ TERM=ansi gdb -ex "show width" -ex q Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 77. ... In tui_resize_all, we need the actual screen width, and using a screenwidth of one less than the actual value garbles the screen. This is currently not causing trouble in testing because we have a workaround in place in proc Term::resize. If we disable the workaround: ... - stty columns [expr {$_cols + 1}] < $::gdb_tty_name + stty columns $_cols < $::gdb_tty_name ... and dump the screen we get the same type of screen garbling: ... 0 +---------------------------------------+| 1 || 2 || 3 || ... Another way to reproduce the problem is using command "maint info screen". After starting gdb with TERM=ansi, entering TUI, and issuing the command, we get: ... Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 78. ... and after maximizing and demaximizing the window we get: ... Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 77. ... If we use TERM=xterm, we do get the expected 78. Fix this by: - detecting when readline will report back less than the actual screen width, - accordingly setting a new variable readline_hidden_cols, - using readline_hidden_cols in tui_resize_all to fix the resize problem, and - removing the workaround in Term::resize. The test-case gdb.tui/empty.exp serves as regression test. I've applied the same fix in tui_async_resize_screen, the new test-case gdb.tui/resize-2.exp serves as a regression test for that change. Without that fix, we have: ... FAIL: gdb.tui/resize-2.exp: again: gdb width 80 ... Tested on x86_64-linux. PR tui/30337 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=30337
2023-04-30 19:06:23 +08:00
/* Readline:
- ignores the COLUMNS variable when detecting screen width
(because rl_prefer_env_winsize defaults to 0)
- puts the detected screen width in the COLUMNS variable
(because rl_change_environment defaults to 1)
- may report one less than the detected screen width in
rl_get_screen_size (when _rl_term_autowrap == 0).
We could set readline_hidden_cols by comparing COLUMNS to cols as
returned by rl_get_screen_size, but instead simply use
_rl_term_autowrap. */
readline_hidden_cols = _rl_term_autowrap ? 0 : 1;
lines_per_page = rows;
[gdb/cli] Fix wrapping for TERM=ansi I. Auto-detected width (xterm vs. ansi) Say we have a terminal with a width of 40 chars: ... $ echo $COLUMNS 40 ... With TERM=xterm, we report a width of 40 chars: ... $ TERM=xterm gdb (gdb) show width Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 40. ... And with TERM=ansi, a width of 39 chars: ... $ TERM=ansi gdb (gdb) show width Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 39. ... Gdb uses readline to auto-detect screen size, and readline decides in the TERM=ansi case that the terminal does not have reliable auto-wrap, and consequently decides to hide the last terminal column from the readline user (in other words GDB), hence we get 39 instead of 40. II. Types of wrapping Looking a bit more in detail inside gdb, it seems there are two types of wrapping: - readline wrapping (in other words, prompt edit wrapping), and - gdb output wrapping (can be observed by issuing "info sources"). This type of wrapping attempts to wrap some of the gdb output earlier than the indicated width, to not break lines in inconvenient places. III. Readline wrapping, auto-detected screen size Let's investigate readline wrapping with the auto-detected screen widths. First, let's try with xterm: ... $ TERM=xterm gdb (gdb) 7890123456789012345678901234567890 123 ... That looks as expected, wrapping occurs after 40 chars. Now, let's try with ansi: ... $ TERM=ansi gdb (gdb) 78901234567890123456789012345678 90123 ... It looks like wrapping occurred after 38, while readline should be capable of wrapping after 39 chars. This is caused by readline hiding the last column, twice. In more detail: - readline detects the screen width: 40, - readline hides the last column, setting the readline screen width to 39, - readline reports 39 to gdb as screen width, - gdb sets its width setting to 39, - gdb sets readline screen width to 39, - readline hides the last column, again, setting the readline screen width to 38. This is reported as PR cli/30346. IV. gdb output wrapping, auto-detected screen size Say we set the terminal width to 56. With TERM=xterm, we have: ... /home/abuild/rpmbuild/BUILD/glibc-2.31/csu/elf-init.c, /data/vries/hello.c, ... but with TERM=ansi: ... /home/abuild/rpmbuild/BUILD/glibc-2.31/csu/elf-init.c, / data/vries/hello.c, ... So what happened here? With TERM=ansi, the width setting is auto-detected to 55, and gdb assumes the terminal inserts a line break there, which it doesn't because the terminal width is 56. This is reported as PR cli/30411. V. Fix PRs Fix both mentioned PRs by taking into account the hidden column when readline reports the screen width in init_page_info, and updating chars_per_line accordingly. Note that now we report the same width for both TERM=xterm and TERM=ansi, which is much clearer. The point where readline respectively expects or ensures wrapping is still indicated by "maint info screen", for xterm: ... Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 40. ... and ansi: ... Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 39. ... VI. Testing PR cli/30346 is covered by existing regression tests gdb.base/wrap-line.exp and gdb.tui/wrap-line.exp, so remove the KFAILs there. I didn't manage to come up with a regression test for PR cli/30411. Perhaps that would be easier if we had a maintenance command that echoes its arguments while applying gdb output wrapping. Tested on x86_64-linux. PR cli/30346 PR cli/30411 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=30346 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=30411
2023-05-12 17:43:41 +08:00
chars_per_line = cols + readline_hidden_cols;
/* Readline should have fetched the termcap entry for us.
gdb, gdbserver, gdbsupport: fix leading space vs tabs issues Many spots incorrectly use only spaces for indentation (for example, there are a lot of spots in ada-lang.c). I've always found it awkward when I needed to edit one of these spots: do I keep the original wrong indentation, or do I fix it? What if the lines around it are also wrong, do I fix them too? I probably don't want to fix them in the same patch, to avoid adding noise to my patch. So I propose to fix as much as possible once and for all (hopefully). One typical counter argument for this is that it makes code archeology more difficult, because git-blame will show this commit as the last change for these lines. My counter counter argument is: when git-blaming, you often need to do "blame the file at the parent commit" anyway, to go past some other refactor that touched the line you are interested in, but is not the change you are looking for. So you already need a somewhat efficient way to do this. Using some interactive tool, rather than plain git-blame, makes this trivial. For example, I use "tig blame <file>", where going back past the commit that changed the currently selected line is one keystroke. It looks like Magit in Emacs does it too (though I've never used it). Web viewers of Github and Gitlab do it too. My point is that it won't really make archeology more difficult. The other typical counter argument is that it will cause conflicts with existing patches. That's true... but it's a one time cost, and those are not conflicts that are difficult to resolve. I have also tried "git rebase --ignore-whitespace", it seems to work well. Although that will re-introduce the faulty indentation, so one needs to take care of fixing the indentation in the patch after that (which is easy). gdb/ChangeLog: * aarch64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.c: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.h: Fix indentation. * ada-tasks.c: Fix indentation. * ada-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.h: Fix indentation. * agent.c: Fix indentation. * aix-thread.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-mdebug-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * annotate.c: Fix indentation. * arc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arch-utils.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-pikeos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * arm-wince-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * auto-load.c: Fix indentation. * auxv.c: Fix indentation. * avr-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ax-gdb.c: Fix indentation. * ax-general.c: Fix indentation. * bfin-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * block.c: Fix indentation. * block.h: Fix indentation. * blockframe.c: Fix indentation. * bpf-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-sig.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-throw.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.h: Fix indentation. * bsd-uthread.c: Fix indentation. * btrace.c: Fix indentation. * build-id.c: Fix indentation. * buildsym-legacy.h: Fix indentation. * buildsym.c: Fix indentation. * c-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * charset.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.h: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-script.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-setshow.c: Fix indentation. * coff-pe-read.c: Fix indentation. * coffread.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-cplus-types.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-load.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-run.c: Fix indentation. * completer.c: Fix indentation. * corefile.c: Fix indentation. * corelow.c: Fix indentation. * cp-abi.h: Fix indentation. * cp-namespace.c: Fix indentation. * cp-support.c: Fix indentation. * cp-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * cris-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * cris-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat-info.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.h: Fix indentation. * dbxread.c: Fix indentation. * dcache.c: Fix indentation. * disasm.c: Fix indentation. * dtrace-probe.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/abbrev.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/attribute.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/expr.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/frame.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-cache.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-write.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/line-header.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/loc.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/macro.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.h: Fix indentation. * elfread.c: Fix indentation. * eval.c: Fix indentation. * event-top.c: Fix indentation. * exec.c: Fix indentation. * exec.h: Fix indentation. * expprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-lang.c: Fix indentation. * f-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * findvar.c: Fix indentation. * fork-child.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.h: Fix indentation. * frame.c: Fix indentation. * frv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ft32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gcore.c: Fix indentation. * gdb_bfd.c: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.sh: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.c: Re-generate * gdbarch.h: Re-generate. * gdbcore.h: Fix indentation. * gdbthread.h: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.c: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.h: Fix indentation. * glibc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.h: Fix indentation. * gnu-v2-abi.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-v3-abi.c: Fix indentation. * go32-nat.c: Fix indentation. * guile/guile-internal.h: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-cmd.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-frame.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-iterator.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-math.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-ports.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-pretty-print.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-value.c: Fix indentation. * h8300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-dicos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-sol2-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-vms-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * infcall.c: Fix indentation. * infcmd.c: Fix indentation. * inferior.c: Fix indentation. * infrun.c: Fix indentation. * iq2000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * language.c: Fix indentation. * linespec.c: Fix indentation. * linux-fork.c: Fix indentation. * linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * linux-thread-db.c: Fix indentation. * lm32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m2-lang.c: Fix indentation. * m2-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * m2-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * m32c-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68hc11-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * machoread.c: Fix indentation. * macrocmd.c: Fix indentation. * macroexp.c: Fix indentation. * macroscope.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.h: Fix indentation. * main.c: Fix indentation. * mdebugread.c: Fix indentation. * mep-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-catch.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-disas.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-env.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-stack.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-var.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-main.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-parse.c: Fix indentation. * microblaze-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * minidebug.c: Fix indentation. * minsyms.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * moxie-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * msp430-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * namespace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/fork-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * nat/gdb_ptrace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-namespaces.c: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-osdata.c: Fix indentation. * nat/netbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nat/x86-dregs.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nto-procfs.c: Fix indentation. * nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.h: Fix indentation. * opencl-lang.c: Fix indentation. * or1k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.h: Fix indentation. * osdata.c: Fix indentation. * p-lang.c: Fix indentation. * p-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * p-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * parse.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-sysv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * printcmd.c: Fix indentation. * proc-api.c: Fix indentation. * producer.c: Fix indentation. * producer.h: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.c: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.h: Fix indentation. * psymtab.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-arch.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-bpevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-finishbreakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-frame.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-framefilter.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-infthread.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-objfile.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-prettyprint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-registers.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-signalevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-threadevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-tui.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-value.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-xmethods.c: Fix indentation. * python/python-internal.h: Fix indentation. * python/python.c: Fix indentation. * ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * record-btrace.c: Fix indentation. * record-full.c: Fix indentation. * record.c: Fix indentation. * reggroups.c: Fix indentation. * regset.h: Fix indentation. * remote-fileio.c: Fix indentation. * remote.c: Fix indentation. * reverse.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rl78-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-aix-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-nat.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rust-lang.c: Fix indentation. * rx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s12z-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s390-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * score-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ser-base.c: Fix indentation. * ser-mingw.c: Fix indentation. * ser-uds.c: Fix indentation. * ser-unix.c: Fix indentation. * serial.c: Fix indentation. * sh-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * skip.c: Fix indentation. * sol-thread.c: Fix indentation. * solib-aix.c: Fix indentation. * solib-darwin.c: Fix indentation. * solib-frv.c: Fix indentation. * solib-svr4.c: Fix indentation. * solib.c: Fix indentation. * source.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * stabsread.c: Fix indentation. * stack.c: Fix indentation. * stap-probe.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/ia64vms-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m32r-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m68k-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sh-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sparc-stub.c: Fix indentation. * symfile-mem.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.h: Fix indentation. * symmisc.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.h: Fix indentation. * target-float.c: Fix indentation. * target.c: Fix indentation. * target.h: Fix indentation. * tic6x-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * top.c: Fix indentation. * tracefile-tfile.c: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-disasm.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-io.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-regs.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-stack.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-win.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-winsource.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui.c: Fix indentation. * typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ui-out.h: Fix indentation. * unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * unittests/memory-map-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * utils.c: Fix indentation. * v850-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * valarith.c: Fix indentation. * valops.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.h: Fix indentation. * value.c: Fix indentation. * value.h: Fix indentation. * varobj.c: Fix indentation. * vax-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * windows-nat.c: Fix indentation. * windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xcoffread.c: Fix indentation. * xml-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * xml-tdesc.c: Fix indentation. * xstormy16-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-config.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. gdbserver/ChangeLog: * ax.cc: Fix indentation. * dll.cc: Fix indentation. * inferiors.h: Fix indentation. * linux-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-nios2-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-ipa.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-x86-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-xtensa-low.cc: Fix indentation. * regcache.cc: Fix indentation. * server.cc: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.cc: Fix indentation. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: * common-exceptions.h: Fix indentation. * event-loop.cc: Fix indentation. * fileio.cc: Fix indentation. * filestuff.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb-dlfcn.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb_string_view.h: Fix indentation. * job-control.cc: Fix indentation. * signals.cc: Fix indentation. Change-Id: I4bad7ae6be0fbe14168b8ebafb98ffe14964a695
2020-11-02 23:26:14 +08:00
Only try to use tgetnum function if rl_get_screen_size
did not return a useful value. */
-Wwrite-strings: The Rest This is the remainder boring constification that all looks more of less borderline obvious IMO. gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-04-05 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * ada-exp.y (yyerror): Constify. * ada-lang.c (bound_name, get_selections) (ada_variant_discrim_type) (ada_variant_discrim_name, ada_value_struct_elt) (ada_lookup_struct_elt_type, is_unchecked_variant) (ada_which_variant_applies, standard_exc, ada_get_next_arg) (catch_ada_exception_command_split) (catch_ada_assert_command_split, catch_assert_command) (ada_op_name): Constify. * ada-lang.h (ada_yyerror, get_selections) (ada_variant_discrim_name, ada_value_struct_elt): Constify. * arc-tdep.c (arc_print_frame_cache): Constify. * arm-tdep.c (arm_skip_stub): Constify. * ax-gdb.c (gen_binop, gen_struct_ref_recursive, gen_struct_ref) (gen_aggregate_elt_ref): Constify. * bcache.c (print_bcache_statistics): Constify. * bcache.h (print_bcache_statistics): Constify. * break-catch-throw.c (catch_exception_command_1): * breakpoint.c (struct ep_type_description::description): Constify. (add_solib_catchpoint): Constify. (catch_fork_command_1): Add cast. (add_catch_command): Constify. * breakpoint.h (add_catch_command, add_solib_catchpoint): Constify. * bsd-uthread.c (bsd_uthread_state): Constify. * buildsym.c (patch_subfile_names): Constify. * buildsym.h (next_symbol_text_func, patch_subfile_names): Constify. * c-exp.y (yyerror): Constify. (token::oper): Constify. * c-lang.h (c_yyerror, cp_print_class_member): Constify. * c-varobj.c (cplus_describe_child): Constify. * charset.c (find_charset_names): Add cast. (find_charset_names): Constify array and add const_cast. * cli/cli-cmds.c (complete_command, cd_command): Constify. (edit_command): Constify. * cli/cli-decode.c (lookup_cmd): Constify. * cli/cli-dump.c (dump_memory_command, dump_value_command): Constify. (struct dump_context): Constify. (add_dump_command, restore_command): Constify. * cli/cli-script.c (get_command_line): Constify. * cli/cli-script.h (get_command_line): Constify. * cli/cli-utils.c (check_for_argument): Constify. * cli/cli-utils.h (check_for_argument): Constify. * coff-pe-read.c (struct read_pe_section_data): Constify. * command.h (lookup_cmd): Constify. * common/print-utils.c (decimal2str): Constify. * completer.c (gdb_print_filename): Constify. * corefile.c (set_gnutarget): Constify. * cp-name-parser.y (yyerror): Constify. * cp-valprint.c (cp_print_class_member): Constify. * cris-tdep.c (cris_register_name, crisv32_register_name): Constify. * d-exp.y (yyerror): Constify. (struct token::oper): Constify. * d-lang.h (d_yyerror): Constify. * dbxread.c (struct header_file_location::name): Constify. (add_old_header_file, add_new_header_file, last_function_name) (dbx_next_symbol_text, add_bincl_to_list) (find_corresponding_bincl_psymtab, set_namestring) (find_stab_function_addr, read_dbx_symtab, start_psymtab) (dbx_end_psymtab, read_ofile_symtab, process_one_symbol): * defs.h (command_line_input, print_address_symbolic) (deprecated_readline_begin_hook): Constify. * dwarf2read.c (anonymous_struct_prefix, dwarf_bool_name): Constify. * event-top.c (handle_line_of_input): Constify and add cast. * exceptions.c (catch_errors): Constify. * exceptions.h (catch_errors): Constify. * expprint.c (print_subexp_standard, op_string, op_name) (op_name_standard, dump_raw_expression, dump_raw_expression): * expression.h (op_name, op_string, dump_raw_expression): Constify. * f-exp.y (yyerror): Constify. (struct token::oper): Constify. (struct f77_boolean_val::name): Constify. * f-lang.c (f_word_break_characters): Constify. * f-lang.h (f_yyerror): Constify. * fork-child.c (fork_inferior): Add cast. * frv-tdep.c (struct gdbarch_tdep::register_names): Constify. (new_variant): Constify. * gdbarch.sh (pstring_ptr, pstring_list): Constify. * gdbarch.c: Regenerate. * gdbcore.h (set_gnutarget): Constify. * go-exp.y (yyerror): Constify. (token::oper): Constify. * go-lang.h (go_yyerror): Constify. * go32-nat.c (go32_sysinfo): Constify. * guile/scm-breakpoint.c (gdbscm_breakpoint_expression): Constify. * guile/scm-cmd.c (cmdscm_function): Constify. * guile/scm-param.c (pascm_param_value): Constify. * h8300-tdep.c (h8300_register_name, h8300s_register_name) (h8300sx_register_name): Constify. * hppa-tdep.c (hppa32_register_name, hppa64_register_name): Constify. * ia64-tdep.c (ia64_register_names): Constify. * infcmd.c (construct_inferior_arguments): Constify. (path_command, attach_post_wait): Constify. * language.c (show_range_command, show_case_command) (unk_lang_error): Constify. * language.h (language_defn::la_error) (language_defn::la_name_of_this): Constify. * linespec.c (decode_line_2): Constify. * linux-thread-db.c (thread_db_err_str): Constify. * lm32-tdep.c (lm32_register_name): Constify. * m2-exp.y (yyerror): Constify. * m2-lang.h (m2_yyerror): Constify. * m32r-tdep.c (m32r_register_names): Constify and make static. * m68hc11-tdep.c (m68hc11_register_names): Constify. * m88k-tdep.c (m88k_register_name): Constify. * macroexp.c (appendmem): Constify. * mdebugread.c (fdr_name, add_data_symbol, parse_type) (upgrade_type, parse_external, parse_partial_symbols) (mdebug_next_symbol_text, cross_ref, mylookup_symbol, new_psymtab) (new_symbol): Constify. * memattr.c (mem_info_command): Constify. * mep-tdep.c (register_name_from_keyword): Constify. * mi/mi-cmd-env.c (mi_cmd_env_path, _initialize_mi_cmd_env): Constify. * mi/mi-cmd-stack.c (list_args_or_locals): Constify. * mi/mi-cmd-var.c (mi_cmd_var_show_attributes): Constify. * mi/mi-main.c (captured_mi_execute_command): Constify and add cast. (mi_execute_async_cli_command): Constify. * mips-tdep.c (mips_register_name): Constify. * mn10300-tdep.c (register_name, mn10300_generic_register_name) (am33_register_name, am33_2_register_name) * moxie-tdep.c (moxie_register_names): Constify. * nat/linux-osdata.c (osdata_type): Constify fields. * nto-tdep.c (nto_parse_redirection): Constify. * objc-lang.c (lookup_struct_typedef, lookup_objc_class) (lookup_child_selector): Constify. (objc_methcall::name): Constify. * objc-lang.h (lookup_objc_class, lookup_child_selector) (lookup_struct_typedef): Constify. * objfiles.c (pc_in_section): Constify. * objfiles.h (pc_in_section): Constify. * p-exp.y (struct token::oper): Constify. (yyerror): Constify. * p-lang.h (pascal_yyerror): Constify. * parser-defs.h (op_name_standard): Constify. (op_print::string): Constify. (exp_descriptor::op_name): Constify. * printcmd.c (print_address_symbolic): Constify. * psymtab.c (print_partial_symbols): Constify. * python/py-breakpoint.c (stop_func): Constify. (bppy_get_expression): Constify. * python/py-cmd.c (cmdpy_completer::name): Constify. (cmdpy_function): Constify. * python/py-event.c (evpy_add_attribute) (gdbpy_initialize_event_generic): Constify. * python/py-event.h (evpy_add_attribute) (gdbpy_initialize_event_generic): Constify. * python/py-evts.c (add_new_registry): Constify. * python/py-finishbreakpoint.c (outofscope_func): Constify. * python/py-framefilter.c (get_py_iter_from_func): Constify. * python/py-inferior.c (get_buffer): Add cast. * python/py-param.c (parm_constant::name): Constify. * python/py-unwind.c (fprint_frame_id): Constify. * python/python.c (gdbpy_parameter_value): Constify. * remote-fileio.c (remote_fio_func_map): Make 'name' const. * remote.c (memory_packet_config::name): Constify. (show_packet_config_cmd, remote_write_bytes) (remote_buffer_add_string): * reverse.c (exec_reverse_once): Constify. * rs6000-tdep.c (variant::name, variant::description): Constify. * rust-exp.y (rustyyerror): Constify. * rust-lang.c (rust_op_name): Constify. * rust-lang.h (rustyyerror): Constify. * serial.h (serial_ops::name): Constify. * sh-tdep.c (sh_sh_register_name, sh_sh3_register_name) (sh_sh3e_register_name, sh_sh2e_register_name) (sh_sh2a_register_name, sh_sh2a_nofpu_register_name) (sh_sh_dsp_register_name, sh_sh3_dsp_register_name) (sh_sh4_register_name, sh_sh4_nofpu_register_name) (sh_sh4al_dsp_register_name): Constify. * sh64-tdep.c (sh64_register_name): Constify. * solib-darwin.c (lookup_symbol_from_bfd): Constify. * spu-tdep.c (spu_register_name, info_spu_dma_cmdlist): Constify. * stabsread.c (patch_block_stabs, read_type_number) (ref_map::stabs, ref_add, process_reference) (symbol_reference_defined, define_symbol, define_symbol) (error_type, read_type, read_member_functions, read_cpp_abbrev) (read_one_struct_field, read_struct_fields, read_baseclasses) (read_tilde_fields, read_struct_type, read_array_type) (read_enum_type, read_sun_builtin_type, read_sun_floating_type) (read_huge_number, read_range_type, read_args, common_block_start) (find_name_end): Constify. * stabsread.h (common_block_start, define_symbol) (process_one_symbol, symbol_reference_defined, ref_add): * symfile.c (get_section_index, add_symbol_file_command): * symfile.h (get_section_index): Constify. * target-descriptions.c (tdesc_type::name): Constify. (tdesc_free_type): Add cast. * target.c (find_default_run_target): (add_deprecated_target_alias, find_default_run_target) (target_announce_detach): Constify. (do_option): Constify. * target.h (add_deprecated_target_alias): Constify. * thread.c (print_thread_info_1): Constify. * top.c (deprecated_readline_begin_hook, command_line_input): Constify. (init_main): Add casts. * top.h (handle_line_of_input): Constify. * tracefile-tfile.c (tfile_write_uploaded_tsv): Constify. * tracepoint.c (tvariables_info_1, trace_status_mi): Constify. (tfind_command): Rename to ... (tfind_command_1): ... this and constify. (tfind_command): New function. (tfind_end_command, tfind_start_command): Adjust. (encode_source_string): Constify. * tracepoint.h (encode_source_string): Constify. * tui/tui-data.c (tui_partial_win_by_name): Constify. * tui/tui-data.h (tui_partial_win_by_name): Constify. * tui/tui-source.c (tui_set_source_content_nil): Constify. * tui/tui-source.h (tui_set_source_content_nil): Constify. * tui/tui-win.c (parse_scrolling_args): Constify. * tui/tui-windata.c (tui_erase_data_content): Constify. * tui/tui-windata.h (tui_erase_data_content): Constify. * tui/tui-winsource.c (tui_erase_source_content): Constify. * tui/tui.c (tui_enable): Add cast. * utils.c (defaulted_query): Constify. (init_page_info): Add cast. (puts_debug, subset_compare): Constify. * utils.h (subset_compare): Constify. * varobj.c (varobj_format_string): Constify. * varobj.h (varobj_format_string): Constify. * vax-tdep.c (vax_register_name): Constify. * windows-nat.c (windows_detach): Constify. * xcoffread.c (process_linenos, xcoff_next_symbol_text): Constify. * xml-support.c (gdb_xml_end_element): Constify. * xml-tdesc.c (tdesc_start_reg): Constify. * xstormy16-tdep.c (xstormy16_register_name): Constify. * xtensa-tdep.c (xtensa_find_register_by_name): Constify. * xtensa-tdep.h (xtensa_register_t::name): Constify. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: 2017-04-05 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdbreplay.c (sync_error): Constify. * linux-x86-low.c (push_opcode): Constify.
2017-04-06 02:21:37 +08:00
if (((rows <= 0) && (tgetnum ((char *) "li") < 0))
/* Also disable paging if inside Emacs. $EMACS was used
before Emacs v25.1, $INSIDE_EMACS is used since then. */
|| getenv ("EMACS") || getenv ("INSIDE_EMACS"))
{
/* The number of lines per page is not mentioned in the terminal
[gdb] Fix more typos in comments (2) Fix typos in comments. NFC. Tested on x86_64-linux. gdb/ChangeLog: 2019-10-26 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de> * aarch64-linux-tdep.c: Fix typos in comments. * aarch64-tdep.c: Same. * ada-lang.c: Same. * amd64-nat.c: Same. * arc-tdep.c: Same. * arch/aarch64-insn.c: Same. * block.c: Same. * breakpoint.h: Same. * btrace.h: Same. * c-varobj.c: Same. * cli/cli-decode.c: Same. * cli/cli-script.c: Same. * cli/cli-utils.h: Same. * coff-pe-read.c: Same. * coffread.c: Same. * compile/compile-cplus-symbols.c: Same. * compile/compile-object-run.c: Same. * completer.c: Same. * corelow.c: Same. * cp-support.c: Same. * demangle.c: Same. * dwarf-index-write.c: Same. * dwarf2-frame.c: Same. * dwarf2-frame.h: Same. * eval.c: Same. * frame-base.h: Same. * frame.h: Same. * gdbcmd.h: Same. * gdbtypes.h: Same. * gnu-nat.c: Same. * guile/scm-objfile.c: Same. * i386-tdep.c: Same. * i386-tdep.h: Same. * infcall.c: Same. * infcall.h: Same. * linux-nat.c: Same. * m68k-tdep.c: Same. * macroexp.c: Same. * memattr.c: Same. * mi/mi-cmd-disas.c: Same. * mi/mi-getopt.h: Same. * mi/mi-main.c: Same. * minsyms.c: Same. * nat/aarch64-sve-linux-sigcontext.h: Same. * objfiles.h: Same. * ppc-linux-nat.c: Same. * ppc-linux-tdep.c: Same. * ppc-tdep.h: Same. * progspace.h: Same. * prologue-value.h: Same. * python/py-evtregistry.c: Same. * python/py-instruction.h: Same. * record-btrace.c: Same. * record-full.c: Same. * remote.c: Same. * rs6000-tdep.c: Same. * ser-tcp.c: Same. * sol-thread.c: Same. * sparc-sol2-tdep.c: Same. * sparc64-tdep.c: Same. * stabsread.c: Same. * symfile.c: Same. * symtab.h: Same. * target.c: Same. * tracepoint.c: Same. * tui/tui-data.h: Same. * tui/tui-io.c: Same. * tui/tui-win.c: Same. * tui/tui.c: Same. * unittests/rsp-low-selftests.c: Same. * user-regs.h: Same. * utils.c: Same. * utils.h: Same. * valarith.c: Same. * valops.c: Same. * valprint.c: Same. * valprint.h: Same. * value.c: Same. * value.h: Same. * varobj.c: Same. * x86-nat.h: Same. * xtensa-tdep.c: Same. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: 2019-10-26 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de> * linux-aarch64-low.c: Fix typos in comments. * linux-arm-low.c: Same. * linux-low.c: Same. * linux-ppc-low.c: Same. * proc-service.c: Same. * regcache.h: Same. * server.c: Same. * tracepoint.c: Same. * win32-low.c: Same. gdb/stubs/ChangeLog: 2019-10-26 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de> * ia64vms-stub.c: Fix typos in comments. * m32r-stub.c: Same. * m68k-stub.c: Same. * sh-stub.c: Same. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2019-10-26 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de> * gdb.base/bigcore.c: Fix typos in comments. * gdb.base/ctf-ptype.c: Same. * gdb.base/long_long.c: Same. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-op-out-param.S: Same. * gdb.python/py-evthreads.c: Same. * gdb.reverse/i387-stack-reverse.c: Same. * gdb.trace/tfile.c: Same. * lib/compiler.c: Same. * lib/compiler.cc: Same. Change-Id: I8573d84a577894270179ae30f46c48d806fc1beb
2019-10-26 15:55:32 +08:00
description or EMACS environment variable is set. This probably
means that paging is not useful, so disable paging. */
lines_per_page = UINT_MAX;
}
/* If the output is not a terminal, don't paginate it. */
if (!gdb_stdout->isatty ())
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
lines_per_page = UINT_MAX;
#endif
}
/* We handle SIGWINCH ourselves. */
rl_catch_sigwinch = 0;
set_screen_size ();
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
set_width ();
}
/* Return nonzero if filtered printing is initialized. */
int
filtered_printing_initialized (void)
{
return filter_initialized;
}
set_batch_flag_and_restore_page_info::set_batch_flag_and_restore_page_info ()
: m_save_lines_per_page (lines_per_page),
m_save_chars_per_line (chars_per_line),
m_save_batch_flag (batch_flag)
{
batch_flag = 1;
init_page_info ();
}
set_batch_flag_and_restore_page_info::~set_batch_flag_and_restore_page_info ()
{
batch_flag = m_save_batch_flag;
chars_per_line = m_save_chars_per_line;
lines_per_page = m_save_lines_per_page;
set_screen_size ();
set_width ();
}
[gdb/cli] Add maint info screen While working on PRs tui/30337 and cli/30346 I came across various notions of width in gdb, as reported by gdb, readline, curses and the environment variables. As for gdb, readline and the environment variables, the way things work is: - Gdb asks readline to detect screen size, - readline sets the actual screen size in the environment variables COLUMNS and LINES, - readline reports back a screen size to gdb, which may have one column less than the actual screen size, to deal with lack of auto-wrap. This becomes gdb's notion of screen size (in other words the point where we can expect the gdb command line to wrap), - Gdb then explicitly sets readline's screen size, which readline itself may adjust to deal with lack of auto-wrap. This becomes readlines notion of screen size (well, internally the unadjusted one, but it'll report back the adjusted one). Add a command "maint info screen" that prints these notions, both for width and height. For TERM=xterm we have: ... $ TERM=xterm gdb -ex "maint info screen" Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 118. Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 27. Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... And for TERM=ansi: ... $ TERM=ansi gdb -ex "maint info screen" Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 117. Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 116. Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 27. Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... [ The fact that we have "characters readline reports are in a line is 116" is is due to gdb making readline adjust twice for the lack of auto-wrap, this is PR cli/30346. Likewise we can detect tui/30337 by doing a resize in TUI mode and doing "maint info screen": ... Number of characters characters curses thinks are in a line is 110. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 111 (COLUMNS). ] And for TERM=ansi, with width and heigth set to 0: ... Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 4294967295 (unlimited). Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 32766 (unlimited - 1). Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 4294967295 (unlimited). Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 32767 (unlimited). Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... [ Note that when doing a resize by say maximizing or de-maximizing a terminal, all reported values are updated, except for curses when not in TUI mode. Maybe that means there's a bug. If not, then maybe we should not print the curses lines unless in TUI mode, or annotate those lines such that it's clear that the values may be not up-to-date. ] I'd like to use this command in the regression test for PR cli/30346. Tested on x86_64-linux. Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> Reviewed-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-04-21 23:12:23 +08:00
/* An approximation of SQRT(INT_MAX) that is:
- cheap to calculate,
- guaranteed to be smaller than SQRT(INT_MAX), such that
sqrt_int_max * sqrt_int_max doesn't overflow, and
- "close enough" to SQRT(INT_MAX), for instance for INT_MAX == 2147483647,
SQRT(INT_MAX) is ~46341 and sqrt_int_max == 32767. */
static const int sqrt_int_max = INT_MAX >> (sizeof (int) * 8 / 2);
/* Set the screen size based on LINES_PER_PAGE and CHARS_PER_LINE. */
static void
set_screen_size (void)
{
int rows = lines_per_page;
int cols = chars_per_line;
/* If we get 0 or negative ROWS or COLS, treat as "infinite" size.
A negative number can be seen here with the "set width/height"
commands and either:
- the user specified "unlimited", which maps to UINT_MAX, or
[gdb] Fix more typos in comments Fix typos in comments. NFC. Tested on x86_64-linux. gdb/ChangeLog: 2019-10-18 Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de> * aarch64-tdep.c: Fix typos in comments. * ada-lang.c: Same. * ada-tasks.c: Same. * alpha-tdep.c: Same. * alpha-tdep.h: Same. * amd64-nat.c: Same. * amd64-windows-tdep.c: Same. * arc-tdep.c: Same. * arc-tdep.h: Same. * arch-utils.c: Same. * arm-nbsd-tdep.c: Same. * arm-tdep.c: Same. * ax-gdb.c: Same. * blockframe.c: Same. * btrace.c: Same. * c-varobj.c: Same. * coff-pe-read.c: Same. * coffread.c: Same. * cris-tdep.c: Same. * darwin-nat.c: Same. * dbxread.c: Same. * dcache.c: Same. * disasm.c: Same. * dtrace-probe.c: Same. * dwarf-index-write.c: Same. * dwarf2-frame-tailcall.c: Same. * dwarf2-frame.c: Same. * dwarf2read.c: Same. * eval.c: Same. * exceptions.c: Same. * fbsd-tdep.c: Same. * findvar.c: Same. * frame.c: Same. * frv-tdep.c: Same. * gnu-v3-abi.c: Same. * go32-nat.c: Same. * h8300-tdep.c: Same. * hppa-tdep.c: Same. * i386-linux-tdep.c: Same. * i386-tdep.c: Same. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.c: Same. * ia64-tdep.c: Same. * infcmd.c: Same. * infrun.c: Same. * linespec.c: Same. * linux-nat.c: Same. * linux-thread-db.c: Same. * machoread.c: Same. * mdebugread.c: Same. * mep-tdep.c: Same. * mn10300-tdep.c: Same. * namespace.c: Same. * objfiles.c: Same. * opencl-lang.c: Same. * or1k-tdep.c: Same. * osabi.c: Same. * ppc-linux-nat.c: Same. * ppc-linux-tdep.c: Same. * ppc-sysv-tdep.c: Same. * printcmd.c: Same. * procfs.c: Same. * record-btrace.c: Same. * record-full.c: Same. * remote-fileio.c: Same. * remote.c: Same. * rs6000-tdep.c: Same. * s12z-tdep.c: Same. * score-tdep.c: Same. * ser-base.c: Same. * ser-go32.c: Same. * skip.c: Same. * sol-thread.c: Same. * solib-svr4.c: Same. * solib.c: Same. * source.c: Same. * sparc-nat.c: Same. * sparc-sol2-tdep.c: Same. * sparc-tdep.c: Same. * sparc64-tdep.c: Same. * stabsread.c: Same. * stack.c: Same. * symfile.c: Same. * symtab.c: Same. * target-descriptions.c: Same. * target-float.c: Same. * thread.c: Same. * utils.c: Same. * valops.c: Same. * valprint.c: Same. * value.c: Same. * varobj.c: Same. * windows-nat.c: Same. * xcoffread.c: Same. * xstormy16-tdep.c: Same. * xtensa-tdep.c: Same. Change-Id: I5175f1b107bfa4e1cdd4a3361ccb4739e53c75c4
2019-10-18 08:48:08 +08:00
- the user specified some number between INT_MAX and UINT_MAX.
Cap "infinity" to approximately sqrt(INT_MAX) so that we don't
overflow in rl_set_screen_size, which multiplies rows and columns
to compute the number of characters on the screen. */
if (rows <= 0 || rows > sqrt_int_max)
{
rows = sqrt_int_max;
lines_per_page = UINT_MAX;
}
if (cols <= 0 || cols > sqrt_int_max)
{
cols = sqrt_int_max;
chars_per_line = UINT_MAX;
}
/* Update Readline's idea of the terminal size. */
rl_set_screen_size (rows, cols);
}
/* Reinitialize WRAP_BUFFER. */
static void
2000-07-30 09:48:28 +08:00
set_width (void)
{
if (chars_per_line == 0)
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
init_page_info ();
filter_initialized = true;
}
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
static void
Constify add_setshow_* This constifies the add_setshow_* family of functions, and then fixes up the fallout. The bulk of this patch was written by script. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-11-07 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * ada-lang.c (catch_ada_exception_command): Constify. (catch_assert_command): Constify. * break-catch-throw.c (catch_catch_command, catch_throw_command) (catch_rethrow_command): Constify. (catch_exception_command_1): Constify. * breakpoint.h (add_catch_command): Constify. * break-catch-syscall.c (catch_syscall_command_1): Constify. (catch_syscall_split_args): Constify. * break-catch-sig.c (catch_signal_command): Constify. (catch_signal_split_args): Constify. * cli/cli-decode.h (struct cmd_list_element) <function>: Use cmd_const_sfunc_ftype. * cli/cli-decode.c (add_setshow_cmd_full): Constify. (add_setshow_enum_cmd, add_setshow_auto_boolean_cmd) (add_setshow_boolean_cmd, add_setshow_filename_cmd) (add_setshow_string_cmd, struct cmd_list_element) (add_setshow_optional_filename_cmd, add_setshow_integer_cmd) (add_setshow_uinteger_cmd, add_setshow_zinteger_cmd) (add_setshow_zuinteger_unlimited_cmd, add_setshow_zuinteger_cmd): Constify. (set_cmd_sfunc): Constify. (empty_sfunc): Constify. * command.h (add_setshow_enum_cmd, add_setshow_auto_boolean_cmd) (add_setshow_boolean_cmd, add_setshow_filename_cmd) (add_setshow_string_cmd, add_setshow_string_noescape_cmd) (add_setshow_optional_filename_cmd, add_setshow_integer_cmd) (add_setshow_uinteger_cmd, add_setshow_zinteger_cmd) (add_setshow_zuinteger_cmd, add_setshow_zuinteger_unlimited_cmd): Constify. (set_cmd_sfunc): Constify. (cmd_sfunc_ftype): Remove. * compile/compile.c (set_compile_args): Constify. * infrun.c (set_disable_randomization): Constify. * infcmd.c (set_args_command, set_cwd_command): Constify. * breakpoint.c (set_condition_evaluation_mode): Constify. (add_catch_command): Constify. (catch_fork_command_1, catch_exec_command_1) (catch_load_command_1, catch_unload_command_1): Constify. (catch_load_or_unload): Constify. * guile/scm-param.c (pascm_set_func): Constify. (add_setshow_generic): Constify. * python/py-param.c (get_set_value): Constify. * top.h (set_verbose): Constify. * tui/tui-win.c (tui_set_var_cmd): Constify. * mi/mi-main.c (set_mi_async_command): Constify. * cli/cli-logging.c (set_logging_overwrite) (set_logging_redirect): Constify. * value.c (set_max_value_size): Constify. * valprint.c (set_input_radix, set_output_radix): Constify. * utils.c (set_width_command, set_height_command): Constify. * typeprint.c (set_print_type_methods, set_print_type_typedefs): Constify. * tracepoint.c (set_disconnected_tracing) (set_circular_trace_buffer, set_trace_buffer_size) (set_trace_user, set_trace_notes, set_trace_stop_notes): Constify. * top.c (set_history_size_command, set_verbose, set_editing) (set_gdb_datadir, set_history_filename): Constify. * target.c (set_targetdebug, maint_set_target_async_command) (maint_set_target_non_stop_command, set_target_permissions) (set_write_memory_permission): Constify. (open_target): Constify. * target-descriptions.c (set_tdesc_filename_cmd): Constify. * target-dcache.c (set_stack_cache, set_code_cache): Constify. * symtab.c (set_symbol_cache_size_handler): Constify. * symfile.c (set_ext_lang_command): Constify. * symfile-debug.c (set_debug_symfile): Constify. * source.c (set_directories_command): Constify. * solib.c (reload_shared_libraries, gdb_sysroot_changed): Constify. * serial.c (set_parity): Constify. * rs6000-tdep.c (powerpc_set_soft_float, powerpc_set_vector_abi): Constify. * remote.c (set_remote_exec_file, set_remotebreak) (set_remote_protocol_Z_packet_cmd, set_range_stepping): Constify. * record.c (set_record_insn_history_size) (set_record_call_history_size): Constify. * record-full.c (set_record_full_insn_max_num): Constify. * proc-api.c (set_procfs_trace_cmd, set_procfs_file_cmd): Constify. * osabi.c (set_osabi): Constify. * mips-tdep.c (set_mips64_transfers_32bit_regs) (reinit_frame_cache_sfunc, mips_abi_update): Constify. * maint.c (maintenance_set_profile_cmd): Constify. * linux-thread-db.c (set_libthread_db_search_path): Constify. * language.c (set_language_command, set_range_command) (set_case_command): Constify. * infrun.c (set_non_stop, set_observer_mode) (set_stop_on_solib_events, set_schedlock_func) (set_exec_direction_func): Constify. * infcmd.c (set_inferior_tty_command): Constify. * disasm.c (set_disassembler_options_sfunc): Constify. * demangle.c (set_demangling_command): Constify. * dcache.c (set_dcache_size, set_dcache_line_size): Constify. * cris-tdep.c (set_cris_version, set_cris_mode) (set_cris_dwarf2_cfi): Constify. * corefile.c (set_gnutarget_command): Constify. * charset.c (set_host_charset_sfunc, set_target_charset_sfunc) (set_target_wide_charset_sfunc): Constify. * breakpoint.c (update_dprintf_commands): Constify. * auto-load.c (set_auto_load_dir, set_auto_load_safe_path): Constify. * arm-tdep.c (set_fp_model_sfunc, arm_set_abi) (set_disassembly_style_sfunc): Constify. * arch-utils.c (set_endian, set_architecture): Constify. * alpha-tdep.c (reinit_frame_cache_sfunc): Constify. * agent.c (set_can_use_agent): Constify.
2017-10-14 23:07:00 +08:00
set_width_command (const char *args, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c)
{
set_screen_size ();
set_width ();
}
static void
Constify add_setshow_* This constifies the add_setshow_* family of functions, and then fixes up the fallout. The bulk of this patch was written by script. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-11-07 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * ada-lang.c (catch_ada_exception_command): Constify. (catch_assert_command): Constify. * break-catch-throw.c (catch_catch_command, catch_throw_command) (catch_rethrow_command): Constify. (catch_exception_command_1): Constify. * breakpoint.h (add_catch_command): Constify. * break-catch-syscall.c (catch_syscall_command_1): Constify. (catch_syscall_split_args): Constify. * break-catch-sig.c (catch_signal_command): Constify. (catch_signal_split_args): Constify. * cli/cli-decode.h (struct cmd_list_element) <function>: Use cmd_const_sfunc_ftype. * cli/cli-decode.c (add_setshow_cmd_full): Constify. (add_setshow_enum_cmd, add_setshow_auto_boolean_cmd) (add_setshow_boolean_cmd, add_setshow_filename_cmd) (add_setshow_string_cmd, struct cmd_list_element) (add_setshow_optional_filename_cmd, add_setshow_integer_cmd) (add_setshow_uinteger_cmd, add_setshow_zinteger_cmd) (add_setshow_zuinteger_unlimited_cmd, add_setshow_zuinteger_cmd): Constify. (set_cmd_sfunc): Constify. (empty_sfunc): Constify. * command.h (add_setshow_enum_cmd, add_setshow_auto_boolean_cmd) (add_setshow_boolean_cmd, add_setshow_filename_cmd) (add_setshow_string_cmd, add_setshow_string_noescape_cmd) (add_setshow_optional_filename_cmd, add_setshow_integer_cmd) (add_setshow_uinteger_cmd, add_setshow_zinteger_cmd) (add_setshow_zuinteger_cmd, add_setshow_zuinteger_unlimited_cmd): Constify. (set_cmd_sfunc): Constify. (cmd_sfunc_ftype): Remove. * compile/compile.c (set_compile_args): Constify. * infrun.c (set_disable_randomization): Constify. * infcmd.c (set_args_command, set_cwd_command): Constify. * breakpoint.c (set_condition_evaluation_mode): Constify. (add_catch_command): Constify. (catch_fork_command_1, catch_exec_command_1) (catch_load_command_1, catch_unload_command_1): Constify. (catch_load_or_unload): Constify. * guile/scm-param.c (pascm_set_func): Constify. (add_setshow_generic): Constify. * python/py-param.c (get_set_value): Constify. * top.h (set_verbose): Constify. * tui/tui-win.c (tui_set_var_cmd): Constify. * mi/mi-main.c (set_mi_async_command): Constify. * cli/cli-logging.c (set_logging_overwrite) (set_logging_redirect): Constify. * value.c (set_max_value_size): Constify. * valprint.c (set_input_radix, set_output_radix): Constify. * utils.c (set_width_command, set_height_command): Constify. * typeprint.c (set_print_type_methods, set_print_type_typedefs): Constify. * tracepoint.c (set_disconnected_tracing) (set_circular_trace_buffer, set_trace_buffer_size) (set_trace_user, set_trace_notes, set_trace_stop_notes): Constify. * top.c (set_history_size_command, set_verbose, set_editing) (set_gdb_datadir, set_history_filename): Constify. * target.c (set_targetdebug, maint_set_target_async_command) (maint_set_target_non_stop_command, set_target_permissions) (set_write_memory_permission): Constify. (open_target): Constify. * target-descriptions.c (set_tdesc_filename_cmd): Constify. * target-dcache.c (set_stack_cache, set_code_cache): Constify. * symtab.c (set_symbol_cache_size_handler): Constify. * symfile.c (set_ext_lang_command): Constify. * symfile-debug.c (set_debug_symfile): Constify. * source.c (set_directories_command): Constify. * solib.c (reload_shared_libraries, gdb_sysroot_changed): Constify. * serial.c (set_parity): Constify. * rs6000-tdep.c (powerpc_set_soft_float, powerpc_set_vector_abi): Constify. * remote.c (set_remote_exec_file, set_remotebreak) (set_remote_protocol_Z_packet_cmd, set_range_stepping): Constify. * record.c (set_record_insn_history_size) (set_record_call_history_size): Constify. * record-full.c (set_record_full_insn_max_num): Constify. * proc-api.c (set_procfs_trace_cmd, set_procfs_file_cmd): Constify. * osabi.c (set_osabi): Constify. * mips-tdep.c (set_mips64_transfers_32bit_regs) (reinit_frame_cache_sfunc, mips_abi_update): Constify. * maint.c (maintenance_set_profile_cmd): Constify. * linux-thread-db.c (set_libthread_db_search_path): Constify. * language.c (set_language_command, set_range_command) (set_case_command): Constify. * infrun.c (set_non_stop, set_observer_mode) (set_stop_on_solib_events, set_schedlock_func) (set_exec_direction_func): Constify. * infcmd.c (set_inferior_tty_command): Constify. * disasm.c (set_disassembler_options_sfunc): Constify. * demangle.c (set_demangling_command): Constify. * dcache.c (set_dcache_size, set_dcache_line_size): Constify. * cris-tdep.c (set_cris_version, set_cris_mode) (set_cris_dwarf2_cfi): Constify. * corefile.c (set_gnutarget_command): Constify. * charset.c (set_host_charset_sfunc, set_target_charset_sfunc) (set_target_wide_charset_sfunc): Constify. * breakpoint.c (update_dprintf_commands): Constify. * auto-load.c (set_auto_load_dir, set_auto_load_safe_path): Constify. * arm-tdep.c (set_fp_model_sfunc, arm_set_abi) (set_disassembly_style_sfunc): Constify. * arch-utils.c (set_endian, set_architecture): Constify. * alpha-tdep.c (reinit_frame_cache_sfunc): Constify. * agent.c (set_can_use_agent): Constify.
