PR python/17698 - add Breakpoint.pending
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / doc / python.texi
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618f726f 1@c Copyright (C) 2008-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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2@c Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
3@c under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
4@c any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with the
5@c Invariant Sections being ``Free Software'' and ``Free Software Needs
6@c Free Documentation'', with the Front-Cover Texts being ``A GNU Manual,''
7@c and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below.
8@c
9@c (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You are free to copy and modify
10@c this GNU Manual. Buying copies from GNU Press supports the FSF in
11@c developing GNU and promoting software freedom.''
12
13@node Python
14@section Extending @value{GDBN} using Python
15@cindex python scripting
16@cindex scripting with python
17
18You can extend @value{GDBN} using the @uref{http://www.python.org/,
19Python programming language}. This feature is available only if
20@value{GDBN} was configured using @option{--with-python}.
21
22@cindex python directory
23Python scripts used by @value{GDBN} should be installed in
24@file{@var{data-directory}/python}, where @var{data-directory} is
25the data directory as determined at @value{GDBN} startup (@pxref{Data Files}).
26This directory, known as the @dfn{python directory},
27is automatically added to the Python Search Path in order to allow
28the Python interpreter to locate all scripts installed at this location.
29
30Additionally, @value{GDBN} commands and convenience functions which
31are written in Python and are located in the
32@file{@var{data-directory}/python/gdb/command} or
33@file{@var{data-directory}/python/gdb/function} directories are
34automatically imported when @value{GDBN} starts.
35
36@menu
37* Python Commands:: Accessing Python from @value{GDBN}.
38* Python API:: Accessing @value{GDBN} from Python.
39* Python Auto-loading:: Automatically loading Python code.
40* Python modules:: Python modules provided by @value{GDBN}.
41@end menu
42
43@node Python Commands
44@subsection Python Commands
45@cindex python commands
46@cindex commands to access python
47
48@value{GDBN} provides two commands for accessing the Python interpreter,
49and one related setting:
50
51@table @code
52@kindex python-interactive
53@kindex pi
54@item python-interactive @r{[}@var{command}@r{]}
55@itemx pi @r{[}@var{command}@r{]}
56Without an argument, the @code{python-interactive} command can be used
57to start an interactive Python prompt. To return to @value{GDBN},
58type the @code{EOF} character (e.g., @kbd{Ctrl-D} on an empty prompt).
59
60Alternatively, a single-line Python command can be given as an
61argument and evaluated. If the command is an expression, the result
62will be printed; otherwise, nothing will be printed. For example:
63
64@smallexample
65(@value{GDBP}) python-interactive 2 + 3
665
67@end smallexample
68
69@kindex python
70@kindex py
71@item python @r{[}@var{command}@r{]}
72@itemx py @r{[}@var{command}@r{]}
73The @code{python} command can be used to evaluate Python code.
74
75If given an argument, the @code{python} command will evaluate the
76argument as a Python command. For example:
77
78@smallexample
79(@value{GDBP}) python print 23
8023
81@end smallexample
82
83If you do not provide an argument to @code{python}, it will act as a
84multi-line command, like @code{define}. In this case, the Python
85script is made up of subsequent command lines, given after the
86@code{python} command. This command list is terminated using a line
87containing @code{end}. For example:
88
89@smallexample
90(@value{GDBP}) python
91Type python script
92End with a line saying just "end".
93>print 23
94>end
9523
96@end smallexample
97
98@kindex set python print-stack
99@item set python print-stack
100By default, @value{GDBN} will print only the message component of a
101Python exception when an error occurs in a Python script. This can be
102controlled using @code{set python print-stack}: if @code{full}, then
103full Python stack printing is enabled; if @code{none}, then Python stack
104and message printing is disabled; if @code{message}, the default, only
105the message component of the error is printed.
106@end table
107
108It is also possible to execute a Python script from the @value{GDBN}
109interpreter:
110
111@table @code
112@item source @file{script-name}
113The script name must end with @samp{.py} and @value{GDBN} must be configured
114to recognize the script language based on filename extension using
115the @code{script-extension} setting. @xref{Extending GDB, ,Extending GDB}.
116
117@item python execfile ("script-name")
118This method is based on the @code{execfile} Python built-in function,
119and thus is always available.