2017-10-14 23:07:00 +08:00
set_height_command (const char *args, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c)
{
set_screen_size ();
}
/* See utils.h. */
void
set_screen_width_and_height (int width, int height)
{
lines_per_page = height;
chars_per_line = width;
set_screen_size ();
set_width ();
}
[gdb/cli] Add maint info screen While working on PRs tui/30337 and cli/30346 I came across various notions of width in gdb, as reported by gdb, readline, curses and the environment variables. As for gdb, readline and the environment variables, the way things work is: - Gdb asks readline to detect screen size, - readline sets the actual screen size in the environment variables COLUMNS and LINES, - readline reports back a screen size to gdb, which may have one column less than the actual screen size, to deal with lack of auto-wrap. This becomes gdb's notion of screen size (in other words the point where we can expect the gdb command line to wrap), - Gdb then explicitly sets readline's screen size, which readline itself may adjust to deal with lack of auto-wrap. This becomes readlines notion of screen size (well, internally the unadjusted one, but it'll report back the adjusted one). Add a command "maint info screen" that prints these notions, both for width and height. For TERM=xterm we have: ... $ TERM=xterm gdb -ex "maint info screen" Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 118. Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 27. Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... And for TERM=ansi: ... $ TERM=ansi gdb -ex "maint info screen" Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 117. Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 116. Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 27. Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... [ The fact that we have "characters readline reports are in a line is 116" is is due to gdb making readline adjust twice for the lack of auto-wrap, this is PR cli/30346. Likewise we can detect tui/30337 by doing a resize in TUI mode and doing "maint info screen": ... Number of characters characters curses thinks are in a line is 110. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 111 (COLUMNS). ] And for TERM=ansi, with width and heigth set to 0: ... Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 4294967295 (unlimited). Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 32766 (unlimited - 1). Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 4294967295 (unlimited). Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 32767 (unlimited). Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... [ Note that when doing a resize by say maximizing or de-maximizing a terminal, all reported values are updated, except for curses when not in TUI mode. Maybe that means there's a bug. If not, then maybe we should not print the curses lines unless in TUI mode, or annotate those lines such that it's clear that the values may be not up-to-date. ] I'd like to use this command in the regression test for PR cli/30346. Tested on x86_64-linux. Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> Reviewed-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-04-21 23:12:23 +08:00
/* Implement "maint info screen". */
static void
maintenance_info_screen (const char *args, int from_tty)
{
int rows, cols;
rl_get_screen_size (&rows, &cols);
gdb_printf (gdb_stdout,
_("Number of characters gdb thinks "
"are in a line is %u%s.\n"),
chars_per_line,
chars_per_line == UINT_MAX ? " (unlimited)" : "");
gdb_printf (gdb_stdout,
_("Number of characters readline reports "
"are in a line is %d%s.\n"),
cols,
(cols == sqrt_int_max
? " (unlimited)"
: (cols == sqrt_int_max - 1
? " (unlimited - 1)"
: "")));
#ifdef HAVE_LIBCURSES
[gdb/cli] Add maint info screen While working on PRs tui/30337 and cli/30346 I came across various notions of width in gdb, as reported by gdb, readline, curses and the environment variables. As for gdb, readline and the environment variables, the way things work is: - Gdb asks readline to detect screen size, - readline sets the actual screen size in the environment variables COLUMNS and LINES, - readline reports back a screen size to gdb, which may have one column less than the actual screen size, to deal with lack of auto-wrap. This becomes gdb's notion of screen size (in other words the point where we can expect the gdb command line to wrap), - Gdb then explicitly sets readline's screen size, which readline itself may adjust to deal with lack of auto-wrap. This becomes readlines notion of screen size (well, internally the unadjusted one, but it'll report back the adjusted one). Add a command "maint info screen" that prints these notions, both for width and height. For TERM=xterm we have: ... $ TERM=xterm gdb -ex "maint info screen" Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 118. Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 27. Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... And for TERM=ansi: ... $ TERM=ansi gdb -ex "maint info screen" Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 117. Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 116. Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 27. Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... [ The fact that we have "characters readline reports are in a line is 116" is is due to gdb making readline adjust twice for the lack of auto-wrap, this is PR cli/30346. Likewise we can detect tui/30337 by doing a resize in TUI mode and doing "maint info screen": ... Number of characters characters curses thinks are in a line is 110. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 111 (COLUMNS). ] And for TERM=ansi, with width and heigth set to 0: ... Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 4294967295 (unlimited). Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 32766 (unlimited - 1). Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 4294967295 (unlimited). Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 32767 (unlimited). Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... [ Note that when doing a resize by say maximizing or de-maximizing a terminal, all reported values are updated, except for curses when not in TUI mode. Maybe that means there's a bug. If not, then maybe we should not print the curses lines unless in TUI mode, or annotate those lines such that it's clear that the values may be not up-to-date. ] I'd like to use this command in the regression test for PR cli/30346. Tested on x86_64-linux. Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> Reviewed-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-04-21 23:12:23 +08:00
gdb_printf (gdb_stdout,
_("Number of characters curses thinks "
"are in a line is %d.\n"),
COLS);
#endif
[gdb/cli] Add maint info screen While working on PRs tui/30337 and cli/30346 I came across various notions of width in gdb, as reported by gdb, readline, curses and the environment variables. As for gdb, readline and the environment variables, the way things work is: - Gdb asks readline to detect screen size, - readline sets the actual screen size in the environment variables COLUMNS and LINES, - readline reports back a screen size to gdb, which may have one column less than the actual screen size, to deal with lack of auto-wrap. This becomes gdb's notion of screen size (in other words the point where we can expect the gdb command line to wrap), - Gdb then explicitly sets readline's screen size, which readline itself may adjust to deal with lack of auto-wrap. This becomes readlines notion of screen size (well, internally the unadjusted one, but it'll report back the adjusted one). Add a command "maint info screen" that prints these notions, both for width and height. For TERM=xterm we have: ... $ TERM=xterm gdb -ex "maint info screen" Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 118. Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 27. Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... And for TERM=ansi: ... $ TERM=ansi gdb -ex "maint info screen" Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 117. Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 116. Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 27. Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... [ The fact that we have "characters readline reports are in a line is 116" is is due to gdb making readline adjust twice for the lack of auto-wrap, this is PR cli/30346. Likewise we can detect tui/30337 by doing a resize in TUI mode and doing "maint info screen": ... Number of characters characters curses thinks are in a line is 110. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 111 (COLUMNS). ] And for TERM=ansi, with width and heigth set to 0: ... Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 4294967295 (unlimited). Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 32766 (unlimited - 1). Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 4294967295 (unlimited). Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 32767 (unlimited). Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... [ Note that when doing a resize by say maximizing or de-maximizing a terminal, all reported values are updated, except for curses when not in TUI mode. Maybe that means there's a bug. If not, then maybe we should not print the curses lines unless in TUI mode, or annotate those lines such that it's clear that the values may be not up-to-date. ] I'd like to use this command in the regression test for PR cli/30346. Tested on x86_64-linux. Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> Reviewed-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-04-21 23:12:23 +08:00
gdb_printf (gdb_stdout,
_("Number of characters environment thinks "
"are in a line is %s (COLUMNS).\n"),
getenv ("COLUMNS"));
gdb_printf (gdb_stdout,
_("Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is %u%s.\n"),
lines_per_page,
lines_per_page == UINT_MAX ? " (unlimited)" : "");
gdb_printf (gdb_stdout,
_("Number of lines readline reports "
"are in a page is %d%s.\n"),
rows,
rows == sqrt_int_max ? " (unlimited)" : "");
#ifdef HAVE_LIBCURSES
[gdb/cli] Add maint info screen While working on PRs tui/30337 and cli/30346 I came across various notions of width in gdb, as reported by gdb, readline, curses and the environment variables. As for gdb, readline and the environment variables, the way things work is: - Gdb asks readline to detect screen size, - readline sets the actual screen size in the environment variables COLUMNS and LINES, - readline reports back a screen size to gdb, which may have one column less than the actual screen size, to deal with lack of auto-wrap. This becomes gdb's notion of screen size (in other words the point where we can expect the gdb command line to wrap), - Gdb then explicitly sets readline's screen size, which readline itself may adjust to deal with lack of auto-wrap. This becomes readlines notion of screen size (well, internally the unadjusted one, but it'll report back the adjusted one). Add a command "maint info screen" that prints these notions, both for width and height. For TERM=xterm we have: ... $ TERM=xterm gdb -ex "maint info screen" Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 118. Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 27. Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... And for TERM=ansi: ... $ TERM=ansi gdb -ex "maint info screen" Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 117. Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 116. Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 27. Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... [ The fact that we have "characters readline reports are in a line is 116" is is due to gdb making readline adjust twice for the lack of auto-wrap, this is PR cli/30346. Likewise we can detect tui/30337 by doing a resize in TUI mode and doing "maint info screen": ... Number of characters characters curses thinks are in a line is 110. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 111 (COLUMNS). ] And for TERM=ansi, with width and heigth set to 0: ... Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 4294967295 (unlimited). Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 32766 (unlimited - 1). Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 4294967295 (unlimited). Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 32767 (unlimited). Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... [ Note that when doing a resize by say maximizing or de-maximizing a terminal, all reported values are updated, except for curses when not in TUI mode. Maybe that means there's a bug. If not, then maybe we should not print the curses lines unless in TUI mode, or annotate those lines such that it's clear that the values may be not up-to-date. ] I'd like to use this command in the regression test for PR cli/30346. Tested on x86_64-linux. Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> Reviewed-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-04-21 23:12:23 +08:00
gdb_printf (gdb_stdout,
_("Number of lines curses thinks "
"are in a page is %d.\n"),
LINES);
#endif
[gdb/cli] Add maint info screen While working on PRs tui/30337 and cli/30346 I came across various notions of width in gdb, as reported by gdb, readline, curses and the environment variables. As for gdb, readline and the environment variables, the way things work is: - Gdb asks readline to detect screen size, - readline sets the actual screen size in the environment variables COLUMNS and LINES, - readline reports back a screen size to gdb, which may have one column less than the actual screen size, to deal with lack of auto-wrap. This becomes gdb's notion of screen size (in other words the point where we can expect the gdb command line to wrap), - Gdb then explicitly sets readline's screen size, which readline itself may adjust to deal with lack of auto-wrap. This becomes readlines notion of screen size (well, internally the unadjusted one, but it'll report back the adjusted one). Add a command "maint info screen" that prints these notions, both for width and height. For TERM=xterm we have: ... $ TERM=xterm gdb -ex "maint info screen" Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 118. Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 27. Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... And for TERM=ansi: ... $ TERM=ansi gdb -ex "maint info screen" Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 117. Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 116. Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 27. Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... [ The fact that we have "characters readline reports are in a line is 116" is is due to gdb making readline adjust twice for the lack of auto-wrap, this is PR cli/30346. Likewise we can detect tui/30337 by doing a resize in TUI mode and doing "maint info screen": ... Number of characters characters curses thinks are in a line is 110. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 111 (COLUMNS). ] And for TERM=ansi, with width and heigth set to 0: ... Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 4294967295 (unlimited). Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 32766 (unlimited - 1). Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 4294967295 (unlimited). Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 32767 (unlimited). Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... [ Note that when doing a resize by say maximizing or de-maximizing a terminal, all reported values are updated, except for curses when not in TUI mode. Maybe that means there's a bug. If not, then maybe we should not print the curses lines unless in TUI mode, or annotate those lines such that it's clear that the values may be not up-to-date. ] I'd like to use this command in the regression test for PR cli/30346. Tested on x86_64-linux. Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> Reviewed-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-04-21 23:12:23 +08:00
gdb_printf (gdb_stdout,
_("Number of lines environment thinks "
"are in a page is %s (LINES).\n"),
getenv ("LINES"));
}
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
void
pager_file::emit_style_escape (const ui_file_style &style)
Add output styles to gdb This adds some output styling to the CLI. A style is currently a foreground color, a background color, and an intensity (dim or bold). (This list could be expanded depending on terminal capabilities.) A style can be applied while printing. For ui-out, this is done by passing the style constant as an argument. For low-level cases, fprintf_styled and fputs_styled are provided. Users can control the style via a number of new set/show commands. In the interest of not typing many nearly-identical documentation strings, I automated this. On the down side, this is not very i18n-friendly. I've chose some default colors to use. I think it would be good to enable this by default, so that when users start the new gdb, they will see the new feature. Stylizing is done if TERM is set and is not "dumb". This could be improved when the TUI is available by using the curses has_colors call. That is, the lowest layer could call this without committing to using curses everywhere; see my other patch for TUI colorizing. I considered adding a new "set_style" method to ui_file. However, because the implementation had to interact with the pager code, I didn't take this approach. But, one idea might be to put the isatty check there and then have it defer to the lower layers. gdb/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * utils.h (set_output_style, fprintf_styled) (fputs_styled): Declare. * utils.c (applied_style, desired_style): New globals. (emit_style_escape, set_output_style): New function. (prompt_for_continue): Emit style escapes. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Likewise. (fputs_styled, fprintf_styled): New functions. * ui-out.h (enum class ui_out_style_kind): New. (class ui_out) <field_string, field_stream, do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out::field_stream, ui_out::field_string): Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.h (class tui_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.c (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * tracepoint.c (print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Style output. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Style output. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Style output. * skip.c (info_skip_command): Style output. * record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history_src_line): Style output. (btrace_call_history): Likewise. * python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Style output. * mi/mi-out.h (class mi_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out::do_table_header) (mi_ui_out::do_field_int): Update. (mi_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Style output. * cli/cli-style.h: New file. * cli/cli-style.c: New file. * cli-out.h (class cli_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * cli-out.c (cli_ui_out::do_table_header) (cli_ui_out::do_field_int, cli_ui_out::do_field_skip): Update. (cli_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. Style the output. * breakpoint.c (print_breakpoint_location): Style output. (update_static_tracepoint): Likewise. * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_CLI_SRCS): Add cli-style.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add cli-style.h. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: New file. * gdb.base/style.c: New file.
2018-09-04 12:56:33 +08:00
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
if (can_emit_style_escape () && style != m_applied_style)
gdb: don't print escape characters when a style is disabled While working on another patch I noticed that if I disable a single style with, for example: set style filename background none set style filename foreground none set style filename intensity normal Then in some places escape characters are still injected into the output stream. This is a bit of an edge case, and I can't think when this would actually cause problems, but it still felt like a bit of an annoyance. One place where this does impact is in testing, where it becomes harder to write tight test patterns if it is not obvious when GDB will decide to inject escape sequences. It's especially annoying because depending on how something is printed then GDB might, or might not, add escape characters. So this would not add escape characters if the filename style was disabled: fprintf_filtered (file, "%ps", styled_string (file_name_style.style (), "This is a test")); But this would add escape characters: fprintf_styled (file, file_name_style.style (), "%s", "This is a test"); I tracked this down to some calls to set_output_style in utils.c. Currently some calls to set_output_style (in utils.c) are guarded like this: if (!STYLE.is_default ()) set_output_style (stream, STYLE); But some calls are not. It is the calls that are NOT guarded that cause the extra escape sequences to be emitted. My initial proposal to resolve this issue was simply to ensure that all calls to set_output_style were guarded. The patch I posted for this can be found here: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-January/175096.html The feedback on this proposal was that it might be better to guard against the escape sequences being emitted at a later lever, right down at emit_style_escape. So this is what this version does. In emit_style_escape we already track the currently applied style, so if the style we are being asked to switch to is the same as the currently applied style then no escape sequence needs to be emitted. Making this change immediately exposed some issues in fputs_maybe_filtered related to line wrapping. The best place to start to understand what's going on with the styling and wrapping is look at the test: gdb.base/style.exp: all styles enabled: frame when width=20 If you run this test and then examine the output in an editor so the escape sequences can be seen you'll see the duplicate escape sequences that are emitted before this patch, the compare to after this patch you'll see the set of escape sequences should be the minimum required. In order to test these changes I have rewritten the gdb.base/style.exp test script. The core of the script is now run multiple times. The first time the test is run things are as they were before, all styles are on. After that the test is rerun multiple times. Each time through a single style is disabled using the 3 explicit set calls listed above. I then repeat all the tests, however, I arrange so that the patterns for the disabled style now require no escape sequences. gdb/ChangeLog: * utils.c (emit_style_escape): Only emit an escape sequence if the requested style is different than the current applied style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Adjust the juggling of the wrap_style, and current applied_style. (fputs_styled): Remove is_default check. (fputs_styled_unfiltered): Likewise. (vfprintf_styled_no_gdbfmt): Likewise. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.base/style.exp (limited_style): New proc. (clean_restart_and_disable): New proc. (run_style_tests): New proc. Most of the old tests from this file are now in this proc. (test_startup_version_string): New proc. Reamining test from the old file is in this proc.
2021-01-14 04:08:42 +08:00
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_applied_style = style;
if (m_paging)
m_stream->emit_style_escape (style);
gdb: don't print escape characters when a style is disabled While working on another patch I noticed that if I disable a single style with, for example: set style filename background none set style filename foreground none set style filename intensity normal Then in some places escape characters are still injected into the output stream. This is a bit of an edge case, and I can't think when this would actually cause problems, but it still felt like a bit of an annoyance. One place where this does impact is in testing, where it becomes harder to write tight test patterns if it is not obvious when GDB will decide to inject escape sequences. It's especially annoying because depending on how something is printed then GDB might, or might not, add escape characters. So this would not add escape characters if the filename style was disabled: fprintf_filtered (file, "%ps", styled_string (file_name_style.style (), "This is a test")); But this would add escape characters: fprintf_styled (file, file_name_style.style (), "%s", "This is a test"); I tracked this down to some calls to set_output_style in utils.c. Currently some calls to set_output_style (in utils.c) are guarded like this: if (!STYLE.is_default ()) set_output_style (stream, STYLE); But some calls are not. It is the calls that are NOT guarded that cause the extra escape sequences to be emitted. My initial proposal to resolve this issue was simply to ensure that all calls to set_output_style were guarded. The patch I posted for this can be found here: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-January/175096.html The feedback on this proposal was that it might be better to guard against the escape sequences being emitted at a later lever, right down at emit_style_escape. So this is what this version does. In emit_style_escape we already track the currently applied style, so if the style we are being asked to switch to is the same as the currently applied style then no escape sequence needs to be emitted. Making this change immediately exposed some issues in fputs_maybe_filtered related to line wrapping. The best place to start to understand what's going on with the styling and wrapping is look at the test: gdb.base/style.exp: all styles enabled: frame when width=20 If you run this test and then examine the output in an editor so the escape sequences can be seen you'll see the duplicate escape sequences that are emitted before this patch, the compare to after this patch you'll see the set of escape sequences should be the minimum required. In order to test these changes I have rewritten the gdb.base/style.exp test script. The core of the script is now run multiple times. The first time the test is run things are as they were before, all styles are on. After that the test is rerun multiple times. Each time through a single style is disabled using the 3 explicit set calls listed above. I then repeat all the tests, however, I arrange so that the patterns for the disabled style now require no escape sequences. gdb/ChangeLog: * utils.c (emit_style_escape): Only emit an escape sequence if the requested style is different than the current applied style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Adjust the juggling of the wrap_style, and current applied_style. (fputs_styled): Remove is_default check. (fputs_styled_unfiltered): Likewise. (vfprintf_styled_no_gdbfmt): Likewise. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.base/style.exp (limited_style): New proc. (clean_restart_and_disable): New proc. (run_style_tests): New proc. Most of the old tests from this file are now in this proc. (test_startup_version_string): New proc. Reamining test from the old file is in this proc.
2021-01-14 04:08:42 +08:00
else
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_wrap_buffer.append (style.to_ansi ());
gdb: don't print escape characters when a style is disabled While working on another patch I noticed that if I disable a single style with, for example: set style filename background none set style filename foreground none set style filename intensity normal Then in some places escape characters are still injected into the output stream. This is a bit of an edge case, and I can't think when this would actually cause problems, but it still felt like a bit of an annoyance. One place where this does impact is in testing, where it becomes harder to write tight test patterns if it is not obvious when GDB will decide to inject escape sequences. It's especially annoying because depending on how something is printed then GDB might, or might not, add escape characters. So this would not add escape characters if the filename style was disabled: fprintf_filtered (file, "%ps", styled_string (file_name_style.style (), "This is a test")); But this would add escape characters: fprintf_styled (file, file_name_style.style (), "%s", "This is a test"); I tracked this down to some calls to set_output_style in utils.c. Currently some calls to set_output_style (in utils.c) are guarded like this: if (!STYLE.is_default ()) set_output_style (stream, STYLE); But some calls are not. It is the calls that are NOT guarded that cause the extra escape sequences to be emitted. My initial proposal to resolve this issue was simply to ensure that all calls to set_output_style were guarded. The patch I posted for this can be found here: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-January/175096.html The feedback on this proposal was that it might be better to guard against the escape sequences being emitted at a later lever, right down at emit_style_escape. So this is what this version does. In emit_style_escape we already track the currently applied style, so if the style we are being asked to switch to is the same as the currently applied style then no escape sequence needs to be emitted. Making this change immediately exposed some issues in fputs_maybe_filtered related to line wrapping. The best place to start to understand what's going on with the styling and wrapping is look at the test: gdb.base/style.exp: all styles enabled: frame when width=20 If you run this test and then examine the output in an editor so the escape sequences can be seen you'll see the duplicate escape sequences that are emitted before this patch, the compare to after this patch you'll see the set of escape sequences should be the minimum required. In order to test these changes I have rewritten the gdb.base/style.exp test script. The core of the script is now run multiple times. The first time the test is run things are as they were before, all styles are on. After that the test is rerun multiple times. Each time through a single style is disabled using the 3 explicit set calls listed above. I then repeat all the tests, however, I arrange so that the patterns for the disabled style now require no escape sequences. gdb/ChangeLog: * utils.c (emit_style_escape): Only emit an escape sequence if the requested style is different than the current applied style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Adjust the juggling of the wrap_style, and current applied_style. (fputs_styled): Remove is_default check. (fputs_styled_unfiltered): Likewise. (vfprintf_styled_no_gdbfmt): Likewise. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.base/style.exp (limited_style): New proc. (clean_restart_and_disable): New proc. (run_style_tests): New proc. Most of the old tests from this file are now in this proc. (test_startup_version_string): New proc. Reamining test from the old file is in this proc.
2021-01-14 04:08:42 +08:00
}
Add output styles to gdb This adds some output styling to the CLI. A style is currently a foreground color, a background color, and an intensity (dim or bold). (This list could be expanded depending on terminal capabilities.) A style can be applied while printing. For ui-out, this is done by passing the style constant as an argument. For low-level cases, fprintf_styled and fputs_styled are provided. Users can control the style via a number of new set/show commands. In the interest of not typing many nearly-identical documentation strings, I automated this. On the down side, this is not very i18n-friendly. I've chose some default colors to use. I think it would be good to enable this by default, so that when users start the new gdb, they will see the new feature. Stylizing is done if TERM is set and is not "dumb". This could be improved when the TUI is available by using the curses has_colors call. That is, the lowest layer could call this without committing to using curses everywhere; see my other patch for TUI colorizing. I considered adding a new "set_style" method to ui_file. However, because the implementation had to interact with the pager code, I didn't take this approach. But, one idea might be to put the isatty check there and then have it defer to the lower layers. gdb/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * utils.h (set_output_style, fprintf_styled) (fputs_styled): Declare. * utils.c (applied_style, desired_style): New globals. (emit_style_escape, set_output_style): New function. (prompt_for_continue): Emit style escapes. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Likewise. (fputs_styled, fprintf_styled): New functions. * ui-out.h (enum class ui_out_style_kind): New. (class ui_out) <field_string, field_stream, do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out::field_stream, ui_out::field_string): Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.h (class tui_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.c (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * tracepoint.c (print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Style output. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Style output. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Style output. * skip.c (info_skip_command): Style output. * record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history_src_line): Style output. (btrace_call_history): Likewise. * python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Style output. * mi/mi-out.h (class mi_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out::do_table_header) (mi_ui_out::do_field_int): Update. (mi_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Style output. * cli/cli-style.h: New file. * cli/cli-style.c: New file. * cli-out.h (class cli_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * cli-out.c (cli_ui_out::do_table_header) (cli_ui_out::do_field_int, cli_ui_out::do_field_skip): Update. (cli_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. Style the output. * breakpoint.c (print_breakpoint_location): Style output. (update_static_tracepoint): Likewise. * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_CLI_SRCS): Add cli-style.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add cli-style.h. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: New file. * gdb.base/style.c: New file.
2018-09-04 12:56:33 +08:00
}
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
/* See pager.h. */
void
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
pager_file::reset_style ()
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
if (can_emit_style_escape ())
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_applied_style = ui_file_style ();
m_wrap_buffer.append (m_applied_style.to_ansi ());
}
}
/* Wait, so the user can read what's on the screen. Prompt the user
to continue by pressing RETURN. 'q' is also provided because
telling users what to do in the prompt is more user-friendly than
expecting them to think of Ctrl-C/SIGINT. */
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
void
pager_file::prompt_for_continue ()
{
char cont_prompt[120];
/* Used to add duration we waited for user to respond to
prompt_for_continue_wait_time. */
gdb: Use C++11 std::chrono This patch fixes a few problems with GDB's time handling. #1 - It avoids problems with gnulib's C++ namespace support On MinGW, the struct timeval that should be passed to gnulib's gettimeofday replacement is incompatible with libiberty's timeval_sub/timeval_add. That's because gnulib also replaces "struct timeval" with its own definition, while libiberty expects the system's. E.g., in code like this: gettimeofday (&prompt_ended, NULL); timeval_sub (&prompt_delta, &prompt_ended, &prompt_started); timeval_add (&prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_delta); That's currently handled in gdb by not using gnulib's gettimeofday at all (see common/gdb_sys_time.h), but that #undef hack won't work with if/when we enable gnulib's C++ namespace support, because that mode adds compile time warnings for uses of ::gettimeofday, which are hard errors with -Werror. #2 - But there's an elephant in the room: gettimeofday is not monotonic... We're using it to: a) check how long functions take, for performance analysis b) compute when in the future to fire events in the event-loop c) print debug timestamps But that's exactly what gettimeofday is NOT meant for. Straight from the man page: ~~~ The time returned by gettimeofday() is affected by discontinuous jumps in the system time (e.g., if the system administrator manually changes the system time). If you need a monotonically increasing clock, see clock_gettime(2). ~~~ std::chrono (part of the C++11 standard library) has a monotonic clock exactly for such purposes (std::chrono::steady_clock). This commit switches to use that instead of gettimeofday, fixing all the issues mentioned above. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/run-time-clock.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/run-time-clock.h. (COMMON_OBS): Add run-time-clock.o. * common/run-time-clock.c, common/run-time-clock.h: New files. * defs.h (struct timeval, print_transfer_performance): Delete declarations. * event-loop.c (struct gdb_timer) <when>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. (create_timer): use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use new instead of malloc. (delete_timer): Use delete instead of xfree. (duration_cast_timeval): New. (update_wait_timeout): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. * maint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h", <time.h> and "timeval-utils.h". (scoped_command_stats::~scoped_command_stats) (scoped_command_stats::scoped_command_stats): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use user_cpu_time_clock instead of get_run_time. * maint.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono>. (scoped_command_stats): <m_start_cpu_time>: Now a user_cpu_time_clock::time_point. <m_start_wall_time>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. * mi/mi-main.c: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h" and <sys/resource.h>. (rusage): Delete. (mi_execute_command): Use new instead of XNEW. (mi_load_progress): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (timestamp): Rewrite in terms of std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. (timeval_diff): Delete. (print_diff): Adjust to use std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. * mi/mi-parse.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct mi_timestamp): Change fields types to std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point, user_cpu_time_clock::time and system_cpu_time_clock::time_point, instead of struct timeval. * symfile.c: Include <chrono> instead of <time.h> and "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct time_range): New. (generic_load): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (print_transfer_performance): Replace timeval parameters with a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration parameter. Adjust. * utils.c: Include <chrono> instead of "timeval-utils.h", "gdb_sys_time.h", and <time.h>. (prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday/timeval_sub/timeval_add. (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Use std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (vfprintf_unfiltered): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use std::string. Use '.' instead of ':'. * utils.h: Include <chrono>. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * debug.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (debug_vprintf): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use '.' instead of ':'. * tracepoint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (get_timestamp): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday.
2016-11-23 23:36:26 +08:00
using namespace std::chrono;
steady_clock::time_point prompt_started = steady_clock::now ();
bool disable_pagination = pagination_disabled_for_command;
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
scoped_restore save_paging = make_scoped_restore (&m_paging, true);
Add output styles to gdb This adds some output styling to the CLI. A style is currently a foreground color, a background color, and an intensity (dim or bold). (This list could be expanded depending on terminal capabilities.) A style can be applied while printing. For ui-out, this is done by passing the style constant as an argument. For low-level cases, fprintf_styled and fputs_styled are provided. Users can control the style via a number of new set/show commands. In the interest of not typing many nearly-identical documentation strings, I automated this. On the down side, this is not very i18n-friendly. I've chose some default colors to use. I think it would be good to enable this by default, so that when users start the new gdb, they will see the new feature. Stylizing is done if TERM is set and is not "dumb". This could be improved when the TUI is available by using the curses has_colors call. That is, the lowest layer could call this without committing to using curses everywhere; see my other patch for TUI colorizing. I considered adding a new "set_style" method to ui_file. However, because the implementation had to interact with the pager code, I didn't take this approach. But, one idea might be to put the isatty check there and then have it defer to the lower layers. gdb/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * utils.h (set_output_style, fprintf_styled) (fputs_styled): Declare. * utils.c (applied_style, desired_style): New globals. (emit_style_escape, set_output_style): New function. (prompt_for_continue): Emit style escapes. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Likewise. (fputs_styled, fprintf_styled): New functions. * ui-out.h (enum class ui_out_style_kind): New. (class ui_out) <field_string, field_stream, do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out::field_stream, ui_out::field_string): Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.h (class tui_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.c (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * tracepoint.c (print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Style output. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Style output. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Style output. * skip.c (info_skip_command): Style output. * record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history_src_line): Style output. (btrace_call_history): Likewise. * python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Style output. * mi/mi-out.h (class mi_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out::do_table_header) (mi_ui_out::do_field_int): Update. (mi_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Style output. * cli/cli-style.h: New file. * cli/cli-style.c: New file. * cli-out.h (class cli_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * cli-out.c (cli_ui_out::do_table_header) (cli_ui_out::do_field_int, cli_ui_out::do_field_skip): Update. (cli_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. Style the output. * breakpoint.c (print_breakpoint_location): Style output. (update_static_tracepoint): Likewise. * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_CLI_SRCS): Add cli-style.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add cli-style.h. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: New file. * gdb.base/style.c: New file.
2018-09-04 12:56:33 +08:00
/* Clear the current styling. */
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_stream->emit_style_escape (ui_file_style ());
Add output styles to gdb This adds some output styling to the CLI. A style is currently a foreground color, a background color, and an intensity (dim or bold). (This list could be expanded depending on terminal capabilities.) A style can be applied while printing. For ui-out, this is done by passing the style constant as an argument. For low-level cases, fprintf_styled and fputs_styled are provided. Users can control the style via a number of new set/show commands. In the interest of not typing many nearly-identical documentation strings, I automated this. On the down side, this is not very i18n-friendly. I've chose some default colors to use. I think it would be good to enable this by default, so that when users start the new gdb, they will see the new feature. Stylizing is done if TERM is set and is not "dumb". This could be improved when the TUI is available by using the curses has_colors call. That is, the lowest layer could call this without committing to using curses everywhere; see my other patch for TUI colorizing. I considered adding a new "set_style" method to ui_file. However, because the implementation had to interact with the pager code, I didn't take this approach. But, one idea might be to put the isatty check there and then have it defer to the lower layers. gdb/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * utils.h (set_output_style, fprintf_styled) (fputs_styled): Declare. * utils.c (applied_style, desired_style): New globals. (emit_style_escape, set_output_style): New function. (prompt_for_continue): Emit style escapes. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Likewise. (fputs_styled, fprintf_styled): New functions. * ui-out.h (enum class ui_out_style_kind): New. (class ui_out) <field_string, field_stream, do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out::field_stream, ui_out::field_string): Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.h (class tui_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.c (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * tracepoint.c (print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Style output. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Style output. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Style output. * skip.c (info_skip_command): Style output. * record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history_src_line): Style output. (btrace_call_history): Likewise. * python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Style output. * mi/mi-out.h (class mi_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out::do_table_header) (mi_ui_out::do_field_int): Update. (mi_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Style output. * cli/cli-style.h: New file. * cli/cli-style.c: New file. * cli-out.h (class cli_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * cli-out.c (cli_ui_out::do_table_header) (cli_ui_out::do_field_int, cli_ui_out::do_field_skip): Update. (cli_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. Style the output. * breakpoint.c (print_breakpoint_location): Style output. (update_static_tracepoint): Likewise. * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_CLI_SRCS): Add cli-style.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add cli-style.h. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: New file. * gdb.base/style.c: New file.
2018-09-04 12:56:33 +08:00
if (annotation_level > 1)
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_stream->puts (("\n\032\032pre-prompt-for-continue\n"));
strcpy (cont_prompt,
"--Type <RET> for more, q to quit, "
"c to continue without paging--");
if (annotation_level > 1)
strcat (cont_prompt, "\n\032\032prompt-for-continue\n");
/* We must do this *before* we call gdb_readline_wrapper, else it
will eventually call us -- thinking that we're trying to print
beyond the end of the screen. */
reinitialize_more_filter ();
Remove make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal This removes make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal and generally C++-ifies target terminal handling. It changes all target_terminal_* functions to be static members of a new target_terminal class and changes the cleanup to be a scoped_* class. make_cleanup_override_quit_handler is also removed in favor of simply using scoped_restore. Note that there are some files in this patch that I could not compile. Considering that some of the rewrites were automated, and that none of these files involed cleanups, I feel that this is relatively safe. Regression tested by the buildbot. gdb/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * windows-nat.c (get_windows_debug_event, windows_wait) (do_initial_windows_stuff, windows_attach): Update. * utils.c (vwarning, internal_vproblem): Update. (ui_unregister_input_event_handler_cleanup) (prepare_to_handle_input): Remove. (class scoped_input_handler): New. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Update. * tui/tui-hooks.c (tui_refresh_frame_and_register_information): Update. * top.c (undo_terminal_modifications_before_exit): Update. * target/target.h (target_terminal_init, target_terminal_inferior) (target_terminal_ours): Don't declare. (class target_terminal): New. * target.h (target_terminal_is_inferior, target_terminal_is_ours) (target_terminal_ours_for_output) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Don't declare. (target_terminal_info): Remove. * target.c (enum terminal_state, terminal_state): Remove. (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output): Rename from target_terminal_ours_for_output. (target_terminal::info): New method. (cleanup_restore_target_terminal) (make_cleanup_restore_target_terminal): Remove. * solib.c (handle_solib_event): Update. * remote.c (remote_serial_quit_handler): Update. (remote_terminal_inferior, remote_wait_as): Update. * record-full.c (record_full_wait_1): Update. * nto-procfs.c (procfs_create_inferior): Update. * nat/fork-inferior.c (startup_inferior): Update. * mi/mi-interp.c (mi_new_thread, mi_thread_exit) (mi_record_changed, mi_inferior_added, mi_inferior_appeared) (mi_inferior_exit, mi_inferior_removed, mi_traceframe_changed) (mi_tsv_created, mi_tsv_deleted, mi_tsv_modified) (mi_breakpoint_created, mi_breakpoint_deleted) (mi_breakpoint_modified, mi_on_resume, mi_solib_loaded) (mi_solib_unloaded, mi_command_param_changed, mi_memory_changed) (mi_user_selected_context_changed, report_initial_inferior): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_attach, linux_nat_terminal_ours) (linux_nat_terminal_inferior): Update. * infrun.c (follow_fork_inferior) (handle_vfork_child_exec_or_exit, do_target_resume) (check_curr_ui_sync_execution_done, handle_inferior_event_1) (handle_signal_stop, maybe_remove_breakpoints, normal_stop): Update. * inflow.c (child_terminal_init, info_terminal_command): Update. * infcmd.c (post_create_inferior, continue_1, prepare_one_step) (attach_command): Update. * infcall.c (call_thread_fsm_should_stop): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_attach): Update. * extension.c (struct active_ext_lang_state) (restore_active_ext_lang): Update. * exceptions.c (print_flush): Update. * event-top.c (async_enable_stdin, default_quit_handler): Update. (struct quit_handler_cleanup_data, restore_quit_handler) (restore_quit_handler_dtor, make_cleanup_override_quit_handler): Remove. * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Update. * breakpoint.c (update_inserted_breakpoint_locations) (insert_breakpoint_locations, handle_jit_event) (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_breakpoints_invalid) (annotate_frames_invalid): Update. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog 2017-09-20 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * target.c (target_terminal::terminal_state): Define. (target_terminal::init): Rename from target_terminal_init. (target_terminal::inferior): Rename from target_terminal_inferior. (target_terminal::ours): Rename from target_terminal_ours. (target_terminal::ours_for_output, target_terminal::info): New.
2017-09-20 11:56:36 +08:00
scoped_input_handler prepare_input;
2014-07-15 02:55:32 +08:00
/* Call gdb_readline_wrapper, not readline, in order to keep an
event loop running. */
gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> ignore (gdb_readline_wrapper (cont_prompt));
/* Add time spend in this routine to prompt_for_continue_wait_time. */
gdb: Use C++11 std::chrono This patch fixes a few problems with GDB's time handling. #1 - It avoids problems with gnulib's C++ namespace support On MinGW, the struct timeval that should be passed to gnulib's gettimeofday replacement is incompatible with libiberty's timeval_sub/timeval_add. That's because gnulib also replaces "struct timeval" with its own definition, while libiberty expects the system's. E.g., in code like this: gettimeofday (&prompt_ended, NULL); timeval_sub (&prompt_delta, &prompt_ended, &prompt_started); timeval_add (&prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_delta); That's currently handled in gdb by not using gnulib's gettimeofday at all (see common/gdb_sys_time.h), but that #undef hack won't work with if/when we enable gnulib's C++ namespace support, because that mode adds compile time warnings for uses of ::gettimeofday, which are hard errors with -Werror. #2 - But there's an elephant in the room: gettimeofday is not monotonic... We're using it to: a) check how long functions take, for performance analysis b) compute when in the future to fire events in the event-loop c) print debug timestamps But that's exactly what gettimeofday is NOT meant for. Straight from the man page: ~~~ The time returned by gettimeofday() is affected by discontinuous jumps in the system time (e.g., if the system administrator manually changes the system time). If you need a monotonically increasing clock, see clock_gettime(2). ~~~ std::chrono (part of the C++11 standard library) has a monotonic clock exactly for such purposes (std::chrono::steady_clock). This commit switches to use that instead of gettimeofday, fixing all the issues mentioned above. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/run-time-clock.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/run-time-clock.h. (COMMON_OBS): Add run-time-clock.o. * common/run-time-clock.c, common/run-time-clock.h: New files. * defs.h (struct timeval, print_transfer_performance): Delete declarations. * event-loop.c (struct gdb_timer) <when>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. (create_timer): use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use new instead of malloc. (delete_timer): Use delete instead of xfree. (duration_cast_timeval): New. (update_wait_timeout): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. * maint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h", <time.h> and "timeval-utils.h". (scoped_command_stats::~scoped_command_stats) (scoped_command_stats::scoped_command_stats): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use user_cpu_time_clock instead of get_run_time. * maint.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono>. (scoped_command_stats): <m_start_cpu_time>: Now a user_cpu_time_clock::time_point. <m_start_wall_time>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. * mi/mi-main.c: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h" and <sys/resource.h>. (rusage): Delete. (mi_execute_command): Use new instead of XNEW. (mi_load_progress): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (timestamp): Rewrite in terms of std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. (timeval_diff): Delete. (print_diff): Adjust to use std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. * mi/mi-parse.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct mi_timestamp): Change fields types to std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point, user_cpu_time_clock::time and system_cpu_time_clock::time_point, instead of struct timeval. * symfile.c: Include <chrono> instead of <time.h> and "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct time_range): New. (generic_load): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (print_transfer_performance): Replace timeval parameters with a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration parameter. Adjust. * utils.c: Include <chrono> instead of "timeval-utils.h", "gdb_sys_time.h", and <time.h>. (prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday/timeval_sub/timeval_add. (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Use std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (vfprintf_unfiltered): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use std::string. Use '.' instead of ':'. * utils.h: Include <chrono>. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * debug.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (debug_vprintf): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use '.' instead of ':'. * tracepoint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (get_timestamp): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday.
2016-11-23 23:36:26 +08:00
prompt_for_continue_wait_time += steady_clock::now () - prompt_started;
if (annotation_level > 1)
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_stream->puts (("\n\032\032post-prompt-for-continue\n"));
if (ignore != NULL)
{
char *p = ignore.get ();
while (*p == ' ' || *p == '\t')
++p;
if (p[0] == 'q')
/* Do not call quit here; there is no possibility of SIGINT. */
throw_quit ("Quit");
if (p[0] == 'c')
disable_pagination = true;
}
/* Now we have to do this again, so that GDB will know that it doesn't
need to save the ---Type <return>--- line at the top of the screen. */
reinitialize_more_filter ();
pagination_disabled_for_command = disable_pagination;
dont_repeat (); /* Forget prev cmd -- CR won't repeat it. */
}
/* Initialize timer to keep track of how long we waited for the user. */
New commands "mt set per-command {space,time,symtab} {on,off}". * NEWS: Add entry. * event-top.c: #include "maint.h". * main.c: #include "maint.h". * maint.c: #include <sys/time.h>, <time.h>, block.h, top.h, timeval-utils.h, maint.h, cli/cli-setshow.h. (per_command_time, per_command_space): New static globals. (per_command_symtab): New static global. (per_command_setlist, per_command_showlist): New static globals. (struct cmd_stats): Move here from utils.c. (set_per_command_time): Renamed from set_display_time in utils.c and moved here. All callers updated. (set_per_command_space): Renamed from set_display_space in utils.c and moved here. All callers updated. (count_symtabs_and_blocks): New function. (report_command_stats): Moved here from utils.c. Add support for printing symtab stats. Only print data if enabled before command executed. (make_command_stats_cleanup): Ditto. (sert_per_command_cmd, show_per_command_cmd): New functions. (_initialize_maint_cmds): Add new commands mt set per-command {space,time,symtab} {on,off}. * maint.h: New file. * top.c: #include "maint.h". * utils.c (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): New function. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): New function. * utils.h (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Declare (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Declare. (make_command_stats_cleanup): Moved to maint.h. (set_display_time, set_display_space): Moved to maint.h and renamed to set_per_command_time, set_per_command_space. * cli/cli-setshow.c (parse_cli_boolean_value): Renamed from parse_binary_operation and made non-static. Don't call error, just return an error marker. All callers updated. * cli/cli-setshow.h (parse_cli_boolean_value): Declare. doc/ * gdb.texinfo (Maintenance Commands): Add docs for "mt set per-command {space,time,symtab} {on,off}". testsuite/ * gdb.base/maint.exp: Update tests for per-command stats.
2013-03-22 01:37:30 +08:00
void
reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time (void)
{
gdb: Use C++11 std::chrono This patch fixes a few problems with GDB's time handling. #1 - It avoids problems with gnulib's C++ namespace support On MinGW, the struct timeval that should be passed to gnulib's gettimeofday replacement is incompatible with libiberty's timeval_sub/timeval_add. That's because gnulib also replaces "struct timeval" with its own definition, while libiberty expects the system's. E.g., in code like this: gettimeofday (&prompt_ended, NULL); timeval_sub (&prompt_delta, &prompt_ended, &prompt_started); timeval_add (&prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_delta); That's currently handled in gdb by not using gnulib's gettimeofday at all (see common/gdb_sys_time.h), but that #undef hack won't work with if/when we enable gnulib's C++ namespace support, because that mode adds compile time warnings for uses of ::gettimeofday, which are hard errors with -Werror. #2 - But there's an elephant in the room: gettimeofday is not monotonic... We're using it to: a) check how long functions take, for performance analysis b) compute when in the future to fire events in the event-loop c) print debug timestamps But that's exactly what gettimeofday is NOT meant for. Straight from the man page: ~~~ The time returned by gettimeofday() is affected by discontinuous jumps in the system time (e.g., if the system administrator manually changes the system time). If you need a monotonically increasing clock, see clock_gettime(2). ~~~ std::chrono (part of the C++11 standard library) has a monotonic clock exactly for such purposes (std::chrono::steady_clock). This commit switches to use that instead of gettimeofday, fixing all the issues mentioned above. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/run-time-clock.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/run-time-clock.h. (COMMON_OBS): Add run-time-clock.o. * common/run-time-clock.c, common/run-time-clock.h: New files. * defs.h (struct timeval, print_transfer_performance): Delete declarations. * event-loop.c (struct gdb_timer) <when>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. (create_timer): use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use new instead of malloc. (delete_timer): Use delete instead of xfree. (duration_cast_timeval): New. (update_wait_timeout): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. * maint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h", <time.h> and "timeval-utils.h". (scoped_command_stats::~scoped_command_stats) (scoped_command_stats::scoped_command_stats): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use user_cpu_time_clock instead of get_run_time. * maint.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono>. (scoped_command_stats): <m_start_cpu_time>: Now a user_cpu_time_clock::time_point. <m_start_wall_time>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. * mi/mi-main.c: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h" and <sys/resource.h>. (rusage): Delete. (mi_execute_command): Use new instead of XNEW. (mi_load_progress): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (timestamp): Rewrite in terms of std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. (timeval_diff): Delete. (print_diff): Adjust to use std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. * mi/mi-parse.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct mi_timestamp): Change fields types to std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point, user_cpu_time_clock::time and system_cpu_time_clock::time_point, instead of struct timeval. * symfile.c: Include <chrono> instead of <time.h> and "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct time_range): New. (generic_load): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (print_transfer_performance): Replace timeval parameters with a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration parameter. Adjust. * utils.c: Include <chrono> instead of "timeval-utils.h", "gdb_sys_time.h", and <time.h>. (prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday/timeval_sub/timeval_add. (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Use std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (vfprintf_unfiltered): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use std::string. Use '.' instead of ':'. * utils.h: Include <chrono>. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * debug.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (debug_vprintf): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use '.' instead of ':'. * tracepoint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (get_timestamp): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday.
2016-11-23 23:36:26 +08:00
using namespace std::chrono;
New commands "mt set per-command {space,time,symtab} {on,off}". * NEWS: Add entry. * event-top.c: #include "maint.h". * main.c: #include "maint.h". * maint.c: #include <sys/time.h>, <time.h>, block.h, top.h, timeval-utils.h, maint.h, cli/cli-setshow.h. (per_command_time, per_command_space): New static globals. (per_command_symtab): New static global. (per_command_setlist, per_command_showlist): New static globals. (struct cmd_stats): Move here from utils.c. (set_per_command_time): Renamed from set_display_time in utils.c and moved here. All callers updated. (set_per_command_space): Renamed from set_display_space in utils.c and moved here. All callers updated. (count_symtabs_and_blocks): New function. (report_command_stats): Moved here from utils.c. Add support for printing symtab stats. Only print data if enabled before command executed. (make_command_stats_cleanup): Ditto. (sert_per_command_cmd, show_per_command_cmd): New functions. (_initialize_maint_cmds): Add new commands mt set per-command {space,time,symtab} {on,off}. * maint.h: New file. * top.c: #include "maint.h". * utils.c (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): New function. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): New function. * utils.h (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Declare (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Declare. (make_command_stats_cleanup): Moved to maint.h. (set_display_time, set_display_space): Moved to maint.h and renamed to set_per_command_time, set_per_command_space. * cli/cli-setshow.c (parse_cli_boolean_value): Renamed from parse_binary_operation and made non-static. Don't call error, just return an error marker. All callers updated. * cli/cli-setshow.h (parse_cli_boolean_value): Declare. doc/ * gdb.texinfo (Maintenance Commands): Add docs for "mt set per-command {space,time,symtab} {on,off}". testsuite/ * gdb.base/maint.exp: Update tests for per-command stats.
2013-03-22 01:37:30 +08:00
gdb: Use C++11 std::chrono This patch fixes a few problems with GDB's time handling. #1 - It avoids problems with gnulib's C++ namespace support On MinGW, the struct timeval that should be passed to gnulib's gettimeofday replacement is incompatible with libiberty's timeval_sub/timeval_add. That's because gnulib also replaces "struct timeval" with its own definition, while libiberty expects the system's. E.g., in code like this: gettimeofday (&prompt_ended, NULL); timeval_sub (&prompt_delta, &prompt_ended, &prompt_started); timeval_add (&prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_delta); That's currently handled in gdb by not using gnulib's gettimeofday at all (see common/gdb_sys_time.h), but that #undef hack won't work with if/when we enable gnulib's C++ namespace support, because that mode adds compile time warnings for uses of ::gettimeofday, which are hard errors with -Werror. #2 - But there's an elephant in the room: gettimeofday is not monotonic... We're using it to: a) check how long functions take, for performance analysis b) compute when in the future to fire events in the event-loop c) print debug timestamps But that's exactly what gettimeofday is NOT meant for. Straight from the man page: ~~~ The time returned by gettimeofday() is affected by discontinuous jumps in the system time (e.g., if the system administrator manually changes the system time). If you need a monotonically increasing clock, see clock_gettime(2). ~~~ std::chrono (part of the C++11 standard library) has a monotonic clock exactly for such purposes (std::chrono::steady_clock). This commit switches to use that instead of gettimeofday, fixing all the issues mentioned above. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/run-time-clock.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/run-time-clock.h. (COMMON_OBS): Add run-time-clock.o. * common/run-time-clock.c, common/run-time-clock.h: New files. * defs.h (struct timeval, print_transfer_performance): Delete declarations. * event-loop.c (struct gdb_timer) <when>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. (create_timer): use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use new instead of malloc. (delete_timer): Use delete instead of xfree. (duration_cast_timeval): New. (update_wait_timeout): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. * maint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h", <time.h> and "timeval-utils.h". (scoped_command_stats::~scoped_command_stats) (scoped_command_stats::scoped_command_stats): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use user_cpu_time_clock instead of get_run_time. * maint.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono>. (scoped_command_stats): <m_start_cpu_time>: Now a user_cpu_time_clock::time_point. <m_start_wall_time>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. * mi/mi-main.c: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h" and <sys/resource.h>. (rusage): Delete. (mi_execute_command): Use new instead of XNEW. (mi_load_progress): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (timestamp): Rewrite in terms of std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. (timeval_diff): Delete. (print_diff): Adjust to use std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. * mi/mi-parse.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct mi_timestamp): Change fields types to std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point, user_cpu_time_clock::time and system_cpu_time_clock::time_point, instead of struct timeval. * symfile.c: Include <chrono> instead of <time.h> and "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct time_range): New. (generic_load): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (print_transfer_performance): Replace timeval parameters with a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration parameter. Adjust. * utils.c: Include <chrono> instead of "timeval-utils.h", "gdb_sys_time.h", and <time.h>. (prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday/timeval_sub/timeval_add. (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Use std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (vfprintf_unfiltered): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use std::string. Use '.' instead of ':'. * utils.h: Include <chrono>. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * debug.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (debug_vprintf): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use '.' instead of ':'. * tracepoint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (get_timestamp): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday.
2016-11-23 23:36:26 +08:00
prompt_for_continue_wait_time = steady_clock::duration::zero ();
New commands "mt set per-command {space,time,symtab} {on,off}". * NEWS: Add entry. * event-top.c: #include "maint.h". * main.c: #include "maint.h". * maint.c: #include <sys/time.h>, <time.h>, block.h, top.h, timeval-utils.h, maint.h, cli/cli-setshow.h. (per_command_time, per_command_space): New static globals. (per_command_symtab): New static global. (per_command_setlist, per_command_showlist): New static globals. (struct cmd_stats): Move here from utils.c. (set_per_command_time): Renamed from set_display_time in utils.c and moved here. All callers updated. (set_per_command_space): Renamed from set_display_space in utils.c and moved here. All callers updated. (count_symtabs_and_blocks): New function. (report_command_stats): Moved here from utils.c. Add support for printing symtab stats. Only print data if enabled before command executed. (make_command_stats_cleanup): Ditto. (sert_per_command_cmd, show_per_command_cmd): New functions. (_initialize_maint_cmds): Add new commands mt set per-command {space,time,symtab} {on,off}. * maint.h: New file. * top.c: #include "maint.h". * utils.c (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): New function. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): New function. * utils.h (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Declare (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Declare. (make_command_stats_cleanup): Moved to maint.h. (set_display_time, set_display_space): Moved to maint.h and renamed to set_per_command_time, set_per_command_space. * cli/cli-setshow.c (parse_cli_boolean_value): Renamed from parse_binary_operation and made non-static. Don't call error, just return an error marker. All callers updated. * cli/cli-setshow.h (parse_cli_boolean_value): Declare. doc/ * gdb.texinfo (Maintenance Commands): Add docs for "mt set per-command {space,time,symtab} {on,off}". testsuite/ * gdb.base/maint.exp: Update tests for per-command stats.
2013-03-22 01:37:30 +08:00
}
/* Fetch the cumulative time spent in prompt_for_continue. */
gdb: Use C++11 std::chrono This patch fixes a few problems with GDB's time handling. #1 - It avoids problems with gnulib's C++ namespace support On MinGW, the struct timeval that should be passed to gnulib's gettimeofday replacement is incompatible with libiberty's timeval_sub/timeval_add. That's because gnulib also replaces "struct timeval" with its own definition, while libiberty expects the system's. E.g., in code like this: gettimeofday (&prompt_ended, NULL); timeval_sub (&prompt_delta, &prompt_ended, &prompt_started); timeval_add (&prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_for_continue_wait_time, &prompt_delta); That's currently handled in gdb by not using gnulib's gettimeofday at all (see common/gdb_sys_time.h), but that #undef hack won't work with if/when we enable gnulib's C++ namespace support, because that mode adds compile time warnings for uses of ::gettimeofday, which are hard errors with -Werror. #2 - But there's an elephant in the room: gettimeofday is not monotonic... We're using it to: a) check how long functions take, for performance analysis b) compute when in the future to fire events in the event-loop c) print debug timestamps But that's exactly what gettimeofday is NOT meant for. Straight from the man page: ~~~ The time returned by gettimeofday() is affected by discontinuous jumps in the system time (e.g., if the system administrator manually changes the system time). If you need a monotonically increasing clock, see clock_gettime(2). ~~~ std::chrono (part of the C++11 standard library) has a monotonic clock exactly for such purposes (std::chrono::steady_clock). This commit switches to use that instead of gettimeofday, fixing all the issues mentioned above. gdb/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * Makefile.in (SFILES): Add common/run-time-clock.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add common/run-time-clock.h. (COMMON_OBS): Add run-time-clock.o. * common/run-time-clock.c, common/run-time-clock.h: New files. * defs.h (struct timeval, print_transfer_performance): Delete declarations. * event-loop.c (struct gdb_timer) <when>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. (create_timer): use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use new instead of malloc. (delete_timer): Use delete instead of xfree. (duration_cast_timeval): New. (update_wait_timeout): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. * maint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h", <time.h> and "timeval-utils.h". (scoped_command_stats::~scoped_command_stats) (scoped_command_stats::scoped_command_stats): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use user_cpu_time_clock instead of get_run_time. * maint.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono>. (scoped_command_stats): <m_start_cpu_time>: Now a user_cpu_time_clock::time_point. <m_start_wall_time>: Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point. * mi/mi-main.c: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h" and <sys/resource.h>. (rusage): Delete. (mi_execute_command): Use new instead of XNEW. (mi_load_progress): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (timestamp): Rewrite in terms of std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. (timeval_diff): Delete. (print_diff): Adjust to use std::chrono::steady_clock, user_cpu_time_clock and system_cpu_time_clock. * mi/mi-parse.h: Include "run-time-clock.h" and <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct mi_timestamp): Change fields types to std::chrono::steady_clock::time_point, user_cpu_time_clock::time and system_cpu_time_clock::time_point, instead of struct timeval. * symfile.c: Include <chrono> instead of <time.h> and "gdb_sys_time.h". (struct time_range): New. (generic_load): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. (print_transfer_performance): Replace timeval parameters with a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration parameter. Adjust. * utils.c: Include <chrono> instead of "timeval-utils.h", "gdb_sys_time.h", and <time.h>. (prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Now a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration. (defaulted_query, prompt_for_continue): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday/timeval_sub/timeval_add. (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Use std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. (vfprintf_unfiltered): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use std::string. Use '.' instead of ':'. * utils.h: Include <chrono>. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Return a std::chrono::steady_clock::duration instead of struct timeval. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: 2016-11-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * debug.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (debug_vprintf): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday. Use '.' instead of ':'. * tracepoint.c: Include <chrono> instead of "gdb_sys_time.h". (get_timestamp): Use std::chrono::steady_clock instead of gettimeofday.
2016-11-23 23:36:26 +08:00
std::chrono::steady_clock::duration
get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time ()
New commands "mt set per-command {space,time,symtab} {on,off}". * NEWS: Add entry. * event-top.c: #include "maint.h". * main.c: #include "maint.h". * maint.c: #include <sys/time.h>, <time.h>, block.h, top.h, timeval-utils.h, maint.h, cli/cli-setshow.h. (per_command_time, per_command_space): New static globals. (per_command_symtab): New static global. (per_command_setlist, per_command_showlist): New static globals. (struct cmd_stats): Move here from utils.c. (set_per_command_time): Renamed from set_display_time in utils.c and moved here. All callers updated. (set_per_command_space): Renamed from set_display_space in utils.c and moved here. All callers updated. (count_symtabs_and_blocks): New function. (report_command_stats): Moved here from utils.c. Add support for printing symtab stats. Only print data if enabled before command executed. (make_command_stats_cleanup): Ditto. (sert_per_command_cmd, show_per_command_cmd): New functions. (_initialize_maint_cmds): Add new commands mt set per-command {space,time,symtab} {on,off}. * maint.h: New file. * top.c: #include "maint.h". * utils.c (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): New function. (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): New function. * utils.h (reset_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Declare (get_prompt_for_continue_wait_time): Declare. (make_command_stats_cleanup): Moved to maint.h. (set_display_time, set_display_space): Moved to maint.h and renamed to set_per_command_time, set_per_command_space. * cli/cli-setshow.c (parse_cli_boolean_value): Renamed from parse_binary_operation and made non-static. Don't call error, just return an error marker. All callers updated. * cli/cli-setshow.h (parse_cli_boolean_value): Declare. doc/ * gdb.texinfo (Maintenance Commands): Add docs for "mt set per-command {space,time,symtab} {on,off}". testsuite/ * gdb.base/maint.exp: Update tests for per-command stats.
2013-03-22 01:37:30 +08:00
{
return prompt_for_continue_wait_time;
}
/* Reinitialize filter; ie. tell it to reset to original values. */
void
2000-07-30 09:48:28 +08:00
reinitialize_more_filter (void)
{
lines_printed = 0;
chars_printed = 0;
pagination_disabled_for_command = false;
}
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
void
pager_file::flush_wrap_buffer ()
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
if (!m_paging && !m_wrap_buffer.empty ())
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_stream->puts (m_wrap_buffer.c_str ());
m_wrap_buffer.clear ();
}
}
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
void
pager_file::flush ()
{
flush_wrap_buffer ();
m_stream->flush ();
}
/* See utils.h. */
void
gdb_flush (struct ui_file *stream)
{
stream->flush ();
}
/* See utils.h. */
int
get_chars_per_line ()
{
return chars_per_line;
}
/* See ui-file.h. */
void
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
pager_file::wrap_here (int indent)
{
/* This should have been allocated, but be paranoid anyway. */
gdb_assert (filter_initialized);
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
flush_wrap_buffer ();
2011-01-05 Michael Snyder <msnyder@vmware.com> * addrmap.c: Shorten lines of >= 80 columns. * arch-utils.c: Ditto. * arch-utils.h: Ditto. * ax-gdb.c: Ditto. * ax-general.c: Ditto. * bcache.c: Ditto. * blockframe.c: Ditto. * breakpoint.c: Ditto. * buildsym.c: Ditto. * c-lang.c: Ditto. * c-typeprint.c: Ditto. * charset.c: Ditto. * coffread.c: Ditto. * command.h: Ditto. * corelow.c: Ditto. * cp-abi.c: Ditto. * cp-namespace.c: Ditto. * cp-support.c: Ditto. * dbug-rom.c: Ditto. * dbxread.c: Ditto. * defs.h: Ditto. * dfp.c: Ditto. * dfp.h: Ditto. * dictionary.c: Ditto. * disasm.c: Ditto. * doublest.c: Ditto. * dwarf2-frame.c: Ditto. * dwarf2expr.c: Ditto. * dwarf2loc.c: Ditto. * dwarf2read.c: Ditto. * elfread.c: Ditto. * eval.c: Ditto. * event-loop.c: Ditto. * event-loop.h: Ditto. * exceptions.h: Ditto. * exec.c: Ditto. * expprint.c: Ditto. * expression.h: Ditto. * f-lang.c: Ditto. * f-valprint.c: Ditto. * findcmd.c: Ditto. * frame-base.c: Ditto. * frame-unwind.c: Ditto. * frame-unwind.h: Ditto. * frame.c: Ditto. * frame.h: Ditto. * gcore.c: Ditto. * gdb-stabs.h: Ditto. * gdb_assert.h: Ditto. * gdb_dirent.h: Ditto. * gdb_obstack.h: Ditto. * gdbcore.h: Ditto. * gdbtypes.c: Ditto. * gdbtypes.h: Ditto. * inf-ttrace.c: Ditto. * infcall.c: Ditto. * infcmd.c: Ditto. * inflow.c: Ditto. * infrun.c: Ditto. * inline-frame.h: Ditto. * language.c: Ditto. * language.h: Ditto. * libunwind-frame.c: Ditto. * libunwind-frame.h: Ditto. * linespec.c: Ditto. * linux-nat.c: Ditto. * linux-nat.h: Ditto. * linux-thread-db.c: Ditto. * machoread.c: Ditto. * macroexp.c: Ditto. * macrotab.c: Ditto. * main.c: Ditto. * maint.c: Ditto. * mdebugread.c: Ditto. * memattr.c: Ditto. * minsyms.c: Ditto. * monitor.c: Ditto. * monitor.h: Ditto. * objfiles.c: Ditto. * objfiles.h: Ditto. * osabi.c: Ditto. * p-typeprint.c: Ditto. * p-valprint.c: Ditto. * parse.c: Ditto. * printcmd.c: Ditto. * proc-events.c: Ditto. * procfs.c: Ditto. * progspace.c: Ditto. * progspace.h: Ditto. * psympriv.h: Ditto. * psymtab.c: Ditto. * record.c: Ditto. * regcache.c: Ditto. * regcache.h: Ditto. * remote-fileio.c: Ditto. * remote.c: Ditto. * ser-mingw.c: Ditto. * ser-tcp.c: Ditto. * ser-unix.c: Ditto. * serial.c: Ditto. * serial.h: Ditto. * solib-frv.c: Ditto. * solib-irix.c: Ditto. * solib-osf.c: Ditto. * solib-pa64.c: Ditto. * solib-som.c: Ditto. * solib-sunos.c: Ditto. * solib-svr4.c: Ditto. * solib-target.c: Ditto. * solib.c: Ditto. * somread.c: Ditto. * source.c: Ditto. * stabsread.c: Ditto. * stabsread.c: Ditto. * stack.c: Ditto. * stack.h: Ditto. * symfile-mem.c: Ditto. * symfile.c: Ditto. * symfile.h: Ditto. * symmisc.c: Ditto. * symtab.c: Ditto. * symtab.h: Ditto. * target-descriptions.c: Ditto. * target-memory.c: Ditto. * target.c: Ditto. * target.h: Ditto. * terminal.h: Ditto. * thread.c: Ditto. * top.c: Ditto. * tracepoint.c: Ditto. * tracepoint.h: Ditto. * ui-file.c: Ditto. * ui-file.h: Ditto. * ui-out.h: Ditto. * user-regs.c: Ditto. * user-regs.h: Ditto. * utils.c: Ditto. * valarith.c: Ditto. * valops.c: Ditto. * valprint.c: Ditto. * valprint.h: Ditto. * value.c: Ditto. * varobj.c: Ditto. * varobj.h: Ditto. * vec.h: Ditto. * xcoffread.c: Ditto. * xcoffsolib.c: Ditto. * xcoffsolib.h: Ditto. * xml-syscall.c: Ditto. * xml-tdesc.c: Ditto.
2011-01-06 06:22:53 +08:00
if (chars_per_line == UINT_MAX) /* No line overflow checking. */
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_wrap_column = 0;
}
else if (chars_printed >= chars_per_line)
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
this->puts ("\n");
if (indent != 0)
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
this->puts (n_spaces (indent));
m_wrap_column = 0;
}
else
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_wrap_column = chars_printed;
m_wrap_indent = indent;
m_wrap_style = m_applied_style;
}
}
/* Print input string to gdb_stdout arranging strings in columns of n
chars. String can be right or left justified in the column. Never
prints trailing spaces. String should never be longer than width.
FIXME: this could be useful for the EXAMINE command, which
currently doesn't tabulate very well. */
void
puts_tabular (char *string, int width, int right)
{
int spaces = 0;
int stringlen;
char *spacebuf;
gdb_assert (chars_per_line > 0);
if (chars_per_line == UINT_MAX)
{
gdb_puts (string);
gdb_puts ("\n");
return;
}
if (((chars_printed - 1) / width + 2) * width >= chars_per_line)
gdb_puts ("\n");
if (width >= chars_per_line)
width = chars_per_line - 1;
stringlen = strlen (string);
if (chars_printed > 0)
spaces = width - (chars_printed - 1) % width - 1;
if (right)
spaces += width - stringlen;
Add casts to memory allocation related calls Most allocation functions (if not all) return a void* pointing to the allocated memory. In C++, we need to add an explicit cast when assigning the result to a pointer to another type (which is the case more often than not). The content of this patch is taken from Pedro's branch, from commit "(mostly) auto-generated patch to insert casts needed for C++". I validated that the changes make sense and manually reflowed the code to make it respect the coding style. I also found multiple places where I could use XNEW/XNEWVEC/XRESIZEVEC/etc. Thanks a lot to whoever did that automated script to insert casts, doing it completely by hand would have taken a ridiculous amount of time. Only files built on x86 with --enable-targets=all are modified. This means that all other -nat.c files are untouched and will have to be dealt with later by using appropiate compilers. Or maybe we can try to build them with a regular g++ just to know where to add casts, I don't know. I built-tested this with --enable-targets=all and reg-tested. Here's the changelog entry, which was not too bad to make despite the size, thanks to David Malcom's script. I fixed some bits by hand, but there might be some wrong parts left (hopefully not). gdb/ChangeLog: * aarch64-linux-tdep.c (aarch64_stap_parse_special_token): Add cast to allocation result assignment. * ada-exp.y (write_object_renaming): Likewise. (write_ambiguous_var): Likewise. (ada_nget_field_index): Likewise. (write_var_or_type): Likewise. * ada-lang.c (ada_decode_symbol): Likewise. (ada_value_assign): Likewise. (value_pointer): Likewise. (cache_symbol): Likewise. (add_nonlocal_symbols): Likewise. (ada_name_for_lookup): Likewise. (symbol_completion_add): Likewise. (ada_to_fixed_type_1): Likewise. (ada_get_next_arg): Likewise. (defns_collected): Likewise. * ada-lex.l (processId): Likewise. (processString): Likewise. * ada-tasks.c (read_known_tasks_array): Likewise. (read_known_tasks_list): Likewise. * ada-typeprint.c (decoded_type_name): Likewise. * addrmap.c (addrmap_mutable_create_fixed): Likewise. * amd64-tdep.c (amd64_push_arguments): Likewise. (amd64_displaced_step_copy_insn): Likewise. (amd64_classify_insn_at): Likewise. (amd64_relocate_instruction): Likewise. * amd64obsd-tdep.c (amd64obsd_sigtramp_p): Likewise. * arch-utils.c (simple_displaced_step_copy_insn): Likewise. (initialize_current_architecture): Likewise. * arm-linux-tdep.c (arm_stap_parse_special_token): Likewise. * arm-symbian-tdep.c (arm_symbian_osabi_sniffer): Likewise. * arm-tdep.c (arm_exidx_new_objfile): Likewise. (arm_push_dummy_call): Likewise. (extend_buffer_earlier): Likewise. (arm_adjust_breakpoint_address): Likewise. (arm_skip_stub): Likewise. * auto-load.c (filename_is_in_pattern): Likewise. (maybe_add_script_file): Likewise. (maybe_add_script_text): Likewise. (auto_load_objfile_script_1): Likewise. * auxv.c (ld_so_xfer_auxv): Likewise. * ax-general.c (new_agent_expr): Likewise. (grow_expr): Likewise. (ax_reg_mask): Likewise. * bcache.c (bcache_full): Likewise. * breakpoint.c (program_breakpoint_here_p): Likewise. * btrace.c (parse_xml_raw): Likewise. * build-id.c (build_id_to_debug_bfd): Likewise. * buildsym.c (end_symtab_with_blockvector): Likewise. * c-exp.y (string_exp): Likewise. (qualified_name): Likewise. (write_destructor_name): Likewise. (operator_stoken): Likewise. (parse_number): Likewise. (scan_macro_expansion): Likewise. (yylex): Likewise. (c_print_token): Likewise. * c-lang.c (c_get_string): Likewise. (emit_numeric_character): Likewise. * charset.c (wchar_iterate): Likewise. * cli/cli-cmds.c (complete_command): Likewise. (make_command): Likewise. * cli/cli-dump.c (restore_section_callback): Likewise. (restore_binary_file): Likewise. * cli/cli-interp.c (cli_interpreter_exec): Likewise. * cli/cli-script.c (execute_control_command): Likewise. * cli/cli-setshow.c (do_set_command): Likewise. * coff-pe-read.c (add_pe_forwarded_sym): Likewise. (read_pe_exported_syms): Likewise. * coffread.c (coff_read_struct_type): Likewise. (coff_read_enum_type): Likewise. * common/btrace-common.c (btrace_data_append): Likewise. * common/buffer.c (buffer_grow): Likewise. * common/filestuff.c (gdb_fopen_cloexec): Likewise. * common/format.c (parse_format_string): Likewise. * common/gdb_vecs.c (delim_string_to_char_ptr_vec_append): Likewise. * common/xml-utils.c (xml_escape_text): Likewise. * compile/compile-object-load.c (copy_sections): Likewise. (compile_object_load): Likewise. * compile/compile-object-run.c (compile_object_run): Likewise. * completer.c (filename_completer): Likewise. * corefile.c (read_memory_typed_address): Likewise. (write_memory_unsigned_integer): Likewise. (write_memory_signed_integer): Likewise. (complete_set_gnutarget): Likewise. * corelow.c (get_core_register_section): Likewise. * cp-name-parser.y (d_grab): Likewise. (allocate_info): Likewise. (cp_new_demangle_parse_info): Likewise. * cp-namespace.c (cp_scan_for_anonymous_namespaces): Likewise. (cp_lookup_symbol_in_namespace): Likewise. (lookup_namespace_scope): Likewise. (find_symbol_in_baseclass): Likewise. (cp_lookup_nested_symbol): Likewise. (cp_lookup_transparent_type_loop): Likewise. * cp-support.c (copy_string_to_obstack): Likewise. (make_symbol_overload_list): Likewise. (make_symbol_overload_list_namespace): Likewise. (make_symbol_overload_list_adl_namespace): Likewise. (first_component_command): Likewise. * cp-valprint.c (cp_print_value): Likewise. * ctf.c (ctf_xfer_partial): Likewise. * d-exp.y (StringExp): Likewise. * d-namespace.c (d_lookup_symbol_in_module): Likewise. (lookup_module_scope): Likewise. (find_symbol_in_baseclass): Likewise. (d_lookup_nested_symbol): Likewise. * dbxread.c (find_stab_function_addr): Likewise. (read_dbx_symtab): Likewise. (dbx_end_psymtab): Likewise. (cp_set_block_scope): Likewise. * dcache.c (dcache_alloc): Likewise. * demangle.c (_initialize_demangler): Likewise. * dicos-tdep.c (dicos_load_module_p): Likewise. * dictionary.c (dict_create_hashed_expandable): Likewise. (dict_create_linear_expandable): Likewise. (expand_hashtable): Likewise. (add_symbol_linear_expandable): Likewise. * dwarf2-frame.c (add_cie): Likewise. (add_fde): Likewise. (dwarf2_build_frame_info): Likewise. * dwarf2expr.c (dwarf_expr_grow_stack): Likewise. (dwarf_expr_fetch_address): Likewise. (add_piece): Likewise. (execute_stack_op): Likewise. * dwarf2loc.c (chain_candidate): Likewise. (dwarf_entry_parameter_to_value): Likewise. (read_pieced_value): Likewise. (write_pieced_value): Likewise. * dwarf2read.c (dwarf2_read_section): Likewise. (add_type_unit): Likewise. (read_comp_units_from_section): Likewise. (fixup_go_packaging): Likewise. (dwarf2_compute_name): Likewise. (dwarf2_physname): Likewise. (create_dwo_unit_in_dwp_v1): Likewise. (create_dwo_unit_in_dwp_v2): Likewise. (read_func_scope): Likewise. (read_call_site_scope): Likewise. (dwarf2_attach_fields_to_type): Likewise. (process_structure_scope): Likewise. (mark_common_block_symbol_computed): Likewise. (read_common_block): Likewise. (abbrev_table_read_table): Likewise. (guess_partial_die_structure_name): Likewise. (fixup_partial_die): Likewise. (add_file_name): Likewise. (dwarf2_const_value_data): Likewise. (dwarf2_const_value_attr): Likewise. (build_error_marker_type): Likewise. (guess_full_die_structure_name): Likewise. (anonymous_struct_prefix): Likewise. (typename_concat): Likewise. (dwarf2_canonicalize_name): Likewise. (dwarf2_name): Likewise. (write_constant_as_bytes): Likewise. (dwarf2_fetch_constant_bytes): Likewise. (copy_string): Likewise. (parse_macro_definition): Likewise. * elfread.c (elf_symfile_segments): Likewise. (elf_rel_plt_read): Likewise. (elf_gnu_ifunc_resolve_by_cache): Likewise. (elf_gnu_ifunc_resolve_by_got): Likewise. (elf_read_minimal_symbols): Likewise. (elf_gnu_ifunc_record_cache): Likewise. * event-top.c (top_level_prompt): Likewise. (command_line_handler): Likewise. * exec.c (resize_section_table): Likewise. * expprint.c (print_subexp_standard): Likewise. * fbsd-tdep.c (fbsd_collect_regset_section_cb): Likewise. * findcmd.c (parse_find_args): Likewise. * findvar.c (address_from_register): Likewise. * frame.c (get_prev_frame_always): Likewise. * gdb_bfd.c (gdb_bfd_ref): Likewise. (get_section_descriptor): Likewise. * gdb_obstack.c (obconcat): Likewise. (obstack_strdup): Likewise. * gdbtypes.c (lookup_function_type_with_arguments): Likewise. (create_set_type): Likewise. (lookup_unsigned_typename): Likewise. (lookup_signed_typename): Likewise. (resolve_dynamic_union): Likewise. (resolve_dynamic_struct): Likewise. (add_dyn_prop): Likewise. (copy_dynamic_prop_list): Likewise. (arch_flags_type): Likewise. (append_composite_type_field_raw): Likewise. * gdbtypes.h (INIT_FUNC_SPECIFIC): Likewise. * gnu-v3-abi.c (gnuv3_rtti_type): Likewise. * go-exp.y (string_exp): Likewise. * go-lang.c (go_demangle): Likewise. * guile/guile.c (compute_scheme_string): Likewise. * guile/scm-cmd.c (gdbscm_parse_command_name): Likewise. (gdbscm_canonicalize_command_name): Likewise. * guile/scm-ports.c (ioscm_init_stdio_buffers): Likewise. (ioscm_init_memory_port): Likewise. (ioscm_reinit_memory_port): Likewise. * guile/scm-utils.c (gdbscm_gc_xstrdup): Likewise. (gdbscm_gc_dup_argv): Likewise. * h8300-tdep.c (h8300_push_dummy_call): Likewise. * hppa-tdep.c (internalize_unwinds): Likewise. (read_unwind_info): Likewise. * i386-cygwin-tdep.c (core_process_module_section): Likewise. (windows_core_xfer_shared_libraries): Likewise. * i386-tdep.c (i386_displaced_step_copy_insn): Likewise. (i386_stap_parse_special_token_triplet): Likewise. (i386_stap_parse_special_token_three_arg_disp): Likewise. * i386obsd-tdep.c (i386obsd_sigtramp_p): Likewise. * inf-child.c (inf_child_fileio_readlink): Likewise. * inf-ptrace.c (inf_ptrace_fetch_register): Likewise. (inf_ptrace_store_register): Likewise. * infrun.c (follow_exec): Likewise. (displaced_step_prepare_throw): Likewise. (save_stop_context): Likewise. (save_infcall_suspend_state): Likewise. * jit.c (jit_read_descriptor): Likewise. (jit_read_code_entry): Likewise. (jit_symtab_line_mapping_add_impl): Likewise. (finalize_symtab): Likewise. (jit_unwind_reg_get_impl): Likewise. * jv-exp.y (QualifiedName): Likewise. * jv-lang.c (get_java_utf8_name): Likewise. (type_from_class): Likewise. (java_demangle_type_signature): Likewise. (java_class_name_from_physname): Likewise. * jv-typeprint.c (java_type_print_base): Likewise. * jv-valprint.c (java_value_print): Likewise. * language.c (add_language): Likewise. * linespec.c (add_sal_to_sals_basic): Likewise. (add_sal_to_sals): Likewise. (decode_objc): Likewise. (find_linespec_symbols): Likewise. * linux-fork.c (fork_save_infrun_state): Likewise. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_detach): Likewise. (linux_nat_fileio_readlink): Likewise. * linux-record.c (record_linux_sockaddr): Likewise. (record_linux_msghdr): Likewise. (Do): Likewise. * linux-tdep.c (linux_core_info_proc_mappings): Likewise. (linux_collect_regset_section_cb): Likewise. (linux_get_siginfo_data): Likewise. * linux-thread-db.c (try_thread_db_load_from_pdir_1): Likewise. (try_thread_db_load_from_dir): Likewise. (thread_db_load_search): Likewise. (info_auto_load_libthread_db): Likewise. * m32c-tdep.c (m32c_m16c_address_to_pointer): Likewise. (m32c_m16c_pointer_to_address): Likewise. * m68hc11-tdep.c (m68hc11_pseudo_register_write): Likewise. * m68k-tdep.c (m68k_get_longjmp_target): Likewise. * machoread.c (macho_check_dsym): Likewise. * macroexp.c (resize_buffer): Likewise. (gather_arguments): Likewise. (maybe_expand): Likewise. * macrotab.c (new_macro_key): Likewise. (new_source_file): Likewise. (new_macro_definition): Likewise. * mdebugread.c (parse_symbol): Likewise. (parse_type): Likewise. (parse_partial_symbols): Likewise. (psymtab_to_symtab_1): Likewise. * mem-break.c (default_memory_insert_breakpoint): Likewise. * mi/mi-cmd-break.c (mi_argv_to_format): Likewise. * mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_data_read_memory): Likewise. (mi_cmd_data_read_memory_bytes): Likewise. (mi_cmd_data_write_memory_bytes): Likewise. (mi_cmd_trace_frame_collected): Likewise. * mi/mi-parse.c (mi_parse_argv): Likewise. (mi_parse): Likewise. * minidebug.c (lzma_open): Likewise. (lzma_pread): Likewise. * mips-tdep.c (mips_read_fp_register_single): Likewise. (mips_print_fp_register): Likewise. * mipsnbsd-tdep.c (mipsnbsd_get_longjmp_target): Likewise. * mipsread.c (read_alphacoff_dynamic_symtab): Likewise. * mt-tdep.c (mt_register_name): Likewise. (mt_registers_info): Likewise. (mt_push_dummy_call): Likewise. * namespace.c (add_using_directive): Likewise. * nat/linux-btrace.c (perf_event_read): Likewise. (linux_enable_bts): Likewise. * nat/linux-osdata.c (linux_common_core_of_thread): Likewise. * nat/linux-ptrace.c (linux_ptrace_test_ret_to_nx): Likewise. * nto-tdep.c (nto_find_and_open_solib): Likewise. (nto_parse_redirection): Likewise. * objc-lang.c (objc_demangle): Likewise. (find_methods): Likewise. * objfiles.c (get_objfile_bfd_data): Likewise. (set_objfile_main_name): Likewise. (allocate_objfile): Likewise. (objfile_relocate): Likewise. (update_section_map): Likewise. * osabi.c (generic_elf_osabi_sniff_abi_tag_sections): Likewise. * p-exp.y (exp): Likewise. (yylex): Likewise. * p-valprint.c (pascal_object_print_value): Likewise. * parse.c (initialize_expout): Likewise. (mark_completion_tag): Likewise. (copy_name): Likewise. (parse_float): Likewise. (type_stack_reserve): Likewise. * ppc-linux-tdep.c (ppc_stap_parse_special_token): Likewise. (ppu2spu_prev_register): Likewise. * ppc-ravenscar-thread.c (supply_register_at_address): Likewise. * printcmd.c (printf_wide_c_string): Likewise. (printf_pointer): Likewise. * probe.c (parse_probes): Likewise. * python/py-cmd.c (gdbpy_parse_command_name): Likewise. (cmdpy_init): Likewise. * python/py-gdb-readline.c (gdbpy_readline_wrapper): Likewise. * python/py-symtab.c (set_sal): Likewise. * python/py-unwind.c (pyuw_sniffer): Likewise. * python/python.c (python_interactive_command): Likewise. (compute_python_string): Likewise. * ravenscar-thread.c (get_running_thread_id): Likewise. * record-full.c (record_full_exec_insn): Likewise. (record_full_core_open_1): Likewise. * regcache.c (regcache_raw_read_signed): Likewise. (regcache_raw_read_unsigned): Likewise. (regcache_cooked_read_signed): Likewise. (regcache_cooked_read_unsigned): Likewise. * remote-fileio.c (remote_fileio_func_open): Likewise. (remote_fileio_func_rename): Likewise. (remote_fileio_func_unlink): Likewise. (remote_fileio_func_stat): Likewise. (remote_fileio_func_system): Likewise. * remote-mips.c (mips_xfer_memory): Likewise. (mips_load_srec): Likewise. (pmon_end_download): Likewise. * remote.c (new_remote_state): Likewise. (map_regcache_remote_table): Likewise. (remote_register_number_and_offset): Likewise. (init_remote_state): Likewise. (get_memory_packet_size): Likewise. (remote_pass_signals): Likewise. (remote_program_signals): Likewise. (remote_start_remote): Likewise. (remote_check_symbols): Likewise. (remote_query_supported): Likewise. (extended_remote_attach): Likewise. (process_g_packet): Likewise. (store_registers_using_G): Likewise. (putpkt_binary): Likewise. (read_frame): Likewise. (compare_sections_command): Likewise. (remote_hostio_pread): Likewise. (remote_hostio_readlink): Likewise. (remote_file_put): Likewise. (remote_file_get): Likewise. (remote_pid_to_exec_file): Likewise. (_initialize_remote): Likewise. * rs6000-aix-tdep.c (rs6000_aix_ld_info_to_xml): Likewise. (rs6000_aix_core_xfer_shared_libraries_aix): Likewise. * rs6000-tdep.c (ppc_displaced_step_copy_insn): Likewise. (bfd_uses_spe_extensions): Likewise. * s390-linux-tdep.c (s390_displaced_step_copy_insn): Likewise. * score-tdep.c (score7_malloc_and_get_memblock): Likewise. * solib-dsbt.c (decode_loadmap): Likewise. (fetch_loadmap): Likewise. (scan_dyntag): Likewise. (enable_break): Likewise. (dsbt_relocate_main_executable): Likewise. * solib-frv.c (fetch_loadmap): Likewise. (enable_break2): Likewise. (frv_relocate_main_executable): Likewise. * solib-spu.c (spu_relocate_main_executable): Likewise. (spu_bfd_open): Likewise. * solib-svr4.c (lm_info_read): Likewise. (read_program_header): Likewise. (find_program_interpreter): Likewise. (scan_dyntag): Likewise. (elf_locate_base): Likewise. (open_symbol_file_object): Likewise. (read_program_headers_from_bfd): Likewise. (svr4_relocate_main_executable): Likewise. * solib-target.c (solib_target_relocate_section_addresses): Likewise. * solib.c (solib_find_1): Likewise. (exec_file_find): Likewise. (solib_find): Likewise. * source.c (openp): Likewise. (print_source_lines_base): Likewise. (forward_search_command): Likewise. * sparc-ravenscar-thread.c (supply_register_at_address): Likewise. * spu-tdep.c (spu2ppu_prev_register): Likewise. (spu_get_overlay_table): Likewise. * stabsread.c (patch_block_stabs): Likewise. (define_symbol): Likewise. (again:): Likewise. (read_member_functions): Likewise. (read_one_struct_field): Likewise. (read_enum_type): Likewise. (common_block_start): Likewise. * stack.c (read_frame_arg): Likewise. (backtrace_command): Likewise. * stap-probe.c (stap_parse_register_operand): Likewise. * symfile.c (syms_from_objfile_1): Likewise. (find_separate_debug_file): Likewise. (load_command): Likewise. (load_progress): Likewise. (load_section_callback): Likewise. (reread_symbols): Likewise. (add_filename_language): Likewise. (allocate_compunit_symtab): Likewise. (read_target_long_array): Likewise. (simple_read_overlay_table): Likewise. * symtab.c (symbol_set_names): Likewise. (resize_symbol_cache): Likewise. (rbreak_command): Likewise. (completion_list_add_name): Likewise. (completion_list_objc_symbol): Likewise. (add_filename_to_list): Likewise. * target-descriptions.c (maint_print_c_tdesc_cmd): Likewise. * target-memory.c (target_write_memory_blocks): Likewise. * target.c (target_read_string): Likewise. (read_whatever_is_readable): Likewise. (target_read_alloc_1): Likewise. (simple_search_memory): Likewise. (target_fileio_read_alloc_1): Likewise. * tilegx-tdep.c (tilegx_push_dummy_call): Likewise. * top.c (command_line_input): Likewise. * tracefile-tfile.c (tfile_fetch_registers): Likewise. * tracefile.c (tracefile_fetch_registers): Likewise. * tracepoint.c (add_memrange): Likewise. (init_collection_list): Likewise. (add_aexpr): Likewise. (trace_dump_actions): Likewise. (parse_trace_status): Likewise. (parse_tracepoint_definition): Likewise. (parse_tsv_definition): Likewise. (parse_static_tracepoint_marker_definition): Likewise. * tui/tui-file.c (tui_sfileopen): Likewise. (tui_file_adjust_strbuf): Likewise. * tui/tui-io.c (tui_expand_tabs): Likewise. * tui/tui-source.c (tui_set_source_content): Likewise. * typeprint.c (find_global_typedef): Likewise. * ui-file.c (do_ui_file_xstrdup): Likewise. (ui_file_obsavestring): Likewise. (mem_file_write): Likewise. * utils.c (make_hex_string): Likewise. (get_regcomp_error): Likewise. (puts_filtered_tabular): Likewise. (gdb_realpath_keepfile): Likewise. (ldirname): Likewise. (gdb_bfd_errmsg): Likewise. (substitute_path_component): Likewise. * valops.c (search_struct_method): Likewise. (find_oload_champ_namespace_loop): Likewise. * valprint.c (print_decimal_chars): Likewise. (read_string): Likewise. (generic_emit_char): Likewise. * varobj.c (varobj_delete): Likewise. (varobj_value_get_print_value): Likewise. * vaxobsd-tdep.c (vaxobsd_sigtramp_sniffer): Likewise. * windows-tdep.c (display_one_tib): Likewise. * xcoffread.c (read_xcoff_symtab): Likewise. (process_xcoff_symbol): Likewise. (swap_sym): Likewise. (scan_xcoff_symtab): Likewise. (xcoff_initial_scan): Likewise. * xml-support.c (gdb_xml_end_element): Likewise. (xml_process_xincludes): Likewise. (xml_fetch_content_from_file): Likewise. * xml-syscall.c (xml_list_of_syscalls): Likewise. * xstormy16-tdep.c (xstormy16_push_dummy_call): Likewise. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * ax.c (gdb_parse_agent_expr): Add cast to allocation result assignment. (gdb_unparse_agent_expr): Likewise. * hostio.c (require_data): Likewise. (handle_pread): Likewise. * linux-low.c (disable_regset): Likewise. (fetch_register): Likewise. (store_register): Likewise. (get_dynamic): Likewise. (linux_qxfer_libraries_svr4): Likewise. * mem-break.c (delete_fast_tracepoint_jump): Likewise. (set_fast_tracepoint_jump): Likewise. (uninsert_fast_tracepoint_jumps_at): Likewise. (reinsert_fast_tracepoint_jumps_at): Likewise. (validate_inserted_breakpoint): Likewise. (clone_agent_expr): Likewise. * regcache.c (init_register_cache): Likewise. * remote-utils.c (putpkt_binary_1): Likewise. (decode_M_packet): Likewise. (decode_X_packet): Likewise. (look_up_one_symbol): Likewise. (relocate_instruction): Likewise. (monitor_output): Likewise. * server.c (handle_search_memory): Likewise. (handle_qxfer_exec_file): Likewise. (handle_qxfer_libraries): Likewise. (handle_qxfer): Likewise. (handle_query): Likewise. (handle_v_cont): Likewise. (handle_v_run): Likewise. (captured_main): Likewise. * target.c (write_inferior_memory): Likewise. * thread-db.c (try_thread_db_load_from_dir): Likewise. * tracepoint.c (init_trace_buffer): Likewise. (add_tracepoint_action): Likewise. (add_traceframe): Likewise. (add_traceframe_block): Likewise. (cmd_qtdpsrc): Likewise. (cmd_qtdv): Likewise. (cmd_qtstatus): Likewise. (response_source): Likewise. (response_tsv): Likewise. (cmd_qtnotes): Likewise. (gdb_collect): Likewise. (initialize_tracepoint): Likewise.
2015-09-26 02:08:06 +08:00
spacebuf = (char *) alloca (spaces + 1);
spacebuf[spaces] = '\0';
while (spaces--)
spacebuf[spaces] = ' ';
gdb_puts (spacebuf);
gdb_puts (string);
}
/* Ensure that whatever gets printed next, using the filtered output
commands, starts at the beginning of the line. I.e. if there is
any pending output for the current line, flush it and start a new
line. Otherwise do nothing. */
void
2000-07-30 09:48:28 +08:00
begin_line (void)
{
if (chars_printed > 0)
{
gdb_puts ("\n");
}
}
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
void
pager_file::puts (const char *linebuffer)
{
const char *lineptr;
if (linebuffer == 0)
return;
/* Don't do any filtering or wrapping if both are disabled. */
if (batch_flag
|| (lines_per_page == UINT_MAX && chars_per_line == UINT_MAX)
|| top_level_interpreter () == NULL
|| top_level_interpreter ()->interp_ui_out ()->is_mi_like_p ())
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
flush_wrap_buffer ();
m_stream->puts (linebuffer);
return;
}
Fix pager bugs with style output I believe this fixes all the pager output problems with styling that Philippe pointed out, plus at least one more. The patch is somewhat hard to reason about, so you may wish to give it a try. Even writing the tests was hard. This removes the style caching, because it was difficult to keep the style cache correct in all cases. Since this would cause more style escapes to be emitted, instead it changes fputs_styled to try to avoid unnecessary changes. Another bug was that the wrap buffer was not flushed in the case where wrap_column==0. In the old (pre-patch series) code, characters were directly emitted in this case; so flushing the wrap buffer here restores this behavior. On error the wrap buffer must be emptied. Otherwise, interrupting output can leave characters in the buffer that will be emitted later. As discussed on gdb-patches, this fixes the ada-lang.c problem where filtered and unfiltered printing were mixed. Now user_select_syms uses filtered printing, which is what its callees were already doing. Finally, it was possible for source line highlighting to be garbled (and invalid escape sequences emitted) if the pager was invoked at the wrong spot. To fix this, the patch arranges for source line escapes to always be emitted as a unit. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * ada-lang.c (user_select_syms): Use filtered printing. * utils.c (wrap_style): New global. (desired_style): Remove. (emit_style_escape): Add stream parameter. (set_output_style, reset_terminal_style, prompt_for_continue): Update. (flush_wrap_buffer): Only flush gdb_stdout. (wrap_here): Set wrap_style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Clear the wrap buffer on exception. Don't treat escape sequences as a character. Change when wrap buffer is flushed. (fputs_styled): Do not set the output style when the default is requested. * ui-style.h (struct ui_file_style) <is_default>: New method. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Emit escape sequences in one piece. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: Add line-wrapping tests. * gdb.base/page.exp: Add test for quitting during pagination.
2019-02-07 21:23:40 +08:00
auto buffer_clearer
= make_scope_exit ([&] ()
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_wrap_buffer.clear ();
m_wrap_column = 0;
m_wrap_indent = 0;
Fix pager bugs with style output I believe this fixes all the pager output problems with styling that Philippe pointed out, plus at least one more. The patch is somewhat hard to reason about, so you may wish to give it a try. Even writing the tests was hard. This removes the style caching, because it was difficult to keep the style cache correct in all cases. Since this would cause more style escapes to be emitted, instead it changes fputs_styled to try to avoid unnecessary changes. Another bug was that the wrap buffer was not flushed in the case where wrap_column==0. In the old (pre-patch series) code, characters were directly emitted in this case; so flushing the wrap buffer here restores this behavior. On error the wrap buffer must be emptied. Otherwise, interrupting output can leave characters in the buffer that will be emitted later. As discussed on gdb-patches, this fixes the ada-lang.c problem where filtered and unfiltered printing were mixed. Now user_select_syms uses filtered printing, which is what its callees were already doing. Finally, it was possible for source line highlighting to be garbled (and invalid escape sequences emitted) if the pager was invoked at the wrong spot. To fix this, the patch arranges for source line escapes to always be emitted as a unit. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * ada-lang.c (user_select_syms): Use filtered printing. * utils.c (wrap_style): New global. (desired_style): Remove. (emit_style_escape): Add stream parameter. (set_output_style, reset_terminal_style, prompt_for_continue): Update. (flush_wrap_buffer): Only flush gdb_stdout. (wrap_here): Set wrap_style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Clear the wrap buffer on exception. Don't treat escape sequences as a character. Change when wrap buffer is flushed. (fputs_styled): Do not set the output style when the default is requested. * ui-style.h (struct ui_file_style) <is_default>: New method. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Emit escape sequences in one piece. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: Add line-wrapping tests. * gdb.base/page.exp: Add test for quitting during pagination.
2019-02-07 21:23:40 +08:00
});
/* If the user does "set height 1" then the pager will exhibit weird
behavior. This is pathological, though, so don't allow it. */
const unsigned int lines_allowed = (lines_per_page > 1
? lines_per_page - 1
: 1);
/* Go through and output each character. Show line extension
when this is necessary; prompt user for new page when this is
necessary. */
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
lineptr = linebuffer;
while (*lineptr)
{
/* Possible new page. Note that PAGINATION_DISABLED_FOR_COMMAND
might be set during this loop, so we must continue to check
it here. */
if (pagination_enabled
&& !pagination_disabled_for_command
&& lines_printed >= lines_allowed)
prompt_for_continue ();
while (*lineptr && *lineptr != '\n')
{
Fix pager bugs with style output I believe this fixes all the pager output problems with styling that Philippe pointed out, plus at least one more. The patch is somewhat hard to reason about, so you may wish to give it a try. Even writing the tests was hard. This removes the style caching, because it was difficult to keep the style cache correct in all cases. Since this would cause more style escapes to be emitted, instead it changes fputs_styled to try to avoid unnecessary changes. Another bug was that the wrap buffer was not flushed in the case where wrap_column==0. In the old (pre-patch series) code, characters were directly emitted in this case; so flushing the wrap buffer here restores this behavior. On error the wrap buffer must be emptied. Otherwise, interrupting output can leave characters in the buffer that will be emitted later. As discussed on gdb-patches, this fixes the ada-lang.c problem where filtered and unfiltered printing were mixed. Now user_select_syms uses filtered printing, which is what its callees were already doing. Finally, it was possible for source line highlighting to be garbled (and invalid escape sequences emitted) if the pager was invoked at the wrong spot. To fix this, the patch arranges for source line escapes to always be emitted as a unit. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * ada-lang.c (user_select_syms): Use filtered printing. * utils.c (wrap_style): New global. (desired_style): Remove. (emit_style_escape): Add stream parameter. (set_output_style, reset_terminal_style, prompt_for_continue): Update. (flush_wrap_buffer): Only flush gdb_stdout. (wrap_here): Set wrap_style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Clear the wrap buffer on exception. Don't treat escape sequences as a character. Change when wrap buffer is flushed. (fputs_styled): Do not set the output style when the default is requested. * ui-style.h (struct ui_file_style) <is_default>: New method. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Emit escape sequences in one piece. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: Add line-wrapping tests. * gdb.base/page.exp: Add test for quitting during pagination.
2019-02-07 21:23:40 +08:00
int skip_bytes;
/* Print a single line. */
if (*lineptr == '\t')
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_wrap_buffer.push_back ('\t');
/* Shifting right by 3 produces the number of tab stops
gdb, gdbserver, gdbsupport: fix leading space vs tabs issues Many spots incorrectly use only spaces for indentation (for example, there are a lot of spots in ada-lang.c). I've always found it awkward when I needed to edit one of these spots: do I keep the original wrong indentation, or do I fix it? What if the lines around it are also wrong, do I fix them too? I probably don't want to fix them in the same patch, to avoid adding noise to my patch. So I propose to fix as much as possible once and for all (hopefully). One typical counter argument for this is that it makes code archeology more difficult, because git-blame will show this commit as the last change for these lines. My counter counter argument is: when git-blaming, you often need to do "blame the file at the parent commit" anyway, to go past some other refactor that touched the line you are interested in, but is not the change you are looking for. So you already need a somewhat efficient way to do this. Using some interactive tool, rather than plain git-blame, makes this trivial. For example, I use "tig blame <file>", where going back past the commit that changed the currently selected line is one keystroke. It looks like Magit in Emacs does it too (though I've never used it). Web viewers of Github and Gitlab do it too. My point is that it won't really make archeology more difficult. The other typical counter argument is that it will cause conflicts with existing patches. That's true... but it's a one time cost, and those are not conflicts that are difficult to resolve. I have also tried "git rebase --ignore-whitespace", it seems to work well. Although that will re-introduce the faulty indentation, so one needs to take care of fixing the indentation in the patch after that (which is easy). gdb/ChangeLog: * aarch64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * aarch64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.c: Fix indentation. * ada-lang.h: Fix indentation. * ada-tasks.c: Fix indentation. * ada-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * ada-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.c: Fix indentation. * addrmap.h: Fix indentation. * agent.c: Fix indentation. * aix-thread.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-mdebug-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * alpha-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-nat.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * amd64-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * annotate.c: Fix indentation. * arc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arch-utils.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm-get-next-pcs.c: Fix indentation. * arch/arm.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * arm-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-pikeos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * arm-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * arm-wince-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * auto-load.c: Fix indentation. * auxv.c: Fix indentation. * avr-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ax-gdb.c: Fix indentation. * ax-general.c: Fix indentation. * bfin-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * block.c: Fix indentation. * block.h: Fix indentation. * blockframe.c: Fix indentation. * bpf-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-sig.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * break-catch-throw.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * breakpoint.h: Fix indentation. * bsd-uthread.c: Fix indentation. * btrace.c: Fix indentation. * build-id.c: Fix indentation. * buildsym-legacy.h: Fix indentation. * buildsym.c: Fix indentation. * c-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * c-varobj.c: Fix indentation. * charset.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-decode.h: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-script.c: Fix indentation. * cli/cli-setshow.c: Fix indentation. * coff-pe-read.c: Fix indentation. * coffread.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-cplus-types.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-load.c: Fix indentation. * compile/compile-object-run.c: Fix indentation. * completer.c: Fix indentation. * corefile.c: Fix indentation. * corelow.c: Fix indentation. * cp-abi.h: Fix indentation. * cp-namespace.c: Fix indentation. * cp-support.c: Fix indentation. * cp-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * cris-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * cris-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat-info.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * darwin-nat.h: Fix indentation. * dbxread.c: Fix indentation. * dcache.c: Fix indentation. * disasm.c: Fix indentation. * dtrace-probe.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/abbrev.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/attribute.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/expr.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/frame.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-cache.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/index-write.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/line-header.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/loc.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/macro.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.c: Fix indentation. * dwarf2/read.h: Fix indentation. * elfread.c: Fix indentation. * eval.c: Fix indentation. * event-top.c: Fix indentation. * exec.c: Fix indentation. * exec.h: Fix indentation. * expprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-lang.c: Fix indentation. * f-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * f-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * fbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * findvar.c: Fix indentation. * fork-child.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * frame-unwind.h: Fix indentation. * frame.c: Fix indentation. * frv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * frv-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ft32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gcore.c: Fix indentation. * gdb_bfd.c: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.sh: Fix indentation. * gdbarch.c: Re-generate * gdbarch.h: Re-generate. * gdbcore.h: Fix indentation. * gdbthread.h: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.c: Fix indentation. * gdbtypes.h: Fix indentation. * glibc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-nat.h: Fix indentation. * gnu-v2-abi.c: Fix indentation. * gnu-v3-abi.c: Fix indentation. * go32-nat.c: Fix indentation. * guile/guile-internal.h: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-cmd.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-frame.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-iterator.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-math.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-ports.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-pretty-print.c: Fix indentation. * guile/scm-value.c: Fix indentation. * h8300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * hppa-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-darwin-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-dicos-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-gnu-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-sol2-nat.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i386-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * i386-windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * i387-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ia64-tdep.h: Fix indentation. * ia64-vms-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * infcall.c: Fix indentation. * infcmd.c: Fix indentation. * inferior.c: Fix indentation. * infrun.c: Fix indentation. * iq2000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * language.c: Fix indentation. * linespec.c: Fix indentation. * linux-fork.c: Fix indentation. * linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * linux-thread-db.c: Fix indentation. * lm32-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m2-lang.c: Fix indentation. * m2-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * m2-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * m32c-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m32r-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68hc11-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-bsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * m68k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * machoread.c: Fix indentation. * macrocmd.c: Fix indentation. * macroexp.c: Fix indentation. * macroscope.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.c: Fix indentation. * macrotab.h: Fix indentation. * main.c: Fix indentation. * mdebugread.c: Fix indentation. * mep-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-catch.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-disas.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-env.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-stack.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmd-var.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-cmds.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-main.c: Fix indentation. * mi/mi-parse.c: Fix indentation. * microblaze-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * minidebug.c: Fix indentation. * minsyms.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * mips-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mips-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * mn10300-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * moxie-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * msp430-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * namespace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/fork-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * nat/gdb_ptrace.h: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-namespaces.c: Fix indentation. * nat/linux-osdata.c: Fix indentation. * nat/netbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nat/x86-dregs.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nios2-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * nto-procfs.c: Fix indentation. * nto-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.c: Fix indentation. * objfiles.h: Fix indentation. * opencl-lang.c: Fix indentation. * or1k-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.c: Fix indentation. * osabi.h: Fix indentation. * osdata.c: Fix indentation. * p-lang.c: Fix indentation. * p-typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * p-valprint.c: Fix indentation. * parse.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-obsd-nat.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * ppc-sysv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ppc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * printcmd.c: Fix indentation. * proc-api.c: Fix indentation. * producer.c: Fix indentation. * producer.h: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.c: Fix indentation. * prologue-value.h: Fix indentation. * psymtab.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-arch.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-bpevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-event.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-finishbreakpoint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-frame.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-framefilter.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-inferior.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-infthread.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-objfile.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-prettyprint.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-registers.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-signalevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-stopevent.h: Fix indentation. * python/py-threadevent.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-tui.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-unwind.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-value.c: Fix indentation. * python/py-xmethods.c: Fix indentation. * python/python-internal.h: Fix indentation. * python/python.c: Fix indentation. * ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * record-btrace.c: Fix indentation. * record-full.c: Fix indentation. * record.c: Fix indentation. * reggroups.c: Fix indentation. * regset.h: Fix indentation. * remote-fileio.c: Fix indentation. * remote.c: Fix indentation. * reverse.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * riscv-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rl78-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-aix-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-nat.c: Fix indentation. * rs6000-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * rust-lang.c: Fix indentation. * rx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s12z-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * s390-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * score-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * ser-base.c: Fix indentation. * ser-mingw.c: Fix indentation. * ser-uds.c: Fix indentation. * ser-unix.c: Fix indentation. * serial.c: Fix indentation. * sh-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sh-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * skip.c: Fix indentation. * sol-thread.c: Fix indentation. * solib-aix.c: Fix indentation. * solib-darwin.c: Fix indentation. * solib-frv.c: Fix indentation. * solib-svr4.c: Fix indentation. * solib.c: Fix indentation. * source.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-ravenscar-thread.c: Fix indentation. * sparc-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-nbsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-obsd-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * sparc64-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * stabsread.c: Fix indentation. * stack.c: Fix indentation. * stap-probe.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/ia64vms-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m32r-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/m68k-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sh-stub.c: Fix indentation. * stubs/sparc-stub.c: Fix indentation. * symfile-mem.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.c: Fix indentation. * symfile.h: Fix indentation. * symmisc.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.c: Fix indentation. * symtab.h: Fix indentation. * target-float.c: Fix indentation. * target.c: Fix indentation. * target.h: Fix indentation. * tic6x-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * tilegx-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * top.c: Fix indentation. * tracefile-tfile.c: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-disasm.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-io.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-regs.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-stack.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-win.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui-winsource.c: Fix indentation. * tui/tui.c: Fix indentation. * typeprint.c: Fix indentation. * ui-out.h: Fix indentation. * unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * unittests/memory-map-selftests.c: Fix indentation. * utils.c: Fix indentation. * v850-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * valarith.c: Fix indentation. * valops.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.c: Fix indentation. * valprint.h: Fix indentation. * value.c: Fix indentation. * value.h: Fix indentation. * varobj.c: Fix indentation. * vax-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * windows-nat.c: Fix indentation. * windows-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xcoffread.c: Fix indentation. * xml-syscall.c: Fix indentation. * xml-tdesc.c: Fix indentation. * xstormy16-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-config.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-nat.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-linux-tdep.c: Fix indentation. * xtensa-tdep.c: Fix indentation. gdbserver/ChangeLog: * ax.cc: Fix indentation. * dll.cc: Fix indentation. * inferiors.h: Fix indentation. * linux-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-nios2-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-ipa.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-ppc-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-x86-low.cc: Fix indentation. * linux-xtensa-low.cc: Fix indentation. * regcache.cc: Fix indentation. * server.cc: Fix indentation. * tracepoint.cc: Fix indentation. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: * common-exceptions.h: Fix indentation. * event-loop.cc: Fix indentation. * fileio.cc: Fix indentation. * filestuff.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb-dlfcn.cc: Fix indentation. * gdb_string_view.h: Fix indentation. * job-control.cc: Fix indentation. * signals.cc: Fix indentation. Change-Id: I4bad7ae6be0fbe14168b8ebafb98ffe14964a695
2020-11-02 23:26:14 +08:00
we have already passed, and then adding one and
shifting left 3 advances to the next tab stop. */
chars_printed = ((chars_printed >> 3) + 1) << 3;
lineptr++;
}
Fix pager bugs with style output I believe this fixes all the pager output problems with styling that Philippe pointed out, plus at least one more. The patch is somewhat hard to reason about, so you may wish to give it a try. Even writing the tests was hard. This removes the style caching, because it was difficult to keep the style cache correct in all cases. Since this would cause more style escapes to be emitted, instead it changes fputs_styled to try to avoid unnecessary changes. Another bug was that the wrap buffer was not flushed in the case where wrap_column==0. In the old (pre-patch series) code, characters were directly emitted in this case; so flushing the wrap buffer here restores this behavior. On error the wrap buffer must be emptied. Otherwise, interrupting output can leave characters in the buffer that will be emitted later. As discussed on gdb-patches, this fixes the ada-lang.c problem where filtered and unfiltered printing were mixed. Now user_select_syms uses filtered printing, which is what its callees were already doing. Finally, it was possible for source line highlighting to be garbled (and invalid escape sequences emitted) if the pager was invoked at the wrong spot. To fix this, the patch arranges for source line escapes to always be emitted as a unit. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * ada-lang.c (user_select_syms): Use filtered printing. * utils.c (wrap_style): New global. (desired_style): Remove. (emit_style_escape): Add stream parameter. (set_output_style, reset_terminal_style, prompt_for_continue): Update. (flush_wrap_buffer): Only flush gdb_stdout. (wrap_here): Set wrap_style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Clear the wrap buffer on exception. Don't treat escape sequences as a character. Change when wrap buffer is flushed. (fputs_styled): Do not set the output style when the default is requested. * ui-style.h (struct ui_file_style) <is_default>: New method. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Emit escape sequences in one piece. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: Add line-wrapping tests. * gdb.base/page.exp: Add test for quitting during pagination.