120@end table
121
122@node Python API
123@subsection Python API
124@cindex python api
125@cindex programming in python
126
127You can get quick online help for @value{GDBN}'s Python API by issuing
128the command @w{@kbd{python help (gdb)}}.
129
130Functions and methods which have two or more optional arguments allow
131them to be specified using keyword syntax. This allows passing some
132optional arguments while skipping others. Example:
133@w{@code{gdb.some_function ('foo', bar = 1, baz = 2)}}.
134
135@menu
136* Basic Python:: Basic Python Functions.
137* Exception Handling:: How Python exceptions are translated.
138* Values From Inferior:: Python representation of values.
139* Types In Python:: Python representation of types.
140* Pretty Printing API:: Pretty-printing values.
141* Selecting Pretty-Printers:: How GDB chooses a pretty-printer.
142* Writing a Pretty-Printer:: Writing a Pretty-Printer.
143* Type Printing API:: Pretty-printing types.
144* Frame Filter API:: Filtering Frames.
145* Frame Decorator API:: Decorating Frames.
146* Writing a Frame Filter:: Writing a Frame Filter.
d11916aa 147* Unwinding Frames in Python:: Writing frame unwinder.
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148* Xmethods In Python:: Adding and replacing methods of C++ classes.
149* Xmethod API:: Xmethod types.
150* Writing an Xmethod:: Writing an xmethod.
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151* Inferiors In Python:: Python representation of inferiors (processes)
152* Events In Python:: Listening for events from @value{GDBN}.
153* Threads In Python:: Accessing inferior threads from Python.
154* Commands In Python:: Implementing new commands in Python.
155* Parameters In Python:: Adding new @value{GDBN} parameters.
156* Functions In Python:: Writing new convenience functions.
157* Progspaces In Python:: Program spaces.
158* Objfiles In Python:: Object files.
159* Frames In Python:: Accessing inferior stack frames from Python.
160* Blocks In Python:: Accessing blocks from Python.
161* Symbols In Python:: Python representation of symbols.
162* Symbol Tables In Python:: Python representation of symbol tables.
163* Line Tables In Python:: Python representation of line tables.
164* Breakpoints In Python:: Manipulating breakpoints using Python.
165* Finish Breakpoints in Python:: Setting Breakpoints on function return
166 using Python.
167* Lazy Strings In Python:: Python representation of lazy strings.
168* Architectures In Python:: Python representation of architectures.
169@end menu
170
171@node Basic Python
172@subsubsection Basic Python
173
174@cindex python stdout
175@cindex python pagination
176At startup, @value{GDBN} overrides Python's @code{sys.stdout} and
177@code{sys.stderr} to print using @value{GDBN}'s output-paging streams.
178A Python program which outputs to one of these streams may have its
179output interrupted by the user (@pxref{Screen Size}). In this
180situation, a Python @code{KeyboardInterrupt} exception is thrown.
181
182Some care must be taken when writing Python code to run in
183@value{GDBN}. Two things worth noting in particular:
184
185@itemize @bullet
186@item
187@value{GDBN} install handlers for @code{SIGCHLD} and @code{SIGINT}.
188Python code must not override these, or even change the options using
189@code{sigaction}. If your program changes the handling of these
190signals, @value{GDBN} will most likely stop working correctly. Note
191that it is unfortunately common for GUI toolkits to install a
192@code{SIGCHLD} handler.
193
194@item
195@value{GDBN} takes care to mark its internal file descriptors as
196close-on-exec. However, this cannot be done in a thread-safe way on
197all platforms. Your Python programs should be aware of this and
198should both create new file descriptors with the close-on-exec flag
199set and arrange to close unneeded file descriptors before starting a
200child process.
201@end itemize
202
203@cindex python functions
204@cindex python module
205@cindex gdb module
206@value{GDBN} introduces a new Python module, named @code{gdb}. All
207methods and classes added by @value{GDBN} are placed in this module.
208@value{GDBN} automatically @code{import}s the @code{gdb} module for
209use in all scripts evaluated by the @code{python} command.
210
211@findex gdb.PYTHONDIR
212@defvar gdb.PYTHONDIR
213A string containing the python directory (@pxref{Python}).