2019-02-07 21:23:40 +08:00
else if (*lineptr == '\033'
&& skip_ansi_escape (lineptr, &skip_bytes))
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_wrap_buffer.append (lineptr, skip_bytes);
Fix pager bugs with style output I believe this fixes all the pager output problems with styling that Philippe pointed out, plus at least one more. The patch is somewhat hard to reason about, so you may wish to give it a try. Even writing the tests was hard. This removes the style caching, because it was difficult to keep the style cache correct in all cases. Since this would cause more style escapes to be emitted, instead it changes fputs_styled to try to avoid unnecessary changes. Another bug was that the wrap buffer was not flushed in the case where wrap_column==0. In the old (pre-patch series) code, characters were directly emitted in this case; so flushing the wrap buffer here restores this behavior. On error the wrap buffer must be emptied. Otherwise, interrupting output can leave characters in the buffer that will be emitted later. As discussed on gdb-patches, this fixes the ada-lang.c problem where filtered and unfiltered printing were mixed. Now user_select_syms uses filtered printing, which is what its callees were already doing. Finally, it was possible for source line highlighting to be garbled (and invalid escape sequences emitted) if the pager was invoked at the wrong spot. To fix this, the patch arranges for source line escapes to always be emitted as a unit. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * ada-lang.c (user_select_syms): Use filtered printing. * utils.c (wrap_style): New global. (desired_style): Remove. (emit_style_escape): Add stream parameter. (set_output_style, reset_terminal_style, prompt_for_continue): Update. (flush_wrap_buffer): Only flush gdb_stdout. (wrap_here): Set wrap_style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Clear the wrap buffer on exception. Don't treat escape sequences as a character. Change when wrap buffer is flushed. (fputs_styled): Do not set the output style when the default is requested. * ui-style.h (struct ui_file_style) <is_default>: New method. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Emit escape sequences in one piece. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: Add line-wrapping tests. * gdb.base/page.exp: Add test for quitting during pagination.
2019-02-07 21:23:40 +08:00
/* Note that we don't consider this a character, so we
don't increment chars_printed here. */
lineptr += skip_bytes;
}
else if (*lineptr == '\r')
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_wrap_buffer.push_back (*lineptr);
chars_printed = 0;
lineptr++;
}
else
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_wrap_buffer.push_back (*lineptr);
chars_printed++;
lineptr++;
}
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
if (chars_printed >= chars_per_line)
{
unsigned int save_chars = chars_printed;
/* If we change the style, below, we'll want to reset it
before continuing to print. If there is no wrap
column, then we'll only reset the style if the pager
prompt is given; and to avoid emitting style
sequences in the middle of a run of text, we track
this as well. */
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
ui_file_style save_style = m_applied_style;
bool did_paginate = false;
chars_printed = 0;
lines_printed++;
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
if (m_wrap_column)
Add output styles to gdb This adds some output styling to the CLI. A style is currently a foreground color, a background color, and an intensity (dim or bold). (This list could be expanded depending on terminal capabilities.) A style can be applied while printing. For ui-out, this is done by passing the style constant as an argument. For low-level cases, fprintf_styled and fputs_styled are provided. Users can control the style via a number of new set/show commands. In the interest of not typing many nearly-identical documentation strings, I automated this. On the down side, this is not very i18n-friendly. I've chose some default colors to use. I think it would be good to enable this by default, so that when users start the new gdb, they will see the new feature. Stylizing is done if TERM is set and is not "dumb". This could be improved when the TUI is available by using the curses has_colors call. That is, the lowest layer could call this without committing to using curses everywhere; see my other patch for TUI colorizing. I considered adding a new "set_style" method to ui_file. However, because the implementation had to interact with the pager code, I didn't take this approach. But, one idea might be to put the isatty check there and then have it defer to the lower layers. gdb/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * utils.h (set_output_style, fprintf_styled) (fputs_styled): Declare. * utils.c (applied_style, desired_style): New globals. (emit_style_escape, set_output_style): New function. (prompt_for_continue): Emit style escapes. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Likewise. (fputs_styled, fprintf_styled): New functions. * ui-out.h (enum class ui_out_style_kind): New. (class ui_out) <field_string, field_stream, do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out::field_stream, ui_out::field_string): Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.h (class tui_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.c (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * tracepoint.c (print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Style output. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Style output. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Style output. * skip.c (info_skip_command): Style output. * record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history_src_line): Style output. (btrace_call_history): Likewise. * python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Style output. * mi/mi-out.h (class mi_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out::do_table_header) (mi_ui_out::do_field_int): Update. (mi_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Style output. * cli/cli-style.h: New file. * cli/cli-style.c: New file. * cli-out.h (class cli_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * cli-out.c (cli_ui_out::do_table_header) (cli_ui_out::do_field_int, cli_ui_out::do_field_skip): Update. (cli_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. Style the output. * breakpoint.c (print_breakpoint_location): Style output. (update_static_tracepoint): Likewise. * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_CLI_SRCS): Add cli-style.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add cli-style.h. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: New file. * gdb.base/style.c: New file.
2018-09-04 12:56:33 +08:00
{
gdb: don't print escape characters when a style is disabled While working on another patch I noticed that if I disable a single style with, for example: set style filename background none set style filename foreground none set style filename intensity normal Then in some places escape characters are still injected into the output stream. This is a bit of an edge case, and I can't think when this would actually cause problems, but it still felt like a bit of an annoyance. One place where this does impact is in testing, where it becomes harder to write tight test patterns if it is not obvious when GDB will decide to inject escape sequences. It's especially annoying because depending on how something is printed then GDB might, or might not, add escape characters. So this would not add escape characters if the filename style was disabled: fprintf_filtered (file, "%ps", styled_string (file_name_style.style (), "This is a test")); But this would add escape characters: fprintf_styled (file, file_name_style.style (), "%s", "This is a test"); I tracked this down to some calls to set_output_style in utils.c. Currently some calls to set_output_style (in utils.c) are guarded like this: if (!STYLE.is_default ()) set_output_style (stream, STYLE); But some calls are not. It is the calls that are NOT guarded that cause the extra escape sequences to be emitted. My initial proposal to resolve this issue was simply to ensure that all calls to set_output_style were guarded. The patch I posted for this can be found here: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-January/175096.html The feedback on this proposal was that it might be better to guard against the escape sequences being emitted at a later lever, right down at emit_style_escape. So this is what this version does. In emit_style_escape we already track the currently applied style, so if the style we are being asked to switch to is the same as the currently applied style then no escape sequence needs to be emitted. Making this change immediately exposed some issues in fputs_maybe_filtered related to line wrapping. The best place to start to understand what's going on with the styling and wrapping is look at the test: gdb.base/style.exp: all styles enabled: frame when width=20 If you run this test and then examine the output in an editor so the escape sequences can be seen you'll see the duplicate escape sequences that are emitted before this patch, the compare to after this patch you'll see the set of escape sequences should be the minimum required. In order to test these changes I have rewritten the gdb.base/style.exp test script. The core of the script is now run multiple times. The first time the test is run things are as they were before, all styles are on. After that the test is rerun multiple times. Each time through a single style is disabled using the 3 explicit set calls listed above. I then repeat all the tests, however, I arrange so that the patterns for the disabled style now require no escape sequences. gdb/ChangeLog: * utils.c (emit_style_escape): Only emit an escape sequence if the requested style is different than the current applied style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Adjust the juggling of the wrap_style, and current applied_style. (fputs_styled): Remove is_default check. (fputs_styled_unfiltered): Likewise. (vfprintf_styled_no_gdbfmt): Likewise. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.base/style.exp (limited_style): New proc. (clean_restart_and_disable): New proc. (run_style_tests): New proc. Most of the old tests from this file are now in this proc. (test_startup_version_string): New proc. Reamining test from the old file is in this proc.
2021-01-14 04:08:42 +08:00
/* We are about to insert a newline at an historic
location in the WRAP_BUFFER. Before we do we want to
restore the default style. To know if we actually
need to insert an escape sequence we must restore the
current applied style to how it was at the WRAP_COLUMN
location. */
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_applied_style = m_wrap_style;
m_stream->emit_style_escape (ui_file_style ());
Fix pager bugs with style output I believe this fixes all the pager output problems with styling that Philippe pointed out, plus at least one more. The patch is somewhat hard to reason about, so you may wish to give it a try. Even writing the tests was hard. This removes the style caching, because it was difficult to keep the style cache correct in all cases. Since this would cause more style escapes to be emitted, instead it changes fputs_styled to try to avoid unnecessary changes. Another bug was that the wrap buffer was not flushed in the case where wrap_column==0. In the old (pre-patch series) code, characters were directly emitted in this case; so flushing the wrap buffer here restores this behavior. On error the wrap buffer must be emptied. Otherwise, interrupting output can leave characters in the buffer that will be emitted later. As discussed on gdb-patches, this fixes the ada-lang.c problem where filtered and unfiltered printing were mixed. Now user_select_syms uses filtered printing, which is what its callees were already doing. Finally, it was possible for source line highlighting to be garbled (and invalid escape sequences emitted) if the pager was invoked at the wrong spot. To fix this, the patch arranges for source line escapes to always be emitted as a unit. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * ada-lang.c (user_select_syms): Use filtered printing. * utils.c (wrap_style): New global. (desired_style): Remove. (emit_style_escape): Add stream parameter. (set_output_style, reset_terminal_style, prompt_for_continue): Update. (flush_wrap_buffer): Only flush gdb_stdout. (wrap_here): Set wrap_style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Clear the wrap buffer on exception. Don't treat escape sequences as a character. Change when wrap buffer is flushed. (fputs_styled): Do not set the output style when the default is requested. * ui-style.h (struct ui_file_style) <is_default>: New method. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Emit escape sequences in one piece. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: Add line-wrapping tests. * gdb.base/page.exp: Add test for quitting during pagination.
2019-02-07 21:23:40 +08:00
/* If we aren't actually wrapping, don't output
newline -- if chars_per_line is right, we
probably just overflowed anyway; if it's wrong,
let us keep going. */
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_stream->puts ("\n");
Add output styles to gdb This adds some output styling to the CLI. A style is currently a foreground color, a background color, and an intensity (dim or bold). (This list could be expanded depending on terminal capabilities.) A style can be applied while printing. For ui-out, this is done by passing the style constant as an argument. For low-level cases, fprintf_styled and fputs_styled are provided. Users can control the style via a number of new set/show commands. In the interest of not typing many nearly-identical documentation strings, I automated this. On the down side, this is not very i18n-friendly. I've chose some default colors to use. I think it would be good to enable this by default, so that when users start the new gdb, they will see the new feature. Stylizing is done if TERM is set and is not "dumb". This could be improved when the TUI is available by using the curses has_colors call. That is, the lowest layer could call this without committing to using curses everywhere; see my other patch for TUI colorizing. I considered adding a new "set_style" method to ui_file. However, because the implementation had to interact with the pager code, I didn't take this approach. But, one idea might be to put the isatty check there and then have it defer to the lower layers. gdb/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * utils.h (set_output_style, fprintf_styled) (fputs_styled): Declare. * utils.c (applied_style, desired_style): New globals. (emit_style_escape, set_output_style): New function. (prompt_for_continue): Emit style escapes. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Likewise. (fputs_styled, fprintf_styled): New functions. * ui-out.h (enum class ui_out_style_kind): New. (class ui_out) <field_string, field_stream, do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out::field_stream, ui_out::field_string): Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.h (class tui_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.c (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * tracepoint.c (print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Style output. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Style output. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Style output. * skip.c (info_skip_command): Style output. * record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history_src_line): Style output. (btrace_call_history): Likewise. * python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Style output. * mi/mi-out.h (class mi_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out::do_table_header) (mi_ui_out::do_field_int): Update. (mi_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Style output. * cli/cli-style.h: New file. * cli/cli-style.c: New file. * cli-out.h (class cli_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * cli-out.c (cli_ui_out::do_table_header) (cli_ui_out::do_field_int, cli_ui_out::do_field_skip): Update. (cli_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. Style the output. * breakpoint.c (print_breakpoint_location): Style output. (update_static_tracepoint): Likewise. * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_CLI_SRCS): Add cli-style.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add cli-style.h. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: New file. * gdb.base/style.c: New file.
2018-09-04 12:56:33 +08:00
}
Fix pager bugs with style output I believe this fixes all the pager output problems with styling that Philippe pointed out, plus at least one more. The patch is somewhat hard to reason about, so you may wish to give it a try. Even writing the tests was hard. This removes the style caching, because it was difficult to keep the style cache correct in all cases. Since this would cause more style escapes to be emitted, instead it changes fputs_styled to try to avoid unnecessary changes. Another bug was that the wrap buffer was not flushed in the case where wrap_column==0. In the old (pre-patch series) code, characters were directly emitted in this case; so flushing the wrap buffer here restores this behavior. On error the wrap buffer must be emptied. Otherwise, interrupting output can leave characters in the buffer that will be emitted later. As discussed on gdb-patches, this fixes the ada-lang.c problem where filtered and unfiltered printing were mixed. Now user_select_syms uses filtered printing, which is what its callees were already doing. Finally, it was possible for source line highlighting to be garbled (and invalid escape sequences emitted) if the pager was invoked at the wrong spot. To fix this, the patch arranges for source line escapes to always be emitted as a unit. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * ada-lang.c (user_select_syms): Use filtered printing. * utils.c (wrap_style): New global. (desired_style): Remove. (emit_style_escape): Add stream parameter. (set_output_style, reset_terminal_style, prompt_for_continue): Update. (flush_wrap_buffer): Only flush gdb_stdout. (wrap_here): Set wrap_style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Clear the wrap buffer on exception. Don't treat escape sequences as a character. Change when wrap buffer is flushed. (fputs_styled): Do not set the output style when the default is requested. * ui-style.h (struct ui_file_style) <is_default>: New method. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Emit escape sequences in one piece. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: Add line-wrapping tests. * gdb.base/page.exp: Add test for quitting during pagination.
2019-02-07 21:23:40 +08:00
else
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
this->flush_wrap_buffer ();
/* Possible new page. Note that
PAGINATION_DISABLED_FOR_COMMAND might be set during
this loop, so we must continue to check it here. */
if (pagination_enabled
&& !pagination_disabled_for_command
&& lines_printed >= lines_allowed)
{
prompt_for_continue ();
did_paginate = true;
}
/* Now output indentation and wrapped string. */
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
if (m_wrap_column)
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_stream->puts (n_spaces (m_wrap_indent));
gdb: don't print escape characters when a style is disabled While working on another patch I noticed that if I disable a single style with, for example: set style filename background none set style filename foreground none set style filename intensity normal Then in some places escape characters are still injected into the output stream. This is a bit of an edge case, and I can't think when this would actually cause problems, but it still felt like a bit of an annoyance. One place where this does impact is in testing, where it becomes harder to write tight test patterns if it is not obvious when GDB will decide to inject escape sequences. It's especially annoying because depending on how something is printed then GDB might, or might not, add escape characters. So this would not add escape characters if the filename style was disabled: fprintf_filtered (file, "%ps", styled_string (file_name_style.style (), "This is a test")); But this would add escape characters: fprintf_styled (file, file_name_style.style (), "%s", "This is a test"); I tracked this down to some calls to set_output_style in utils.c. Currently some calls to set_output_style (in utils.c) are guarded like this: if (!STYLE.is_default ()) set_output_style (stream, STYLE); But some calls are not. It is the calls that are NOT guarded that cause the extra escape sequences to be emitted. My initial proposal to resolve this issue was simply to ensure that all calls to set_output_style were guarded. The patch I posted for this can be found here: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-January/175096.html The feedback on this proposal was that it might be better to guard against the escape sequences being emitted at a later lever, right down at emit_style_escape. So this is what this version does. In emit_style_escape we already track the currently applied style, so if the style we are being asked to switch to is the same as the currently applied style then no escape sequence needs to be emitted. Making this change immediately exposed some issues in fputs_maybe_filtered related to line wrapping. The best place to start to understand what's going on with the styling and wrapping is look at the test: gdb.base/style.exp: all styles enabled: frame when width=20 If you run this test and then examine the output in an editor so the escape sequences can be seen you'll see the duplicate escape sequences that are emitted before this patch, the compare to after this patch you'll see the set of escape sequences should be the minimum required. In order to test these changes I have rewritten the gdb.base/style.exp test script. The core of the script is now run multiple times. The first time the test is run things are as they were before, all styles are on. After that the test is rerun multiple times. Each time through a single style is disabled using the 3 explicit set calls listed above. I then repeat all the tests, however, I arrange so that the patterns for the disabled style now require no escape sequences. gdb/ChangeLog: * utils.c (emit_style_escape): Only emit an escape sequence if the requested style is different than the current applied style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Adjust the juggling of the wrap_style, and current applied_style. (fputs_styled): Remove is_default check. (fputs_styled_unfiltered): Likewise. (vfprintf_styled_no_gdbfmt): Likewise. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.base/style.exp (limited_style): New proc. (clean_restart_and_disable): New proc. (run_style_tests): New proc. Most of the old tests from this file are now in this proc. (test_startup_version_string): New proc. Reamining test from the old file is in this proc.
2021-01-14 04:08:42 +08:00
/* Having finished inserting the wrapping we should
restore the style as it was at the WRAP_COLUMN. */
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_stream->emit_style_escape (m_wrap_style);
gdb: don't print escape characters when a style is disabled While working on another patch I noticed that if I disable a single style with, for example: set style filename background none set style filename foreground none set style filename intensity normal Then in some places escape characters are still injected into the output stream. This is a bit of an edge case, and I can't think when this would actually cause problems, but it still felt like a bit of an annoyance. One place where this does impact is in testing, where it becomes harder to write tight test patterns if it is not obvious when GDB will decide to inject escape sequences. It's especially annoying because depending on how something is printed then GDB might, or might not, add escape characters. So this would not add escape characters if the filename style was disabled: fprintf_filtered (file, "%ps", styled_string (file_name_style.style (), "This is a test")); But this would add escape characters: fprintf_styled (file, file_name_style.style (), "%s", "This is a test"); I tracked this down to some calls to set_output_style in utils.c. Currently some calls to set_output_style (in utils.c) are guarded like this: if (!STYLE.is_default ()) set_output_style (stream, STYLE); But some calls are not. It is the calls that are NOT guarded that cause the extra escape sequences to be emitted. My initial proposal to resolve this issue was simply to ensure that all calls to set_output_style were guarded. The patch I posted for this can be found here: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-January/175096.html The feedback on this proposal was that it might be better to guard against the escape sequences being emitted at a later lever, right down at emit_style_escape. So this is what this version does. In emit_style_escape we already track the currently applied style, so if the style we are being asked to switch to is the same as the currently applied style then no escape sequence needs to be emitted. Making this change immediately exposed some issues in fputs_maybe_filtered related to line wrapping. The best place to start to understand what's going on with the styling and wrapping is look at the test: gdb.base/style.exp: all styles enabled: frame when width=20 If you run this test and then examine the output in an editor so the escape sequences can be seen you'll see the duplicate escape sequences that are emitted before this patch, the compare to after this patch you'll see the set of escape sequences should be the minimum required. In order to test these changes I have rewritten the gdb.base/style.exp test script. The core of the script is now run multiple times. The first time the test is run things are as they were before, all styles are on. After that the test is rerun multiple times. Each time through a single style is disabled using the 3 explicit set calls listed above. I then repeat all the tests, however, I arrange so that the patterns for the disabled style now require no escape sequences. gdb/ChangeLog: * utils.c (emit_style_escape): Only emit an escape sequence if the requested style is different than the current applied style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Adjust the juggling of the wrap_style, and current applied_style. (fputs_styled): Remove is_default check. (fputs_styled_unfiltered): Likewise. (vfprintf_styled_no_gdbfmt): Likewise. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.base/style.exp (limited_style): New proc. (clean_restart_and_disable): New proc. (run_style_tests): New proc. Most of the old tests from this file are now in this proc. (test_startup_version_string): New proc. Reamining test from the old file is in this proc.
2021-01-14 04:08:42 +08:00
/* The WRAP_BUFFER will still contain content, and that
content might set some alternative style. Restore
APPLIED_STYLE as it was before we started wrapping,
this reflects the current style for the last character
in WRAP_BUFFER. */
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_applied_style = save_style;
gdb: don't print escape characters when a style is disabled While working on another patch I noticed that if I disable a single style with, for example: set style filename background none set style filename foreground none set style filename intensity normal Then in some places escape characters are still injected into the output stream. This is a bit of an edge case, and I can't think when this would actually cause problems, but it still felt like a bit of an annoyance. One place where this does impact is in testing, where it becomes harder to write tight test patterns if it is not obvious when GDB will decide to inject escape sequences. It's especially annoying because depending on how something is printed then GDB might, or might not, add escape characters. So this would not add escape characters if the filename style was disabled: fprintf_filtered (file, "%ps", styled_string (file_name_style.style (), "This is a test")); But this would add escape characters: fprintf_styled (file, file_name_style.style (), "%s", "This is a test"); I tracked this down to some calls to set_output_style in utils.c. Currently some calls to set_output_style (in utils.c) are guarded like this: if (!STYLE.is_default ()) set_output_style (stream, STYLE); But some calls are not. It is the calls that are NOT guarded that cause the extra escape sequences to be emitted. My initial proposal to resolve this issue was simply to ensure that all calls to set_output_style were guarded. The patch I posted for this can be found here: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2021-January/175096.html The feedback on this proposal was that it might be better to guard against the escape sequences being emitted at a later lever, right down at emit_style_escape. So this is what this version does. In emit_style_escape we already track the currently applied style, so if the style we are being asked to switch to is the same as the currently applied style then no escape sequence needs to be emitted. Making this change immediately exposed some issues in fputs_maybe_filtered related to line wrapping. The best place to start to understand what's going on with the styling and wrapping is look at the test: gdb.base/style.exp: all styles enabled: frame when width=20 If you run this test and then examine the output in an editor so the escape sequences can be seen you'll see the duplicate escape sequences that are emitted before this patch, the compare to after this patch you'll see the set of escape sequences should be the minimum required. In order to test these changes I have rewritten the gdb.base/style.exp test script. The core of the script is now run multiple times. The first time the test is run things are as they were before, all styles are on. After that the test is rerun multiple times. Each time through a single style is disabled using the 3 explicit set calls listed above. I then repeat all the tests, however, I arrange so that the patterns for the disabled style now require no escape sequences. gdb/ChangeLog: * utils.c (emit_style_escape): Only emit an escape sequence if the requested style is different than the current applied style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Adjust the juggling of the wrap_style, and current applied_style. (fputs_styled): Remove is_default check. (fputs_styled_unfiltered): Likewise. (vfprintf_styled_no_gdbfmt): Likewise. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.base/style.exp (limited_style): New proc. (clean_restart_and_disable): New proc. (run_style_tests): New proc. Most of the old tests from this file are now in this proc. (test_startup_version_string): New proc. Reamining test from the old file is in this proc.
2021-01-14 04:08:42 +08:00
/* Note that this can set chars_printed > chars_per_line
if we are printing a long string. */
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
chars_printed = m_wrap_indent + (save_chars - m_wrap_column);
m_wrap_column = 0; /* And disable fancy wrap */
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
}
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
else if (did_paginate)
m_stream->emit_style_escape (save_style);
}
}
if (*lineptr == '\n')
{
chars_printed = 0;
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
wrap_here (0); /* Spit out chars, cancel further wraps. */
lines_printed++;
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
m_stream->puts ("\n");
lineptr++;
}
}
Fix pager bugs with style output I believe this fixes all the pager output problems with styling that Philippe pointed out, plus at least one more. The patch is somewhat hard to reason about, so you may wish to give it a try. Even writing the tests was hard. This removes the style caching, because it was difficult to keep the style cache correct in all cases. Since this would cause more style escapes to be emitted, instead it changes fputs_styled to try to avoid unnecessary changes. Another bug was that the wrap buffer was not flushed in the case where wrap_column==0. In the old (pre-patch series) code, characters were directly emitted in this case; so flushing the wrap buffer here restores this behavior. On error the wrap buffer must be emptied. Otherwise, interrupting output can leave characters in the buffer that will be emitted later. As discussed on gdb-patches, this fixes the ada-lang.c problem where filtered and unfiltered printing were mixed. Now user_select_syms uses filtered printing, which is what its callees were already doing. Finally, it was possible for source line highlighting to be garbled (and invalid escape sequences emitted) if the pager was invoked at the wrong spot. To fix this, the patch arranges for source line escapes to always be emitted as a unit. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * ada-lang.c (user_select_syms): Use filtered printing. * utils.c (wrap_style): New global. (desired_style): Remove. (emit_style_escape): Add stream parameter. (set_output_style, reset_terminal_style, prompt_for_continue): Update. (flush_wrap_buffer): Only flush gdb_stdout. (wrap_here): Set wrap_style. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Clear the wrap buffer on exception. Don't treat escape sequences as a character. Change when wrap buffer is flushed. (fputs_styled): Do not set the output style when the default is requested. * ui-style.h (struct ui_file_style) <is_default>: New method. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Emit escape sequences in one piece. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2019-02-17 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: Add line-wrapping tests. * gdb.base/page.exp: Add test for quitting during pagination.
2019-02-07 21:23:40 +08:00
buffer_clearer.release ();
}
void
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
pager_file::write (const char *buf, long length_buf)
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
/* We have to make a string here because the pager uses
skip_ansi_escape, which requires NUL-termination. */
std::string str (buf, length_buf);
this->puts (str.c_str ());
}
#if GDB_SELF_TEST
/* Test that disabling the pager does not also disable word
wrapping. */
static void
test_pager ()
{
string_file *strfile = new string_file ();
pager_file pager (strfile);
/* Make sure the pager is disabled. */
scoped_restore save_enabled
= make_scoped_restore (&pagination_enabled, false);
scoped_restore save_disabled
= make_scoped_restore (&pagination_disabled_for_command, false);
scoped_restore save_batch
= make_scoped_restore (&batch_flag, false);
scoped_restore save_lines
= make_scoped_restore (&lines_per_page, 50);
/* Make it easy to word wrap. */
scoped_restore save_chars
= make_scoped_restore (&chars_per_line, 15);
scoped_restore save_printed
= make_scoped_restore (&chars_printed, 0);
pager.puts ("aaaaaaaaaaaa");
pager.wrap_here (2);
pager.puts ("bbbbbbbbbbbb\n");
SELF_CHECK (strfile->string () == "aaaaaaaaaaaa\n bbbbbbbbbbbb\n");
}
#endif /* GDB_SELF_TEST */
void
gdb_puts (const char *linebuffer, struct ui_file *stream)
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
{
stream->puts (linebuffer);
}
Add output styles to gdb This adds some output styling to the CLI. A style is currently a foreground color, a background color, and an intensity (dim or bold). (This list could be expanded depending on terminal capabilities.) A style can be applied while printing. For ui-out, this is done by passing the style constant as an argument. For low-level cases, fprintf_styled and fputs_styled are provided. Users can control the style via a number of new set/show commands. In the interest of not typing many nearly-identical documentation strings, I automated this. On the down side, this is not very i18n-friendly. I've chose some default colors to use. I think it would be good to enable this by default, so that when users start the new gdb, they will see the new feature. Stylizing is done if TERM is set and is not "dumb". This could be improved when the TUI is available by using the curses has_colors call. That is, the lowest layer could call this without committing to using curses everywhere; see my other patch for TUI colorizing. I considered adding a new "set_style" method to ui_file. However, because the implementation had to interact with the pager code, I didn't take this approach. But, one idea might be to put the isatty check there and then have it defer to the lower layers. gdb/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * utils.h (set_output_style, fprintf_styled) (fputs_styled): Declare. * utils.c (applied_style, desired_style): New globals. (emit_style_escape, set_output_style): New function. (prompt_for_continue): Emit style escapes. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Likewise. (fputs_styled, fprintf_styled): New functions. * ui-out.h (enum class ui_out_style_kind): New. (class ui_out) <field_string, field_stream, do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out::field_stream, ui_out::field_string): Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.h (class tui_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.c (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * tracepoint.c (print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Style output. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Style output. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Style output. * skip.c (info_skip_command): Style output. * record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history_src_line): Style output. (btrace_call_history): Likewise. * python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Style output. * mi/mi-out.h (class mi_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out::do_table_header) (mi_ui_out::do_field_int): Update. (mi_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Style output. * cli/cli-style.h: New file. * cli/cli-style.c: New file. * cli-out.h (class cli_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * cli-out.c (cli_ui_out::do_table_header) (cli_ui_out::do_field_int, cli_ui_out::do_field_skip): Update. (cli_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. Style the output. * breakpoint.c (print_breakpoint_location): Style output. (update_static_tracepoint): Likewise. * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_CLI_SRCS): Add cli-style.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add cli-style.h. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: New file. * gdb.base/style.c: New file.
2018-09-04 12:56:33 +08:00
/* See utils.h. */
void
fputs_styled (const char *linebuffer, const ui_file_style &style,
struct ui_file *stream)
{
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
stream->emit_style_escape (style);
gdb_puts (linebuffer, stream);
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
stream->emit_style_escape (ui_file_style ());
Add output styles to gdb This adds some output styling to the CLI. A style is currently a foreground color, a background color, and an intensity (dim or bold). (This list could be expanded depending on terminal capabilities.) A style can be applied while printing. For ui-out, this is done by passing the style constant as an argument. For low-level cases, fprintf_styled and fputs_styled are provided. Users can control the style via a number of new set/show commands. In the interest of not typing many nearly-identical documentation strings, I automated this. On the down side, this is not very i18n-friendly. I've chose some default colors to use. I think it would be good to enable this by default, so that when users start the new gdb, they will see the new feature. Stylizing is done if TERM is set and is not "dumb". This could be improved when the TUI is available by using the curses has_colors call. That is, the lowest layer could call this without committing to using curses everywhere; see my other patch for TUI colorizing. I considered adding a new "set_style" method to ui_file. However, because the implementation had to interact with the pager code, I didn't take this approach. But, one idea might be to put the isatty check there and then have it defer to the lower layers. gdb/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * utils.h (set_output_style, fprintf_styled) (fputs_styled): Declare. * utils.c (applied_style, desired_style): New globals. (emit_style_escape, set_output_style): New function. (prompt_for_continue): Emit style escapes. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Likewise. (fputs_styled, fprintf_styled): New functions. * ui-out.h (enum class ui_out_style_kind): New. (class ui_out) <field_string, field_stream, do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out::field_stream, ui_out::field_string): Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.h (class tui_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.c (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * tracepoint.c (print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Style output. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Style output. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Style output. * skip.c (info_skip_command): Style output. * record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history_src_line): Style output. (btrace_call_history): Likewise. * python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Style output. * mi/mi-out.h (class mi_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out::do_table_header) (mi_ui_out::do_field_int): Update. (mi_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Style output. * cli/cli-style.h: New file. * cli/cli-style.c: New file. * cli-out.h (class cli_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * cli-out.c (cli_ui_out::do_table_header) (cli_ui_out::do_field_int, cli_ui_out::do_field_skip): Update. (cli_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. Style the output. * breakpoint.c (print_breakpoint_location): Style output. (update_static_tracepoint): Likewise. * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_CLI_SRCS): Add cli-style.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add cli-style.h. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: New file. * gdb.base/style.c: New file.
2018-09-04 12:56:33 +08:00
}
/* See utils.h. */
void
fputs_highlighted (const char *str, const compiled_regex &highlight,
struct ui_file *stream)
{
regmatch_t pmatch;
while (*str && highlight.exec (str, 1, &pmatch, 0) == 0)
{
size_t n_highlight = pmatch.rm_eo - pmatch.rm_so;
/* Output the part before pmatch with current style. */
while (pmatch.rm_so > 0)
{
gdb_putc (*str, stream);
pmatch.rm_so--;
str++;
}
/* Output pmatch with the highlight style. */
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
stream->emit_style_escape (highlight_style.style ());
while (n_highlight > 0)
{
gdb_putc (*str, stream);
n_highlight--;
str++;
}
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
stream->emit_style_escape (ui_file_style ());
}
/* Output the trailing part of STR not matching HIGHLIGHT. */
if (*str)
gdb_puts (str, stream);
}
void
gdb_putc (int c)
2001-01-31 11:46:23 +08:00
{
return gdb_stdout->putc (c);
2001-01-31 11:46:23 +08:00
}
void
gdb_putc (int c, struct ui_file *stream)
{
return stream->putc (c);
}
void
gdb_vprintf (struct ui_file *stream, const char *format, va_list args)
{
stream->vprintf (format, args);
}
void
gdb_vprintf (const char *format, va_list args)
{
gdb_stdout->vprintf (format, args);
}
void
gdb_printf (struct ui_file *stream, const char *format, ...)
{
va_list args;
va_start (args, format);
gdb_vprintf (stream, format, args);
va_end (args);
}
Add output styles to gdb This adds some output styling to the CLI. A style is currently a foreground color, a background color, and an intensity (dim or bold). (This list could be expanded depending on terminal capabilities.) A style can be applied while printing. For ui-out, this is done by passing the style constant as an argument. For low-level cases, fprintf_styled and fputs_styled are provided. Users can control the style via a number of new set/show commands. In the interest of not typing many nearly-identical documentation strings, I automated this. On the down side, this is not very i18n-friendly. I've chose some default colors to use. I think it would be good to enable this by default, so that when users start the new gdb, they will see the new feature. Stylizing is done if TERM is set and is not "dumb". This could be improved when the TUI is available by using the curses has_colors call. That is, the lowest layer could call this without committing to using curses everywhere; see my other patch for TUI colorizing. I considered adding a new "set_style" method to ui_file. However, because the implementation had to interact with the pager code, I didn't take this approach. But, one idea might be to put the isatty check there and then have it defer to the lower layers. gdb/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * utils.h (set_output_style, fprintf_styled) (fputs_styled): Declare. * utils.c (applied_style, desired_style): New globals. (emit_style_escape, set_output_style): New function. (prompt_for_continue): Emit style escapes. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Likewise. (fputs_styled, fprintf_styled): New functions. * ui-out.h (enum class ui_out_style_kind): New. (class ui_out) <field_string, field_stream, do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out::field_stream, ui_out::field_string): Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.h (class tui_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.c (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * tracepoint.c (print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Style output. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Style output. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Style output. * skip.c (info_skip_command): Style output. * record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history_src_line): Style output. (btrace_call_history): Likewise. * python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Style output. * mi/mi-out.h (class mi_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out::do_table_header) (mi_ui_out::do_field_int): Update. (mi_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Style output. * cli/cli-style.h: New file. * cli/cli-style.c: New file. * cli-out.h (class cli_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * cli-out.c (cli_ui_out::do_table_header) (cli_ui_out::do_field_int, cli_ui_out::do_field_skip): Update. (cli_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. Style the output. * breakpoint.c (print_breakpoint_location): Style output. (update_static_tracepoint): Likewise. * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_CLI_SRCS): Add cli-style.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add cli-style.h. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: New file. * gdb.base/style.c: New file.
2018-09-04 12:56:33 +08:00
/* See utils.h. */
void
fprintf_styled (struct ui_file *stream, const ui_file_style &style,
const char *format, ...)
{
va_list args;
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
stream->emit_style_escape (style);
Add output styles to gdb This adds some output styling to the CLI. A style is currently a foreground color, a background color, and an intensity (dim or bold). (This list could be expanded depending on terminal capabilities.) A style can be applied while printing. For ui-out, this is done by passing the style constant as an argument. For low-level cases, fprintf_styled and fputs_styled are provided. Users can control the style via a number of new set/show commands. In the interest of not typing many nearly-identical documentation strings, I automated this. On the down side, this is not very i18n-friendly. I've chose some default colors to use. I think it would be good to enable this by default, so that when users start the new gdb, they will see the new feature. Stylizing is done if TERM is set and is not "dumb". This could be improved when the TUI is available by using the curses has_colors call. That is, the lowest layer could call this without committing to using curses everywhere; see my other patch for TUI colorizing. I considered adding a new "set_style" method to ui_file. However, because the implementation had to interact with the pager code, I didn't take this approach. But, one idea might be to put the isatty check there and then have it defer to the lower layers. gdb/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * utils.h (set_output_style, fprintf_styled) (fputs_styled): Declare. * utils.c (applied_style, desired_style): New globals. (emit_style_escape, set_output_style): New function. (prompt_for_continue): Emit style escapes. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Likewise. (fputs_styled, fprintf_styled): New functions. * ui-out.h (enum class ui_out_style_kind): New. (class ui_out) <field_string, field_stream, do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out::field_stream, ui_out::field_string): Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.h (class tui_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.c (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * tracepoint.c (print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Style output. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Style output. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Style output. * skip.c (info_skip_command): Style output. * record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history_src_line): Style output. (btrace_call_history): Likewise. * python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Style output. * mi/mi-out.h (class mi_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out::do_table_header) (mi_ui_out::do_field_int): Update. (mi_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Style output. * cli/cli-style.h: New file. * cli/cli-style.c: New file. * cli-out.h (class cli_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * cli-out.c (cli_ui_out::do_table_header) (cli_ui_out::do_field_int, cli_ui_out::do_field_skip): Update. (cli_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. Style the output. * breakpoint.c (print_breakpoint_location): Style output. (update_static_tracepoint): Likewise. * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_CLI_SRCS): Add cli-style.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add cli-style.h. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: New file. * gdb.base/style.c: New file.
2018-09-04 12:56:33 +08:00
va_start (args, format);
gdb_vprintf (stream, format, args);
Add output styles to gdb This adds some output styling to the CLI. A style is currently a foreground color, a background color, and an intensity (dim or bold). (This list could be expanded depending on terminal capabilities.) A style can be applied while printing. For ui-out, this is done by passing the style constant as an argument. For low-level cases, fprintf_styled and fputs_styled are provided. Users can control the style via a number of new set/show commands. In the interest of not typing many nearly-identical documentation strings, I automated this. On the down side, this is not very i18n-friendly. I've chose some default colors to use. I think it would be good to enable this by default, so that when users start the new gdb, they will see the new feature. Stylizing is done if TERM is set and is not "dumb". This could be improved when the TUI is available by using the curses has_colors call. That is, the lowest layer could call this without committing to using curses everywhere; see my other patch for TUI colorizing. I considered adding a new "set_style" method to ui_file. However, because the implementation had to interact with the pager code, I didn't take this approach. But, one idea might be to put the isatty check there and then have it defer to the lower layers. gdb/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * utils.h (set_output_style, fprintf_styled) (fputs_styled): Declare. * utils.c (applied_style, desired_style): New globals. (emit_style_escape, set_output_style): New function. (prompt_for_continue): Emit style escapes. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Likewise. (fputs_styled, fprintf_styled): New functions. * ui-out.h (enum class ui_out_style_kind): New. (class ui_out) <field_string, field_stream, do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out::field_stream, ui_out::field_string): Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.h (class tui_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.c (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * tracepoint.c (print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Style output. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Style output. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Style output. * skip.c (info_skip_command): Style output. * record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history_src_line): Style output. (btrace_call_history): Likewise. * python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Style output. * mi/mi-out.h (class mi_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out::do_table_header) (mi_ui_out::do_field_int): Update. (mi_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Style output. * cli/cli-style.h: New file. * cli/cli-style.c: New file. * cli-out.h (class cli_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * cli-out.c (cli_ui_out::do_table_header) (cli_ui_out::do_field_int, cli_ui_out::do_field_skip): Update. (cli_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. Style the output. * breakpoint.c (print_breakpoint_location): Style output. (update_static_tracepoint): Likewise. * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_CLI_SRCS): Add cli-style.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add cli-style.h. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: New file. * gdb.base/style.c: New file.
2018-09-04 12:56:33 +08:00
va_end (args);
Change the pager to a ui_file This rewrites the output pager as a ui_file implementation. A new header is introduced to declare the pager class. The implementation remains in utils.c for the time being, because there are some static globals there that must be used by this code. (This could be cleaned up at some future date.) I went through all the text output in gdb to ensure that this change should be ok. There are a few cases: * Any existing call to printf_unfiltered is required to be avoid the pager. This is ensured directly in the implementation. * All remaining calls to the f*_unfiltered functions -- the ones that take an explicit ui_file -- either send to an unfiltered stream (e.g., gdb_stderr), which is obviously ok; or conditionally send to gdb_stdout I investigated all such calls by searching for: grep -e '\bf[a-z0-9_]*_unfiltered' *.[chyl] */*.[ch] | grep -v gdb_stdlog | grep -v gdb_stderr This yields a number of candidates to check. * The breakpoint _print_recreate family, and save_trace_state_variables. These are used for "save" commands and so are fine. * Things printing to a temporary stream. Obviously ok. * Disassembly selftests. * print_gdb_help - this is non-obvious, but ok because paging isn't yet enabled at this point during startup. * serial.c - doens't use gdb_stdout * The code in compile/. This is all printing to a file. * DWARF DIE dumping - doesn't reference gdb_stdout. * Calls to the _filtered form -- these are all clearly ok, because if they are using gdb_stdout, then filtering will still apply; and if not, then filtering never applied and still will not. Therefore, at this point, there is no longer any distinction between all the other _filtered and _unfiltered calls, and they can be unified. In this patch, take special note of the vfprintf_maybe_filtered and ui_file::vprintf change. This is one instance of the above idea, erasing the distinction between filtered and unfiltered -- in this part of the change, the "unfiltered_output" flag is never passe to cli_ui_out. Subsequent patches will go much further in this direction. Also note the can_emit_style_escape changes in ui-file.c. Checking against gdb_stdout or gdb_stderr was always a bit of a hack; and now it is no longer needed, because this is decision can be more fully delegated to the particular ui_file implementation. ui_file::can_page is removed, because this patch removed the only call to it. I think this is the main part of fixing PR cli/7234. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7234
2022-01-02 04:18:17 +08:00
stream->emit_style_escape (ui_file_style ());
Add output styles to gdb This adds some output styling to the CLI. A style is currently a foreground color, a background color, and an intensity (dim or bold). (This list could be expanded depending on terminal capabilities.) A style can be applied while printing. For ui-out, this is done by passing the style constant as an argument. For low-level cases, fprintf_styled and fputs_styled are provided. Users can control the style via a number of new set/show commands. In the interest of not typing many nearly-identical documentation strings, I automated this. On the down side, this is not very i18n-friendly. I've chose some default colors to use. I think it would be good to enable this by default, so that when users start the new gdb, they will see the new feature. Stylizing is done if TERM is set and is not "dumb". This could be improved when the TUI is available by using the curses has_colors call. That is, the lowest layer could call this without committing to using curses everywhere; see my other patch for TUI colorizing. I considered adding a new "set_style" method to ui_file. However, because the implementation had to interact with the pager code, I didn't take this approach. But, one idea might be to put the isatty check there and then have it defer to the lower layers. gdb/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * utils.h (set_output_style, fprintf_styled) (fputs_styled): Declare. * utils.c (applied_style, desired_style): New globals. (emit_style_escape, set_output_style): New function. (prompt_for_continue): Emit style escapes. (fputs_maybe_filtered): Likewise. (fputs_styled, fprintf_styled): New functions. * ui-out.h (enum class ui_out_style_kind): New. (class ui_out) <field_string, field_stream, do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out::field_stream, ui_out::field_string): Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.h (class tui_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * tui/tui-out.c (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. (tui_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * tracepoint.c (print_one_static_tracepoint_marker): Style output. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Style output. * source.c (print_source_lines_base): Style output. * skip.c (info_skip_command): Style output. * record-btrace.c (btrace_call_history_src_line): Style output. (btrace_call_history): Likewise. * python/py-framefilter.c (py_print_frame): Style output. * mi/mi-out.h (class mi_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * mi/mi-out.c (mi_ui_out::do_table_header) (mi_ui_out::do_field_int): Update. (mi_ui_out::do_field_string): Update. * disasm.c (gdb_pretty_print_disassembler::pretty_print_insn): Style output. * cli/cli-style.h: New file. * cli/cli-style.c: New file. * cli-out.h (class cli_ui_out) <do_field_string>: Add style parameter. * cli-out.c (cli_ui_out::do_table_header) (cli_ui_out::do_field_int, cli_ui_out::do_field_skip): Update. (cli_ui_out::do_field_string): Add style parameter. Style the output. * breakpoint.c (print_breakpoint_location): Style output. (update_static_tracepoint): Likewise. * Makefile.in (SUBDIR_CLI_SRCS): Add cli-style.c. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add cli-style.h. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog 2018-12-28 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * gdb.base/style.exp: New file. * gdb.base/style.c: New file.
2018-09-04 12:56:33 +08:00
}
void
gdb_printf (const char *format, ...)
{
va_list args;
va_start (args, format);
gdb_vprintf (gdb_stdout, format, args);
va_end (args);
}
void
2003-02-01 06:45:22 +08:00
printf_unfiltered (const char *format, ...)
{
va_list args;
va_start (args, format);
string_file file (gdb_stdout->can_emit_style_escape ());
file.vprintf (format, args);
gdb_stdout->puts_unfiltered (file.string ().c_str ());
va_end (args);
}
/* Easy -- but watch out!
This routine is *not* a replacement for puts()! puts() appends a newline.
This one doesn't, and had better not! */
void
gdb_puts (const char *string)
{
gdb_stdout->puts (string);
}
/* Return a pointer to N spaces and a null. The pointer is good
until the next call to here. */
const char *
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n_spaces (int n)
{
1999-05-26 02:09:09 +08:00
char *t;
static char *spaces = 0;
static int max_spaces = -1;
if (n > max_spaces)
{
xfree (spaces);
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
spaces = (char *) xmalloc (n + 1);
for (t = spaces + n; t != spaces;)
*--t = ' ';
spaces[n] = '\0';
max_spaces = n;
}
return spaces + max_spaces - n;
}
/* Print N spaces. */
void
print_spaces (int n, struct ui_file *stream)
{
gdb_puts (n_spaces (n), stream);
}
/* C++/ObjC demangler stuff. */
/* fprintf_symbol attempts to demangle NAME, a symbol in language
2002-09-19 11:58:41 +08:00
LANG, using demangling args ARG_MODE, and print it filtered to STREAM.
If the name is not mangled, or the language for the name is unknown, or
demangling is off, the name is printed in its "raw" form. */
void
fprintf_symbol (struct ui_file *stream, const char *name,
enum language lang, int arg_mode)
{
if (name != NULL)
{
/* If user wants to see raw output, no problem. */
if (!demangle)
{
gdb_puts (name, stream);
}
else
{
gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> demangled
= language_def (lang)->demangle_symbol (name, arg_mode);
gdb_puts (demangled ? demangled.get () : name, stream);
}
}
}
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
/* True if CH is a character that can be part of a symbol name. I.e.,
either a number, a letter, or a '_'. */
static bool
valid_identifier_name_char (int ch)
{
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
return (ISALNUM (ch) || ch == '_');
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
}
/* Skip to end of token, or to END, whatever comes first. Input is
assumed to be a C++ operator name. */
static const char *
cp_skip_operator_token (const char *token, const char *end)
{
const char *p = token;
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
while (p != end && !ISSPACE (*p) && *p != '(')
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
{
if (valid_identifier_name_char (*p))
{
while (p != end && valid_identifier_name_char (*p))
p++;
return p;
}
else
{
/* Note, ordered such that among ops that share a prefix,
longer comes first. This is so that the loop below can
bail on first match. */
static const char *ops[] =
{
"[",
"]",
"~",
",",
"-=", "--", "->", "-",
"+=", "++", "+",
"*=", "*",
"/=", "/",
"%=", "%",
"|=", "||", "|",
"&=", "&&", "&",
"^=", "^",
"!=", "!",
"<<=", "<=", "<<", "<",
">>=", ">=", ">>", ">",
"==", "=",
};
for (const char *op : ops)
{
size_t oplen = strlen (op);
size_t lencmp = std::min<size_t> (oplen, end - p);
if (strncmp (p, op, lencmp) == 0)
return p + lencmp;
}
/* Some unidentified character. Return it. */
return p + 1;
}
}
return p;
}
/* Advance STRING1/STRING2 past whitespace. */
static void
skip_ws (const char *&string1, const char *&string2, const char *end_str2)
{
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
while (ISSPACE (*string1))
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
string1++;
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
while (string2 < end_str2 && ISSPACE (*string2))
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
string2++;
}
/* True if STRING points at the start of a C++ operator name. START
is the start of the string that STRING points to, hence when
reading backwards, we must not read any character before START. */
static bool
cp_is_operator (const char *string, const char *start)
{
return ((string == start
|| !valid_identifier_name_char (string[-1]))
&& strncmp (string, CP_OPERATOR_STR, CP_OPERATOR_LEN) == 0
&& !valid_identifier_name_char (string[CP_OPERATOR_LEN]));
}
Breakpoints in symbols with ABI tags (PR c++/19436) Trying to set a breakpoint in a function with an ABI tag does not work currently. E.g., debugging gdb itself, we see this with the "string_printf" function: (top-gdb) b string_print [TAB] (top-gdb) b string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...) [RET] No source file named string_printf[abi. Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) Quoting doesn't help: (top-gdb) b 'string_printf[abi:cxx11]'(char const*, ...) malformed linespec error: unexpected string, "(char const*, ...)" (top-gdb) b 'string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...)' No source file named string_printf[abi. Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) n This patch fixes this, and takes it a bit further. The actual symbol name as demangled by libiberty's demangler is really string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...) however, this patch makes it possible to set the breakpoint with string_printf(char const*, ...) too. I.e., ignoring the ABI tag. And to match, it teaches the completer to complete the symbol name without the ABI tag, i.e., "string_pri<TAB>" -> "string_printf(char const*, ...)" If however, you really want to break on a symbol with the tag, then you simply start writing the tag, and GDB will preserve it, like: "string_printf[a<TAB>" -> "string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...)" Grows the gdb.linespec/ tests like this: -# of expected passes 8977 +# of expected passes 9176 gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * NEWS: Mention setting breakpoints on functions with C++ ABI tags. * completer.h (completion_match_for_lcd) <match, mark_ignored_range>: New methods. <finish>: Consider ignored ranges. <clear>: Clear ignored ranges. <m_ignored_ranges, m_finished_storage>: New fields. * cp-support.c (cp_search_name_hash): Ignore ABI tags. (cp_symbol_name_matches_1, cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Pass the completion_match_for_lcd pointer to strncmp_iw_with_mode. (test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): Add [abi:...] tags unit tests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass the completion_match_for_lcd pointer to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * linespec.c (linespec_lexer_lex_string): Don't tokenize ABI tags. * utils.c (skip_abi_tag): New function. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add completion_match_for_lcd parameter. Handle ABI tags. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add completion_match_for_lcd parameter. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * gdb.linespec/cpls-abi-tag.cc: New file. * gdb.linespec/cpls-abi-tag.exp: New file. gdb/doc/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * gdb.texinfo (Debugging C Plus Plus): Document setting breakpoints in functions with ABI tags.