214@end defvar
215
216@findex gdb.execute
217@defun gdb.execute (command @r{[}, from_tty @r{[}, to_string@r{]]})
218Evaluate @var{command}, a string, as a @value{GDBN} CLI command.
219If a GDB exception happens while @var{command} runs, it is
220translated as described in @ref{Exception Handling,,Exception Handling}.
221
697aa1b7 222The @var{from_tty} flag specifies whether @value{GDBN} ought to consider this
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223command as having originated from the user invoking it interactively.
224It must be a boolean value. If omitted, it defaults to @code{False}.
225
226By default, any output produced by @var{command} is sent to
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227@value{GDBN}'s standard output (and to the log output if logging is
228turned on). If the @var{to_string} parameter is
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229@code{True}, then output will be collected by @code{gdb.execute} and
230returned as a string. The default is @code{False}, in which case the
231return value is @code{None}. If @var{to_string} is @code{True}, the
232@value{GDBN} virtual terminal will be temporarily set to unlimited width
233and height, and its pagination will be disabled; @pxref{Screen Size}.
234@end defun
235
236@findex gdb.breakpoints
237@defun gdb.breakpoints ()
238Return a sequence holding all of @value{GDBN}'s breakpoints.
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239@xref{Breakpoints In Python}, for more information. In @value{GDBN}
240version 7.11 and earlier, this function returned @code{None} if there
241were no breakpoints. This peculiarity was subsequently fixed, and now
242@code{gdb.breakpoints} returns an empty sequence in this case.
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243@end defun
244
245@findex gdb.parameter
246@defun gdb.parameter (parameter)
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247Return the value of a @value{GDBN} @var{parameter} given by its name,
248a string; the parameter name string may contain spaces if the parameter has a
249multi-part name. For example, @samp{print object} is a valid
250parameter name.
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251
252If the named parameter does not exist, this function throws a
253@code{gdb.error} (@pxref{Exception Handling}). Otherwise, the
254parameter's value is converted to a Python value of the appropriate
255type, and returned.
256@end defun
257
258@findex gdb.history
259@defun gdb.history (number)
260Return a value from @value{GDBN}'s value history (@pxref{Value
697aa1b7 261History}). The @var{number} argument indicates which history element to return.
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262If @var{number} is negative, then @value{GDBN} will take its absolute value
263and count backward from the last element (i.e., the most recent element) to
264find the value to return. If @var{number} is zero, then @value{GDBN} will
265return the most recent element. If the element specified by @var{number}
266doesn't exist in the value history, a @code{gdb.error} exception will be
267raised.
268
269If no exception is raised, the return value is always an instance of
270@code{gdb.Value} (@pxref{Values From Inferior}).
271@end defun
272
273@findex gdb.parse_and_eval
274@defun gdb.parse_and_eval (expression)
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275Parse @var{expression}, which must be a string, as an expression in
276the current language, evaluate it, and return the result as a
277@code{gdb.Value}.
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278
279This function can be useful when implementing a new command
280(@pxref{Commands In Python}), as it provides a way to parse the
281command's argument as an expression. It is also useful simply to
282compute values, for example, it is the only way to get the value of a
283convenience variable (@pxref{Convenience Vars}) as a @code{gdb.Value}.
284@end defun
285
286@findex gdb.find_pc_line
287@defun gdb.find_pc_line (pc)
288Return the @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} object corresponding to the
289@var{pc} value. @xref{Symbol Tables In Python}. If an invalid
290value of @var{pc} is passed as an argument, then the @code{symtab} and
291@code{line} attributes of the returned @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} object
292will be @code{None} and 0 respectively.
293@end defun
294
295@findex gdb.post_event
296@defun gdb.post_event (event)
297Put @var{event}, a callable object taking no arguments, into
298@value{GDBN}'s internal event queue. This callable will be invoked at
299some later point, during @value{GDBN}'s event processing. Events
300posted using @code{post_event} will be run in the order in which they
301were posted; however, there is no way to know when they will be
302processed relative to other events inside @value{GDBN}.
303
304@value{GDBN} is not thread-safe. If your Python program uses multiple
305threads, you must be careful to only call @value{GDBN}-specific
b3ce5e5f 306functions in the @value{GDBN} thread. @code{post_event} ensures
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307this. For example:
308
309@smallexample
310(@value{GDBP}) python
311>import threading
312>
313>class Writer():
314> def __init__(self, message):
315> self.message = message;
316> def __call__(self):
317> gdb.write(self.message)
318>
319>class MyThread1 (threading.Thread):
320> def run (self):
321> gdb.post_event(Writer("Hello "))
322>
323>class MyThread2 (threading.Thread):
324> def run (self):
325> gdb.post_event(Writer("World\n"))
326>
327>MyThread1().start()
328>MyThread2().start()
329>end
330(@value{GDBP}) Hello World
331@end smallexample
332@end defun
333
334@findex gdb.write
335@defun gdb.write (string @r{[}, stream{]})
336Print a string to @value{GDBN}'s paginated output stream. The
337optional @var{stream} determines the stream to print to. The default
338stream is @value{GDBN}'s standard output stream. Possible stream
339values are:
340
341@table @code
342@findex STDOUT
343@findex gdb.STDOUT
344@item gdb.STDOUT
345@value{GDBN}'s standard output stream.
346
347@findex STDERR
348@findex gdb.STDERR
349@item gdb.STDERR
350@value{GDBN}'s standard error stream.
351
352@findex STDLOG
353@findex gdb.STDLOG
354@item gdb.STDLOG
355@value{GDBN}'s log stream (@pxref{Logging Output}).
356@end table
357
358Writing to @code{sys.stdout} or @code{sys.stderr} will automatically
359call this function and will automatically direct the output to the
360relevant stream.
361@end defun
362
363@findex gdb.flush
364@defun gdb.flush ()
365Flush the buffer of a @value{GDBN} paginated stream so that the
366contents are displayed immediately. @value{GDBN} will flush the
367contents of a stream automatically when it encounters a newline in the
368buffer. The optional @var{stream} determines the stream to flush. The
369default stream is @value{GDBN}'s standard output stream. Possible
370stream values are:
371
372@table @code
373@findex STDOUT
374@findex gdb.STDOUT
375@item gdb.STDOUT
376@value{GDBN}'s standard output stream.
377
378@findex STDERR
379@findex gdb.STDERR
380@item gdb.STDERR
381@value{GDBN}'s standard error stream.
382
383@findex STDLOG
384@findex gdb.STDLOG
385@item gdb.STDLOG
386@value{GDBN}'s log stream (@pxref{Logging Output}).
387
388@end table
389
390Flushing @code{sys.stdout} or @code{sys.stderr} will automatically
391call this function for the relevant stream.
392@end defun
393
394@findex gdb.target_charset
395@defun gdb.target_charset ()
396Return the name of the current target character set (@pxref{Character
397Sets}). This differs from @code{gdb.parameter('target-charset')} in
398that @samp{auto} is never returned.
399@end defun
400
401@findex gdb.target_wide_charset
402@defun gdb.target_wide_charset ()
403Return the name of the current target wide character set
404(@pxref{Character Sets}). This differs from
405@code{gdb.parameter('target-wide-charset')} in that @samp{auto} is
406never returned.
407@end defun
408
409@findex gdb.solib_name
410@defun gdb.solib_name (address)
411Return the name of the shared library holding the given @var{address}
412as a string, or @code{None}.
413@end defun
414
415@findex gdb.decode_line
416@defun gdb.decode_line @r{[}expression@r{]}
417Return locations of the line specified by @var{expression}, or of the
418current line if no argument was given. This function returns a Python
419tuple containing two elements. The first element contains a string
420holding any unparsed section of @var{expression} (or @code{None} if
421the expression has been fully parsed). The second element contains
422either @code{None} or another tuple that contains all the locations
423that match the expression represented as @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line}
424objects (@pxref{Symbol Tables In Python}). If @var{expression} is
425provided, it is decoded the way that @value{GDBN}'s inbuilt
426@code{break} or @code{edit} commands do (@pxref{Specify Location}).
427@end defun
428
429@defun gdb.prompt_hook (current_prompt)
430@anchor{prompt_hook}
431
432If @var{prompt_hook} is callable, @value{GDBN} will call the method
433assigned to this operation before a prompt is displayed by
434@value{GDBN}.