2017-11-30 03:33:24 +08:00
/* If *NAME points at an ABI tag, skip it and return true. Otherwise
leave *NAME unmodified and return false. (see GCC's abi_tag
attribute), such names are demangled as e.g.,
"function[abi:cxx11]()". */
static bool
skip_abi_tag (const char **name)
{
const char *p = *name;
if (startswith (p, "[abi:"))
{
p += 5;
while (valid_identifier_name_char (*p))
p++;
if (*p == ']')
{
p++;
*name = p;
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
Support template lookups in strncmp_iw_with_mode This patch adds support for wild template parameter list matches, similar to how ABI tags or function overloads are now handled. With this patch, users will be able to "gloss over" the details of matching template parameter lists. This is accomplished by adding (yet more) logic to strncmp_iw_with_mode to skip parameter lists if none is explicitly given by the user. Here's a simple example using gdb.linespec/cpls-ops.exp: Before ------ (gdb) ptype test_op_call type = struct test_op_call { public: void operator()(void); void operator()(int); void operator()(long); void operator()<int>(int *); } (gdb) b test_op_call::operator() Breakpoint 1 at 0x400583: test_op_call::operator(). (3 locations) (gdb) i b Num Type Disp Enb Address What 1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE> 1.1 y 0x400583 in test_op_call::operator()(int) at cpls-ops.cc:43 1.2 y 0x40058e in test_op_call::operator()() at cpls-ops.cc:47 1.3 y 0x40059e in test_op_call::operator()(long) at cpls-ops.cc:51 The breakpoint at test_op_call::operator()<int> was never set. After ----- (gdb) b test_op_call::operator() Breakpoint 1 at 0x400583: test_op_call::operator(). (4 locations) (gdb) i b Num Type Disp Enb Address What 1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE> 1.1 y 0x400583 in test_op_call::operator()(int) at cpls-ops.cc:43 1.2 y 0x40058e in test_op_call::operator()() at cpls-ops.cc:47 1.3 y 0x40059e in test_op_call::operator()(long) at cpls-ops.cc:51 1.4 y 0x4008d0 in test_op_call::operator()<int>(int*) at cpls-ops.cc:57 Similar to how scope lookups work, passing "-qualified" to the break command will cause a literal lookup of the symbol. In the example immediately above, this will cause GDB to only find the three non-template functions.
2022-02-25 08:42:22 +08:00
/* If *NAME points at a template parameter list, skip it and return true.
Otherwise do nothing and return false. */
static bool
skip_template_parameter_list (const char **name)
{
const char *p = *name;
if (*p == '<')
{
const char *template_param_list_end = find_toplevel_char (p + 1, '>');
if (template_param_list_end == NULL)
return false;
p = template_param_list_end + 1;
/* Skip any whitespace that might occur after the closing of the
parameter list, but only if it is the end of parameter list. */
const char *q = p;
while (ISSPACE (*q))
++q;
if (*q == '>')
p = q;
*name = p;
return true;
}
return false;
}
Introduce lookup_name_info and generalize Ada's FULL/WILD name matching Summary: - This is preparation for supporting wild name matching on C++ too. - This is also preparation for TAB-completion fixes. - Makes symbol name matching (think strcmp_iw) be based on a per-language method. - Merges completion and non-completion name comparison (think language_ops::la_get_symbol_name_cmp generalized). - Avoid re-hashing lookup name multiple times - Centralizes preparing a name for lookup (Ada name encoding / C++ Demangling), both completion and non-completion. - Fixes Ada latent bug with verbatim name matches in expressions - Makes ada-lang.c use common|symtab.c completion code a bit more. Ada's wild matching basically means that "(gdb) break foo" will find all methods named "foo" in all packages. Translating to C++, it's roughly the same as saying that "break klass::method" sets breakpoints on all "klass::method" methods of all classes, no matter the namespace. A following patch will teach GDB about fullname vs wild matching for C++ too. This patch is preparatory work to get there. Another idea here is to do symbol name matching based on the symbol language's algorithm. I.e., avoid dependency on current language set. This allows for example doing (gdb) b foo::bar< int > (<tab> and having gdb name match the C++ symbols correctly even if the current language is C or Assembly (or Rust, or Ada, or ...), which can easily happen if you step into an Assembly/C runtime library frame. By encapsulating all the information related to a lookup name in a class, we can also cache hash computation for a given language in the lookup name object, to avoid recomputing it over and over. Similarly, because we don't really know upfront which languages the lookup name will be matched against, for each language we store the lookup name transformed into a search name. E.g., for C++, that means demangling the name. But for Ada, it means encoding the name. This actually forces us to centralize all the different lookup name encoding in a central place, resulting in clearer code, IMO. See e.g., the new ada_lookup_name_info class. The lookup name -> symbol search name computation is also done only once per language. The old language->la_get_symbol_name_cmp / symbol_name_cmp_ftype are generalized to work with both completion, and normal symbol look up. At some point early on, I had separate completion vs non-completion language vector entry points, but a single method ends up being better IMO for simplifying things -- the more we merge the completion / non-completion name lookup code paths, the less changes for bugs causing completion vs normal lookup finding different symbols. The ada-lex.l change is necessary because when doing (gdb) p <UpperCase> then the name that is passed to write_ write_var_or_type -> ada_lookup_symbol_list misses the "<>", i.e., it's just "UpperCase", and we end up doing a wild match against "UpperCase" lowercased by ada_lookup_name_info's constructor. I.e., "uppercase" wouldn't ever match "UpperCase", and the symbol lookup fails. This wouldn't cause any regression in the testsuite, but I added a new test that would pass before the patch and fail after, if it weren't for that fix. This is latent bug that happens to go unnoticed because that particular path was inconsistent with the rest of Ada symbol lookup by not lowercasing the lookup name. Ada's symbol_completion_add is deleted, replaced by using common code's completion_list_add_name. To make the latter work for Ada, we needed to add a new output parameter, because Ada wants to return back a custom completion candidates that are not the symbol name. With this patch, minimal symbol demangled name hashing is made consistent with regular symbol hashing. I.e., it now goes via the language vector's search_name_hash method too, as I had suggested in a previous patch. dw2_expand_symtabs_matching / .gdb_index symbol names were a challenge. The problem is that we have no way to telling what is the language of each symbol name found in the index, until we expand the corresponding full symbol, which is off course what we're trying to avoid. Language information is simply not considered in the index format... Since the symbol name hashing and comparison routines are per-language, we now have a problem. The patch sorts this out by matching each name against all languages. This is inneficient, and indeed slows down completion several times. E.g., with: $ cat script.cmd set pagination off set $count = 0 while $count < 400 complete b string_prin printf "count = %d\n", $count set $count = $count + 1 end $ time gdb --batch -q ./gdb-with-index -ex "source script-string_printf.cmd" I get, before patch (-O2, x86-64): real 0m1.773s user 0m1.737s sys 0m0.040s While after patch (-O2, x86-64): real 0m9.843s user 0m9.482s sys 0m0.034s However, the following patch will optimize this, and will actually make this use case faster compared to the "before patch" above: real 0m1.321s user 0m1.285s sys 0m0.039s gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * ada-lang.c (ada_encode): Rename to .. (ada_encode_1): ... this. Add throw_errors parameter and handle it. (ada_encode): Reimplement. (match_name): Delete, folded into full_name. (resolve_subexp): No longer pass the encoded name to ada_lookup_symbol_list. (should_use_wild_match): Delete. (name_match_type_from_name): New. (ada_lookup_simple_minsym): Use lookup_name_info and the language's symbol_name_matcher_ftype. (add_symbols_from_enclosing_procs, ada_add_local_symbols) (ada_add_block_renamings): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (ada_lookup_name): New. (add_nonlocal_symbols, ada_add_all_symbols) (ada_lookup_symbol_list_worker, ada_lookup_symbol_list) (ada_iterate_over_symbols): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (ada_name_for_lookup): Delete. (ada_lookup_encoded_symbol): Construct a verbatim name. (wild_match): Reverse sense of return type. Use bool. (full_match): Reverse sense of return type. Inline bits of old match_name here. (ada_add_block_symbols): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (symbol_completion_match): Delete, folded into... (ada_lookup_name_info::matches): ... .this new method. (symbol_completion_add): Delete. (ada_collect_symbol_completion_matches): Add name_match_type parameter. Adjust to use lookup_name_info and completion_list_add_name. (get_var_value, ada_add_global_exceptions): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (ada_get_symbol_name_cmp): Delete. (do_wild_match, do_full_match): New functions. (ada_lookup_name_info::ada_lookup_name_info): New method. (ada_symbol_name_matches, ada_get_symbol_name_matcher): New functions. (ada_language_defn): Install ada_get_symbol_name_matcher. * ada-lex.l (processId): If name starts with '<', copy it verbatim. * block.c (block_iter_match_step, block_iter_match_first) (block_iter_match_next, block_lookup_symbol) (block_lookup_symbol_primary, block_find_symbol): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. * block.h (block_iter_match_first, block_iter_match_next) (ALL_BLOCK_SYMBOLS_WITH_NAME): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. * c-lang.c (c_language_defn, cplus_language_defn) (asm_language_defn, minimal_language_defn): Adjust comments to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * completer.c (complete_files_symbols) (collect_explicit_location_matches, symbol_completer): Pass a symbol_name_match_type down. * completer.h (class completion_match, completion_match_result): New classes. (completion_tracker::reset_completion_match_result): New method. (completion_tracker::m_completion_match_result): New field. * cp-support.c (make_symbol_overload_list_block): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches, cp_get_symbol_name_matcher): New functions. * cp-support.h (cp_get_symbol_name_matcher): New declaration. * d-lang.c: Adjust comments to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * dictionary.c (dict_vector) <iter_match_first, iter_match_next>: Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (dict_iter_match_first, dict_iter_match_next) (iter_match_first_hashed, iter_match_next_hashed) (iter_match_first_linear, iter_match_next_linear): Adjust to work with a lookup_name_info. * dictionary.h (dict_iter_match_first, dict_iter_match_next): Likewise. * dwarf2read.c (dw2_lookup_symbol): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (dw2_map_matching_symbols): Adjust to use symbol_name_match_type. (gdb_index_symbol_name_matcher): New class. (dw2_expand_symtabs_matching) Adjust to use lookup_name_info and gdb_index_symbol_name_matcher. Accept a NULL symbol_matcher. * f-lang.c (f_collect_symbol_completion_matches): Adjust to work with a symbol_name_match_type. (f_language_defn): Adjust comments to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * go-lang.c (go_language_defn): Adjust comments to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher) (language_get_symbol_name_matcher): New functions. (unknown_language_defn, auto_language_defn): Adjust comments to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * language.h (symbol_name_cmp_ftype): Delete. (language_defn) <la_collect_symbol_completion_matches>: Add match type parameter. <la_get_symbol_name_cmp>: Delete field. <la_get_symbol_name_matcher>: New field. <la_iterate_over_symbols>: Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (default_symbol_name_matcher, language_get_symbol_name_matcher): Declare. * linespec.c (iterate_over_all_matching_symtabs) (iterate_over_file_blocks): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (find_methods): Add language parameter, and use lookup_name_info and the language's symbol_name_matcher_ftype. (linespec_complete_function): Adjust. (lookup_prefix_sym): Use lookup_name_info. (add_all_symbol_names_from_pspace): Adjust. (find_superclass_methods): Add language parameter and pass it down. (find_method): Pass symbol language down. (find_linespec_symbols): Don't demangle or Ada encode here. (search_minsyms_for_name): Add lookup_name_info parameter. (add_matching_symbols_to_info): Add name_match_type parameter. Use lookup_name_info. * m2-lang.c (m2_language_defn): Adjust comments to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * minsyms.c: Include <algorithm>. (add_minsym_to_demangled_hash_table): Remove table parameter and add objfile parameter. Use search_name_hash, and add language to demangled languages vector. (struct found_minimal_symbols): New struct. (lookup_minimal_symbol_mangled, lookup_minimal_symbol_demangled): New functions. (lookup_minimal_symbol): Adjust to use them. Don't canonicalize input names here. Use lookup_name_info instead. Lookup up demangled names once for each language in the demangled names vector. (iterate_over_minimal_symbols): Use lookup_name_info. Lookup up demangled names once for each language in the demangled names vector. (build_minimal_symbol_hash_tables): Adjust. * minsyms.h (iterate_over_minimal_symbols): Adjust to pass down a lookup_name_info. * objc-lang.c (objc_language_defn): Adjust comment to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * objfiles.h: Include <vector>. (objfile_per_bfd_storage) <demangled_hash_languages>: New field. * opencl-lang.c (opencl_language_defn): Adjust comment to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * p-lang.c (pascal_language_defn): Adjust comment to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * psymtab.c (psym_lookup_symbol): Use lookup_name_info. (match_partial_symbol): Use symbol_name_match_type, lookup_name_info and psymbol_name_matches. (lookup_partial_symbol): Use lookup_name_info. (map_block): Use symbol_name_match_type and lookup_name_info. (psym_map_matching_symbols): Use symbol_name_match_type. (psymbol_name_matches): New. (recursively_search_psymtabs): Use lookup_name_info and psymbol_name_matches. Rename 'kind' parameter to 'domain'. (psym_expand_symtabs_matching): Use lookup_name_info. Rename 'kind' parameter to 'domain'. * rust-lang.c (rust_language_defn): Adjust comment to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * symfile-debug.c (debug_qf_map_matching_symbols) (debug_qf_map_matching_symbols): Use symbol_name_match_type. (debug_qf_expand_symtabs_matching): Use lookup_name_info. * symfile.c (expand_symtabs_matching): Use lookup_name_info. * symfile.h (quick_symbol_functions) <map_matching_symbols>: Adjust to use symbol_name_match_type. <expand_symtabs_matching>: Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (expand_symtabs_matching): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. * symmisc.c (maintenance_expand_symtabs): Use lookup_name_info::match_any (). * symtab.c (symbol_matches_search_name): New. (eq_symbol_entry): Adjust to use lookup_name_info and the language's matcher. (demangle_for_lookup_info::demangle_for_lookup_info): New. (lookup_name_info::match_any): New. (iterate_over_symbols, search_symbols): Use lookup_name_info. (compare_symbol_name): Add language, lookup_name_info and completion_match_result parameters, and use them. (completion_list_add_name): Make extern. Add language and lookup_name_info parameters. Use them. (completion_list_add_symbol, completion_list_add_msymbol) (completion_list_objc_symbol): Add lookup_name_info parameters and adjust. Pass down language. (completion_list_add_fields): Add lookup_name_info parameters and adjust. Pass down language. (add_symtab_completions): Add lookup_name_info parameters and adjust. (default_collect_symbol_completion_matches_break_on): Add name_match_type parameter, and use it. Use lookup_name_info. (default_collect_symbol_completion_matches) (collect_symbol_completion_matches): Add name_match_type parameter, and pass it down. (collect_symbol_completion_matches_type): Adjust. (collect_file_symbol_completion_matches): Add name_match_type parameter, and use lookup_name_info. * symtab.h: Include <string> and "common/gdb_optional.h". (enum class symbol_name_match_type): New. (class ada_lookup_name_info): New. (struct demangle_for_lookup_info): New. (class lookup_name_info): New. (symbol_name_matcher_ftype): New. (SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME): Use symbol_matches_search_name. (symbol_matches_search_name): Declare. (MSYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME): Delete. (default_collect_symbol_completion_matches) (collect_symbol_completion_matches) (collect_file_symbol_completion_matches): Add name_match_type parameter. (iterate_over_symbols): Use lookup_name_info. (completion_list_add_name): Declare. * utils.c (enum class strncmp_iw_mode): Moved to utils.h. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Now extern. * utils.h (enum class strncmp_iw_mode): Moved from utils.c. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Declare. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2017-11-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb.ada/complete.exp (p <Exported_Capitalized>): New test. (p Exported_Capitalized): New test. (p exported_capitalized): New test.
2017-11-08 22:22:32 +08:00
/* See utils.h. */
Introduce lookup_name_info and generalize Ada's FULL/WILD name matching Summary: - This is preparation for supporting wild name matching on C++ too. - This is also preparation for TAB-completion fixes. - Makes symbol name matching (think strcmp_iw) be based on a per-language method. - Merges completion and non-completion name comparison (think language_ops::la_get_symbol_name_cmp generalized). - Avoid re-hashing lookup name multiple times - Centralizes preparing a name for lookup (Ada name encoding / C++ Demangling), both completion and non-completion. - Fixes Ada latent bug with verbatim name matches in expressions - Makes ada-lang.c use common|symtab.c completion code a bit more. Ada's wild matching basically means that "(gdb) break foo" will find all methods named "foo" in all packages. Translating to C++, it's roughly the same as saying that "break klass::method" sets breakpoints on all "klass::method" methods of all classes, no matter the namespace. A following patch will teach GDB about fullname vs wild matching for C++ too. This patch is preparatory work to get there. Another idea here is to do symbol name matching based on the symbol language's algorithm. I.e., avoid dependency on current language set. This allows for example doing (gdb) b foo::bar< int > (<tab> and having gdb name match the C++ symbols correctly even if the current language is C or Assembly (or Rust, or Ada, or ...), which can easily happen if you step into an Assembly/C runtime library frame. By encapsulating all the information related to a lookup name in a class, we can also cache hash computation for a given language in the lookup name object, to avoid recomputing it over and over. Similarly, because we don't really know upfront which languages the lookup name will be matched against, for each language we store the lookup name transformed into a search name. E.g., for C++, that means demangling the name. But for Ada, it means encoding the name. This actually forces us to centralize all the different lookup name encoding in a central place, resulting in clearer code, IMO. See e.g., the new ada_lookup_name_info class. The lookup name -> symbol search name computation is also done only once per language. The old language->la_get_symbol_name_cmp / symbol_name_cmp_ftype are generalized to work with both completion, and normal symbol look up. At some point early on, I had separate completion vs non-completion language vector entry points, but a single method ends up being better IMO for simplifying things -- the more we merge the completion / non-completion name lookup code paths, the less changes for bugs causing completion vs normal lookup finding different symbols. The ada-lex.l change is necessary because when doing (gdb) p <UpperCase> then the name that is passed to write_ write_var_or_type -> ada_lookup_symbol_list misses the "<>", i.e., it's just "UpperCase", and we end up doing a wild match against "UpperCase" lowercased by ada_lookup_name_info's constructor. I.e., "uppercase" wouldn't ever match "UpperCase", and the symbol lookup fails. This wouldn't cause any regression in the testsuite, but I added a new test that would pass before the patch and fail after, if it weren't for that fix. This is latent bug that happens to go unnoticed because that particular path was inconsistent with the rest of Ada symbol lookup by not lowercasing the lookup name. Ada's symbol_completion_add is deleted, replaced by using common code's completion_list_add_name. To make the latter work for Ada, we needed to add a new output parameter, because Ada wants to return back a custom completion candidates that are not the symbol name. With this patch, minimal symbol demangled name hashing is made consistent with regular symbol hashing. I.e., it now goes via the language vector's search_name_hash method too, as I had suggested in a previous patch. dw2_expand_symtabs_matching / .gdb_index symbol names were a challenge. The problem is that we have no way to telling what is the language of each symbol name found in the index, until we expand the corresponding full symbol, which is off course what we're trying to avoid. Language information is simply not considered in the index format... Since the symbol name hashing and comparison routines are per-language, we now have a problem. The patch sorts this out by matching each name against all languages. This is inneficient, and indeed slows down completion several times. E.g., with: $ cat script.cmd set pagination off set $count = 0 while $count < 400 complete b string_prin printf "count = %d\n", $count set $count = $count + 1 end $ time gdb --batch -q ./gdb-with-index -ex "source script-string_printf.cmd" I get, before patch (-O2, x86-64): real 0m1.773s user 0m1.737s sys 0m0.040s While after patch (-O2, x86-64): real 0m9.843s user 0m9.482s sys 0m0.034s However, the following patch will optimize this, and will actually make this use case faster compared to the "before patch" above: real 0m1.321s user 0m1.285s sys 0m0.039s gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * ada-lang.c (ada_encode): Rename to .. (ada_encode_1): ... this. Add throw_errors parameter and handle it. (ada_encode): Reimplement. (match_name): Delete, folded into full_name. (resolve_subexp): No longer pass the encoded name to ada_lookup_symbol_list. (should_use_wild_match): Delete. (name_match_type_from_name): New. (ada_lookup_simple_minsym): Use lookup_name_info and the language's symbol_name_matcher_ftype. (add_symbols_from_enclosing_procs, ada_add_local_symbols) (ada_add_block_renamings): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (ada_lookup_name): New. (add_nonlocal_symbols, ada_add_all_symbols) (ada_lookup_symbol_list_worker, ada_lookup_symbol_list) (ada_iterate_over_symbols): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (ada_name_for_lookup): Delete. (ada_lookup_encoded_symbol): Construct a verbatim name. (wild_match): Reverse sense of return type. Use bool. (full_match): Reverse sense of return type. Inline bits of old match_name here. (ada_add_block_symbols): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (symbol_completion_match): Delete, folded into... (ada_lookup_name_info::matches): ... .this new method. (symbol_completion_add): Delete. (ada_collect_symbol_completion_matches): Add name_match_type parameter. Adjust to use lookup_name_info and completion_list_add_name. (get_var_value, ada_add_global_exceptions): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (ada_get_symbol_name_cmp): Delete. (do_wild_match, do_full_match): New functions. (ada_lookup_name_info::ada_lookup_name_info): New method. (ada_symbol_name_matches, ada_get_symbol_name_matcher): New functions. (ada_language_defn): Install ada_get_symbol_name_matcher. * ada-lex.l (processId): If name starts with '<', copy it verbatim. * block.c (block_iter_match_step, block_iter_match_first) (block_iter_match_next, block_lookup_symbol) (block_lookup_symbol_primary, block_find_symbol): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. * block.h (block_iter_match_first, block_iter_match_next) (ALL_BLOCK_SYMBOLS_WITH_NAME): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. * c-lang.c (c_language_defn, cplus_language_defn) (asm_language_defn, minimal_language_defn): Adjust comments to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * completer.c (complete_files_symbols) (collect_explicit_location_matches, symbol_completer): Pass a symbol_name_match_type down. * completer.h (class completion_match, completion_match_result): New classes. (completion_tracker::reset_completion_match_result): New method. (completion_tracker::m_completion_match_result): New field. * cp-support.c (make_symbol_overload_list_block): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches, cp_get_symbol_name_matcher): New functions. * cp-support.h (cp_get_symbol_name_matcher): New declaration. * d-lang.c: Adjust comments to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * dictionary.c (dict_vector) <iter_match_first, iter_match_next>: Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (dict_iter_match_first, dict_iter_match_next) (iter_match_first_hashed, iter_match_next_hashed) (iter_match_first_linear, iter_match_next_linear): Adjust to work with a lookup_name_info. * dictionary.h (dict_iter_match_first, dict_iter_match_next): Likewise. * dwarf2read.c (dw2_lookup_symbol): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (dw2_map_matching_symbols): Adjust to use symbol_name_match_type. (gdb_index_symbol_name_matcher): New class. (dw2_expand_symtabs_matching) Adjust to use lookup_name_info and gdb_index_symbol_name_matcher. Accept a NULL symbol_matcher. * f-lang.c (f_collect_symbol_completion_matches): Adjust to work with a symbol_name_match_type. (f_language_defn): Adjust comments to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * go-lang.c (go_language_defn): Adjust comments to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher) (language_get_symbol_name_matcher): New functions. (unknown_language_defn, auto_language_defn): Adjust comments to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * language.h (symbol_name_cmp_ftype): Delete. (language_defn) <la_collect_symbol_completion_matches>: Add match type parameter. <la_get_symbol_name_cmp>: Delete field. <la_get_symbol_name_matcher>: New field. <la_iterate_over_symbols>: Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (default_symbol_name_matcher, language_get_symbol_name_matcher): Declare. * linespec.c (iterate_over_all_matching_symtabs) (iterate_over_file_blocks): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (find_methods): Add language parameter, and use lookup_name_info and the language's symbol_name_matcher_ftype. (linespec_complete_function): Adjust. (lookup_prefix_sym): Use lookup_name_info. (add_all_symbol_names_from_pspace): Adjust. (find_superclass_methods): Add language parameter and pass it down. (find_method): Pass symbol language down. (find_linespec_symbols): Don't demangle or Ada encode here. (search_minsyms_for_name): Add lookup_name_info parameter. (add_matching_symbols_to_info): Add name_match_type parameter. Use lookup_name_info. * m2-lang.c (m2_language_defn): Adjust comments to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * minsyms.c: Include <algorithm>. (add_minsym_to_demangled_hash_table): Remove table parameter and add objfile parameter. Use search_name_hash, and add language to demangled languages vector. (struct found_minimal_symbols): New struct. (lookup_minimal_symbol_mangled, lookup_minimal_symbol_demangled): New functions. (lookup_minimal_symbol): Adjust to use them. Don't canonicalize input names here. Use lookup_name_info instead. Lookup up demangled names once for each language in the demangled names vector. (iterate_over_minimal_symbols): Use lookup_name_info. Lookup up demangled names once for each language in the demangled names vector. (build_minimal_symbol_hash_tables): Adjust. * minsyms.h (iterate_over_minimal_symbols): Adjust to pass down a lookup_name_info. * objc-lang.c (objc_language_defn): Adjust comment to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * objfiles.h: Include <vector>. (objfile_per_bfd_storage) <demangled_hash_languages>: New field. * opencl-lang.c (opencl_language_defn): Adjust comment to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * p-lang.c (pascal_language_defn): Adjust comment to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * psymtab.c (psym_lookup_symbol): Use lookup_name_info. (match_partial_symbol): Use symbol_name_match_type, lookup_name_info and psymbol_name_matches. (lookup_partial_symbol): Use lookup_name_info. (map_block): Use symbol_name_match_type and lookup_name_info. (psym_map_matching_symbols): Use symbol_name_match_type. (psymbol_name_matches): New. (recursively_search_psymtabs): Use lookup_name_info and psymbol_name_matches. Rename 'kind' parameter to 'domain'. (psym_expand_symtabs_matching): Use lookup_name_info. Rename 'kind' parameter to 'domain'. * rust-lang.c (rust_language_defn): Adjust comment to refer to la_get_symbol_name_matcher. * symfile-debug.c (debug_qf_map_matching_symbols) (debug_qf_map_matching_symbols): Use symbol_name_match_type. (debug_qf_expand_symtabs_matching): Use lookup_name_info. * symfile.c (expand_symtabs_matching): Use lookup_name_info. * symfile.h (quick_symbol_functions) <map_matching_symbols>: Adjust to use symbol_name_match_type. <expand_symtabs_matching>: Adjust to use lookup_name_info. (expand_symtabs_matching): Adjust to use lookup_name_info. * symmisc.c (maintenance_expand_symtabs): Use lookup_name_info::match_any (). * symtab.c (symbol_matches_search_name): New. (eq_symbol_entry): Adjust to use lookup_name_info and the language's matcher. (demangle_for_lookup_info::demangle_for_lookup_info): New. (lookup_name_info::match_any): New. (iterate_over_symbols, search_symbols): Use lookup_name_info. (compare_symbol_name): Add language, lookup_name_info and completion_match_result parameters, and use them. (completion_list_add_name): Make extern. Add language and lookup_name_info parameters. Use them. (completion_list_add_symbol, completion_list_add_msymbol) (completion_list_objc_symbol): Add lookup_name_info parameters and adjust. Pass down language. (completion_list_add_fields): Add lookup_name_info parameters and adjust. Pass down language. (add_symtab_completions): Add lookup_name_info parameters and adjust. (default_collect_symbol_completion_matches_break_on): Add name_match_type parameter, and use it. Use lookup_name_info. (default_collect_symbol_completion_matches) (collect_symbol_completion_matches): Add name_match_type parameter, and pass it down. (collect_symbol_completion_matches_type): Adjust. (collect_file_symbol_completion_matches): Add name_match_type parameter, and use lookup_name_info. * symtab.h: Include <string> and "common/gdb_optional.h". (enum class symbol_name_match_type): New. (class ada_lookup_name_info): New. (struct demangle_for_lookup_info): New. (class lookup_name_info): New. (symbol_name_matcher_ftype): New. (SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME): Use symbol_matches_search_name. (symbol_matches_search_name): Declare. (MSYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME): Delete. (default_collect_symbol_completion_matches) (collect_symbol_completion_matches) (collect_file_symbol_completion_matches): Add name_match_type parameter. (iterate_over_symbols): Use lookup_name_info. (completion_list_add_name): Declare. * utils.c (enum class strncmp_iw_mode): Moved to utils.h. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Now extern. * utils.h (enum class strncmp_iw_mode): Moved from utils.c. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Declare. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2017-11-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb.ada/complete.exp (p <Exported_Capitalized>): New test. (p Exported_Capitalized): New test. (p exported_capitalized): New test.
2017-11-08 22:22:32 +08:00
int
strncmp_iw_with_mode (const char *string1, const char *string2,
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
size_t string2_len, strncmp_iw_mode mode,
Breakpoints in symbols with ABI tags (PR c++/19436) Trying to set a breakpoint in a function with an ABI tag does not work currently. E.g., debugging gdb itself, we see this with the "string_printf" function: (top-gdb) b string_print [TAB] (top-gdb) b string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...) [RET] No source file named string_printf[abi. Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) Quoting doesn't help: (top-gdb) b 'string_printf[abi:cxx11]'(char const*, ...) malformed linespec error: unexpected string, "(char const*, ...)" (top-gdb) b 'string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...)' No source file named string_printf[abi. Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) n This patch fixes this, and takes it a bit further. The actual symbol name as demangled by libiberty's demangler is really string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...) however, this patch makes it possible to set the breakpoint with string_printf(char const*, ...) too. I.e., ignoring the ABI tag. And to match, it teaches the completer to complete the symbol name without the ABI tag, i.e., "string_pri<TAB>" -> "string_printf(char const*, ...)" If however, you really want to break on a symbol with the tag, then you simply start writing the tag, and GDB will preserve it, like: "string_printf[a<TAB>" -> "string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...)" Grows the gdb.linespec/ tests like this: -# of expected passes 8977 +# of expected passes 9176 gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * NEWS: Mention setting breakpoints on functions with C++ ABI tags. * completer.h (completion_match_for_lcd) <match, mark_ignored_range>: New methods. <finish>: Consider ignored ranges. <clear>: Clear ignored ranges. <m_ignored_ranges, m_finished_storage>: New fields. * cp-support.c (cp_search_name_hash): Ignore ABI tags. (cp_symbol_name_matches_1, cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Pass the completion_match_for_lcd pointer to strncmp_iw_with_mode. (test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): Add [abi:...] tags unit tests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass the completion_match_for_lcd pointer to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * linespec.c (linespec_lexer_lex_string): Don't tokenize ABI tags. * utils.c (skip_abi_tag): New function. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add completion_match_for_lcd parameter. Handle ABI tags. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add completion_match_for_lcd parameter. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * gdb.linespec/cpls-abi-tag.cc: New file. * gdb.linespec/cpls-abi-tag.exp: New file. gdb/doc/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * gdb.texinfo (Debugging C Plus Plus): Document setting breakpoints in functions with ABI tags.
2017-11-30 03:33:24 +08:00
enum language language,
Support template lookups in strncmp_iw_with_mode This patch adds support for wild template parameter list matches, similar to how ABI tags or function overloads are now handled. With this patch, users will be able to "gloss over" the details of matching template parameter lists. This is accomplished by adding (yet more) logic to strncmp_iw_with_mode to skip parameter lists if none is explicitly given by the user. Here's a simple example using gdb.linespec/cpls-ops.exp: Before ------ (gdb) ptype test_op_call type = struct test_op_call { public: void operator()(void); void operator()(int); void operator()(long); void operator()<int>(int *); } (gdb) b test_op_call::operator() Breakpoint 1 at 0x400583: test_op_call::operator(). (3 locations) (gdb) i b Num Type Disp Enb Address What 1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE> 1.1 y 0x400583 in test_op_call::operator()(int) at cpls-ops.cc:43 1.2 y 0x40058e in test_op_call::operator()() at cpls-ops.cc:47 1.3 y 0x40059e in test_op_call::operator()(long) at cpls-ops.cc:51 The breakpoint at test_op_call::operator()<int> was never set. After ----- (gdb) b test_op_call::operator() Breakpoint 1 at 0x400583: test_op_call::operator(). (4 locations) (gdb) i b Num Type Disp Enb Address What 1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE> 1.1 y 0x400583 in test_op_call::operator()(int) at cpls-ops.cc:43 1.2 y 0x40058e in test_op_call::operator()() at cpls-ops.cc:47 1.3 y 0x40059e in test_op_call::operator()(long) at cpls-ops.cc:51 1.4 y 0x4008d0 in test_op_call::operator()<int>(int*) at cpls-ops.cc:57 Similar to how scope lookups work, passing "-qualified" to the break command will cause a literal lookup of the symbol. In the example immediately above, this will cause GDB to only find the three non-template functions.
2022-02-25 08:42:22 +08:00
completion_match_for_lcd *match_for_lcd,
bool ignore_template_params)
{
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
const char *string1_start = string1;
const char *end_str2 = string2 + string2_len;
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
bool skip_spaces = true;
bool have_colon_op = (language == language_cplus
|| language == language_rust
|| language == language_fortran);
gdb: fix crash during command completion In some cases GDB will fail when attempting to complete a command that involves a rust symbol, the failure can manifest as a crash. The problem is caused by the completion_match_for_lcd object being left containing invalid data during calls to cp_symbol_name_matches_1. The first question to address is why we are calling a C++ support function when handling a rust symbol. That's due to GDB's auto language detection for msymbols, in some cases GDB can't tell if a symbol is a rust symbol, or a C++ symbol. The test application contains symbols for functions which are statically linked in from various rust support libraries. There's no DWARF for these symbols, so all GDB has is the msymbols built from the ELF symbol table. Here's the problematic symbol that leads to our crash: mangled: _ZN4core3str21_$LT$impl$u20$str$GT$5parse17h5111d2d6a50d22bdE demangled: core::str::<impl str>::parse As an msymbol this is initially created with language auto, then GDB eventually calls symbol_find_demangled_name, which loops over all languages calling language_defn::sniff_from_mangled_name, the first language that can demangle the symbol gets assigned as the language for that symbol. Unfortunately, there's overlap in the mangled symbol names, some (legacy) rust symbols can be demangled as both rust and C++, see cplus_demangle in libiberty/cplus-dem.c where this is mentioned. And so, because we check the C++ language before we check for rust, then the msymbol is (incorrectly) given the C++ language. Now it's true that is some cases we might be able to figure out that a demangled symbol is not actually a valid C++ symbol, for example, in our case, the construct '::<impl str>::' is not, I believe, valid in a C++ symbol, we could look for ':<' and '>:' and refuse to accept this as a C++ symbol. However, I'm not sure it is always possible to tell that a demangled symbol is rust or C++, so, I think, we have to accept that some times we will get this language detection wrong. If we accept that we can't fix the symbol language detection 100% of the time, then we should make sure that GDB doesn't crash when it gets the language wrong, that is what this commit addresses. In our test case the user tries to complete a symbol name like this: (gdb) complete break pars This results in GDB trying to find all symbols that match 'pars', eventually we consider our problematic symbol, and we end up with a call stack that looks like this: #0 0x0000000000f3c6bd in strncmp_iw_with_mode #1 0x0000000000706d8d in cp_symbol_name_matches_1 #2 0x0000000000706fa4 in cp_symbol_name_matches #3 0x0000000000df3c45 in compare_symbol_name #4 0x0000000000df3c91 in completion_list_add_name #5 0x0000000000df3f1d in completion_list_add_msymbol #6 0x0000000000df4c94 in default_collect_symbol_completion_matches_break_on #7 0x0000000000658c08 in language_defn::collect_symbol_completion_matches #8 0x0000000000df54c9 in collect_symbol_completion_matches #9 0x00000000009d98fb in linespec_complete_function #10 0x00000000009d99f0 in complete_linespec_component #11 0x00000000009da200 in linespec_complete #12 0x00000000006e4132 in complete_address_and_linespec_locations #13 0x00000000006e4ac3 in location_completer In cp_symbol_name_matches_1 we enter a loop, this loop repeatedly tries to match the demangled problematic symbol name against the user supplied text ('pars'). Each time around the loop another component of the symbol name is stripped off, thus, we check 'pars' against these options: core::str::<impl str>::parse str::<impl str>::parse <impl str>::parse parse As soon as we get a match the cp_symbol_name_matches_1 exits its loop and returns. In our case, when we're looking for 'pars', the match occurs on the last iteration of the loop, when we are comparing to 'parse'. Now the problem here is that cp_symbol_name_matches_1 uses the strncmp_iw_with_mode, and inside strncmp_iw_with_mode we allow for skipping over template parameters. This allows GDB to match the symbol name 'foo<int>(int,int)' if the user supplies 'foo(int,'. Inside strncmp_iw_with_mode GDB will record any template arguments that it has skipped over inside the completion_match_for_lcd object that is passed in as an argument. And so, when GDB tries to match against '<impl str>::parse', the first thing it sees is '<impl str>', GDB assumes this is a template argument and records this as a skipped region within the completion_match_for_lcd object. After '<impl str>' GDB sees a ':' character, which doesn't match with the 'pars' the user supplied, so strncmp_iw_with_mode returns a value indicating a non-match. GDB then removes the '<impl str>' component from the symbol name and tries again, this time comparing to 'parse', which does match. Having found a match, then in cp_symbol_name_matches_1 we record the match string, and the full symbol name within the completion_match_result object, and return. The problem here is that the skipped region, the '<impl str>' that we recorded in the penultimate loop iteration was never discarded, its still there in our returned result. If we look at what the pointers held in the completion_match_result that cp_symbol_name_matches_1 returns, this is what we see: core::str::<impl str>::parse | \________/ | | | '--- completion match string | '---skip range '--- full symbol name When GDB calls completion_match_for_lcd::finish, GDB tries to create a string using the completion match string (parse), but excluding the skip range, as the stored skip range is before the start of the completion match string, then GDB tries to do some weird string creation, which will cause GDB to crash. The reason we don't often see this problem in C++ is that for C++ symbols there is always some non-template text before the template argument. This non-template text means GDB is likely to either match the symbol, or reject the symbol without storing a skip range. However, notice, I did say, we don't often see this problem. Once I understood the issue, I was able to reproduce the crash using a pure C++ example: template<typename S> struct foo { template<typename T> foo (int p1, T a) { s = 0; } S s; }; int main () { foo<int> obj (2.3, 0); return 0; } Then in GDB: (gdb) complete break foo(int The problem here is that the C++ symbol for the constructor looks like this: foo<int>::foo<double>(int, double) When GDB enters cp_symbol_name_matches_1 the symbols it examines are: foo<int>::foo<double>(int, double) foo<double>(int, double) The first iteration of the loop will match the 'foo', then add the '<int>' template argument will be added as a skip range. When GDB find the ':' after the '<int>' the first iteration of the loop fails to match, GDB removes the 'foo<int>::' component, and starts the second iteration of the loop. Again, GDB matches the 'foo', and now adds '<double>' as a skip region. After that the '(int' successfully matches, and so the second iteration of the loop succeeds, but, once again we left the '<int>' in place as a skip region, even though this occurs before the start of our match string, and this will cause GDB to crash. This problem was reported to the mailing list, and a solution discussed in this thread: https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2023-January/195166.html The solution proposed here is similar to one proposed by the original bug reported, but implemented in a different location within GDB. Instead of placing the fix in strncmp_iw_with_mode, I place the fix in cp_symbol_name_matches_1. I believe this is a better location as it is this function that implements the loop, and it is this loop, which repeatedly calls strncmp_iw_with_mode, that should be resetting the result object state (I believe). What I have done is add an assert to strncmp_iw_with_mode that the incoming result object is empty. I've also added some other asserts in related code, in completion_match_for_lcd::mark_ignored_range, I make some basic assertions about the incoming range pointers, and in completion_match_for_lcd::finish I also make some assertions about how the skip ranges relate to the match pointer. There's two new tests. The original rust example that was used in the initial bug report, and a C++ test. The rust example depends on which symbols are pulled in from the rust libraries, so it is possible that, at some future date, the problematic symbol will disappear from this test program. The C++ test should be more reliable, as this only depends on symbols from within the C++ source code. Since I originally posted this patch to the mailing list, the following patch has been merged: commit 6e7eef72164c00d6a5a7b0bce9fa01f5481f33cb Date: Sun Mar 19 09:13:10 2023 -0600 Use rust_demangle to fix a crash This solves the problem of a rust symbol ending up in the C++ specific code by changing the order languages are sorted. However, this new commit doesn't address the issue in the C++ code which was fixed with this commit. Given that the C++ issue is real, and has a reproducer, I'm still going to merge this fix. I've left the discussion of rust in this commit message as I originally wrote it, but it should be read within the context of GDB prior to commit 6e7eef72164c00d6a5a7. Co-Authored-By: Zheng Zhan <zzlossdev@163.com>
2023-01-06 23:50:26 +08:00
gdb_assert (match_for_lcd == nullptr || match_for_lcd->empty ());
while (1)
{
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
if (skip_spaces
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
|| ((ISSPACE (*string1) && !valid_identifier_name_char (*string2))
|| (ISSPACE (*string2) && !valid_identifier_name_char (*string1))))
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
{
skip_ws (string1, string2, end_str2);
skip_spaces = false;
}
Breakpoints in symbols with ABI tags (PR c++/19436) Trying to set a breakpoint in a function with an ABI tag does not work currently. E.g., debugging gdb itself, we see this with the "string_printf" function: (top-gdb) b string_print [TAB] (top-gdb) b string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...) [RET] No source file named string_printf[abi. Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) Quoting doesn't help: (top-gdb) b 'string_printf[abi:cxx11]'(char const*, ...) malformed linespec error: unexpected string, "(char const*, ...)" (top-gdb) b 'string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...)' No source file named string_printf[abi. Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) n This patch fixes this, and takes it a bit further. The actual symbol name as demangled by libiberty's demangler is really string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...) however, this patch makes it possible to set the breakpoint with string_printf(char const*, ...) too. I.e., ignoring the ABI tag. And to match, it teaches the completer to complete the symbol name without the ABI tag, i.e., "string_pri<TAB>" -> "string_printf(char const*, ...)" If however, you really want to break on a symbol with the tag, then you simply start writing the tag, and GDB will preserve it, like: "string_printf[a<TAB>" -> "string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...)" Grows the gdb.linespec/ tests like this: -# of expected passes 8977 +# of expected passes 9176 gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * NEWS: Mention setting breakpoints on functions with C++ ABI tags. * completer.h (completion_match_for_lcd) <match, mark_ignored_range>: New methods. <finish>: Consider ignored ranges. <clear>: Clear ignored ranges. <m_ignored_ranges, m_finished_storage>: New fields. * cp-support.c (cp_search_name_hash): Ignore ABI tags. (cp_symbol_name_matches_1, cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Pass the completion_match_for_lcd pointer to strncmp_iw_with_mode. (test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): Add [abi:...] tags unit tests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass the completion_match_for_lcd pointer to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * linespec.c (linespec_lexer_lex_string): Don't tokenize ABI tags. * utils.c (skip_abi_tag): New function. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add completion_match_for_lcd parameter. Handle ABI tags. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add completion_match_for_lcd parameter. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * gdb.linespec/cpls-abi-tag.cc: New file. * gdb.linespec/cpls-abi-tag.exp: New file. gdb/doc/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * gdb.texinfo (Debugging C Plus Plus): Document setting breakpoints in functions with ABI tags.
2017-11-30 03:33:24 +08:00
/* Skip [abi:cxx11] tags in the symbol name if the lookup name
doesn't include them. E.g.:
string1: function[abi:cxx1](int)
string2: function
string1: function[abi:cxx1](int)
string2: function(int)
string1: Struct[abi:cxx1]::function()
string2: Struct::function()
string1: function(Struct[abi:cxx1], int)
string2: function(Struct, int)
*/
if (string2 == end_str2
|| (*string2 != '[' && !valid_identifier_name_char (*string2)))
{
const char *abi_start = string1;
/* There can be more than one tag. */
while (*string1 == '[' && skip_abi_tag (&string1))
;
if (match_for_lcd != NULL && abi_start != string1)
match_for_lcd->mark_ignored_range (abi_start, string1);
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
while (ISSPACE (*string1))
Breakpoints in symbols with ABI tags (PR c++/19436) Trying to set a breakpoint in a function with an ABI tag does not work currently. E.g., debugging gdb itself, we see this with the "string_printf" function: (top-gdb) b string_print [TAB] (top-gdb) b string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...) [RET] No source file named string_printf[abi. Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) Quoting doesn't help: (top-gdb) b 'string_printf[abi:cxx11]'(char const*, ...) malformed linespec error: unexpected string, "(char const*, ...)" (top-gdb) b 'string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...)' No source file named string_printf[abi. Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) n This patch fixes this, and takes it a bit further. The actual symbol name as demangled by libiberty's demangler is really string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...) however, this patch makes it possible to set the breakpoint with string_printf(char const*, ...) too. I.e., ignoring the ABI tag. And to match, it teaches the completer to complete the symbol name without the ABI tag, i.e., "string_pri<TAB>" -> "string_printf(char const*, ...)" If however, you really want to break on a symbol with the tag, then you simply start writing the tag, and GDB will preserve it, like: "string_printf[a<TAB>" -> "string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...)" Grows the gdb.linespec/ tests like this: -# of expected passes 8977 +# of expected passes 9176 gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * NEWS: Mention setting breakpoints on functions with C++ ABI tags. * completer.h (completion_match_for_lcd) <match, mark_ignored_range>: New methods. <finish>: Consider ignored ranges. <clear>: Clear ignored ranges. <m_ignored_ranges, m_finished_storage>: New fields. * cp-support.c (cp_search_name_hash): Ignore ABI tags. (cp_symbol_name_matches_1, cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Pass the completion_match_for_lcd pointer to strncmp_iw_with_mode. (test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): Add [abi:...] tags unit tests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass the completion_match_for_lcd pointer to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * linespec.c (linespec_lexer_lex_string): Don't tokenize ABI tags. * utils.c (skip_abi_tag): New function. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add completion_match_for_lcd parameter. Handle ABI tags. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add completion_match_for_lcd parameter. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * gdb.linespec/cpls-abi-tag.cc: New file. * gdb.linespec/cpls-abi-tag.exp: New file. gdb/doc/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * gdb.texinfo (Debugging C Plus Plus): Document setting breakpoints in functions with ABI tags.
2017-11-30 03:33:24 +08:00
string1++;
}
Support template lookups in strncmp_iw_with_mode This patch adds support for wild template parameter list matches, similar to how ABI tags or function overloads are now handled. With this patch, users will be able to "gloss over" the details of matching template parameter lists. This is accomplished by adding (yet more) logic to strncmp_iw_with_mode to skip parameter lists if none is explicitly given by the user. Here's a simple example using gdb.linespec/cpls-ops.exp: Before ------ (gdb) ptype test_op_call type = struct test_op_call { public: void operator()(void); void operator()(int); void operator()(long); void operator()<int>(int *); } (gdb) b test_op_call::operator() Breakpoint 1 at 0x400583: test_op_call::operator(). (3 locations) (gdb) i b Num Type Disp Enb Address What 1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE> 1.1 y 0x400583 in test_op_call::operator()(int) at cpls-ops.cc:43 1.2 y 0x40058e in test_op_call::operator()() at cpls-ops.cc:47 1.3 y 0x40059e in test_op_call::operator()(long) at cpls-ops.cc:51 The breakpoint at test_op_call::operator()<int> was never set. After ----- (gdb) b test_op_call::operator() Breakpoint 1 at 0x400583: test_op_call::operator(). (4 locations) (gdb) i b Num Type Disp Enb Address What 1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE> 1.1 y 0x400583 in test_op_call::operator()(int) at cpls-ops.cc:43 1.2 y 0x40058e in test_op_call::operator()() at cpls-ops.cc:47 1.3 y 0x40059e in test_op_call::operator()(long) at cpls-ops.cc:51 1.4 y 0x4008d0 in test_op_call::operator()<int>(int*) at cpls-ops.cc:57 Similar to how scope lookups work, passing "-qualified" to the break command will cause a literal lookup of the symbol. In the example immediately above, this will cause GDB to only find the three non-template functions.
2022-02-25 08:42:22 +08:00
/* Skip template parameters in STRING1 if STRING2 does not contain
any. E.g.:
Case 1: User is looking for all functions named "foo".
string1: foo <...> (...)
string2: foo
Case 2: User is looking for all methods named "foo" in all template
class instantiations.
string1: Foo<...>::foo <...> (...)
string2: Foo::foo (...)
Case 3: User is looking for a specific overload of a template
function or method.
string1: foo<...>
string2: foo(...)
Case 4: User is looking for a specific overload of a specific
template instantiation.
string1: foo<A> (...)
string2: foo<B> (...)
Case 5: User is looking wild parameter match.
string1: foo<A<a<b<...> > > > (...)
string2: foo<A
*/
if (language == language_cplus && ignore_template_params
&& *string1 == '<' && *string2 != '<')
{
/* Skip any parameter list in STRING1. */
const char *template_start = string1;
if (skip_template_parameter_list (&string1))
{
/* Don't mark the parameter list ignored if the user didn't
try to ignore it. [Case #5 above] */
if (*string2 != '\0'
&& match_for_lcd != NULL && template_start != string1)
match_for_lcd->mark_ignored_range (template_start, string1);
}
}
if (*string1 == '\0' || string2 == end_str2)
break;
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
/* Handle the :: operator. */
if (have_colon_op && string1[0] == ':' && string1[1] == ':')
{
if (*string2 != ':')
return 1;
string1++;
string2++;
if (string2 == end_str2)
break;
if (*string2 != ':')
return 1;
string1++;
string2++;
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
while (ISSPACE (*string1))
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
string1++;
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
while (string2 < end_str2 && ISSPACE (*string2))
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
string2++;
continue;
}
/* Handle C++ user-defined operators. */
else if (language == language_cplus
&& *string1 == 'o')
{
if (cp_is_operator (string1, string1_start))
{
/* An operator name in STRING1. Check STRING2. */
size_t cmplen
= std::min<size_t> (CP_OPERATOR_LEN, end_str2 - string2);
if (strncmp (string1, string2, cmplen) != 0)
return 1;
string1 += cmplen;
string2 += cmplen;
if (string2 != end_str2)
{
/* Check for "operatorX" in STRING2. */
if (valid_identifier_name_char (*string2))
return 1;
skip_ws (string1, string2, end_str2);
}
/* Handle operator(). */
if (*string1 == '(')
{
if (string2 == end_str2)
{
if (mode == strncmp_iw_mode::NORMAL)
return 0;
else
{
/* Don't break for the regular return at the
bottom, because "operator" should not
match "operator()", since this open
parentheses is not the parameter list
start. */
return *string1 != '\0';
}
}
if (*string1 != *string2)
return 1;
string1++;
string2++;
}
while (1)
{
skip_ws (string1, string2, end_str2);
/* Skip to end of token, or to END, whatever comes
first. */
const char *end_str1 = string1 + strlen (string1);
const char *p1 = cp_skip_operator_token (string1, end_str1);
const char *p2 = cp_skip_operator_token (string2, end_str2);
cmplen = std::min (p1 - string1, p2 - string2);
if (p2 == end_str2)
{
if (strncmp (string1, string2, cmplen) != 0)
return 1;
}
else
{
if (p1 - string1 != p2 - string2)
return 1;
if (strncmp (string1, string2, cmplen) != 0)
return 1;
}
string1 += cmplen;
string2 += cmplen;
if (*string1 == '\0' || string2 == end_str2)
break;
if (*string1 == '(' || *string2 == '(')
break;
Support template lookups in strncmp_iw_with_mode This patch adds support for wild template parameter list matches, similar to how ABI tags or function overloads are now handled. With this patch, users will be able to "gloss over" the details of matching template parameter lists. This is accomplished by adding (yet more) logic to strncmp_iw_with_mode to skip parameter lists if none is explicitly given by the user. Here's a simple example using gdb.linespec/cpls-ops.exp: Before ------ (gdb) ptype test_op_call type = struct test_op_call { public: void operator()(void); void operator()(int); void operator()(long); void operator()<int>(int *); } (gdb) b test_op_call::operator() Breakpoint 1 at 0x400583: test_op_call::operator(). (3 locations) (gdb) i b Num Type Disp Enb Address What 1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE> 1.1 y 0x400583 in test_op_call::operator()(int) at cpls-ops.cc:43 1.2 y 0x40058e in test_op_call::operator()() at cpls-ops.cc:47 1.3 y 0x40059e in test_op_call::operator()(long) at cpls-ops.cc:51 The breakpoint at test_op_call::operator()<int> was never set. After ----- (gdb) b test_op_call::operator() Breakpoint 1 at 0x400583: test_op_call::operator(). (4 locations) (gdb) i b Num Type Disp Enb Address What 1 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE> 1.1 y 0x400583 in test_op_call::operator()(int) at cpls-ops.cc:43 1.2 y 0x40058e in test_op_call::operator()() at cpls-ops.cc:47 1.3 y 0x40059e in test_op_call::operator()(long) at cpls-ops.cc:51 1.4 y 0x4008d0 in test_op_call::operator()<int>(int*) at cpls-ops.cc:57 Similar to how scope lookups work, passing "-qualified" to the break command will cause a literal lookup of the symbol. In the example immediately above, this will cause GDB to only find the three non-template functions.
2022-02-25 08:42:22 +08:00
/* If STRING1 or STRING2 starts with a template
parameter list, break out of operator processing. */
skip_ws (string1, string2, end_str2);
if (*string1 == '<' || *string2 == '<')
break;
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
}
continue;
}
}
gdb/doc/ * gdb.texinfo (Index Section Format): Change the version to 5. Describe the different formula. gdb/ Case insensitive lookups implementation. * dwarf2read.c: Include ctype.h. (struct mapped_index): New field version. (mapped_index_string_hash): New parameter index_version. New comment for it. Call tolower appropriately. (find_slot_in_mapped_hash): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. Choose the right index version for mapped_index_string_hash. (dwarf2_read_index): Support also the index version 5. Initialize the new struct mapped_index field version. (hash_strtab_entry): Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter, explain why. (find_slot): Explain the version needs. Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter. (write_psymtabs_to_index): Produce version 5. * minsyms.c (lookup_minimal_symbol): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. New comment for SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME. * psymtab.c (lookup_partial_symbol): Find the SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME start of the found block of matching entries. * symtab.c (lookup_symbol_in_language): Remove the case_sensitive_off NAME lowercasing. (search_symbols): Pass REG_ICASE to regcomp for case_sensitive_off. (completion_list_add_name): New variable ncmp, initialize it, use it. * symtab.h (SYMBOL_HASH_NEXT): Always call tolower. * utils.c (strcmp_iw): Support case_sensitive_off. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Sort in a way compatible with case_sensitive_off. New function comment part. New variables saved_string1, saved_string2 and case_pass. Add a proper second pass. gdb/testsuite/ * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.c: New file. * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.exp: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive-debug.S: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.c: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.exp: New file.
2011-04-28 04:03:04 +08:00
if (case_sensitivity == case_sensitive_on && *string1 != *string2)
break;
if (case_sensitivity == case_sensitive_off
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
&& (TOLOWER ((unsigned char) *string1)
!= TOLOWER ((unsigned char) *string2)))
gdb/doc/ * gdb.texinfo (Index Section Format): Change the version to 5. Describe the different formula. gdb/ Case insensitive lookups implementation. * dwarf2read.c: Include ctype.h. (struct mapped_index): New field version. (mapped_index_string_hash): New parameter index_version. New comment for it. Call tolower appropriately. (find_slot_in_mapped_hash): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. Choose the right index version for mapped_index_string_hash. (dwarf2_read_index): Support also the index version 5. Initialize the new struct mapped_index field version. (hash_strtab_entry): Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter, explain why. (find_slot): Explain the version needs. Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter. (write_psymtabs_to_index): Produce version 5. * minsyms.c (lookup_minimal_symbol): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. New comment for SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME. * psymtab.c (lookup_partial_symbol): Find the SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME start of the found block of matching entries. * symtab.c (lookup_symbol_in_language): Remove the case_sensitive_off NAME lowercasing. (search_symbols): Pass REG_ICASE to regcomp for case_sensitive_off. (completion_list_add_name): New variable ncmp, initialize it, use it. * symtab.h (SYMBOL_HASH_NEXT): Always call tolower. * utils.c (strcmp_iw): Support case_sensitive_off. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Sort in a way compatible with case_sensitive_off. New function comment part. New variables saved_string1, saved_string2 and case_pass. Add a proper second pass. gdb/testsuite/ * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.c: New file. * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.exp: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive-debug.S: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.c: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.exp: New file.
2011-04-28 04:03:04 +08:00
break;
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
/* If we see any non-whitespace, non-identifier-name character
(any of "()<>*&" etc.), then skip spaces the next time
around. */
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
if (!ISSPACE (*string1) && !valid_identifier_name_char (*string1))
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
skip_spaces = true;
string1++;
string2++;
}
if (string2 == end_str2)
{
if (mode == strncmp_iw_mode::NORMAL)
Breakpoints in symbols with ABI tags (PR c++/19436) Trying to set a breakpoint in a function with an ABI tag does not work currently. E.g., debugging gdb itself, we see this with the "string_printf" function: (top-gdb) b string_print [TAB] (top-gdb) b string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...) [RET] No source file named string_printf[abi. Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) Quoting doesn't help: (top-gdb) b 'string_printf[abi:cxx11]'(char const*, ...) malformed linespec error: unexpected string, "(char const*, ...)" (top-gdb) b 'string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...)' No source file named string_printf[abi. Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? (y or [n]) n This patch fixes this, and takes it a bit further. The actual symbol name as demangled by libiberty's demangler is really string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...) however, this patch makes it possible to set the breakpoint with string_printf(char const*, ...) too. I.e., ignoring the ABI tag. And to match, it teaches the completer to complete the symbol name without the ABI tag, i.e., "string_pri<TAB>" -> "string_printf(char const*, ...)" If however, you really want to break on a symbol with the tag, then you simply start writing the tag, and GDB will preserve it, like: "string_printf[a<TAB>" -> "string_printf[abi:cxx11](char const*, ...)" Grows the gdb.linespec/ tests like this: -# of expected passes 8977 +# of expected passes 9176 gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * NEWS: Mention setting breakpoints on functions with C++ ABI tags. * completer.h (completion_match_for_lcd) <match, mark_ignored_range>: New methods. <finish>: Consider ignored ranges. <clear>: Clear ignored ranges. <m_ignored_ranges, m_finished_storage>: New fields. * cp-support.c (cp_search_name_hash): Ignore ABI tags. (cp_symbol_name_matches_1, cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Pass the completion_match_for_lcd pointer to strncmp_iw_with_mode. (test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): Add [abi:...] tags unit tests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass the completion_match_for_lcd pointer to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * linespec.c (linespec_lexer_lex_string): Don't tokenize ABI tags. * utils.c (skip_abi_tag): New function. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add completion_match_for_lcd parameter. Handle ABI tags. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add completion_match_for_lcd parameter. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * gdb.linespec/cpls-abi-tag.cc: New file. * gdb.linespec/cpls-abi-tag.exp: New file. gdb/doc/ChangeLog: 2017-11-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> PR c++/19436 * gdb.texinfo (Debugging C Plus Plus): Document setting breakpoints in functions with ABI tags.
2017-11-30 03:33:24 +08:00
{
/* Strip abi tag markers from the matched symbol name.
Usually the ABI marker will be found on function name
(automatically added because the function returns an
object marked with an ABI tag). However, it's also
possible to see a marker in one of the function
parameters, for example.
string2 (lookup name):
func
symbol name:
function(some_struct[abi:cxx11], int)
and for completion LCD computation we want to say that
the match was for:
function(some_struct, int)
*/
if (match_for_lcd != NULL)
{
while ((string1 = strstr (string1, "[abi:")) != NULL)
{
const char *abi_start = string1;
/* There can be more than one tag. */
while (skip_abi_tag (&string1) && *string1 == '[')
;
if (abi_start != string1)
match_for_lcd->mark_ignored_range (abi_start, string1);
}
}
return 0;
}
else
gdb/c++: fix handling of breakpoints on @plt symbols This commit should fix PR gdb/20091, PR gdb/17201, and PR gdb/17071. Additionally, PR gdb/17199 relates to this area of code, but is more of a request to refactor some parts of GDB, this commit does not address that request, but it is probably worth reading that PR when looking at this commit. When the current language is C++, and the user places a breakpoint on a function in a shared library, GDB will currently find two locations for the breakpoint, one location will be within the function itself as we would expect, but the other location will be within the PLT table for the call to the named function. Consider this session: $ gdb -q /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func Reading symbols from /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func... (gdb) start Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x40112e: file /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func.cc, line 20. Starting program: /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func Temporary breakpoint 1, main () at /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func.cc:20 20 int answer = foo (); (gdb) break foo Breakpoint 2 at 0x401030 (2 locations) (gdb) info breakpoints Num Type Disp Enb Address What 2 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE> 2.1 y 0x0000000000401030 <foo()@plt> 2.2 y 0x00007ffff7fc50fd in foo() at /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func-lib.cc:20 This is not the expected behaviour. If we compile the same test using a C compiler then we see this: (gdb) break foo Breakpoint 2 at 0x7ffff7fc50fd: file /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func-c-lib.c, line 20. (gdb) info breakpoints Num Type Disp Enb Address What 2 breakpoint keep y 0x00007ffff7fc50fd in foo at /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func-c-lib.c:20 Here's what's happening. When GDB parses the symbols in the main executable and the shared library we see a number of different symbols for foo, and use these to create entries in GDB's msymbol table: - In the main executable we see a symbol 'foo@plt' that points at the plt entry for foo, from this we add two entries into GDB's msymbol table, one called 'foo@plt' which points at the plt entry and has type mst_text, then we create a second symbol, this time called 'foo' with type mst_solib_trampoline which also points at the plt entry, - Then, when the shared library is loaded we see another symbol called 'foo', this one points at the actual implementation in the shared library. This time GDB creates a msymbol called 'foo' with type mst_text that points at the implementation. This means that GDB creates 3 msymbols to represent the 2 symbols found in the executable and shared library. When the user creates a breakpoint on 'foo' GDB eventually ends up in search_minsyms_for_name (linespec.c), this function then calls iterate_over_minimal_symbols passing in the name we are looking for wrapped in a lookup_name_info object. In iterate_over_minimal_symbols we iterate over two hash tables (using the name we're looking for as the hash key), first we walk the hash table of symbol linkage names, then we walk the hash table of demangled symbol names. When the language is C++ the symbols for 'foo' will all have been mangled, as a result, in this case, the iteration of the linkage name hash table will find no matching results. However, when we walk the demangled hash table we do find some results. In order to match symbol names, GDB obtains a symbol name matching function by calling the get_symbol_name_matcher method on the language_defn class. For C++, in this case, the matching function we use is cp_fq_symbol_name_matches, which delegates the work to strncmp_iw_with_mode with mode strncmp_iw_mode::MATCH_PARAMS and language set to language_cplus. The strncmp_iw_mode::MATCH_PARAMS mode means that strncmp_iw_mode will skip any parameters in the demangled symbol name when checking for a match, e.g. 'foo' will match the demangled name 'foo()'. The way this is done is that the strings are matched character by character, but, once the string we are looking for ('foo' here) is exhausted, if we are looking at '(' then we consider the match a success. Lets consider the 3 symbols GDB created. If the function declaration is 'void foo ()' then from the main executable we added symbols '_Z3foov@plt' and '_Z3foov', while from the shared library we added another symbol call '_Z3foov'. When these are demangled they become 'foo()@plt', 'foo()', and 'foo()' respectively. Now, the '_Z3foov' symbol from the main executable has the type mst_solib_trampoline, and in search_minsyms_for_name, we search for any symbols of type mst_solib_trampoline and filter these out of the results. However, the '_Z3foov@plt' symbol (from the main executable), and the '_Z3foov' symbol (from the shared library) both have type mst_text. During the demangled name matching, due to the use of MATCH_PARAMS mode, we stop the comparison as soon as we hit a '(' in the demangled name. And so, '_Z3foov@plt', which demangles to 'foo()@plt' matches 'foo', and '_Z3foov', which demangles to 'foo()' also matches 'foo'. By contrast, for C, there are no demangled hash table entries to be iterated over (in iterate_over_minimal_symbols), we only consider the linkage name symbols which are 'foo@plt' and 'foo'. The plain 'foo' symbol obviously matches when we are looking for 'foo', but in this case the 'foo@plt' will not match due to the '@plt' suffix. And so, when the user asks for a breakpoint in 'foo', and the language is C, search_minsyms_for_name, returns a single msymbol, the mst_text symbol for foo in the shared library, while, when the language is C++, we get two results, '_Z3foov' for the shared library function, and '_Z3foov@plt' for the plt entry in the main executable. I propose to fix this in strncmp_iw_with_mode. When the mode is MATCH_PARAMS, instead of stopping at a '(' and assuming the match is a success, GDB will instead search forward for the matching, closing, ')', effectively skipping the parameter list, and then resume matching. Thus, when comparing 'foo' to 'foo()@plt' GDB will effectively compare against 'foo@plt' (skipping the parameter list), and the match will fail, just as it does when the language is C. There is one slight complication, which is revealed by the test gdb.linespec/cpcompletion.exp, when searching for the symbol of a const member function, the demangled symbol will have 'const' at the end of its name, e.g.: struct_with_const_overload::const_overload_fn() const Previously, the matching would stop at the '(' character, but after my change the whole '()' is skipped, and the match resumes. As a result, the 'const' modifier results in a failure to match, when previously GDB would have found a match. To work around this issue, in strncmp_iw_with_mode, when mode is MATCH_PARAMS, after skipping the parameter list, if the next character is '@' then we assume we are looking at something like '@plt' and return a value indicating the match failed, otherwise, we return a value indicating the match succeeded, this allows things like 'const' to be skipped. With these changes in place I now see GDB correctly setting a breakpoint only at the implementation of 'foo' in the shared library. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=20091 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17201 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17071 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17199 Tested-By: Bruno Larsen <blarsen@redhat.com> Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
2022-12-16 23:15:42 +08:00
{
if (*string1 == '(')
{
int p_count = 0;
do
{
if (*string1 == '(')
++p_count;
else if (*string1 == ')')
--p_count;
++string1;
}
while (*string1 != '\0' && p_count > 0);
/* There maybe things like 'const' after the parameters,
which we do want to ignore. However, if there's an '@'
then this likely indicates something like '@plt' which we
should not ignore. */
return *string1 == '@';
}
return *string1 == '\0' ? 0 : 1;
}
}
else
return 1;
}
#if GDB_SELF_TEST
/* Unit tests for strncmp_iw_with_mode. */
#define CHECK_MATCH_LM(S1, S2, MODE, LANG, LCD) \
SELF_CHECK (strncmp_iw_with_mode ((S1), (S2), strlen ((S2)), \
strncmp_iw_mode::MODE, \
(LANG), (LCD)) == 0)
#define CHECK_MATCH_LANG(S1, S2, MODE, LANG) \
CHECK_MATCH_LM ((S1), (S2), MODE, (LANG), nullptr)
#define CHECK_MATCH(S1, S2, MODE) \
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ((S1), (S2), MODE, language_minimal)
#define CHECK_NO_MATCH_LM(S1, S2, MODE, LANG, LCD) \
SELF_CHECK (strncmp_iw_with_mode ((S1), (S2), strlen ((S2)), \
strncmp_iw_mode::MODE, \
(LANG)) != 0)
#define CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG(S1, S2, MODE, LANG) \
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LM ((S1), (S2), MODE, (LANG), nullptr)
#define CHECK_NO_MATCH(S1, S2, MODE) \
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ((S1), (S2), MODE, language_minimal)
static void
check_scope_operator (enum language lang)
{
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("::", "::", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("::foo", "::", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("::foo", "::foo", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG (" :: foo ", "::foo", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a ::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a\t::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a \t::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a\t ::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a:: b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a::\tb", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a:: \tb", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a::\t b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a :: b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a ::\tb", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a\t:: b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a \t::\t b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a ::b", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a\t::b", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a \t::b", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a\t ::b", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a:: b", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::\tb", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a:: \tb", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::\t b", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a :: b", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a ::\tb", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a\t:: b", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a \t::\t b", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b::c", "a::b::c", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG (" a:: b:: c", "a::b::c", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b::c", " a:: b:: c", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a ::b ::c", "a::b::c", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b::c", "a :: b:: c", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("\ta::\tb::\tc", "\ta::\tb::\tc", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a\t::b\t::c\t", "a\t::b\t::c\t", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG (" \ta:: \tb:: \tc", " \ta:: \tb:: \tc", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("\t a::\t b::\t c", "\t a::\t b::\t c", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b::c", "\ta::\tb::\tc", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b::c", "a\t::b\t::c\t", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b::c", " \ta:: \tb:: \tc", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b::c", "\t a::\t b::\t c", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("\ta::\tb::\tc", "a::b::c", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a\t::b\t::c\t", "a::b::c", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG (" \ta:: \tb:: \tc", "a::b::c", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("\t a::\t b::\t c", "a::b::c", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a :: b:: c\t", "\ta :: b\t:: c\t\t", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG (" a::\t \t b:: c\t", "\ta ::b:: c\t\t",
NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a :: b :: \t\t\tc\t",
"\t\t\t\ta :: \t\t\t b \t\t::c",
NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b()", "a", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b()", "a::", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b()", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b(a)", "a", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b(a)", "a::", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b(a)", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b(a,b)", "a", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b(a,b)", "a::", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b(a,b)", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b(a,b,c)", "a", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b(a,b,c)", "a::", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::b(a,b,c)", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::", "::a", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("::a", "::a()", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("::", "::a", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a:::b", "a::b", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b()", "a::b(a)", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b(a)", "a::b()", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b(a,b)", "a::b(a,a)", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a()", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a::()", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a::b()", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a(a)", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a::(a)", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a::b()", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a(a,b)", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a::(a,b)", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a::b(a,b)", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a(a,b,c)", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a::(a,b,c)", NORMAL, lang);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::b", "a::b(a,b,c)", NORMAL, lang);
}
/* Callback for strncmp_iw_with_mode unit tests. */
static void
strncmp_iw_with_mode_tests ()
{
/* Some of the following tests are nonsensical, but could be input by a
deranged script (or user). */
/* strncmp_iw_mode::NORMAL: strcmp()-like but ignore any whitespace... */
CHECK_MATCH ("", "", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH (" foo", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo ", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH (" foo ", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH (" foo", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo ", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH (" foo ", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("\tfoo", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo\t", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("\tfoo\t", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH (" \tfoo \t", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("\t foo\t ", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("\t \t \t\t\t\t foo\t\t\t \t\t \t \t \t \t ",
"foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo",
"\t \t \t\t\t\t foo\t\t\t \t\t \t \t \t \t ",
NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo bar", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "bar", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo bar", "foobar", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH (" foo ", "bar", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", " bar ", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH (" \t\t foo\t\t ", "\t \t \tbar\t", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("@!%&", "@!%&foo", NORMAL);
/* ... and function parameters in STRING1. */
CHECK_MATCH ("foo()", "foo()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo ()", "foo()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo ()", "foo()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo\t()", "foo()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo\t ()", "foo()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo \t()", "foo()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo()", "foo ()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo()", "foo ()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo()", "foo\t()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo()", "foo\t ()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo()", "foo \t()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo()", "foo()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo ()", "foo ()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo ()", "foo ()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo\t()", "foo\t()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo\t ()", "foo\t ()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo \t()", "foo \t()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo( a)", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a )", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(\ta)", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a\t)", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(\t a)", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo( \ta)", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a\t )", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a \t)", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo( a )", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(\ta\t)", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(\t a\t )", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo( \ta \t)", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo( a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo(a )", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo(\ta)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo(a\t)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo(\t a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo( \ta)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo(a\t )", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo(a \t)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo( a )", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo(\ta\t)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo(\t a\t )", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo( \ta \t)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a,b)", "foo(a,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a ,b)", "foo(a,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a\t,b)", "foo(a,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a,\tb)", "foo(a,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a\t,\tb)", "foo(a,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a \t,b)", "foo(a,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a\t ,b)", "foo(a,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a,\tb)", "foo(a,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a, \tb)", "foo(a,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a,\t b)", "foo(a,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a,b)", "foo(a ,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a,b)", "foo(a\t,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a,b)", "foo(a,\tb)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a,b)", "foo(a\t,\tb)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a,b)", "foo(a \t,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a,b)", "foo(a\t ,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a,b)", "foo(a,\tb)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a,b)", "foo(a, \tb)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a,b)", "foo(a,\t b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a,b,c,d)", "foo(a,b,c,d)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH (" foo ( a , b , c , d ) ", "foo(a,b,c,d)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH (" foo ( a , b , c , d ) ", "foo( a , b , c , d )", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo &\t*(\ta b *\t\t&)", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo &\t*(\ta b *\t\t&)", "foo&*(a b * &)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(a) b", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("*foo(*a&)", "*foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("*foo(*a&)", "*foo(*a&)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("*a&b#c/^d$foo(*a&)", "*a&b#c/^d$foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("* foo", "*foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo&", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo*", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo.", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo->", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo(", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo()", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo*", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo (*", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo*", "foo (*", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo *", "foo (*", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo&", "foo (*", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo &", "foo (*", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo &*", "foo (&)", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo & \t *\t", "foo (*", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo & \t *\t", "foo (*", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo(a*) b", "foo(a) b", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[aqi:A](a)", "foo(b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("*foo", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("*foo", "foo*", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("*foo*", "*foo&", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("*foo*", "foo *", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("&foo", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("&foo", "foo&", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo&", "&foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo&", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo*", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo.", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo->", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo bar", "foo()", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo bar", "foo bar()", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo()", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("*(*)&", "*(*)*", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo()", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo(a)", "foo(b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo(a,b)", "foo(a,b,c)", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo(a\\b)", "foo()", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo bar(a b c d)", "foobar", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo bar(a b c d)", "foobar ( a b c \td\t)\t", NORMAL);
/* Test scope operator. */
check_scope_operator (language_minimal);
check_scope_operator (language_cplus);
check_scope_operator (language_fortran);
check_scope_operator (language_rust);
/* Test C++ user-defined operators. */
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("operator foo(int&)", "operator foo(int &)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("operator foo(int &)", "operator foo(int &)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("operator foo(int\t&)", "operator foo(int\t&)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("operator foo (int)", "operator foo(int)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("operator foo\t(int)", "operator foo(int)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("operator foo \t(int)", "operator foo(int)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("operator foo (int)", "operator foo \t(int)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("operator foo\t(int)", "operator foo \t(int)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("operator foo \t(int)", "operator foo \t(int)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::operator foo(int&)", "a::operator foo(int &)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a :: operator foo(int &)", "a::operator foo(int &)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a \t:: \toperator foo(int\t&)", "a::operator foo(int\t&)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::operator foo (int)", "a::operator foo(int)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::operator foo\t(int)", "a::operator foo(int)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::operator foo \t(int)", "a::operator foo(int)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::operator foo (int)", "a::operator foo \t(int)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::operator foo\t(int)", "a::operator foo \t(int)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_MATCH_LANG ("a::operator foo \t(int)", "a::operator foo \t(int)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("operator foo(int)", "operator foo(char)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("operator foo(int)", "operator foo(int *)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("operator foo(int)", "operator foo(int &)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("operator foo(int)", "operator foo(int, char *)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("operator foo(int)", "operator bar(int)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::operator b::foo(int)", "a::operator a::foo(char)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::operator foo(int)", "a::operator foo(int *)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::operator foo(int)", "a::operator foo(int &)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::operator foo(int)", "a::operator foo(int, char *)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
CHECK_NO_MATCH_LANG ("a::operator foo(int)", "a::operator bar(int)", NORMAL,
language_cplus);
/* Skip "[abi:cxx11]" tags in the symbol name if the lookup name
doesn't include them. These are not language-specific in
strncmp_iw_with_mode. */
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]()", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a)", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a&,b*)", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a,b)", "foo(a,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a,b) c", "foo(a,b) c", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a)", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a,b)", "foo(a,b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[ abi:a]", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[\tabi:a]", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[ \tabi:a]", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[\t abi:a]", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi :a]", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi\t:a]", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi \t:a]", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi\t :a]", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]", "foo[ abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]", "foo[\tabi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]", "foo[ \tabi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]", "foo[\t abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]", "foo[abi :a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]", "foo[abi\t:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]", "foo[abi \t:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]", "foo[abi\t :a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]", "foo[abi:a ]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]", "foo[abi:a\t]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]", "foo[abi:a \t]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]", "foo[abi:a\t ]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a,b]", "foo[abi:a,b]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:::]", "foo[abi:::]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi : : : ]", "foo[abi:::]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:::]", "foo[abi : : : ]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[ \t abi \t:\t: : \t]",
"foo[ abi : \t ::]",
NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo< bar< baz< quxi > > >(int)", "foo<bar<baz<quxi>>>(int)",
NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("\tfoo<\tbar<\tbaz\t<\tquxi\t>\t>\t>(int)",
"foo<bar<baz<quxi>>>(int)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH (" \tfoo \t< \tbar \t< \tbaz \t< \tquxi \t> \t> \t> \t( \tint \t)",
"foo<bar<baz<quxi>>>(int)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo<bar<baz<quxi>>>(int)",
"foo < bar < baz < quxi > > > (int)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo<bar<baz<quxi>>>(int)",
"\tfoo\t<\tbar\t<\tbaz\t<\tquxi\t>\t>\t>\t(int)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo<bar<baz<quxi>>>(int)",
" \tfoo \t< \tbar \t< \tbaz \t< \tquxi \t> \t> \t> \t( \tint \t)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo<bar<baz>>::foo(quxi &)", "fo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo<bar<baz>>::foo(quxi &)", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo<bar<baz>>::foo(quxi &)", "foo<bar<baz>>::", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo<bar<baz>>::foo(quxi &)", "foo<bar<baz> >::foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a][abi:b](bar[abi:c][abi:d])", "foo[abi:a][abi:b](bar[abi:c][abi:d])",
NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a][abi:b](bar[abi:c][abi:d])", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a][abi:b](bar[abi:c][abi:d])", "foo(bar)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a][abi:b](bar[abi:c][abi:d])", "foo[abi:a](bar)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a][abi:b](bar[abi:c][abi:d])", "foo(bar[abi:c])", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a][abi:b](bar[abi:c][abi:d])", "foo[abi:a](bar[abi:c])", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a][abi:b](bar[abi:c][abi:d])", "foo[abi:a][abi:b](bar)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a][abi:b](bar[abi:c][abi:d])", "foo[abi:a][abi:b](bar[abi:c])",
NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH("foo<bar[abi:a]>(char *, baz[abi:b])", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH("foo<bar[abi:a]>(char *, baz[abi:b])", "foo()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH("foo<bar[abi:a]>(char *, baz[abi:b])", "foo<bar>", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH("foo<bar[abi:a]>(char *, baz[abi:b])", "foo<bar>(char*, baz)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH("foo<bar[abi:a]>(char *, baz[abi:b])", "foo<bar>(char*, baz[abi:b])",
NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH("foo<bar[abi:a]>(char *, baz[abi:b])", "foo<bar>(char*, baz[abi:A])",
NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH("foo<bar[abi:a]>(char *, baz[abi:b])", "foo<bar[abi:a]>(char*, baz)",
NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH("foo<bar[abi:a]>(char *, baz[abi:b])", "foo<bar[abi:A]>(char*, baz)",
NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH("foo<bar[abi:a]>(char *, baz[abi:b])", "foo<bar[abi:a]>(char*, baz[abi:b])",
NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH("foo<bar[abi:a]>(char *, baz[abi:b])",
"foo<bar[abi:a]>(char*, baz[abi:B])", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[ a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[a ]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[ a ]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[\ta]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[a \t]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[a\t ]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[ \ta]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[\t a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[ \ta \t]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[\t a\t ]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[ abi]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi ]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[\tabi]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi\t]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[ \tabi]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[\t abi]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi \t]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi\t ]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi :]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi\t:]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi \t:]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi\t :]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi: ]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi:\t]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi: \t]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi:\t ]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi: a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi:\ta]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi: \ta]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi:\t a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi:a ]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi:a\t]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi:a \t]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo", "foo[abi:a\t ]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]()", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]()", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]()", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]()", "foo(a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]()", "foo(a) c", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]()", "foo(a) .", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]()", "foo(a) *", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a]()", "foo(a) &", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a,b)", "foo(a,b) c", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a,b)", "foo(a,b) .", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a,b)", "foo(a,b) *", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a,b)", "foo(a,b) &", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a,b)", "foo(a,b)c", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a,b)", "foo(a,b).", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a,b)", "foo(a,b)*", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a,b)", "foo(a,b)&", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a,b) d", "foo(a,b) c", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a)", "foo()", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a)", "foo(b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a)", "foo[abi:b](a)", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a](a)", "foo[abi:a](b)", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:]", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:]", "foo[abi:a", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:,]", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:a,b]", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi::a]", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo[abi:,([a]", "foo[abi:a]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo <a, b [, c (", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo >a, b ], c )", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("@!%&\\*", "@!%&\\*", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("()", "()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("*(*)*", "*(*)*", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("[]", "[]", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("<>", "<>", NORMAL);
/* strncmp_iw_with_mode::MATCH_PARAMS: the "strcmp_iw hack." */
CHECK_MATCH ("foo2", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2", "foo ", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2", "foo\t", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2", "foo \t", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2", "foo\t ", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2", "foo \t", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2", " foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2", "\tfoo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2", " \tfoo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2", "\t foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH (" foo2", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("\tfoo2", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH (" \tfoo2", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("\t foo2", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH (" foo2 ", " foo ", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("\tfoo2\t", "\tfoo\t", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH (" \tfoo2 \t", " \tfoo \t", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("\t foo2\t ", "\t foo\t ", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2 ", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2\t", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2 ", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2 \t", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2\t ", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2 (args)", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2 (args)", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2\t(args)", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2 \t(args)", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2\t (args)", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2 ( args)", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2(args )", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2(args\t)", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2 (args \t)", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo2 (args\t )", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a][abi:b](bar[abi:c][abi:d])", "foo[abi:a][abi:b](bar[abi:c][abi:d])",
MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:a][abi:b](bar[abi:c][abi:d])", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
gdb/c++: fix handling of breakpoints on @plt symbols This commit should fix PR gdb/20091, PR gdb/17201, and PR gdb/17071. Additionally, PR gdb/17199 relates to this area of code, but is more of a request to refactor some parts of GDB, this commit does not address that request, but it is probably worth reading that PR when looking at this commit. When the current language is C++, and the user places a breakpoint on a function in a shared library, GDB will currently find two locations for the breakpoint, one location will be within the function itself as we would expect, but the other location will be within the PLT table for the call to the named function. Consider this session: $ gdb -q /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func Reading symbols from /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func... (gdb) start Temporary breakpoint 1 at 0x40112e: file /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func.cc, line 20. Starting program: /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func Temporary breakpoint 1, main () at /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func.cc:20 20 int answer = foo (); (gdb) break foo Breakpoint 2 at 0x401030 (2 locations) (gdb) info breakpoints Num Type Disp Enb Address What 2 breakpoint keep y <MULTIPLE> 2.1 y 0x0000000000401030 <foo()@plt> 2.2 y 0x00007ffff7fc50fd in foo() at /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func-lib.cc:20 This is not the expected behaviour. If we compile the same test using a C compiler then we see this: (gdb) break foo Breakpoint 2 at 0x7ffff7fc50fd: file /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func-c-lib.c, line 20. (gdb) info breakpoints Num Type Disp Enb Address What 2 breakpoint keep y 0x00007ffff7fc50fd in foo at /tmp/breakpoint-shlib-func-c-lib.c:20 Here's what's happening. When GDB parses the symbols in the main executable and the shared library we see a number of different symbols for foo, and use these to create entries in GDB's msymbol table: - In the main executable we see a symbol 'foo@plt' that points at the plt entry for foo, from this we add two entries into GDB's msymbol table, one called 'foo@plt' which points at the plt entry and has type mst_text, then we create a second symbol, this time called 'foo' with type mst_solib_trampoline which also points at the plt entry, - Then, when the shared library is loaded we see another symbol called 'foo', this one points at the actual implementation in the shared library. This time GDB creates a msymbol called 'foo' with type mst_text that points at the implementation. This means that GDB creates 3 msymbols to represent the 2 symbols found in the executable and shared library. When the user creates a breakpoint on 'foo' GDB eventually ends up in search_minsyms_for_name (linespec.c), this function then calls iterate_over_minimal_symbols passing in the name we are looking for wrapped in a lookup_name_info object. In iterate_over_minimal_symbols we iterate over two hash tables (using the name we're looking for as the hash key), first we walk the hash table of symbol linkage names, then we walk the hash table of demangled symbol names. When the language is C++ the symbols for 'foo' will all have been mangled, as a result, in this case, the iteration of the linkage name hash table will find no matching results. However, when we walk the demangled hash table we do find some results. In order to match symbol names, GDB obtains a symbol name matching function by calling the get_symbol_name_matcher method on the language_defn class. For C++, in this case, the matching function we use is cp_fq_symbol_name_matches, which delegates the work to strncmp_iw_with_mode with mode strncmp_iw_mode::MATCH_PARAMS and language set to language_cplus. The strncmp_iw_mode::MATCH_PARAMS mode means that strncmp_iw_mode will skip any parameters in the demangled symbol name when checking for a match, e.g. 'foo' will match the demangled name 'foo()'. The way this is done is that the strings are matched character by character, but, once the string we are looking for ('foo' here) is exhausted, if we are looking at '(' then we consider the match a success. Lets consider the 3 symbols GDB created. If the function declaration is 'void foo ()' then from the main executable we added symbols '_Z3foov@plt' and '_Z3foov', while from the shared library we added another symbol call '_Z3foov'. When these are demangled they become 'foo()@plt', 'foo()', and 'foo()' respectively. Now, the '_Z3foov' symbol from the main executable has the type mst_solib_trampoline, and in search_minsyms_for_name, we search for any symbols of type mst_solib_trampoline and filter these out of the results. However, the '_Z3foov@plt' symbol (from the main executable), and the '_Z3foov' symbol (from the shared library) both have type mst_text. During the demangled name matching, due to the use of MATCH_PARAMS mode, we stop the comparison as soon as we hit a '(' in the demangled name. And so, '_Z3foov@plt', which demangles to 'foo()@plt' matches 'foo', and '_Z3foov', which demangles to 'foo()' also matches 'foo'. By contrast, for C, there are no demangled hash table entries to be iterated over (in iterate_over_minimal_symbols), we only consider the linkage name symbols which are 'foo@plt' and 'foo'. The plain 'foo' symbol obviously matches when we are looking for 'foo', but in this case the 'foo@plt' will not match due to the '@plt' suffix. And so, when the user asks for a breakpoint in 'foo', and the language is C, search_minsyms_for_name, returns a single msymbol, the mst_text symbol for foo in the shared library, while, when the language is C++, we get two results, '_Z3foov' for the shared library function, and '_Z3foov@plt' for the plt entry in the main executable. I propose to fix this in strncmp_iw_with_mode. When the mode is MATCH_PARAMS, instead of stopping at a '(' and assuming the match is a success, GDB will instead search forward for the matching, closing, ')', effectively skipping the parameter list, and then resume matching. Thus, when comparing 'foo' to 'foo()@plt' GDB will effectively compare against 'foo@plt' (skipping the parameter list), and the match will fail, just as it does when the language is C. There is one slight complication, which is revealed by the test gdb.linespec/cpcompletion.exp, when searching for the symbol of a const member function, the demangled symbol will have 'const' at the end of its name, e.g.: struct_with_const_overload::const_overload_fn() const Previously, the matching would stop at the '(' character, but after my change the whole '()' is skipped, and the match resumes. As a result, the 'const' modifier results in a failure to match, when previously GDB would have found a match. To work around this issue, in strncmp_iw_with_mode, when mode is MATCH_PARAMS, after skipping the parameter list, if the next character is '@' then we assume we are looking at something like '@plt' and return a value indicating the match failed, otherwise, we return a value indicating the match succeeded, this allows things like 'const' to be skipped. With these changes in place I now see GDB correctly setting a breakpoint only at the implementation of 'foo' in the shared library. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=20091 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17201 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17071 Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17199 Tested-By: Bruno Larsen <blarsen@redhat.com> Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
2022-12-16 23:15:42 +08:00
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo(args)@plt", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("foo((())args(()))@plt", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo((())args(()))", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(args) const", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo(args)const", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
/* strncmp_iw_with_mode also supports case insensitivity. */
{
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("FoO", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("FoO", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
scoped_restore restore_case = make_scoped_restore (&case_sensitivity);
case_sensitivity = case_sensitive_off;
CHECK_MATCH ("FoO", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("FoO", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo", "FoO", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo", "FoO", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_MATCH ("FoO[AbI:abC]()", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("FoO[AbI:abC]()", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_MATCH ("FoO2[AbI:abC]()", "foo", NORMAL);
CHECK_NO_MATCH ("FoO2[AbI:abC]()", "foo", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:abc]()", "FoO[AbI:abC]()", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:abc]()", "FoO[AbI:AbC]()", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:abc](xyz)", "FoO[AbI:abC](XyZ)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:abc](xyz)", "FoO[AbI:abC](XyZ)", MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:abc][abi:def](xyz)", "FoO[AbI:abC](XyZ)", NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo[abi:abc][abi:def](xyz)", "FoO[AbI:abC](XyZ)",
MATCH_PARAMS);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo<bar<baz>>(bar<baz>)", "FoO<bAr<BaZ>>(bAr<BaZ>)",
NORMAL);
CHECK_MATCH ("foo<bar<baz>>(bar<baz>)", "FoO<bAr<BaZ>>(bAr<BaZ>)",
MATCH_PARAMS);
}
}
#undef MATCH
#undef NO_MATCH
#endif
/* See utils.h. */
int
strncmp_iw (const char *string1, const char *string2, size_t string2_len)
{
return strncmp_iw_with_mode (string1, string2, string2_len,
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
strncmp_iw_mode::NORMAL, language_minimal);
}
/* See utils.h. */
int
strcmp_iw (const char *string1, const char *string2)
{
return strncmp_iw_with_mode (string1, string2, strlen (string2),
Make strcmp_iw NOT ignore whitespace in the middle of tokens currently "b func tion" manages to set a breakpoint at "function" ! All these years I had never noticed this, but now that the linespec completer actually works, this easily happens by accident, with: "b func t<tab>" expecting to get "thread", but getting instead: "b func tion" ... Also, this: "b rettypefunc<int>" manages to set a breakpoint on "rettype func<int>()". These things happen due to strcmp_iw "magic". Fix it by teaching strcmp_iw about when can it skip whitespace. This required handling user-defined operators, and scope operators, complicating the code a bit, unfortunately. I added unit tests for all the corner cases I stumbled on, as I was developing this, and then in the end wrote a testsuite testcase covering many of the same things and more (to be added later). gdb/ChangeLog: 2017-11-24 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (cp_symbol_name_matches_1): New, factored out from cp_fq_symbol_name_matches. Pass language_cplus to strncmp_with_mode. (cp_fq_symbol_name_matches): Call cp_symbol_name_matches_1. (selftests::test_cp_symbol_name_cmp): New. (_initialize_cp_support): Register "cp_symbol_name_matches" selftests. * language.c (default_symbol_name_matcher): Pass language_minimal to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.c: Include "cp-support.h" and <algorithm>. (valid_identifier_name_char, cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws) (cp_is_operator): New functions. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use them. Add language parameter. Don't skip whitespace in the symbol name when the lookup name doesn't have spaces, and vice versa. (strncmp_iw, strcmp_iw): Pass language to strncmp_iw_with_mode. * utils.h (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Add language parameter.
2017-11-25 07:30:04 +08:00
strncmp_iw_mode::MATCH_PARAMS, language_minimal);
}
/* This is like strcmp except that it ignores whitespace and treats
'(' as the first non-NULL character in terms of ordering. Like
strcmp (and unlike strcmp_iw), it returns negative if STRING1 <
STRING2, 0 if STRING2 = STRING2, and positive if STRING1 > STRING2
according to that ordering.
If a list is sorted according to this function and if you want to
find names in the list that match some fixed NAME according to
strcmp_iw(LIST_ELT, NAME), then the place to start looking is right
where this function would put NAME.
gdb/doc/ * gdb.texinfo (Index Section Format): Change the version to 5. Describe the different formula. gdb/ Case insensitive lookups implementation. * dwarf2read.c: Include ctype.h. (struct mapped_index): New field version. (mapped_index_string_hash): New parameter index_version. New comment for it. Call tolower appropriately. (find_slot_in_mapped_hash): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. Choose the right index version for mapped_index_string_hash. (dwarf2_read_index): Support also the index version 5. Initialize the new struct mapped_index field version. (hash_strtab_entry): Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter, explain why. (find_slot): Explain the version needs. Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter. (write_psymtabs_to_index): Produce version 5. * minsyms.c (lookup_minimal_symbol): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. New comment for SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME. * psymtab.c (lookup_partial_symbol): Find the SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME start of the found block of matching entries. * symtab.c (lookup_symbol_in_language): Remove the case_sensitive_off NAME lowercasing. (search_symbols): Pass REG_ICASE to regcomp for case_sensitive_off. (completion_list_add_name): New variable ncmp, initialize it, use it. * symtab.h (SYMBOL_HASH_NEXT): Always call tolower. * utils.c (strcmp_iw): Support case_sensitive_off. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Sort in a way compatible with case_sensitive_off. New function comment part. New variables saved_string1, saved_string2 and case_pass. Add a proper second pass. gdb/testsuite/ * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.c: New file. * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.exp: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive-debug.S: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.c: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.exp: New file.
2011-04-28 04:03:04 +08:00
This function must be neutral to the CASE_SENSITIVITY setting as the user
may choose it during later lookup. Therefore this function always sorts
primarily case-insensitively and secondarily case-sensitively.
Here are some examples of why using strcmp to sort is a bad idea:
Whitespace example:
Say your partial symtab contains: "foo<char *>", "goo". Then, if
we try to do a search for "foo<char*>", strcmp will locate this
after "foo<char *>" and before "goo". Then lookup_partial_symbol
will start looking at strings beginning with "goo", and will never
see the correct match of "foo<char *>".
Parenthesis example:
In practice, this is less like to be an issue, but I'll give it a
shot. Let's assume that '$' is a legitimate character to occur in
symbols. (Which may well even be the case on some systems.) Then
say that the partial symbol table contains "foo$" and "foo(int)".
strcmp will put them in this order, since '$' < '('. Now, if the
user searches for "foo", then strcmp will sort "foo" before "foo$".
Then lookup_partial_symbol will notice that strcmp_iw("foo$",
"foo") is false, so it won't proceed to the actual match of
"foo(int)" with "foo". */
int
strcmp_iw_ordered (const char *string1, const char *string2)
{
gdb/doc/ * gdb.texinfo (Index Section Format): Change the version to 5. Describe the different formula. gdb/ Case insensitive lookups implementation. * dwarf2read.c: Include ctype.h. (struct mapped_index): New field version. (mapped_index_string_hash): New parameter index_version. New comment for it. Call tolower appropriately. (find_slot_in_mapped_hash): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. Choose the right index version for mapped_index_string_hash. (dwarf2_read_index): Support also the index version 5. Initialize the new struct mapped_index field version. (hash_strtab_entry): Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter, explain why. (find_slot): Explain the version needs. Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter. (write_psymtabs_to_index): Produce version 5. * minsyms.c (lookup_minimal_symbol): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. New comment for SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME. * psymtab.c (lookup_partial_symbol): Find the SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME start of the found block of matching entries. * symtab.c (lookup_symbol_in_language): Remove the case_sensitive_off NAME lowercasing. (search_symbols): Pass REG_ICASE to regcomp for case_sensitive_off. (completion_list_add_name): New variable ncmp, initialize it, use it. * symtab.h (SYMBOL_HASH_NEXT): Always call tolower. * utils.c (strcmp_iw): Support case_sensitive_off. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Sort in a way compatible with case_sensitive_off. New function comment part. New variables saved_string1, saved_string2 and case_pass. Add a proper second pass. gdb/testsuite/ * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.c: New file. * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.exp: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive-debug.S: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.c: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.exp: New file.
2011-04-28 04:03:04 +08:00
const char *saved_string1 = string1, *saved_string2 = string2;
enum case_sensitivity case_pass = case_sensitive_off;
for (;;)
{
/* C1 and C2 are valid only if *string1 != '\0' && *string2 != '\0'.
Provide stub characters if we are already at the end of one of the
strings. */
char c1 = 'X', c2 = 'X';
while (*string1 != '\0' && *string2 != '\0')
{
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
while (ISSPACE (*string1))
string1++;
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
while (ISSPACE (*string2))
string2++;
gdb/doc/ * gdb.texinfo (Index Section Format): Change the version to 5. Describe the different formula. gdb/ Case insensitive lookups implementation. * dwarf2read.c: Include ctype.h. (struct mapped_index): New field version. (mapped_index_string_hash): New parameter index_version. New comment for it. Call tolower appropriately. (find_slot_in_mapped_hash): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. Choose the right index version for mapped_index_string_hash. (dwarf2_read_index): Support also the index version 5. Initialize the new struct mapped_index field version. (hash_strtab_entry): Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter, explain why. (find_slot): Explain the version needs. Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter. (write_psymtabs_to_index): Produce version 5. * minsyms.c (lookup_minimal_symbol): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. New comment for SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME. * psymtab.c (lookup_partial_symbol): Find the SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME start of the found block of matching entries. * symtab.c (lookup_symbol_in_language): Remove the case_sensitive_off NAME lowercasing. (search_symbols): Pass REG_ICASE to regcomp for case_sensitive_off. (completion_list_add_name): New variable ncmp, initialize it, use it. * symtab.h (SYMBOL_HASH_NEXT): Always call tolower. * utils.c (strcmp_iw): Support case_sensitive_off. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Sort in a way compatible with case_sensitive_off. New function comment part. New variables saved_string1, saved_string2 and case_pass. Add a proper second pass. gdb/testsuite/ * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.c: New file. * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.exp: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive-debug.S: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.c: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.exp: New file.
2011-04-28 04:03:04 +08:00
switch (case_pass)
{
case case_sensitive_off:
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
c1 = TOLOWER ((unsigned char) *string1);
c2 = TOLOWER ((unsigned char) *string2);
gdb/doc/ * gdb.texinfo (Index Section Format): Change the version to 5. Describe the different formula. gdb/ Case insensitive lookups implementation. * dwarf2read.c: Include ctype.h. (struct mapped_index): New field version. (mapped_index_string_hash): New parameter index_version. New comment for it. Call tolower appropriately. (find_slot_in_mapped_hash): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. Choose the right index version for mapped_index_string_hash. (dwarf2_read_index): Support also the index version 5. Initialize the new struct mapped_index field version. (hash_strtab_entry): Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter, explain why. (find_slot): Explain the version needs. Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter. (write_psymtabs_to_index): Produce version 5. * minsyms.c (lookup_minimal_symbol): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. New comment for SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME. * psymtab.c (lookup_partial_symbol): Find the SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME start of the found block of matching entries. * symtab.c (lookup_symbol_in_language): Remove the case_sensitive_off NAME lowercasing. (search_symbols): Pass REG_ICASE to regcomp for case_sensitive_off. (completion_list_add_name): New variable ncmp, initialize it, use it. * symtab.h (SYMBOL_HASH_NEXT): Always call tolower. * utils.c (strcmp_iw): Support case_sensitive_off. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Sort in a way compatible with case_sensitive_off. New function comment part. New variables saved_string1, saved_string2 and case_pass. Add a proper second pass. gdb/testsuite/ * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.c: New file. * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.exp: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive-debug.S: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.c: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.exp: New file.
2011-04-28 04:03:04 +08:00
break;
case case_sensitive_on:
c1 = *string1;
c2 = *string2;
gdb/doc/ * gdb.texinfo (Index Section Format): Change the version to 5. Describe the different formula. gdb/ Case insensitive lookups implementation. * dwarf2read.c: Include ctype.h. (struct mapped_index): New field version. (mapped_index_string_hash): New parameter index_version. New comment for it. Call tolower appropriately. (find_slot_in_mapped_hash): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. Choose the right index version for mapped_index_string_hash. (dwarf2_read_index): Support also the index version 5. Initialize the new struct mapped_index field version. (hash_strtab_entry): Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter, explain why. (find_slot): Explain the version needs. Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter. (write_psymtabs_to_index): Produce version 5. * minsyms.c (lookup_minimal_symbol): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. New comment for SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME. * psymtab.c (lookup_partial_symbol): Find the SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME start of the found block of matching entries. * symtab.c (lookup_symbol_in_language): Remove the case_sensitive_off NAME lowercasing. (search_symbols): Pass REG_ICASE to regcomp for case_sensitive_off. (completion_list_add_name): New variable ncmp, initialize it, use it. * symtab.h (SYMBOL_HASH_NEXT): Always call tolower. * utils.c (strcmp_iw): Support case_sensitive_off. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Sort in a way compatible with case_sensitive_off. New function comment part. New variables saved_string1, saved_string2 and case_pass. Add a proper second pass. gdb/testsuite/ * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.c: New file. * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.exp: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive-debug.S: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.c: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.exp: New file.
2011-04-28 04:03:04 +08:00
break;
}
if (c1 != c2)
break;
if (*string1 != '\0')
{
string1++;
string2++;
}
}
switch (*string1)
{
/* Characters are non-equal unless they're both '\0'; we want to
make sure we get the comparison right according to our
comparison in the cases where one of them is '\0' or '('. */
case '\0':
if (*string2 == '\0')
gdb/doc/ * gdb.texinfo (Index Section Format): Change the version to 5. Describe the different formula. gdb/ Case insensitive lookups implementation. * dwarf2read.c: Include ctype.h. (struct mapped_index): New field version. (mapped_index_string_hash): New parameter index_version. New comment for it. Call tolower appropriately. (find_slot_in_mapped_hash): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. Choose the right index version for mapped_index_string_hash. (dwarf2_read_index): Support also the index version 5. Initialize the new struct mapped_index field version. (hash_strtab_entry): Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter, explain why. (find_slot): Explain the version needs. Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter. (write_psymtabs_to_index): Produce version 5. * minsyms.c (lookup_minimal_symbol): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. New comment for SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME. * psymtab.c (lookup_partial_symbol): Find the SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME start of the found block of matching entries. * symtab.c (lookup_symbol_in_language): Remove the case_sensitive_off NAME lowercasing. (search_symbols): Pass REG_ICASE to regcomp for case_sensitive_off. (completion_list_add_name): New variable ncmp, initialize it, use it. * symtab.h (SYMBOL_HASH_NEXT): Always call tolower. * utils.c (strcmp_iw): Support case_sensitive_off. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Sort in a way compatible with case_sensitive_off. New function comment part. New variables saved_string1, saved_string2 and case_pass. Add a proper second pass. gdb/testsuite/ * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.c: New file. * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.exp: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive-debug.S: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.c: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.exp: New file.
2011-04-28 04:03:04 +08:00
break;
else
return -1;
case '(':
if (*string2 == '\0')
return 1;
else
return -1;
default:
if (*string2 == '\0' || *string2 == '(')
return 1;
gdb/doc/ * gdb.texinfo (Index Section Format): Change the version to 5. Describe the different formula. gdb/ Case insensitive lookups implementation. * dwarf2read.c: Include ctype.h. (struct mapped_index): New field version. (mapped_index_string_hash): New parameter index_version. New comment for it. Call tolower appropriately. (find_slot_in_mapped_hash): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. Choose the right index version for mapped_index_string_hash. (dwarf2_read_index): Support also the index version 5. Initialize the new struct mapped_index field version. (hash_strtab_entry): Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter, explain why. (find_slot): Explain the version needs. Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter. (write_psymtabs_to_index): Produce version 5. * minsyms.c (lookup_minimal_symbol): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. New comment for SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME. * psymtab.c (lookup_partial_symbol): Find the SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME start of the found block of matching entries. * symtab.c (lookup_symbol_in_language): Remove the case_sensitive_off NAME lowercasing. (search_symbols): Pass REG_ICASE to regcomp for case_sensitive_off. (completion_list_add_name): New variable ncmp, initialize it, use it. * symtab.h (SYMBOL_HASH_NEXT): Always call tolower. * utils.c (strcmp_iw): Support case_sensitive_off. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Sort in a way compatible with case_sensitive_off. New function comment part. New variables saved_string1, saved_string2 and case_pass. Add a proper second pass. gdb/testsuite/ * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.c: New file. * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.exp: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive-debug.S: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.c: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.exp: New file.
2011-04-28 04:03:04 +08:00
else if (c1 > c2)
return 1;
else if (c1 < c2)
return -1;
/* PASSTHRU */
}
gdb/doc/ * gdb.texinfo (Index Section Format): Change the version to 5. Describe the different formula. gdb/ Case insensitive lookups implementation. * dwarf2read.c: Include ctype.h. (struct mapped_index): New field version. (mapped_index_string_hash): New parameter index_version. New comment for it. Call tolower appropriately. (find_slot_in_mapped_hash): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. Choose the right index version for mapped_index_string_hash. (dwarf2_read_index): Support also the index version 5. Initialize the new struct mapped_index field version. (hash_strtab_entry): Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter, explain why. (find_slot): Explain the version needs. Pass INT_MAX for the new parameter. (write_psymtabs_to_index): Produce version 5. * minsyms.c (lookup_minimal_symbol): New variable cmp, initialize it, use it. New comment for SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME. * psymtab.c (lookup_partial_symbol): Find the SYMBOL_MATCHES_SEARCH_NAME start of the found block of matching entries. * symtab.c (lookup_symbol_in_language): Remove the case_sensitive_off NAME lowercasing. (search_symbols): Pass REG_ICASE to regcomp for case_sensitive_off. (completion_list_add_name): New variable ncmp, initialize it, use it. * symtab.h (SYMBOL_HASH_NEXT): Always call tolower. * utils.c (strcmp_iw): Support case_sensitive_off. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Sort in a way compatible with case_sensitive_off. New function comment part. New variables saved_string1, saved_string2 and case_pass. Add a proper second pass. gdb/testsuite/ * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.c: New file. * gdb.base/fortran-sym-case.exp: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive-debug.S: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.c: New file. * gdb.dwarf2/dw2-case-insensitive.exp: New file.
2011-04-28 04:03:04 +08:00
if (case_pass == case_sensitive_on)
return 0;
/* Otherwise the strings were equal in case insensitive way, make
a more fine grained comparison in a case sensitive way. */
case_pass = case_sensitive_on;
string1 = saved_string1;
string2 = saved_string2;
}
}
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
static void
show_debug_timestamp (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
{
gdb_printf (file, _("Timestamping debugging messages is %s.\n"),
value);
}
1999-07-08 04:19:36 +08:00
const char *
* defs.h (strlen_paddr, paddr, paddr_nz): Remove. (paddress): Add GDBARCH parameter. * utils.c (strlen_paddr, paddr, paddr_nz): Remove. (paddress): Add GDBARCH parameter, use it instead of current_gdbarch. * ui-out.h (ui_out_field_core_addr): Add GDBARCH parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out_field_core_addr): Add GDBARCH parameter, use it instead of current_gdbarch. Update calls to ui_out_field_core_addr to pass architecture: * ada-lang.c (print_one_exception): Update. * breakpoint.c (print_one_breakpoint_location, print_one_exception_catchpoint): Update. * disasm.c (dump_insns): Update. * darwin-nat-info.c (darwin_debug_regions_recurse): Update. * mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_data_read_memory): Update. * mi/mi-symbol-cmds.c: Include "objfiles.h". (mi_cmd_symbol_list_lines): Update. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Update. Update callers of paddress to pass architecture: * ada-tasks.c (info_task): Update. * ada-valprint.c (ada_val_print_1): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_source, annotate_frame_begin): Update. * breakpoint.c (insert_bp_location, describe_other_breakpoints, mention): Update. * cli/cli-cmds.c (edit_command, list_command, print_disassembly): Update. * corefile.c (memory_error): Update. * c-valprint.c (print_function_pointer_address, c_val_print): Update. * disasm.c (dis_asm_print_address): Update. * exec.c (print_section_info): Update. * f-valprint.c (f_val_print): Update. * infcmd.c: Include "arch-utils.h". (jump_command, program_info): Update. * linux-fork.c: Include "arch-utils.h". (info_forks_command): Update. * m2-valprint.c (print_function_pointer_address, print_unpacked_pointer, print_variable_at_address, m2_val_print): Update. * m32r-rom.c (m32r_load_section, m32r_load, m32r_upload_command): Update. * printcmd.c (print_address, print_address_demangle, address_info): Update. * p-valprint.c (pascal_val_print): Update. * source.c: Include "arch-utils.h". (line_info): Update. * stack.c (frame_info, print_block_frame_labels): Update. * symfile.c (add_symbol_file_command, list_overlays_command): Update. * symmisc.c (dump_msymbols, dump_psymtab, dump_symtab_1, print_symbol, print_partial_symbols, maintenance_info_psymtabs, maintenance_check_symtabs): Update. * symtab.c (find_pc_sect_symtab): Update. * target.c (deprecated_debug_xfer_memory): Update. * tracepoint.c (scope_info): Update. * tui/tui-stack.c (tui_make_status_line): Update. * valprint.c (val_print_string): Update. Update callers of paddr_nz to use paddress instead (keeping user-visible output identical): * alpha-tdep.c (alpha_heuristic_proc_start): Update. * amd64-tdep.c (fixup_riprel, amd64_displaced_step_copy_insn, amd64_displaced_step_fixup): Update. * arch-utils.c (simple_displaced_step_copy_insn): Update. * auxv.c (fprint_target_auxv): Update. * breakpoint.c (insert_single_step_breakpoint): Update. * buildsym.c (finish_block): Update. * cli/cli-dump.c (restore_section_callback): Update. * fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_find_memory_regions): Update. * frame.c (frame_unwind_register_value): Update. * gcore.c (gcore_create_callback): Update. * hppa-tdep.c (hppa_frame_cache, hppa_skip_trampoline_code): Update. * i386-tdep.c (i386_displaced_step_fixup, i386_record_modrm, i386_record_lea_modrm_addr, i386_record_lea_modrm, i386_process_record): Update. * ia64-tdep.c (ia64_frame_this_id, ia64_sigtramp_frame_this_id, ia64_libunwind_frame_this_id, ia64_libunwind_sigtramp_frame_this_id, ia64_dummy_id, ia64_access_reg, ia64_access_rse_reg): Update. * infrun.c (displaced_step_prepare, displaced_step_fixup, handle_inferior_event, insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_sal, insert_longjmp_resume_breakpoint): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_find_memory_regions): Update. * linux-record.c (record_linux_system_call): Update. * mips-tdep.c (heuristic_proc_start, mips_eabi_push_dummy_call, mips_n32n64_push_dummy_call, mips_o32_push_dummy_call, mips_o64_push_dummy_call): Update. * monitor.c (monitor_error, monitor_remove_breakpoint): Update. * record.c (record_arch_list_add_mem, record_wait, record_xfer_partial): Update. * remote-mips.c (mips_fetch_word, mips_check_lsi_error, mips_common_breakpoint): Update. * remote-sim.c (gdbsim_xfer_inferior_memory): Update. * rs6000-tdep.c (ppc_displaced_step_fixup): Update. * solib-som.c (som_current_sos): Update. * symfile.c (load_progress, generic_load): Update. * symfile-mem.c (add_vsyscall_page): Update. * valops.c (value_fetch_lazy): Update. * windows-tdep.c (windows_xfer_shared_library): Update. Update callers of paddr_nz to use paddress instead (changing user-visible output to make it more correct): * dwarf2loc.c (locexpr_describe_location): Update. * ia64-tdep.c (ia64_memory_insert_breakpoint, ia64_memory_remove_breakpoint): Update. * jv-valprint.c (java_value_print): Update. * m32c-tdep.c (m32c_m16c_address_to_pointer): Update. * monitor.c (monitor_read_memory): Update. Update callers of paddr to use paddress instead (changing user-visible output to make it more correct): * arm-tdep.c (arm_push_dummy_call): Update. * breakpoint.c (insert_bp_location, create_thread_event_breakpoint, create_breakpoint): Update. * darwin-nat-info.c (darwin_debug_regions): Update. * dcache.c (dcache_info): Update. * dsrec.c (load_srec, make_srec): Update. * dwarf2-frame.c (dwarf2_restore_rule, execute_cfa_program, dwarf2_frame_cache): Update. * gcore.c (gcore_copy_callback): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_xfer_memory): Update. * mips-linux-nat.c (mips_show_dr): Update. * monitor.c (monitor_write_memory, monitor_insert_breakpoint, monitor_remove_breakpoint): Update. * remote.c (compare_sections_command): Update. * remote-m32r-sdi.c (m32r_xfer_memory, m32r_insert_breakpoint, m32r_remove_breakpoint, m32r_insert_watchpoint, m32r_remove_watchpoint): Update. * sol-thread.c (info_cb): Update. * symfile.c (load_progress): Update. Update callers of paddress or paddr_nz to use hex_string instead (changes output of internal/error/debug messages only): * dwarf2read.c (dump_die_shallow): Update. * frame.c (fprint_field, fprint_frame, frame_pc_unwind, get_frame_func, create_new_frame): Update. * hppa-tdep.c (find_unwind_entry, unwind_command): Update. * ia64-tdep.c (get_kernel_table, ia64_find_proc_info_x, ia64_get_dyn_info_list): Update. * maint.c (maintenance_translate_address): Update. * mi/mi-cmd-var.c (mi_cmd_var_create): Update. * target.c (target_flash_erase): Update. Update callers of paddr/paddr_nz to use phex/phex_nz instead, using an appropriate address size. Remove use of strlen_paddr. * exec.c (exec_files_info): Update. * i386-nat.c (i386_show_dr): Update. * remote.c (remote_flash_erase): Update. * m32r-rom.c (m32r_load_section): Update. * monitor.c (monitor_vsprintf, monitor_store_register): Update. * remote.c (remote_check_symbols, remote_search_memory): Update. * remote-mips.c (mips_request, mips_common_breakpoint): Update. * scm-valprint.c (scm_ipruk, scm_scmval_print): Update. * sh64-tdep.c (sh64_show_media_regs, sh64_show_compact_regs): Update. * sh-tdep.c (sh_generic_show_regs, sh3_show_regs, sh2e_show_regs, sh2a_show_regs, sh2a_nofpu_show_regs, sh3e_show_regs, sh3_dsp_show_regs, sh4_show_regs, sh4_nofpu_show_regs, sh_dsp_show_regs): Update. * xcoffsolib.c (sharedlibrary_command): Update. * maint.c (maint_print_section_info): Add ADDR_SIZE parameter. Use hex_string_custom instead of paddr. (print_bfd_section_info): Pass address size. (print_objfile_section_info): Likewise. * annotate.h (annotate_source): Add GDBARCH parameter. (annotate_frame_begin): Likewise. * annotate.c (annotate_source): Add GDBARCH parameter. (annotate_frame_begin): Likewise. * source.c (identify_source_line): Update call to annotate_source. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Update call to annotate_frame_begin. * breakpoint.c (describe_other_breakpoints): Add GDBARCH parameter. (create_breakpoint, create_ada_exception_breakpoint): Update call. * stack.c (print_block_frame_labels): Add GDBARCH parameter. (print_frame_label_vars): Update call. * symmisc.c (print_partial_symbols): Add GDBARCH parameter. (dump_psymtab): Update call to print_partial_symbols. (struct print_symbol_args): Add GDBARCH member. (dump_symtab_1): Set print_symbol_args architecture member. (print_symbol): Use it. * windows-tdep.h (windows_xfer_shared_library): Add GDBARCH parameter. * windows-tdep.c (windows_xfer_shared_library): Likewise. * i386-cygwin-tdep.c (struct cpms_data): Add GDBARCH member. (core_process_module_section): Pass architecture from cpms_data to windows_xfer_shared_library. (windows_core_xfer_shared_libraries): Initialize cmps_data architecture member. * windows-nat.c (windows_xfer_shared_libraries): Pass architecture to windows_xfer_shared_library. * defs.h (print_address): Add GDBARCH parameter. * printcmd.c (print_address): Add GDBARCH parameter. (print_scalar_formatted, do_examine): Update call. * findcmd.c (find_command): Update call. * tracepoint.c: Include "arch-utils.h". (trace_find_line_command): Update call. * tui/tui-disasm.c (tui_disassemble): Update call. * value.h (print_address_demangle): Add GDBARCH parameter. * printcmd.c (print_address_demangle): Add GDBARCH parameter. * c-valprint.c (print_function_pointer_address, c_val_print): Update call. * f-valprint.c (f_val_print): Update call. * gnu-v3-abi.c (gnuv3_print_method_ptr): Update call. * jv-valprint.c (java_val_print): Update call. * m2-valprint.c (print_function_pointer_address, m2_val_print): Update call. * p-valprint.c (pascal_val_print): Update call. * disasm.c (gdb_disassemble_info): Install architecture into di.application_data field. testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.threads/tls-shared.exp: Update to locexpr_describe_location change to prefix TLS offset in hex with 0x. doc/ChangeLog: * gdbint.texinfo (Item Output Functions): Update signature for ui_out_field_core_addr.
2009-07-03 01:21:10 +08:00
paddress (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR addr)
{
/* Truncate address to the size of a target address, avoiding shifts
larger or equal than the width of a CORE_ADDR. The local
variable ADDR_BIT stops the compiler reporting a shift overflow
when it won't occur. */
/* NOTE: This assumes that the significant address information is
kept in the least significant bits of ADDR - the upper bits were
either zero or sign extended. Should gdbarch_address_to_pointer or
some ADDRESS_TO_PRINTABLE() be used to do the conversion? */
* defs.h (strlen_paddr, paddr, paddr_nz): Remove. (paddress): Add GDBARCH parameter. * utils.c (strlen_paddr, paddr, paddr_nz): Remove. (paddress): Add GDBARCH parameter, use it instead of current_gdbarch. * ui-out.h (ui_out_field_core_addr): Add GDBARCH parameter. * ui-out.c (ui_out_field_core_addr): Add GDBARCH parameter, use it instead of current_gdbarch. Update calls to ui_out_field_core_addr to pass architecture: * ada-lang.c (print_one_exception): Update. * breakpoint.c (print_one_breakpoint_location, print_one_exception_catchpoint): Update. * disasm.c (dump_insns): Update. * darwin-nat-info.c (darwin_debug_regions_recurse): Update. * mi/mi-main.c (mi_cmd_data_read_memory): Update. * mi/mi-symbol-cmds.c: Include "objfiles.h". (mi_cmd_symbol_list_lines): Update. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Update. Update callers of paddress to pass architecture: * ada-tasks.c (info_task): Update. * ada-valprint.c (ada_val_print_1): Update. * annotate.c (annotate_source, annotate_frame_begin): Update. * breakpoint.c (insert_bp_location, describe_other_breakpoints, mention): Update. * cli/cli-cmds.c (edit_command, list_command, print_disassembly): Update. * corefile.c (memory_error): Update. * c-valprint.c (print_function_pointer_address, c_val_print): Update. * disasm.c (dis_asm_print_address): Update. * exec.c (print_section_info): Update. * f-valprint.c (f_val_print): Update. * infcmd.c: Include "arch-utils.h". (jump_command, program_info): Update. * linux-fork.c: Include "arch-utils.h". (info_forks_command): Update. * m2-valprint.c (print_function_pointer_address, print_unpacked_pointer, print_variable_at_address, m2_val_print): Update. * m32r-rom.c (m32r_load_section, m32r_load, m32r_upload_command): Update. * printcmd.c (print_address, print_address_demangle, address_info): Update. * p-valprint.c (pascal_val_print): Update. * source.c: Include "arch-utils.h". (line_info): Update. * stack.c (frame_info, print_block_frame_labels): Update. * symfile.c (add_symbol_file_command, list_overlays_command): Update. * symmisc.c (dump_msymbols, dump_psymtab, dump_symtab_1, print_symbol, print_partial_symbols, maintenance_info_psymtabs, maintenance_check_symtabs): Update. * symtab.c (find_pc_sect_symtab): Update. * target.c (deprecated_debug_xfer_memory): Update. * tracepoint.c (scope_info): Update. * tui/tui-stack.c (tui_make_status_line): Update. * valprint.c (val_print_string): Update. Update callers of paddr_nz to use paddress instead (keeping user-visible output identical): * alpha-tdep.c (alpha_heuristic_proc_start): Update. * amd64-tdep.c (fixup_riprel, amd64_displaced_step_copy_insn, amd64_displaced_step_fixup): Update. * arch-utils.c (simple_displaced_step_copy_insn): Update. * auxv.c (fprint_target_auxv): Update. * breakpoint.c (insert_single_step_breakpoint): Update. * buildsym.c (finish_block): Update. * cli/cli-dump.c (restore_section_callback): Update. * fbsd-nat.c (fbsd_find_memory_regions): Update. * frame.c (frame_unwind_register_value): Update. * gcore.c (gcore_create_callback): Update. * hppa-tdep.c (hppa_frame_cache, hppa_skip_trampoline_code): Update. * i386-tdep.c (i386_displaced_step_fixup, i386_record_modrm, i386_record_lea_modrm_addr, i386_record_lea_modrm, i386_process_record): Update. * ia64-tdep.c (ia64_frame_this_id, ia64_sigtramp_frame_this_id, ia64_libunwind_frame_this_id, ia64_libunwind_sigtramp_frame_this_id, ia64_dummy_id, ia64_access_reg, ia64_access_rse_reg): Update. * infrun.c (displaced_step_prepare, displaced_step_fixup, handle_inferior_event, insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_sal, insert_longjmp_resume_breakpoint): Update. * linux-nat.c (linux_nat_find_memory_regions): Update. * linux-record.c (record_linux_system_call): Update. * mips-tdep.c (heuristic_proc_start, mips_eabi_push_dummy_call, mips_n32n64_push_dummy_call, mips_o32_push_dummy_call, mips_o64_push_dummy_call): Update. * monitor.c (monitor_error, monitor_remove_breakpoint): Update. * record.c (record_arch_list_add_mem, record_wait, record_xfer_partial): Update. * remote-mips.c (mips_fetch_word, mips_check_lsi_error, mips_common_breakpoint): Update. * remote-sim.c (gdbsim_xfer_inferior_memory): Update. * rs6000-tdep.c (ppc_displaced_step_fixup): Update. * solib-som.c (som_current_sos): Update. * symfile.c (load_progress, generic_load): Update. * symfile-mem.c (add_vsyscall_page): Update. * valops.c (value_fetch_lazy): Update. * windows-tdep.c (windows_xfer_shared_library): Update. Update callers of paddr_nz to use paddress instead (changing user-visible output to make it more correct): * dwarf2loc.c (locexpr_describe_location): Update. * ia64-tdep.c (ia64_memory_insert_breakpoint, ia64_memory_remove_breakpoint): Update. * jv-valprint.c (java_value_print): Update. * m32c-tdep.c (m32c_m16c_address_to_pointer): Update. * monitor.c (monitor_read_memory): Update. Update callers of paddr to use paddress instead (changing user-visible output to make it more correct): * arm-tdep.c (arm_push_dummy_call): Update. * breakpoint.c (insert_bp_location, create_thread_event_breakpoint, create_breakpoint): Update. * darwin-nat-info.c (darwin_debug_regions): Update. * dcache.c (dcache_info): Update. * dsrec.c (load_srec, make_srec): Update. * dwarf2-frame.c (dwarf2_restore_rule, execute_cfa_program, dwarf2_frame_cache): Update. * gcore.c (gcore_copy_callback): Update. * gnu-nat.c (gnu_xfer_memory): Update. * mips-linux-nat.c (mips_show_dr): Update. * monitor.c (monitor_write_memory, monitor_insert_breakpoint, monitor_remove_breakpoint): Update. * remote.c (compare_sections_command): Update. * remote-m32r-sdi.c (m32r_xfer_memory, m32r_insert_breakpoint, m32r_remove_breakpoint, m32r_insert_watchpoint, m32r_remove_watchpoint): Update. * sol-thread.c (info_cb): Update. * symfile.c (load_progress): Update. Update callers of paddress or paddr_nz to use hex_string instead (changes output of internal/error/debug messages only): * dwarf2read.c (dump_die_shallow): Update. * frame.c (fprint_field, fprint_frame, frame_pc_unwind, get_frame_func, create_new_frame): Update. * hppa-tdep.c (find_unwind_entry, unwind_command): Update. * ia64-tdep.c (get_kernel_table, ia64_find_proc_info_x, ia64_get_dyn_info_list): Update. * maint.c (maintenance_translate_address): Update. * mi/mi-cmd-var.c (mi_cmd_var_create): Update. * target.c (target_flash_erase): Update. Update callers of paddr/paddr_nz to use phex/phex_nz instead, using an appropriate address size. Remove use of strlen_paddr. * exec.c (exec_files_info): Update. * i386-nat.c (i386_show_dr): Update. * remote.c (remote_flash_erase): Update. * m32r-rom.c (m32r_load_section): Update. * monitor.c (monitor_vsprintf, monitor_store_register): Update. * remote.c (remote_check_symbols, remote_search_memory): Update. * remote-mips.c (mips_request, mips_common_breakpoint): Update. * scm-valprint.c (scm_ipruk, scm_scmval_print): Update. * sh64-tdep.c (sh64_show_media_regs, sh64_show_compact_regs): Update. * sh-tdep.c (sh_generic_show_regs, sh3_show_regs, sh2e_show_regs, sh2a_show_regs, sh2a_nofpu_show_regs, sh3e_show_regs, sh3_dsp_show_regs, sh4_show_regs, sh4_nofpu_show_regs, sh_dsp_show_regs): Update. * xcoffsolib.c (sharedlibrary_command): Update. * maint.c (maint_print_section_info): Add ADDR_SIZE parameter. Use hex_string_custom instead of paddr. (print_bfd_section_info): Pass address size. (print_objfile_section_info): Likewise. * annotate.h (annotate_source): Add GDBARCH parameter. (annotate_frame_begin): Likewise. * annotate.c (annotate_source): Add GDBARCH parameter. (annotate_frame_begin): Likewise. * source.c (identify_source_line): Update call to annotate_source. * stack.c (print_frame_info, print_frame): Update call to annotate_frame_begin. * breakpoint.c (describe_other_breakpoints): Add GDBARCH parameter. (create_breakpoint, create_ada_exception_breakpoint): Update call. * stack.c (print_block_frame_labels): Add GDBARCH parameter. (print_frame_label_vars): Update call. * symmisc.c (print_partial_symbols): Add GDBARCH parameter. (dump_psymtab): Update call to print_partial_symbols. (struct print_symbol_args): Add GDBARCH member. (dump_symtab_1): Set print_symbol_args architecture member. (print_symbol): Use it. * windows-tdep.h (windows_xfer_shared_library): Add GDBARCH parameter. * windows-tdep.c (windows_xfer_shared_library): Likewise. * i386-cygwin-tdep.c (struct cpms_data): Add GDBARCH member. (core_process_module_section): Pass architecture from cpms_data to windows_xfer_shared_library. (windows_core_xfer_shared_libraries): Initialize cmps_data architecture member. * windows-nat.c (windows_xfer_shared_libraries): Pass architecture to windows_xfer_shared_library. * defs.h (print_address): Add GDBARCH parameter. * printcmd.c (print_address): Add GDBARCH parameter. (print_scalar_formatted, do_examine): Update call. * findcmd.c (find_command): Update call. * tracepoint.c: Include "arch-utils.h". (trace_find_line_command): Update call. * tui/tui-disasm.c (tui_disassemble): Update call. * value.h (print_address_demangle): Add GDBARCH parameter. * printcmd.c (print_address_demangle): Add GDBARCH parameter. * c-valprint.c (print_function_pointer_address, c_val_print): Update call. * f-valprint.c (f_val_print): Update call. * gnu-v3-abi.c (gnuv3_print_method_ptr): Update call. * jv-valprint.c (java_val_print): Update call. * m2-valprint.c (print_function_pointer_address, m2_val_print): Update call. * p-valprint.c (pascal_val_print): Update call. * disasm.c (gdb_disassemble_info): Install architecture into di.application_data field. testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.threads/tls-shared.exp: Update to locexpr_describe_location change to prefix TLS offset in hex with 0x. doc/ChangeLog: * gdbint.texinfo (Item Output Functions): Update signature for ui_out_field_core_addr.
2009-07-03 01:21:10 +08:00
int addr_bit = gdbarch_addr_bit (gdbarch);
if (addr_bit < (sizeof (CORE_ADDR) * HOST_CHAR_BIT))
addr &= ((CORE_ADDR) 1 << addr_bit) - 1;
return hex_string (addr);
}
2011-03-31 Thiago Jung Bauermann <bauerman@br.ibm.com> Sergio Durigan Junior <sergiodj@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Implement support for PowerPC BookE ranged breakpoints. gdb/ * NEWS: Mention support for ranged breakpoints on embedded PowerPC. * breakpoint.h (struct bp_target_info) <length>: New member variable. (struct breakpoint_ops) <breakpoint_hit>: Take struct bp_location instead of struct breakpoint as argument, and also add ASPACE and BP_ADDR arguments. Update all callers. (struct breakpoint_ops) <print_one_detail>: New method. (struct breakpoint) <addr_string_range_end>: New member variable. * breakpoint.c (breakpoint_location_address_match): Add function prototype. (insert_bp_location): Set bl->target_info.length. (breakpoint_here_p): Call breakpoint_location_address_match. (moribund_breakpoint_here_p): Likewise. (regular_breakpoint_inserted_here_p): Likewise. (breakpoint_thread_match): Likewise. (bpstat_stop_status): Likewise. (bpstat_check_location): Move call to breakpoint_ops.breakpoint_hit to the top. (print_one_breakpoint_location): Call breakpoint_ops.print_one_detail if available. (breakpoint_address_match_range): New function. (breakpoint_location_address_match): Likewise. (breakpoint_locations_match): Compare the length field of the locations too. (hw_breakpoint_used_count): Count resources used by all locations in a breakpoint, and use breakpoint_ops.resources_needed if available. (breakpoint_hit_ranged_breakpoint): New function. (resources_needed_ranged_breakpoint): Likewise. (print_it_ranged_breakpoint): Likewise. (print_one_ranged_breakpoint): Likewise. (print_one_detail_ranged_breakpoint): Likewise. (print_mention_ranged_breakpoint): Likewise. (print_recreate_ranged_breakpoint): Likewise. (ranged_breakpoint_ops): New structure. (find_breakpoint_range_end): New function. (break_range_command): Likewise. (delete_breakpoint): Free addr_string_range_end. (update_breakpoint_locations): Add SALS_END argument. Update all callers. Calculate breakpoint length if a non-zero SALS_END is given. Call breakpoint_locations_match instead of breakpoint_address_match. (reset_breakpoint): Find SaL of the end of the range if B is a ranged breakpoint. (_initialize_breakpoint): Register break-range command. * defs.h (print_core_address): Add function prototype. * ppc-linux-nat.c (ppc_linux_ranged_break_num_registers): New function. (ppc_linux_insert_hw_breakpoint): Support ranged breakpoints. (ppc_linux_remove_hw_breakpoint): Likewise. (_initialize_ppc_linux_nat): Initialize to_ranged_break_num_registers. * target.c (update_current_target): Add comment about to_ranged_break_num_registers. (target_ranged_break_num_registers): New function. * target.h (struct target_ops) <to_ranged_break_num_registers>: New method. (target_ranged_break_num_registers): Add function prototype. * ui-out.c (ui_out_field_core_addr): Move address-printing logic to ... * utils.c (print_core_address): ... here. gdb/doc/ * gdb.texinfo (PowerPC Embedded): Document ranged breakpoints.
2011-03-31 22:32:49 +08:00
/* This function is described in "defs.h". */
const char *
print_core_address (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR address)
{
int addr_bit = gdbarch_addr_bit (gdbarch);
if (addr_bit < (sizeof (CORE_ADDR) * HOST_CHAR_BIT))
address &= ((CORE_ADDR) 1 << addr_bit) - 1;
/* FIXME: cagney/2002-05-03: Need local_address_string() function
that returns the language localized string formatted to a width
based on gdbarch_addr_bit. */
if (addr_bit <= 32)
return hex_string_custom (address, 8);
else
return hex_string_custom (address, 16);
}
/* Convert a string back into a CORE_ADDR. */
CORE_ADDR
string_to_core_addr (const char *my_string)
{
CORE_ADDR addr = 0;
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
if (my_string[0] == '0' && TOLOWER (my_string[1]) == 'x')
{
/* Assume that it is in hex. */
int i;
for (i = 2; my_string[i] != '\0'; i++)
{
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
if (ISDIGIT (my_string[i]))
addr = (my_string[i] - '0') + (addr * 16);
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
else if (ISXDIGIT (my_string[i]))
addr = (TOLOWER (my_string[i]) - 'a' + 0xa) + (addr * 16);
else
error (_("invalid hex \"%s\""), my_string);
}
}
else
{
/* Assume that it is in decimal. */
int i;
for (i = 0; my_string[i] != '\0'; i++)
{
Use safe-ctype.h (ISSPACE etc.) in symbol parsing & comparison This patch avoids depending on the current locale when parsing & comparing symbol names, by using libiberty's safe-ctype.h uppercase TOLOWER, ISXDIGIT, etc. macros instead of the standard ctype.h tolower, isxdigit, etc. macros/functions. This commit: commit b1b60145aedb8adcb0b9dcf43a5ae735c2f03b51 Author: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> AuthorDate: Tue May 22 17:35:38 2018 +0100 Support UTF-8 identifiers in C/C++ expressions (PR gdb/22973) did something similar, except in the expression parser. This can improve GDB's symbol loading performance significantly. Currently strcmp_iw_ordered can show up high on profiles (called from sort_pst_symbols -> std::sort) because of the isspace and tolower functions. Hannes mentions seeing it as high as in ~24% of the profiling samples on Windows (https://sourceware.org/pipermail/gdb-patches/2020-May/168858.html). I tested GDB's performance (built with "-g -O2") loading a "-g -O0" build of gdb. I ran GDB 10 times like: /bin/time -f %e \ ./gdb/gdb --data-directory ./gdb/data-directory -nx \ -batch /tmp/gdb-g-O0 Then I computed the mean time. The baseline mean time was gdb 2.515 This patch brings the number down to gdb 2.096 Which is an around 16% improvement. gdb/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * utils.c: Include "gdbsupport/gdb-safe-ctype.h". (parse_escape): Use ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. (puts_debug): Use gdb_isprint instead of isprint. (fprintf_symbol_filtered): Use ISALNUM instead of isalnum. (cp_skip_operator_token, skip_ws, strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strncmp_iw_with_mode): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower and ISSPACE instead of isspace. (strcmp_iw_ordered): Use ISSPACE instead of isspace. (string_to_core_addr): Use TOLOWER instead of tolower, ISXDIGIT instead of isxdigit and ISDIGIT instead of isdigit. gdbsupport/ChangeLog: 2020-05-23 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * gdb-safe-ctype.h: New.
2020-05-23 19:46:37 +08:00
if (ISDIGIT (my_string[i]))
addr = (my_string[i] - '0') + (addr * 10);
else
error (_("invalid decimal \"%s\""), my_string);
}
}
return addr;
}
#if GDB_SELF_TEST
static void
gdb_realpath_check_trailer (const char *input, const char *trailer)
{
gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> result = gdb_realpath (input);
size_t len = strlen (result.get ());
size_t trail_len = strlen (trailer);
SELF_CHECK (len >= trail_len
&& strcmp (result.get () + len - trail_len, trailer) == 0);
}
static void
gdb_realpath_tests ()
{
/* A file which contains a directory prefix. */
gdb_realpath_check_trailer ("./xfullpath.exp", "/xfullpath.exp");
/* A file which contains a directory prefix. */
gdb_realpath_check_trailer ("../../defs.h", "/defs.h");
/* A one-character filename. */
gdb_realpath_check_trailer ("./a", "/a");
/* A file in the root directory. */
gdb_realpath_check_trailer ("/root_file_which_should_exist",
"/root_file_which_should_exist");
/* A file which does not have a directory prefix. */
gdb_realpath_check_trailer ("xfullpath.exp", "xfullpath.exp");
/* A one-char filename without any directory prefix. */
gdb_realpath_check_trailer ("a", "a");
/* An empty filename. */
gdb_realpath_check_trailer ("", "");
}
/* Test the gdb_argv::as_array_view method. */
static void
gdb_argv_as_array_view_test ()
{
{
gdb_argv argv;
gdb::array_view<char *> view = argv.as_array_view ();
SELF_CHECK (view.data () == nullptr);
SELF_CHECK (view.size () == 0);
}
{
gdb_argv argv ("une bonne 50");
gdb::array_view<char *> view = argv.as_array_view ();
SELF_CHECK (view.size () == 3);
SELF_CHECK (strcmp (view[0], "une") == 0);
SELF_CHECK (strcmp (view[1], "bonne") == 0);
SELF_CHECK (strcmp (view[2], "50") == 0);
}
}
#endif /* GDB_SELF_TEST */
/* Simple, portable version of dirname that does not modify its
argument. */
std::string
ldirname (const char *filename)
{
std::string dirname;
const char *base = lbasename (filename);
while (base > filename && IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (base[-1]))
--base;
if (base == filename)
return dirname;
dirname = std::string (filename, base - filename);
/* On DOS based file systems, convert "d:foo" to "d:.", so that we
create "d:./bar" later instead of the (different) "d:/bar". */
if (base - filename == 2 && IS_ABSOLUTE_PATH (base)
&& !IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (filename[0]))
dirname[base++ - filename] = '.';
return dirname;
}
/* Return ARGS parsed as a valid pid, or throw an error. */
int
parse_pid_to_attach (const char *args)
{
unsigned long pid;
char *dummy;
if (!args)
error_no_arg (_("process-id to attach"));
dummy = (char *) args;
pid = strtoul (args, &dummy, 0);
/* Some targets don't set errno on errors, grrr! */
if ((pid == 0 && dummy == args) || dummy != &args[strlen (args)])
error (_("Illegal process-id: %s."), args);
return pid;
}
/* Substitute all occurrences of string FROM by string TO in *STRINGP. *STRINGP
must come from xrealloc-compatible allocator and it may be updated. FROM
needs to be delimited by IS_DIR_SEPARATOR or DIRNAME_SEPARATOR (or be
located at the start or end of *STRINGP. */
void
substitute_path_component (char **stringp, const char *from, const char *to)
{
char *string = *stringp, *s;
const size_t from_len = strlen (from);
const size_t to_len = strlen (to);
for (s = string;;)
{
s = strstr (s, from);
if (s == NULL)
break;
if ((s == string || IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (s[-1])
|| s[-1] == DIRNAME_SEPARATOR)
&& (s[from_len] == '\0' || IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (s[from_len])
|| s[from_len] == DIRNAME_SEPARATOR))
{
char *string_new;
string_new
= (char *) xrealloc (string, (strlen (string) + to_len + 1));
/* Relocate the current S pointer. */
s = s - string + string_new;
string = string_new;
/* Replace from by to. */
memmove (&s[to_len], &s[from_len], strlen (&s[from_len]) + 1);
memcpy (s, to, to_len);
s += to_len;
}
else
s++;
}
*stringp = string;
}
#ifdef HAVE_WAITPID
#ifdef SIGALRM
/* SIGALRM handler for waitpid_with_timeout. */
static void
sigalrm_handler (int signo)
{
/* Nothing to do. */
}
#endif
/* Wrapper to wait for child PID to die with TIMEOUT.
TIMEOUT is the time to stop waiting in seconds.
If TIMEOUT is zero, pass WNOHANG to waitpid.
Returns PID if it was successfully waited for, otherwise -1.
Timeouts are currently implemented with alarm and SIGALRM.
If the host does not support them, this waits "forever".
It would be odd though for a host to have waitpid and not SIGALRM. */
pid_t
wait_to_die_with_timeout (pid_t pid, int *status, int timeout)
{
pid_t waitpid_result;
gdb_assert (pid > 0);
gdb_assert (timeout >= 0);
if (timeout > 0)
{
#ifdef SIGALRM
#if defined (HAVE_SIGACTION) && defined (SA_RESTART)
struct sigaction sa, old_sa;
sa.sa_handler = sigalrm_handler;
sigemptyset (&sa.sa_mask);
sa.sa_flags = 0;
sigaction (SIGALRM, &sa, &old_sa);
#else
gdb: Use sighandler_t everywhere This fixes 14 build errors like these in C++ mode: src/gdb/extension.c: In function ‘void install_sigint_handler(const signal_handler*)’: src/gdb/extension.c:698:41: error: invalid conversion from ‘void (*)()’ to ‘__sighandler_t {aka void (*)(int)}’ [-fpermissive] signal (SIGINT, handler_state->handler); ^ In file included from build-gnulib/import/signal.h:52:0, from ../../src/gdb/extension.c:24: /usr/include/signal.h:102:23: error: initializing argument 2 of ‘void (* signal(int, __sighandler_t))(int)’ [-fpermissive] extern __sighandler_t signal (int __sig, __sighandler_t __handler) ^ Instead of this everywhere: - RETSIGTYPE (*handle_sigint_for_compare) () = handle_sigint; + RETSIGTYPE (*handle_sigint_for_compare) (int) = handle_sigint; Use sighandler_t (a GNU extension). That's OK to use unconditionaly because gnulib's signal.h replacement makes sure that it is available. gdb/ChangeLog: 2015-08-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Use sighandler_t. Remove cast. * extension-priv.h: Include signal.h. (struct signal_handler) <handler>: Change type to sighandler_t. * extension.c (install_gdb_sigint_handler): Use sighandler_t. * inflow.c (sigint_ours, sigquit_ours): Change type to sighandler_t. (child_terminal_inferior): Remove casts. (child_terminal_ours_1, new_tty): Use sighandler_t. Remove casts. (osig): Change type to sighandler_t. * nto-procfs.c (ofunc): Change type to sighandler_t. (procfs_wait): Remove casts. * remote-m32r-sdi.c (m32r_wait, m32r_load): Use sighandler_t. * remote-sim.c (gdbsim_wait): Use sighandler_t. * utils.c (wait_to_die_with_timeout): Use sighandler_t.
2015-08-27 20:26:23 +08:00
sighandler_t ofunc;
gdb: Use sighandler_t everywhere This fixes 14 build errors like these in C++ mode: src/gdb/extension.c: In function ‘void install_sigint_handler(const signal_handler*)’: src/gdb/extension.c:698:41: error: invalid conversion from ‘void (*)()’ to ‘__sighandler_t {aka void (*)(int)}’ [-fpermissive] signal (SIGINT, handler_state->handler); ^ In file included from build-gnulib/import/signal.h:52:0, from ../../src/gdb/extension.c:24: /usr/include/signal.h:102:23: error: initializing argument 2 of ‘void (* signal(int, __sighandler_t))(int)’ [-fpermissive] extern __sighandler_t signal (int __sig, __sighandler_t __handler) ^ Instead of this everywhere: - RETSIGTYPE (*handle_sigint_for_compare) () = handle_sigint; + RETSIGTYPE (*handle_sigint_for_compare) (int) = handle_sigint; Use sighandler_t (a GNU extension). That's OK to use unconditionaly because gnulib's signal.h replacement makes sure that it is available. gdb/ChangeLog: 2015-08-27 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> * cp-support.c (gdb_demangle): Use sighandler_t. Remove cast. * extension-priv.h: Include signal.h. (struct signal_handler) <handler>: Change type to sighandler_t. * extension.c (install_gdb_sigint_handler): Use sighandler_t. * inflow.c (sigint_ours, sigquit_ours): Change type to sighandler_t. (child_terminal_inferior): Remove casts. (child_terminal_ours_1, new_tty): Use sighandler_t. Remove casts. (osig): Change type to sighandler_t. * nto-procfs.c (ofunc): Change type to sighandler_t. (procfs_wait): Remove casts. * remote-m32r-sdi.c (m32r_wait, m32r_load): Use sighandler_t. * remote-sim.c (gdbsim_wait): Use sighandler_t. * utils.c (wait_to_die_with_timeout): Use sighandler_t.
2015-08-27 20:26:23 +08:00
ofunc = signal (SIGALRM, sigalrm_handler);
#endif
alarm (timeout);
#endif
waitpid_result = waitpid (pid, status, 0);
#ifdef SIGALRM
alarm (0);
#if defined (HAVE_SIGACTION) && defined (SA_RESTART)
sigaction (SIGALRM, &old_sa, NULL);
#else
signal (SIGALRM, ofunc);
#endif
#endif
}
else
waitpid_result = waitpid (pid, status, WNOHANG);
if (waitpid_result == pid)
return pid;
else
return -1;
}
#endif /* HAVE_WAITPID */
/* Provide fnmatch compatible function for FNM_FILE_NAME matching of host files.
Both FNM_FILE_NAME and FNM_NOESCAPE must be set in FLAGS.
It handles correctly HAVE_DOS_BASED_FILE_SYSTEM and
HAVE_CASE_INSENSITIVE_FILE_SYSTEM. */
int
gdb_filename_fnmatch (const char *pattern, const char *string, int flags)
{
gdb_assert ((flags & FNM_FILE_NAME) != 0);
/* It is unclear how '\' escaping vs. directory separator should coexist. */
gdb_assert ((flags & FNM_NOESCAPE) != 0);
#ifdef HAVE_DOS_BASED_FILE_SYSTEM
{
char *pattern_slash, *string_slash;
/* Replace '\' by '/' in both strings. */
pattern_slash = (char *) alloca (strlen (pattern) + 1);
strcpy (pattern_slash, pattern);
pattern = pattern_slash;
for (; *pattern_slash != 0; pattern_slash++)
if (IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (*pattern_slash))
*pattern_slash = '/';
string_slash = (char *) alloca (strlen (string) + 1);
strcpy (string_slash, string);
string = string_slash;
for (; *string_slash != 0; string_slash++)
if (IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (*string_slash))
*string_slash = '/';
}
#endif /* HAVE_DOS_BASED_FILE_SYSTEM */
#ifdef HAVE_CASE_INSENSITIVE_FILE_SYSTEM
flags |= FNM_CASEFOLD;
#endif /* HAVE_CASE_INSENSITIVE_FILE_SYSTEM */
return fnmatch (pattern, string, flags);
}
Extend "skip" command to support -file, -gfile, -function, -rfunction. gdb/ChangeLog: Extend "skip" command to support -file, -gfile, -function, -rfunction. * NEWS: Document new features. * skip.c: #include "fnmatch.h", "gdb_regex.h". (skiplist_entry) <file>: Renamed from filename. <function>: Renamed from function_name. <file_is_glob, function_is_regexp>: New members. <compiled_function_regexp, compiled_function_regexp_is_valid>: New members. (make_skip_entry): New function. (free_skiplist_entry, free_skiplist_entry_cleanup): New functions. (make_free_skiplist_entry_cleanup): New function. (skip_file_command): Update. (skip_function, skip_function_command): Update. (compile_skip_regexp): New functions. (skip_command): Add support for new options. (skip_info): Update. (skip_file_p, skip_gfile_p): New functions. (skip_function_p, skip_rfunction_p): New functions. (function_name_is_marked_for_skip): Update and simplify. (_initialize_step_skip): Update. * symtab.c: #include "fnmatch.h". (compare_glob_filenames_for_search): New function. * symtab.h (compare_glob_filenames_for_search): Declare. * utils.c (count_path_elements): New function. (strip_leading_path_elements): New function. * utils.h (count_path_elements): Declare. (strip_leading_path_elements): Declare. gdb/doc/ChangeLog: * gdb.texinfo (Skipping Over Functions and Files): Document new options to "skip" command. Update docs of output of "info skip". gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.base/skip.c (test_skip): New function. (end_test_skip_file_and_function): New function. (test_skip_file_and_function): New function. * gdb.base/skip1.c (test_skip): New function. (skip1_test_skip_file_and_function): New function. * gdb.base/skip.exp: Add tests for new skip options. * gdb.base/skip-solib.exp: Update expected output. * gdb.perf/skip-command.cc: New file. * gdb.perf/skip-command.exp: New file. * gdb.perf/skip-command.py: New file.
2016-02-24 05:25:18 +08:00
/* Return the number of path elements in PATH.
/ = 1
/foo = 2
/foo/ = 2
foo/bar = 2
foo/ = 1 */
int
count_path_elements (const char *path)
{
int count = 0;
const char *p = path;
if (HAS_DRIVE_SPEC (p))
{
p = STRIP_DRIVE_SPEC (p);
++count;
}
while (*p != '\0')
{
if (IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (*p))
++count;
++p;
}
/* Backup one if last character is /, unless it's the only one. */
if (p > path + 1 && IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (p[-1]))
--count;
/* Add one for the file name, if present. */
if (p > path && !IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (p[-1]))
++count;
return count;
}
/* Remove N leading path elements from PATH.
N must be non-negative.
If PATH has more than N path elements then return NULL.
If PATH has exactly N path elements then return "".
See count_path_elements for a description of how we do the counting. */
const char *
strip_leading_path_elements (const char *path, int n)
{
int i = 0;
const char *p = path;
gdb_assert (n >= 0);
if (n == 0)
return p;
if (HAS_DRIVE_SPEC (p))
{
p = STRIP_DRIVE_SPEC (p);
++i;
}
while (i < n)
{
while (*p != '\0' && !IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (*p))
++p;
if (*p == '\0')
{
if (i + 1 == n)
return "";
return NULL;
}
++p;
++i;
}
return p;
}
/* See utils.h. */
void
copy_bitwise (gdb_byte *dest, ULONGEST dest_offset,
const gdb_byte *source, ULONGEST source_offset,
ULONGEST nbits, int bits_big_endian)
{
unsigned int buf, avail;
if (nbits == 0)
return;
if (bits_big_endian)
{
/* Start from the end, then work backwards. */
dest_offset += nbits - 1;
dest += dest_offset / 8;
dest_offset = 7 - dest_offset % 8;
source_offset += nbits - 1;
source += source_offset / 8;
source_offset = 7 - source_offset % 8;
}
else
{
dest += dest_offset / 8;
dest_offset %= 8;
source += source_offset / 8;
source_offset %= 8;
}
/* Fill BUF with DEST_OFFSET bits from the destination and 8 -
SOURCE_OFFSET bits from the source. */
buf = *(bits_big_endian ? source-- : source++) >> source_offset;
buf <<= dest_offset;
buf |= *dest & ((1 << dest_offset) - 1);
/* NBITS: bits yet to be written; AVAIL: BUF's fill level. */
nbits += dest_offset;
avail = dest_offset + 8 - source_offset;
/* Flush 8 bits from BUF, if appropriate. */
if (nbits >= 8 && avail >= 8)
{
*(bits_big_endian ? dest-- : dest++) = buf;
buf >>= 8;
avail -= 8;
nbits -= 8;
}
/* Copy the middle part. */
if (nbits >= 8)
{
size_t len = nbits / 8;
/* Use a faster method for byte-aligned copies. */
if (avail == 0)
{
if (bits_big_endian)
{
dest -= len;
source -= len;
memcpy (dest + 1, source + 1, len);
}
else
{
memcpy (dest, source, len);
dest += len;
source += len;
}
}
else
{
while (len--)
{
buf |= *(bits_big_endian ? source-- : source++) << avail;
*(bits_big_endian ? dest-- : dest++) = buf;
buf >>= 8;
}
}
nbits %= 8;
}
/* Write the last byte. */
if (nbits)
{
if (avail < nbits)
buf |= *source << avail;
buf &= (1 << nbits) - 1;
*dest = (*dest & (~0U << nbits)) | buf;
}
}
#if GDB_SELF_TEST
static void
test_assign_set_return_if_changed ()
{
bool changed;
int a;
for (bool initial : { false, true })
{
changed = initial;
a = 1;
assign_set_if_changed (a, 1, changed);
SELF_CHECK (a == 1);
SELF_CHECK (changed == initial);
}
for (bool initial : { false, true })
{
changed = initial;
a = 1;
assign_set_if_changed (a, 2, changed);
SELF_CHECK (a == 2);
SELF_CHECK (changed == true);
}
a = 1;
changed = assign_return_if_changed (a, 1);
SELF_CHECK (a == 1);
SELF_CHECK (changed == false);
a = 1;
assign_set_if_changed (a, 2, changed);
SELF_CHECK (a == 2);
SELF_CHECK (changed == true);
}
#endif
gdb: add back declarations for _initialize functions I'd like to enable the -Wmissing-declarations warning. However, it warns for every _initialize function, for example: CXX dcache.o /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dcache.c: In function ‘void _initialize_dcache()’: /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dcache.c:688:1: error: no previous declaration for ‘void _initialize_dcache()’ [-Werror=missing-declarations] _initialize_dcache (void) ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The only practical way forward I found is to add back the declarations, which were removed by this commit: commit 481695ed5f6e0a8a9c9c50bfac1cdd2b3151e6c9 Author: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org> Date: Sat Sep 9 11:02:37 2017 -0700 Remove unnecessary function prototypes. I don't think it's a big problem to have the declarations for these functions, but if anybody has a better solution for this, I'll be happy to use it. gdb/ChangeLog: * aarch64-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_aarch64_fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * aarch64-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_aarch64_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * aarch64-linux-nat.c (_initialize_aarch64_linux_nat): Add declaration. * aarch64-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_aarch64_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * aarch64-newlib-tdep.c (_initialize_aarch64_newlib_tdep): Add declaration. * aarch64-tdep.c (_initialize_aarch64_tdep): Add declaration. * ada-exp.y (_initialize_ada_exp): Add declaration. * ada-lang.c (_initialize_ada_language): Add declaration. * ada-tasks.c (_initialize_tasks): Add declaration. * agent.c (_initialize_agent): Add declaration. * aix-thread.c (_initialize_aix_thread): Add declaration. * alpha-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_alphabsd_nat): Add declaration. * alpha-linux-nat.c (_initialize_alpha_linux_nat): Add declaration. * alpha-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_alpha_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * alpha-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_alphanbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * alpha-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_alphaobsd_tdep): Add declaration. * alpha-tdep.c (_initialize_alpha_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-darwin-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_darwin_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-dicos-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_dicos_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_amd64fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * amd64-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-linux-nat.c (_initialize_amd64_linux_nat): Add declaration. * amd64-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_amd64nbsd_nat): Add declaration. * amd64-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64nbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_amd64obsd_nat): Add declaration. * amd64-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64obsd_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-sol2-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_sol2_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-windows-nat.c (_initialize_amd64_windows_nat): Add declaration. * amd64-windows-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_windows_tdep): Add declaration. * annotate.c (_initialize_annotate): Add declaration. * arc-newlib-tdep.c (_initialize_arc_newlib_tdep): Add declaration. * arc-tdep.c (_initialize_arc_tdep): Add declaration. * arch-utils.c (_initialize_gdbarch_utils): Add declaration. * arm-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_arm_fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * arm-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * arm-linux-nat.c (_initialize_arm_linux_nat): Add declaration. * arm-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * arm-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_arm_netbsd_nat): Add declaration. * arm-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_netbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * arm-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_armobsd_tdep): Add declaration. * arm-pikeos-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_pikeos_tdep): Add declaration. * arm-symbian-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_symbian_tdep): Add declaration. * arm-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_tdep): Add declaration. * arm-wince-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_wince_tdep): Add declaration. * auto-load.c (_initialize_auto_load): Add declaration. * auxv.c (_initialize_auxv): Add declaration. * avr-tdep.c (_initialize_avr_tdep): Add declaration. * ax-gdb.c (_initialize_ax_gdb): Add declaration. * bfin-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_bfin_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * bfin-tdep.c (_initialize_bfin_tdep): Add declaration. * break-catch-sig.c (_initialize_break_catch_sig): Add declaration. * break-catch-syscall.c (_initialize_break_catch_syscall): Add declaration. * break-catch-throw.c (_initialize_break_catch_throw): Add declaration. * breakpoint.c (_initialize_breakpoint): Add declaration. * bsd-uthread.c (_initialize_bsd_uthread): Add declaration. * btrace.c (_initialize_btrace): Add declaration. * charset.c (_initialize_charset): Add declaration. * cli/cli-cmds.c (_initialize_cli_cmds): Add declaration. * cli/cli-dump.c (_initialize_cli_dump): Add declaration. * cli/cli-interp.c (_initialize_cli_interp): Add declaration. * cli/cli-logging.c (_initialize_cli_logging): Add declaration. * cli/cli-script.c (_initialize_cli_script): Add declaration. * cli/cli-style.c (_initialize_cli_style): Add declaration. * coff-pe-read.c (_initialize_coff_pe_read): Add declaration. * coffread.c (_initialize_coffread): Add declaration. * compile/compile-cplus-types.c (_initialize_compile_cplus_types): Add declaration. * compile/compile.c (_initialize_compile): Add declaration. * complaints.c (_initialize_complaints): Add declaration. * completer.c (_initialize_completer): Add declaration. * copying.c (_initialize_copying): Add declaration. * corefile.c (_initialize_core): Add declaration. * corelow.c (_initialize_corelow): Add declaration. * cp-abi.c (_initialize_cp_abi): Add declaration. * cp-namespace.c (_initialize_cp_namespace): Add declaration. * cp-support.c (_initialize_cp_support): Add declaration. * cp-valprint.c (_initialize_cp_valprint): Add declaration. * cris-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_cris_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * cris-tdep.c (_initialize_cris_tdep): Add declaration. * csky-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_csky_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * csky-tdep.c (_initialize_csky_tdep): Add declaration. * ctfread.c (_initialize_ctfread): Add declaration. * d-lang.c (_initialize_d_language): Add declaration. * darwin-nat-info.c (_initialize_darwin_info_commands): Add declaration. * darwin-nat.c (_initialize_darwin_nat): Add declaration. * dbxread.c (_initialize_dbxread): Add declaration. * dcache.c (_initialize_dcache): Add declaration. * disasm-selftests.c (_initialize_disasm_selftests): Add declaration. * disasm.c (_initialize_disasm): Add declaration. * dtrace-probe.c (_initialize_dtrace_probe): Add declaration. * dummy-frame.c (_initialize_dummy_frame): Add declaration. * dwarf-index-cache.c (_initialize_index_cache): Add declaration. * dwarf-index-write.c (_initialize_dwarf_index_write): Add declaration. * dwarf2-frame-tailcall.c (_initialize_tailcall_frame): Add declaration. * dwarf2-frame.c (_initialize_dwarf2_frame): Add declaration. * dwarf2expr.c (_initialize_dwarf2expr): Add declaration. * dwarf2loc.c (_initialize_dwarf2loc): Add declaration. * dwarf2read.c (_initialize_dwarf2_read): Add declaration. * elfread.c (_initialize_elfread): Add declaration. * exec.c (_initialize_exec): Add declaration. * extension.c (_initialize_extension): Add declaration. * f-lang.c (_initialize_f_language): Add declaration. * f-valprint.c (_initialize_f_valprint): Add declaration. * fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * filesystem.c (_initialize_filesystem): Add declaration. * findcmd.c (_initialize_mem_search): Add declaration. * findvar.c (_initialize_findvar): Add declaration. * fork-child.c (_initialize_fork_child): Add declaration. * frame-base.c (_initialize_frame_base): Add declaration. * frame-unwind.c (_initialize_frame_unwind): Add declaration. * frame.c (_initialize_frame): Add declaration. * frv-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_frv_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * frv-tdep.c (_initialize_frv_tdep): Add declaration. * ft32-tdep.c (_initialize_ft32_tdep): Add declaration. * gcore.c (_initialize_gcore): Add declaration. * gdb-demangle.c (_initialize_gdb_demangle): Add declaration. * gdb_bfd.c (_initialize_gdb_bfd): Add declaration. * gdbarch-selftests.c (_initialize_gdbarch_selftests): Add declaration. * gdbarch.c (_initialize_gdbarch): Add declaration. * gdbtypes.c (_initialize_gdbtypes): Add declaration. * gnu-nat.c (_initialize_gnu_nat): Add declaration. * gnu-v2-abi.c (_initialize_gnu_v2_abi): Add declaration. * gnu-v3-abi.c (_initialize_gnu_v3_abi): Add declaration. * go-lang.c (_initialize_go_language): Add declaration. * go32-nat.c (_initialize_go32_nat): Add declaration. * guile/guile.c (_initialize_guile): Add declaration. * h8300-tdep.c (_initialize_h8300_tdep): Add declaration. * hppa-linux-nat.c (_initialize_hppa_linux_nat): Add declaration. * hppa-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_hppa_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * hppa-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_hppanbsd_nat): Add declaration. * hppa-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_hppanbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * hppa-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_hppaobsd_nat): Add declaration. * hppa-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_hppabsd_tdep): Add declaration. * hppa-tdep.c (_initialize_hppa_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_i386bsd_nat): Add declaration. * i386-cygwin-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_cygwin_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-darwin-nat.c (_initialize_i386_darwin_nat): Add declaration. * i386-darwin-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_darwin_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-dicos-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_dicos_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_i386fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * i386-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_i386fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-gnu-nat.c (_initialize_i386gnu_nat): Add declaration. * i386-gnu-tdep.c (_initialize_i386gnu_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-go32-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_go32_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-linux-nat.c (_initialize_i386_linux_nat): Add declaration. * i386-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_i386nbsd_nat): Add declaration. * i386-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_i386nbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-nto-tdep.c (_initialize_i386nto_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_i386obsd_nat): Add declaration. * i386-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_i386obsd_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-sol2-nat.c (_initialize_amd64_sol2_nat): Add declaration. * i386-sol2-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_sol2_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-windows-nat.c (_initialize_i386_windows_nat): Add declaration. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.c (_initialize_libunwind_frame): Add declaration. * ia64-linux-nat.c (_initialize_ia64_linux_nat): Add declaration. * ia64-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_ia64_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * ia64-tdep.c (_initialize_ia64_tdep): Add declaration. * ia64-vms-tdep.c (_initialize_ia64_vms_tdep): Add declaration. * infcall.c (_initialize_infcall): Add declaration. * infcmd.c (_initialize_infcmd): Add declaration. * inflow.c (_initialize_inflow): Add declaration. * infrun.c (_initialize_infrun): Add declaration. * interps.c (_initialize_interpreter): Add declaration. * iq2000-tdep.c (_initialize_iq2000_tdep): Add declaration. * jit.c (_initialize_jit): Add declaration. * language.c (_initialize_language): Add declaration. * linux-fork.c (_initialize_linux_fork): Add declaration. * linux-nat.c (_initialize_linux_nat): Add declaration. * linux-tdep.c (_initialize_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * linux-thread-db.c (_initialize_thread_db): Add declaration. * lm32-tdep.c (_initialize_lm32_tdep): Add declaration. * m2-lang.c (_initialize_m2_language): Add declaration. * m32c-tdep.c (_initialize_m32c_tdep): Add declaration. * m32r-linux-nat.c (_initialize_m32r_linux_nat): Add declaration. * m32r-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_m32r_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * m32r-tdep.c (_initialize_m32r_tdep): Add declaration. * m68hc11-tdep.c (_initialize_m68hc11_tdep): Add declaration. * m68k-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_m68kbsd_nat): Add declaration. * m68k-bsd-tdep.c (_initialize_m68kbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * m68k-linux-nat.c (_initialize_m68k_linux_nat): Add declaration. * m68k-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_m68k_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * m68k-tdep.c (_initialize_m68k_tdep): Add declaration. * machoread.c (_initialize_machoread): Add declaration. * macrocmd.c (_initialize_macrocmd): Add declaration. * macroscope.c (_initialize_macroscope): Add declaration. * maint-test-options.c (_initialize_maint_test_options): Add declaration. * maint-test-settings.c (_initialize_maint_test_settings): Add declaration. * maint.c (_initialize_maint_cmds): Add declaration. * mdebugread.c (_initialize_mdebugread): Add declaration. * memattr.c (_initialize_mem): Add declaration. * mep-tdep.c (_initialize_mep_tdep): Add declaration. * mi/mi-cmd-env.c (_initialize_mi_cmd_env): Add declaration. * mi/mi-cmds.c (_initialize_mi_cmds): Add declaration. * mi/mi-interp.c (_initialize_mi_interp): Add declaration. * mi/mi-main.c (_initialize_mi_main): Add declaration. * microblaze-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_microblaze_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * microblaze-tdep.c (_initialize_microblaze_tdep): Add declaration. * mips-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_mips_fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * mips-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_mips_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * mips-linux-nat.c (_initialize_mips_linux_nat): Add declaration. * mips-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_mips_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * mips-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_mipsnbsd_nat): Add declaration. * mips-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_mipsnbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * mips-sde-tdep.c (_initialize_mips_sde_tdep): Add declaration. * mips-tdep.c (_initialize_mips_tdep): Add declaration. * mips64-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_mips64obsd_nat): Add declaration. * mips64-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_mips64obsd_tdep): Add declaration. * mipsread.c (_initialize_mipsread): Add declaration. * mn10300-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_mn10300_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * mn10300-tdep.c (_initialize_mn10300_tdep): Add declaration. * moxie-tdep.c (_initialize_moxie_tdep): Add declaration. * msp430-tdep.c (_initialize_msp430_tdep): Add declaration. * nds32-tdep.c (_initialize_nds32_tdep): Add declaration. * nios2-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_nios2_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * nios2-tdep.c (_initialize_nios2_tdep): Add declaration. * nto-procfs.c (_initialize_procfs): Add declaration. * objc-lang.c (_initialize_objc_language): Add declaration. * observable.c (_initialize_observer): Add declaration. * opencl-lang.c (_initialize_opencl_language): Add declaration. * or1k-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_or1k_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * or1k-tdep.c (_initialize_or1k_tdep): Add declaration. * osabi.c (_initialize_gdb_osabi): Add declaration. * osdata.c (_initialize_osdata): Add declaration. * p-valprint.c (_initialize_pascal_valprint): Add declaration. * parse.c (_initialize_parse): Add declaration. * ppc-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_ppcfbsd_nat): Add declaration. * ppc-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_ppcfbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * ppc-linux-nat.c (_initialize_ppc_linux_nat): Add declaration. * ppc-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_ppc_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * ppc-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_ppcnbsd_nat): Add declaration. * ppc-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_ppcnbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * ppc-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_ppcobsd_nat): Add declaration. * ppc-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_ppcobsd_tdep): Add declaration. * printcmd.c (_initialize_printcmd): Add declaration. * probe.c (_initialize_probe): Add declaration. * proc-api.c (_initialize_proc_api): Add declaration. * proc-events.c (_initialize_proc_events): Add declaration. * proc-service.c (_initialize_proc_service): Add declaration. * procfs.c (_initialize_procfs): Add declaration. * producer.c (_initialize_producer): Add declaration. * psymtab.c (_initialize_psymtab): Add declaration. * python/python.c (_initialize_python): Add declaration. * ravenscar-thread.c (_initialize_ravenscar): Add declaration. * record-btrace.c (_initialize_record_btrace): Add declaration. * record-full.c (_initialize_record_full): Add declaration. * record.c (_initialize_record): Add declaration. * regcache-dump.c (_initialize_regcache_dump): Add declaration. * regcache.c (_initialize_regcache): Add declaration. * reggroups.c (_initialize_reggroup): Add declaration. * remote-notif.c (_initialize_notif): Add declaration. * remote-sim.c (_initialize_remote_sim): Add declaration. * remote.c (_initialize_remote): Add declaration. * reverse.c (_initialize_reverse): Add declaration. * riscv-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_riscv_fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * riscv-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_riscv_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * riscv-linux-nat.c (_initialize_riscv_linux_nat): Add declaration. * riscv-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_riscv_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * riscv-tdep.c (_initialize_riscv_tdep): Add declaration. * rl78-tdep.c (_initialize_rl78_tdep): Add declaration. * rs6000-aix-tdep.c (_initialize_rs6000_aix_tdep): Add declaration. * rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c (_initialize_rs6000_lynx178_tdep): Add declaration. * rs6000-nat.c (_initialize_rs6000_nat): Add declaration. * rs6000-tdep.c (_initialize_rs6000_tdep): Add declaration. * run-on-main-thread.c (_initialize_run_on_main_thread): Add declaration. * rust-exp.y (_initialize_rust_exp): Add declaration. * rx-tdep.c (_initialize_rx_tdep): Add declaration. * s12z-tdep.c (_initialize_s12z_tdep): Add declaration. * s390-linux-nat.c (_initialize_s390_nat): Add declaration. * s390-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_s390_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * s390-tdep.c (_initialize_s390_tdep): Add declaration. * score-tdep.c (_initialize_score_tdep): Add declaration. * ser-go32.c (_initialize_ser_dos): Add declaration. * ser-mingw.c (_initialize_ser_windows): Add declaration. * ser-pipe.c (_initialize_ser_pipe): Add declaration. * ser-tcp.c (_initialize_ser_tcp): Add declaration. * ser-uds.c (_initialize_ser_socket): Add declaration. * ser-unix.c (_initialize_ser_hardwire): Add declaration. * serial.c (_initialize_serial): Add declaration. * sh-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_sh_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * sh-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_shnbsd_nat): Add declaration. * sh-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_shnbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * sh-tdep.c (_initialize_sh_tdep): Add declaration. * skip.c (_initialize_step_skip): Add declaration. * sol-thread.c (_initialize_sol_thread): Add declaration. * solib-aix.c (_initialize_solib_aix): Add declaration. * solib-darwin.c (_initialize_darwin_solib): Add declaration. * solib-dsbt.c (_initialize_dsbt_solib): Add declaration. * solib-frv.c (_initialize_frv_solib): Add declaration. * solib-svr4.c (_initialize_svr4_solib): Add declaration. * solib-target.c (_initialize_solib_target): Add declaration. * solib.c (_initialize_solib): Add declaration. * source-cache.c (_initialize_source_cache): Add declaration. * source.c (_initialize_source): Add declaration. * sparc-linux-nat.c (_initialize_sparc_linux_nat): Add declaration. * sparc-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc-nat.c (_initialize_sparc_nat): Add declaration. * sparc-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_sparcnbsd_nat): Add declaration. * sparc-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparcnbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc32obsd_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc-sol2-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc_sol2_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc64-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * sparc64-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc64-linux-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64_linux_nat): Add declaration. * sparc64-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc64-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64_nat): Add declaration. * sparc64-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64nbsd_nat): Add declaration. * sparc64-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64nbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc64-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64obsd_nat): Add declaration. * sparc64-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64obsd_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc64-sol2-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64_sol2_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc64-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64_adi_tdep): Add declaration. * stabsread.c (_initialize_stabsread): Add declaration. * stack.c (_initialize_stack): Add declaration. * stap-probe.c (_initialize_stap_probe): Add declaration. * std-regs.c (_initialize_frame_reg): Add declaration. * symfile-debug.c (_initialize_symfile_debug): Add declaration. * symfile-mem.c (_initialize_symfile_mem): Add declaration. * symfile.c (_initialize_symfile): Add declaration. * symmisc.c (_initialize_symmisc): Add declaration. * symtab.c (_initialize_symtab): Add declaration. * target.c (_initialize_target): Add declaration. * target-connection.c (_initialize_target_connection): Add declaration. * target-dcache.c (_initialize_target_dcache): Add declaration. * target-descriptions.c (_initialize_target_descriptions): Add declaration. * thread.c (_initialize_thread): Add declaration. * tic6x-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_tic6x_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * tic6x-tdep.c (_initialize_tic6x_tdep): Add declaration. * tilegx-linux-nat.c (_initialize_tile_linux_nat): Add declaration. * tilegx-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_tilegx_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * tilegx-tdep.c (_initialize_tilegx_tdep): Add declaration. * tracectf.c (_initialize_ctf): Add declaration. * tracefile-tfile.c (_initialize_tracefile_tfile): Add declaration. * tracefile.c (_initialize_tracefile): Add declaration. * tracepoint.c (_initialize_tracepoint): Add declaration. * tui/tui-hooks.c (_initialize_tui_hooks): Add declaration. * tui/tui-interp.c (_initialize_tui_interp): Add declaration. * tui/tui-layout.c (_initialize_tui_layout): Add declaration. * tui/tui-regs.c (_initialize_tui_regs): Add declaration. * tui/tui-stack.c (_initialize_tui_stack): Add declaration. * tui/tui-win.c (_initialize_tui_win): Add declaration. * tui/tui.c (_initialize_tui): Add declaration. * typeprint.c (_initialize_typeprint): Add declaration. * ui-style.c (_initialize_ui_style): Add declaration. * unittests/array-view-selftests.c (_initialize_array_view_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/child-path-selftests.c (_initialize_child_path_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/cli-utils-selftests.c (_initialize_cli_utils_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/common-utils-selftests.c (_initialize_common_utils_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c (_initialize_copy_bitwise_utils_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/environ-selftests.c (_initialize_environ_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/filtered_iterator-selftests.c (_initialize_filtered_iterator_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/format_pieces-selftests.c (_initialize_format_pieces_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/function-view-selftests.c (_initialize_function_view_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/help-doc-selftests.c (_initialize_help_doc_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/lookup_name_info-selftests.c (_initialize_lookup_name_info_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/main-thread-selftests.c (_initialize_main_thread_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/memory-map-selftests.c (_initialize_memory_map_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/memrange-selftests.c (_initialize_memrange_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.c (_initialize_mkdir_recursive_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/observable-selftests.c (_initialize_observer_selftest): Add declaration. * unittests/offset-type-selftests.c (_initialize_offset_type_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/optional-selftests.c (_initialize_optional_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/parse-connection-spec-selftests.c (_initialize_parse_connection_spec_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/rsp-low-selftests.c (_initialize_rsp_low_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/scoped_fd-selftests.c (_initialize_scoped_fd_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/scoped_mmap-selftests.c (_initialize_scoped_mmap_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/scoped_restore-selftests.c (_initialize_scoped_restore_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/string_view-selftests.c (_initialize_string_view_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/style-selftests.c (_initialize_style_selftest): Add declaration. * unittests/tracepoint-selftests.c (_initialize_tracepoint_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/tui-selftests.c (_initialize_tui_selftest): Add declaration. * unittests/unpack-selftests.c (_initialize_unpack_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/utils-selftests.c (_initialize_utils_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/vec-utils-selftests.c (_initialize_vec_utils_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/xml-utils-selftests.c (_initialize_xml_utils): Add declaration. * user-regs.c (_initialize_user_regs): Add declaration. * utils.c (_initialize_utils): Add declaration. * v850-tdep.c (_initialize_v850_tdep): Add declaration. * valops.c (_initialize_valops): Add declaration. * valprint.c (_initialize_valprint): Add declaration. * value.c (_initialize_values): Add declaration. * varobj.c (_initialize_varobj): Add declaration. * vax-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_vaxbsd_nat): Add declaration. * vax-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_vaxnbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * vax-tdep.c (_initialize_vax_tdep): Add declaration. * windows-nat.c (_initialize_windows_nat): Add declaration. (_initialize_check_for_gdb_ini): Add declaration. (_initialize_loadable): Add declaration. * windows-tdep.c (_initialize_windows_tdep): Add declaration. * x86-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_x86_bsd_nat): Add declaration. * x86-linux-nat.c (_initialize_x86_linux_nat): Add declaration. * xcoffread.c (_initialize_xcoffread): Add declaration. * xml-support.c (_initialize_xml_support): Add declaration. * xstormy16-tdep.c (_initialize_xstormy16_tdep): Add declaration. * xtensa-linux-nat.c (_initialize_xtensa_linux_nat): Add declaration. * xtensa-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_xtensa_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * xtensa-tdep.c (_initialize_xtensa_tdep): Add declaration. Change-Id: I13eec7e0ed2b3c427377a7bdb055cf46da64def9
2020-01-14 03:01:38 +08:00
void _initialize_utils ();
void
gdb: add back declarations for _initialize functions I'd like to enable the -Wmissing-declarations warning. However, it warns for every _initialize function, for example: CXX dcache.o /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dcache.c: In function ‘void _initialize_dcache()’: /home/smarchi/src/binutils-gdb/gdb/dcache.c:688:1: error: no previous declaration for ‘void _initialize_dcache()’ [-Werror=missing-declarations] _initialize_dcache (void) ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The only practical way forward I found is to add back the declarations, which were removed by this commit: commit 481695ed5f6e0a8a9c9c50bfac1cdd2b3151e6c9 Author: John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org> Date: Sat Sep 9 11:02:37 2017 -0700 Remove unnecessary function prototypes. I don't think it's a big problem to have the declarations for these functions, but if anybody has a better solution for this, I'll be happy to use it. gdb/ChangeLog: * aarch64-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_aarch64_fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * aarch64-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_aarch64_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * aarch64-linux-nat.c (_initialize_aarch64_linux_nat): Add declaration. * aarch64-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_aarch64_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * aarch64-newlib-tdep.c (_initialize_aarch64_newlib_tdep): Add declaration. * aarch64-tdep.c (_initialize_aarch64_tdep): Add declaration. * ada-exp.y (_initialize_ada_exp): Add declaration. * ada-lang.c (_initialize_ada_language): Add declaration. * ada-tasks.c (_initialize_tasks): Add declaration. * agent.c (_initialize_agent): Add declaration. * aix-thread.c (_initialize_aix_thread): Add declaration. * alpha-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_alphabsd_nat): Add declaration. * alpha-linux-nat.c (_initialize_alpha_linux_nat): Add declaration. * alpha-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_alpha_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * alpha-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_alphanbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * alpha-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_alphaobsd_tdep): Add declaration. * alpha-tdep.c (_initialize_alpha_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-darwin-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_darwin_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-dicos-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_dicos_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_amd64fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * amd64-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-linux-nat.c (_initialize_amd64_linux_nat): Add declaration. * amd64-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_amd64nbsd_nat): Add declaration. * amd64-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64nbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_amd64obsd_nat): Add declaration. * amd64-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64obsd_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-sol2-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_sol2_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_tdep): Add declaration. * amd64-windows-nat.c (_initialize_amd64_windows_nat): Add declaration. * amd64-windows-tdep.c (_initialize_amd64_windows_tdep): Add declaration. * annotate.c (_initialize_annotate): Add declaration. * arc-newlib-tdep.c (_initialize_arc_newlib_tdep): Add declaration. * arc-tdep.c (_initialize_arc_tdep): Add declaration. * arch-utils.c (_initialize_gdbarch_utils): Add declaration. * arm-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_arm_fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * arm-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * arm-linux-nat.c (_initialize_arm_linux_nat): Add declaration. * arm-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * arm-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_arm_netbsd_nat): Add declaration. * arm-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_netbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * arm-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_armobsd_tdep): Add declaration. * arm-pikeos-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_pikeos_tdep): Add declaration. * arm-symbian-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_symbian_tdep): Add declaration. * arm-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_tdep): Add declaration. * arm-wince-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_wince_tdep): Add declaration. * auto-load.c (_initialize_auto_load): Add declaration. * auxv.c (_initialize_auxv): Add declaration. * avr-tdep.c (_initialize_avr_tdep): Add declaration. * ax-gdb.c (_initialize_ax_gdb): Add declaration. * bfin-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_bfin_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * bfin-tdep.c (_initialize_bfin_tdep): Add declaration. * break-catch-sig.c (_initialize_break_catch_sig): Add declaration. * break-catch-syscall.c (_initialize_break_catch_syscall): Add declaration. * break-catch-throw.c (_initialize_break_catch_throw): Add declaration. * breakpoint.c (_initialize_breakpoint): Add declaration. * bsd-uthread.c (_initialize_bsd_uthread): Add declaration. * btrace.c (_initialize_btrace): Add declaration. * charset.c (_initialize_charset): Add declaration. * cli/cli-cmds.c (_initialize_cli_cmds): Add declaration. * cli/cli-dump.c (_initialize_cli_dump): Add declaration. * cli/cli-interp.c (_initialize_cli_interp): Add declaration. * cli/cli-logging.c (_initialize_cli_logging): Add declaration. * cli/cli-script.c (_initialize_cli_script): Add declaration. * cli/cli-style.c (_initialize_cli_style): Add declaration. * coff-pe-read.c (_initialize_coff_pe_read): Add declaration. * coffread.c (_initialize_coffread): Add declaration. * compile/compile-cplus-types.c (_initialize_compile_cplus_types): Add declaration. * compile/compile.c (_initialize_compile): Add declaration. * complaints.c (_initialize_complaints): Add declaration. * completer.c (_initialize_completer): Add declaration. * copying.c (_initialize_copying): Add declaration. * corefile.c (_initialize_core): Add declaration. * corelow.c (_initialize_corelow): Add declaration. * cp-abi.c (_initialize_cp_abi): Add declaration. * cp-namespace.c (_initialize_cp_namespace): Add declaration. * cp-support.c (_initialize_cp_support): Add declaration. * cp-valprint.c (_initialize_cp_valprint): Add declaration. * cris-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_cris_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * cris-tdep.c (_initialize_cris_tdep): Add declaration. * csky-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_csky_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * csky-tdep.c (_initialize_csky_tdep): Add declaration. * ctfread.c (_initialize_ctfread): Add declaration. * d-lang.c (_initialize_d_language): Add declaration. * darwin-nat-info.c (_initialize_darwin_info_commands): Add declaration. * darwin-nat.c (_initialize_darwin_nat): Add declaration. * dbxread.c (_initialize_dbxread): Add declaration. * dcache.c (_initialize_dcache): Add declaration. * disasm-selftests.c (_initialize_disasm_selftests): Add declaration. * disasm.c (_initialize_disasm): Add declaration. * dtrace-probe.c (_initialize_dtrace_probe): Add declaration. * dummy-frame.c (_initialize_dummy_frame): Add declaration. * dwarf-index-cache.c (_initialize_index_cache): Add declaration. * dwarf-index-write.c (_initialize_dwarf_index_write): Add declaration. * dwarf2-frame-tailcall.c (_initialize_tailcall_frame): Add declaration. * dwarf2-frame.c (_initialize_dwarf2_frame): Add declaration. * dwarf2expr.c (_initialize_dwarf2expr): Add declaration. * dwarf2loc.c (_initialize_dwarf2loc): Add declaration. * dwarf2read.c (_initialize_dwarf2_read): Add declaration. * elfread.c (_initialize_elfread): Add declaration. * exec.c (_initialize_exec): Add declaration. * extension.c (_initialize_extension): Add declaration. * f-lang.c (_initialize_f_language): Add declaration. * f-valprint.c (_initialize_f_valprint): Add declaration. * fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * filesystem.c (_initialize_filesystem): Add declaration. * findcmd.c (_initialize_mem_search): Add declaration. * findvar.c (_initialize_findvar): Add declaration. * fork-child.c (_initialize_fork_child): Add declaration. * frame-base.c (_initialize_frame_base): Add declaration. * frame-unwind.c (_initialize_frame_unwind): Add declaration. * frame.c (_initialize_frame): Add declaration. * frv-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_frv_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * frv-tdep.c (_initialize_frv_tdep): Add declaration. * ft32-tdep.c (_initialize_ft32_tdep): Add declaration. * gcore.c (_initialize_gcore): Add declaration. * gdb-demangle.c (_initialize_gdb_demangle): Add declaration. * gdb_bfd.c (_initialize_gdb_bfd): Add declaration. * gdbarch-selftests.c (_initialize_gdbarch_selftests): Add declaration. * gdbarch.c (_initialize_gdbarch): Add declaration. * gdbtypes.c (_initialize_gdbtypes): Add declaration. * gnu-nat.c (_initialize_gnu_nat): Add declaration. * gnu-v2-abi.c (_initialize_gnu_v2_abi): Add declaration. * gnu-v3-abi.c (_initialize_gnu_v3_abi): Add declaration. * go-lang.c (_initialize_go_language): Add declaration. * go32-nat.c (_initialize_go32_nat): Add declaration. * guile/guile.c (_initialize_guile): Add declaration. * h8300-tdep.c (_initialize_h8300_tdep): Add declaration. * hppa-linux-nat.c (_initialize_hppa_linux_nat): Add declaration. * hppa-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_hppa_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * hppa-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_hppanbsd_nat): Add declaration. * hppa-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_hppanbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * hppa-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_hppaobsd_nat): Add declaration. * hppa-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_hppabsd_tdep): Add declaration. * hppa-tdep.c (_initialize_hppa_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_i386bsd_nat): Add declaration. * i386-cygwin-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_cygwin_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-darwin-nat.c (_initialize_i386_darwin_nat): Add declaration. * i386-darwin-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_darwin_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-dicos-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_dicos_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_i386fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * i386-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_i386fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-gnu-nat.c (_initialize_i386gnu_nat): Add declaration. * i386-gnu-tdep.c (_initialize_i386gnu_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-go32-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_go32_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-linux-nat.c (_initialize_i386_linux_nat): Add declaration. * i386-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_i386nbsd_nat): Add declaration. * i386-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_i386nbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-nto-tdep.c (_initialize_i386nto_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_i386obsd_nat): Add declaration. * i386-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_i386obsd_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-sol2-nat.c (_initialize_amd64_sol2_nat): Add declaration. * i386-sol2-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_sol2_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-tdep.c (_initialize_i386_tdep): Add declaration. * i386-windows-nat.c (_initialize_i386_windows_nat): Add declaration. * ia64-libunwind-tdep.c (_initialize_libunwind_frame): Add declaration. * ia64-linux-nat.c (_initialize_ia64_linux_nat): Add declaration. * ia64-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_ia64_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * ia64-tdep.c (_initialize_ia64_tdep): Add declaration. * ia64-vms-tdep.c (_initialize_ia64_vms_tdep): Add declaration. * infcall.c (_initialize_infcall): Add declaration. * infcmd.c (_initialize_infcmd): Add declaration. * inflow.c (_initialize_inflow): Add declaration. * infrun.c (_initialize_infrun): Add declaration. * interps.c (_initialize_interpreter): Add declaration. * iq2000-tdep.c (_initialize_iq2000_tdep): Add declaration. * jit.c (_initialize_jit): Add declaration. * language.c (_initialize_language): Add declaration. * linux-fork.c (_initialize_linux_fork): Add declaration. * linux-nat.c (_initialize_linux_nat): Add declaration. * linux-tdep.c (_initialize_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * linux-thread-db.c (_initialize_thread_db): Add declaration. * lm32-tdep.c (_initialize_lm32_tdep): Add declaration. * m2-lang.c (_initialize_m2_language): Add declaration. * m32c-tdep.c (_initialize_m32c_tdep): Add declaration. * m32r-linux-nat.c (_initialize_m32r_linux_nat): Add declaration. * m32r-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_m32r_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * m32r-tdep.c (_initialize_m32r_tdep): Add declaration. * m68hc11-tdep.c (_initialize_m68hc11_tdep): Add declaration. * m68k-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_m68kbsd_nat): Add declaration. * m68k-bsd-tdep.c (_initialize_m68kbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * m68k-linux-nat.c (_initialize_m68k_linux_nat): Add declaration. * m68k-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_m68k_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * m68k-tdep.c (_initialize_m68k_tdep): Add declaration. * machoread.c (_initialize_machoread): Add declaration. * macrocmd.c (_initialize_macrocmd): Add declaration. * macroscope.c (_initialize_macroscope): Add declaration. * maint-test-options.c (_initialize_maint_test_options): Add declaration. * maint-test-settings.c (_initialize_maint_test_settings): Add declaration. * maint.c (_initialize_maint_cmds): Add declaration. * mdebugread.c (_initialize_mdebugread): Add declaration. * memattr.c (_initialize_mem): Add declaration. * mep-tdep.c (_initialize_mep_tdep): Add declaration. * mi/mi-cmd-env.c (_initialize_mi_cmd_env): Add declaration. * mi/mi-cmds.c (_initialize_mi_cmds): Add declaration. * mi/mi-interp.c (_initialize_mi_interp): Add declaration. * mi/mi-main.c (_initialize_mi_main): Add declaration. * microblaze-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_microblaze_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * microblaze-tdep.c (_initialize_microblaze_tdep): Add declaration. * mips-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_mips_fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * mips-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_mips_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * mips-linux-nat.c (_initialize_mips_linux_nat): Add declaration. * mips-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_mips_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * mips-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_mipsnbsd_nat): Add declaration. * mips-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_mipsnbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * mips-sde-tdep.c (_initialize_mips_sde_tdep): Add declaration. * mips-tdep.c (_initialize_mips_tdep): Add declaration. * mips64-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_mips64obsd_nat): Add declaration. * mips64-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_mips64obsd_tdep): Add declaration. * mipsread.c (_initialize_mipsread): Add declaration. * mn10300-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_mn10300_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * mn10300-tdep.c (_initialize_mn10300_tdep): Add declaration. * moxie-tdep.c (_initialize_moxie_tdep): Add declaration. * msp430-tdep.c (_initialize_msp430_tdep): Add declaration. * nds32-tdep.c (_initialize_nds32_tdep): Add declaration. * nios2-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_nios2_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * nios2-tdep.c (_initialize_nios2_tdep): Add declaration. * nto-procfs.c (_initialize_procfs): Add declaration. * objc-lang.c (_initialize_objc_language): Add declaration. * observable.c (_initialize_observer): Add declaration. * opencl-lang.c (_initialize_opencl_language): Add declaration. * or1k-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_or1k_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * or1k-tdep.c (_initialize_or1k_tdep): Add declaration. * osabi.c (_initialize_gdb_osabi): Add declaration. * osdata.c (_initialize_osdata): Add declaration. * p-valprint.c (_initialize_pascal_valprint): Add declaration. * parse.c (_initialize_parse): Add declaration. * ppc-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_ppcfbsd_nat): Add declaration. * ppc-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_ppcfbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * ppc-linux-nat.c (_initialize_ppc_linux_nat): Add declaration. * ppc-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_ppc_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * ppc-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_ppcnbsd_nat): Add declaration. * ppc-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_ppcnbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * ppc-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_ppcobsd_nat): Add declaration. * ppc-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_ppcobsd_tdep): Add declaration. * printcmd.c (_initialize_printcmd): Add declaration. * probe.c (_initialize_probe): Add declaration. * proc-api.c (_initialize_proc_api): Add declaration. * proc-events.c (_initialize_proc_events): Add declaration. * proc-service.c (_initialize_proc_service): Add declaration. * procfs.c (_initialize_procfs): Add declaration. * producer.c (_initialize_producer): Add declaration. * psymtab.c (_initialize_psymtab): Add declaration. * python/python.c (_initialize_python): Add declaration. * ravenscar-thread.c (_initialize_ravenscar): Add declaration. * record-btrace.c (_initialize_record_btrace): Add declaration. * record-full.c (_initialize_record_full): Add declaration. * record.c (_initialize_record): Add declaration. * regcache-dump.c (_initialize_regcache_dump): Add declaration. * regcache.c (_initialize_regcache): Add declaration. * reggroups.c (_initialize_reggroup): Add declaration. * remote-notif.c (_initialize_notif): Add declaration. * remote-sim.c (_initialize_remote_sim): Add declaration. * remote.c (_initialize_remote): Add declaration. * reverse.c (_initialize_reverse): Add declaration. * riscv-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_riscv_fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * riscv-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_riscv_fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * riscv-linux-nat.c (_initialize_riscv_linux_nat): Add declaration. * riscv-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_riscv_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * riscv-tdep.c (_initialize_riscv_tdep): Add declaration. * rl78-tdep.c (_initialize_rl78_tdep): Add declaration. * rs6000-aix-tdep.c (_initialize_rs6000_aix_tdep): Add declaration. * rs6000-lynx178-tdep.c (_initialize_rs6000_lynx178_tdep): Add declaration. * rs6000-nat.c (_initialize_rs6000_nat): Add declaration. * rs6000-tdep.c (_initialize_rs6000_tdep): Add declaration. * run-on-main-thread.c (_initialize_run_on_main_thread): Add declaration. * rust-exp.y (_initialize_rust_exp): Add declaration. * rx-tdep.c (_initialize_rx_tdep): Add declaration. * s12z-tdep.c (_initialize_s12z_tdep): Add declaration. * s390-linux-nat.c (_initialize_s390_nat): Add declaration. * s390-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_s390_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * s390-tdep.c (_initialize_s390_tdep): Add declaration. * score-tdep.c (_initialize_score_tdep): Add declaration. * ser-go32.c (_initialize_ser_dos): Add declaration. * ser-mingw.c (_initialize_ser_windows): Add declaration. * ser-pipe.c (_initialize_ser_pipe): Add declaration. * ser-tcp.c (_initialize_ser_tcp): Add declaration. * ser-uds.c (_initialize_ser_socket): Add declaration. * ser-unix.c (_initialize_ser_hardwire): Add declaration. * serial.c (_initialize_serial): Add declaration. * sh-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_sh_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * sh-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_shnbsd_nat): Add declaration. * sh-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_shnbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * sh-tdep.c (_initialize_sh_tdep): Add declaration. * skip.c (_initialize_step_skip): Add declaration. * sol-thread.c (_initialize_sol_thread): Add declaration. * solib-aix.c (_initialize_solib_aix): Add declaration. * solib-darwin.c (_initialize_darwin_solib): Add declaration. * solib-dsbt.c (_initialize_dsbt_solib): Add declaration. * solib-frv.c (_initialize_frv_solib): Add declaration. * solib-svr4.c (_initialize_svr4_solib): Add declaration. * solib-target.c (_initialize_solib_target): Add declaration. * solib.c (_initialize_solib): Add declaration. * source-cache.c (_initialize_source_cache): Add declaration. * source.c (_initialize_source): Add declaration. * sparc-linux-nat.c (_initialize_sparc_linux_nat): Add declaration. * sparc-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc-nat.c (_initialize_sparc_nat): Add declaration. * sparc-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_sparcnbsd_nat): Add declaration. * sparc-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparcnbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc32obsd_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc-sol2-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc_sol2_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc64-fbsd-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64fbsd_nat): Add declaration. * sparc64-fbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64fbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc64-linux-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64_linux_nat): Add declaration. * sparc64-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc64-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64_nat): Add declaration. * sparc64-nbsd-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64nbsd_nat): Add declaration. * sparc64-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64nbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc64-obsd-nat.c (_initialize_sparc64obsd_nat): Add declaration. * sparc64-obsd-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64obsd_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc64-sol2-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64_sol2_tdep): Add declaration. * sparc64-tdep.c (_initialize_sparc64_adi_tdep): Add declaration. * stabsread.c (_initialize_stabsread): Add declaration. * stack.c (_initialize_stack): Add declaration. * stap-probe.c (_initialize_stap_probe): Add declaration. * std-regs.c (_initialize_frame_reg): Add declaration. * symfile-debug.c (_initialize_symfile_debug): Add declaration. * symfile-mem.c (_initialize_symfile_mem): Add declaration. * symfile.c (_initialize_symfile): Add declaration. * symmisc.c (_initialize_symmisc): Add declaration. * symtab.c (_initialize_symtab): Add declaration. * target.c (_initialize_target): Add declaration. * target-connection.c (_initialize_target_connection): Add declaration. * target-dcache.c (_initialize_target_dcache): Add declaration. * target-descriptions.c (_initialize_target_descriptions): Add declaration. * thread.c (_initialize_thread): Add declaration. * tic6x-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_tic6x_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * tic6x-tdep.c (_initialize_tic6x_tdep): Add declaration. * tilegx-linux-nat.c (_initialize_tile_linux_nat): Add declaration. * tilegx-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_tilegx_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * tilegx-tdep.c (_initialize_tilegx_tdep): Add declaration. * tracectf.c (_initialize_ctf): Add declaration. * tracefile-tfile.c (_initialize_tracefile_tfile): Add declaration. * tracefile.c (_initialize_tracefile): Add declaration. * tracepoint.c (_initialize_tracepoint): Add declaration. * tui/tui-hooks.c (_initialize_tui_hooks): Add declaration. * tui/tui-interp.c (_initialize_tui_interp): Add declaration. * tui/tui-layout.c (_initialize_tui_layout): Add declaration. * tui/tui-regs.c (_initialize_tui_regs): Add declaration. * tui/tui-stack.c (_initialize_tui_stack): Add declaration. * tui/tui-win.c (_initialize_tui_win): Add declaration. * tui/tui.c (_initialize_tui): Add declaration. * typeprint.c (_initialize_typeprint): Add declaration. * ui-style.c (_initialize_ui_style): Add declaration. * unittests/array-view-selftests.c (_initialize_array_view_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/child-path-selftests.c (_initialize_child_path_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/cli-utils-selftests.c (_initialize_cli_utils_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/common-utils-selftests.c (_initialize_common_utils_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/copy_bitwise-selftests.c (_initialize_copy_bitwise_utils_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/environ-selftests.c (_initialize_environ_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/filtered_iterator-selftests.c (_initialize_filtered_iterator_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/format_pieces-selftests.c (_initialize_format_pieces_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/function-view-selftests.c (_initialize_function_view_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/help-doc-selftests.c (_initialize_help_doc_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/lookup_name_info-selftests.c (_initialize_lookup_name_info_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/main-thread-selftests.c (_initialize_main_thread_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/memory-map-selftests.c (_initialize_memory_map_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/memrange-selftests.c (_initialize_memrange_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/mkdir-recursive-selftests.c (_initialize_mkdir_recursive_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/observable-selftests.c (_initialize_observer_selftest): Add declaration. * unittests/offset-type-selftests.c (_initialize_offset_type_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/optional-selftests.c (_initialize_optional_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/parse-connection-spec-selftests.c (_initialize_parse_connection_spec_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/rsp-low-selftests.c (_initialize_rsp_low_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/scoped_fd-selftests.c (_initialize_scoped_fd_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/scoped_mmap-selftests.c (_initialize_scoped_mmap_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/scoped_restore-selftests.c (_initialize_scoped_restore_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/string_view-selftests.c (_initialize_string_view_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/style-selftests.c (_initialize_style_selftest): Add declaration. * unittests/tracepoint-selftests.c (_initialize_tracepoint_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/tui-selftests.c (_initialize_tui_selftest): Add declaration. * unittests/unpack-selftests.c (_initialize_unpack_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/utils-selftests.c (_initialize_utils_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/vec-utils-selftests.c (_initialize_vec_utils_selftests): Add declaration. * unittests/xml-utils-selftests.c (_initialize_xml_utils): Add declaration. * user-regs.c (_initialize_user_regs): Add declaration. * utils.c (_initialize_utils): Add declaration. * v850-tdep.c (_initialize_v850_tdep): Add declaration. * valops.c (_initialize_valops): Add declaration. * valprint.c (_initialize_valprint): Add declaration. * value.c (_initialize_values): Add declaration. * varobj.c (_initialize_varobj): Add declaration. * vax-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_vaxbsd_nat): Add declaration. * vax-nbsd-tdep.c (_initialize_vaxnbsd_tdep): Add declaration. * vax-tdep.c (_initialize_vax_tdep): Add declaration. * windows-nat.c (_initialize_windows_nat): Add declaration. (_initialize_check_for_gdb_ini): Add declaration. (_initialize_loadable): Add declaration. * windows-tdep.c (_initialize_windows_tdep): Add declaration. * x86-bsd-nat.c (_initialize_x86_bsd_nat): Add declaration. * x86-linux-nat.c (_initialize_x86_linux_nat): Add declaration. * xcoffread.c (_initialize_xcoffread): Add declaration. * xml-support.c (_initialize_xml_support): Add declaration. * xstormy16-tdep.c (_initialize_xstormy16_tdep): Add declaration. * xtensa-linux-nat.c (_initialize_xtensa_linux_nat): Add declaration. * xtensa-linux-tdep.c (_initialize_xtensa_linux_tdep): Add declaration. * xtensa-tdep.c (_initialize_xtensa_tdep): Add declaration. Change-Id: I13eec7e0ed2b3c427377a7bdb055cf46da64def9
2020-01-14 03:01:38 +08:00
_initialize_utils ()
{
add_setshow_uinteger_cmd ("width", class_support, &chars_per_line, _("\
Set number of characters where GDB should wrap lines of its output."), _("\
Show number of characters where GDB should wrap lines of its output."), _("\
This affects where GDB wraps its output to fit the screen width.\n\
Setting this to \"unlimited\" or zero prevents GDB from wrapping its output."),
set_width_command,
show_chars_per_line,
&setlist, &showlist);
add_setshow_uinteger_cmd ("height", class_support, &lines_per_page, _("\
Set number of lines in a page for GDB output pagination."), _("\
Show number of lines in a page for GDB output pagination."), _("\
This affects the number of lines after which GDB will pause\n\
its output and ask you whether to continue.\n\
Setting this to \"unlimited\" or zero causes GDB never pause during output."),
set_height_command,
show_lines_per_page,
&setlist, &showlist);
add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("pagination", class_support,
&pagination_enabled, _("\
Set state of GDB output pagination."), _("\
Show state of GDB output pagination."), _("\
When pagination is ON, GDB pauses at end of each screenful of\n\
its output and asks you whether to continue.\n\
Turning pagination off is an alternative to \"set height unlimited\"."),
NULL,
show_pagination_enabled,
&setlist, &showlist);
add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("sevenbit-strings", class_support,
&sevenbit_strings, _("\
Set printing of 8-bit characters in strings as \\nnn."), _("\
Show printing of 8-bit characters in strings as \\nnn."), NULL,
NULL,
show_sevenbit_strings,
&setprintlist, &showprintlist);
add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("timestamp", class_maintenance,
&debug_timestamp, _("\
Set timestamping of debugging messages."), _("\
Show timestamping of debugging messages."), _("\
When set, debugging messages will be marked with seconds and microseconds."),
NULL,
show_debug_timestamp,
&setdebuglist, &showdebuglist);
add_internal_problem_command (&internal_error_problem);
add_internal_problem_command (&internal_warning_problem);
add_internal_problem_command (&demangler_warning_problem);
[gdb/cli] Add maint info screen While working on PRs tui/30337 and cli/30346 I came across various notions of width in gdb, as reported by gdb, readline, curses and the environment variables. As for gdb, readline and the environment variables, the way things work is: - Gdb asks readline to detect screen size, - readline sets the actual screen size in the environment variables COLUMNS and LINES, - readline reports back a screen size to gdb, which may have one column less than the actual screen size, to deal with lack of auto-wrap. This becomes gdb's notion of screen size (in other words the point where we can expect the gdb command line to wrap), - Gdb then explicitly sets readline's screen size, which readline itself may adjust to deal with lack of auto-wrap. This becomes readlines notion of screen size (well, internally the unadjusted one, but it'll report back the adjusted one). Add a command "maint info screen" that prints these notions, both for width and height. For TERM=xterm we have: ... $ TERM=xterm gdb -ex "maint info screen" Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 118. Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 27. Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... And for TERM=ansi: ... $ TERM=ansi gdb -ex "maint info screen" Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 117. Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 116. Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 27. Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... [ The fact that we have "characters readline reports are in a line is 116" is is due to gdb making readline adjust twice for the lack of auto-wrap, this is PR cli/30346. Likewise we can detect tui/30337 by doing a resize in TUI mode and doing "maint info screen": ... Number of characters characters curses thinks are in a line is 110. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 111 (COLUMNS). ] And for TERM=ansi, with width and heigth set to 0: ... Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is 4294967295 (unlimited). Number of characters readline reports are in a line is 32766 (unlimited - 1). Number of characters curses thinks are in a line is 118. Number of characters environment thinks are in a line is 118 (COLUMNS). Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is 4294967295 (unlimited). Number of lines readline reports are in a page is 32767 (unlimited). Number of lines curses thinks are in a page is 27. Number of lines environment thinks are in a page is 27 (LINES). ... [ Note that when doing a resize by say maximizing or de-maximizing a terminal, all reported values are updated, except for curses when not in TUI mode. Maybe that means there's a bug. If not, then maybe we should not print the curses lines unless in TUI mode, or annotate those lines such that it's clear that the values may be not up-to-date. ] I'd like to use this command in the regression test for PR cli/30346. Tested on x86_64-linux. Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> Reviewed-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2023-04-21 23:12:23 +08:00
add_cmd ("screen", class_maintenance, &maintenance_info_screen,
_("Show screen characteristics."), &maintenanceinfolist);
#if GDB_SELF_TEST
Add selftests run filtering With the growing number of selftests, I think it would be useful to be able to run only a subset of the tests. This patch associates a name to each registered selftest. It then allows doing something like: (gdb) maintenance selftest aarch64 Running self-tests. Running selftest aarch64-analyze-prologue. Running selftest aarch64-process-record. Ran 2 unit tests, 0 failed or with gdbserver: ./gdbserver --selftest=aarch64 In both cases, only the tests that contain "aarch64" in their name are ran. To help validate that the tests you want to run were actually ran, it also prints a message with the test name before running each test. Right now, all the arch-dependent tests are registered as a single test of the selftests. To be able to filter those too, I made them "first-class citizen" selftests. The selftest type is an interface, with different implementations for "simple selftests" and "arch selftests". The run_tests function simply iterates on that an invokes operator() on each test. I changed the tests data structure from a vector to a map, because - it allows iterating in a stable (alphabetical) order - it allows to easily verify if a test with a given name has been registered, to avoid duplicates There's also a new command "maintenance info selftests" that lists the registered selftests. gdb/ChangeLog: * common/selftest.h (selftest): New struct/interface. (register_test): Add name parameter, add new overload. (run_tests): Add filter parameter. (for_each_selftest_ftype): New typedef. (for_each_selftest): New declaration. * common/selftest.c (tests): Change type to map<string, unique_ptr<selftest>>. (simple_selftest): New struct. (register_test): New function. (register_test): Add name parameter and use it. (run_tests): Add filter parameter and use it. Add prints. Adjust to vector -> map change. * aarch64-tdep.c (_initialize_aarch64_tdep): Add names when registering selftests. * arm-tdep.c (_initialize_arm_tdep): Likewise. * disasm-selftests.c (_initialize_disasm_selftests): Likewise. * dwarf2-frame.c (_initialize_dwarf2_frame): Likewise. * dwarf2loc.c (_initialize_dwarf2loc): Likewise. * findvar.c (_initialize_findvar): Likewise. * gdbarch-selftests.c (_initialize_gdbarch_selftests): Likewise. * maint.c (maintenance_selftest): Update call to run_tests. (maintenance_info_selftests): New function. (_initialize_maint_cmds): Register "maintenance info selftests" command. Update "maintenance selftest" doc. * regcache.c (_initialize_regcache): Add names when registering selftests. * rust-exp.y (_initialize_rust_exp): Likewise. * selftest-arch.c (gdbarch_selftest): New struct. (gdbarch_tests): Remove. (register_test_foreach_arch): Add name parameter. Call register_test. (tests_with_arch): Remove, move most content to gdbarch_selftest::operator(). (_initialize_selftests_foreach_arch): Remove. * selftest-arch.h (register_test_foreach_arch): Add name parameter. (run_tests_with_arch): New declaration. * utils-selftests.c (_initialize_utils_selftests): Add names when registering selftests. * utils.c (_initialize_utils): Likewise. * unittests/array-view-selftests.c (_initialize_array_view_selftests): Likewise. * unittests/environ-selftests.c (_initialize_environ_selftests): Likewise. * unittests/function-view-selftests.c (_initialize_function_view_selftests): Likewise. * unittests/offset-type-selftests.c (_initialize_offset_type_selftests): Likewise. * unittests/optional-selftests.c (_initialize_optional_selftests): Likewise. * unittests/scoped_restore-selftests.c (_initialize_scoped_restore_selftests): Likewise. * NEWS: Document "maintenance selftest" and "maint info selftests". gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * server.c (captured_main): Accept argument for --selftest. Update run_tests call. * linux-x86-tdesc-selftest.c (initialize_low_tdesc): Add names when registering selftests. gdb/doc/ChangeLog: * gdb.texinfo (Maintenance Commands): Document filter parameter of "maint selftest". Document "maint info selftests" command.
2017-09-16 20:06:03 +08:00
selftests::register_test ("gdb_realpath", gdb_realpath_tests);
selftests::register_test ("gdb_argv_array_view", gdb_argv_as_array_view_test);
selftests::register_test ("strncmp_iw_with_mode",
strncmp_iw_with_mode_tests);
selftests::register_test ("pager", test_pager);
selftests::register_test ("assign_set_return_if_changed",
test_assign_set_return_if_changed);
#endif
}