435
436The parameter @code{current_prompt} contains the current @value{GDBN}
437prompt. This method must return a Python string, or @code{None}. If
438a string is returned, the @value{GDBN} prompt will be set to that
439string. If @code{None} is returned, @value{GDBN} will continue to use
440the current prompt.
441
442Some prompts cannot be substituted in @value{GDBN}. Secondary prompts
443such as those used by readline for command input, and annotation
444related prompts are prohibited from being changed.
445@end defun
446
447@node Exception Handling
448@subsubsection Exception Handling
449@cindex python exceptions
450@cindex exceptions, python
451
452When executing the @code{python} command, Python exceptions
453uncaught within the Python code are translated to calls to
454@value{GDBN} error-reporting mechanism. If the command that called
455@code{python} does not handle the error, @value{GDBN} will
456terminate it and print an error message containing the Python
457exception name, the associated value, and the Python call stack
458backtrace at the point where the exception was raised. Example:
459
460@smallexample
461(@value{GDBP}) python print foo
462Traceback (most recent call last):
463 File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
464NameError: name 'foo' is not defined
465@end smallexample
466
467@value{GDBN} errors that happen in @value{GDBN} commands invoked by
468Python code are converted to Python exceptions. The type of the
469Python exception depends on the error.
470
471@ftable @code
472@item gdb.error
473This is the base class for most exceptions generated by @value{GDBN}.
474It is derived from @code{RuntimeError}, for compatibility with earlier
475versions of @value{GDBN}.
476
477If an error occurring in @value{GDBN} does not fit into some more
478specific category, then the generated exception will have this type.
479
480@item gdb.MemoryError
481This is a subclass of @code{gdb.error} which is thrown when an
482operation tried to access invalid memory in the inferior.
483
484@item KeyboardInterrupt
485User interrupt (via @kbd{C-c} or by typing @kbd{q} at a pagination
486prompt) is translated to a Python @code{KeyboardInterrupt} exception.
487@end ftable
488
489In all cases, your exception handler will see the @value{GDBN} error
490message as its value and the Python call stack backtrace at the Python
491statement closest to where the @value{GDBN} error occured as the
492traceback.
493
494@findex gdb.GdbError
495When implementing @value{GDBN} commands in Python via @code{gdb.Command},
496it is useful to be able to throw an exception that doesn't cause a
497traceback to be printed. For example, the user may have invoked the
498command incorrectly. Use the @code{gdb.GdbError} exception
499to handle this case. Example:
500
501@smallexample
502(gdb) python
503>class HelloWorld (gdb.Command):
504> """Greet the whole world."""
505> def __init__ (self):
506> super (HelloWorld, self).__init__ ("hello-world", gdb.COMMAND_USER)
507> def invoke (self, args, from_tty):
508> argv = gdb.string_to_argv (args)
509> if len (argv) != 0:
510> raise gdb.GdbError ("hello-world takes no arguments")
511> print "Hello, World!"
512>HelloWorld ()
513>end
514(gdb) hello-world 42
515hello-world takes no arguments
516@end smallexample
517
518@node Values From Inferior
519@subsubsection Values From Inferior
520@cindex values from inferior, with Python
521@cindex python, working with values from inferior
522
523@cindex @code{gdb.Value}
524@value{GDBN} provides values it obtains from the inferior program in
525an object of type @code{gdb.Value}. @value{GDBN} uses this object
526for its internal bookkeeping of the inferior's values, and for
527fetching values when necessary.
528
529Inferior values that are simple scalars can be used directly in
530Python expressions that are valid for the value's data type. Here's
531an example for an integer or floating-point value @code{some_val}:
532
533@smallexample
534bar = some_val + 2
535@end smallexample
536
537@noindent
538As result of this, @code{bar} will also be a @code{gdb.Value} object
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539whose values are of the same type as those of @code{some_val}. Valid
540Python operations can also be performed on @code{gdb.Value} objects
541representing a @code{struct} or @code{class} object. For such cases,
542the overloaded operator (if present), is used to perform the operation.
543For example, if @code{val1} and @code{val2} are @code{gdb.Value} objects
544representing instances of a @code{class} which overloads the @code{+}
545operator, then one can use the @code{+} operator in their Python script
546as follows:
547
548@smallexample
549val3 = val1 + val2
550@end smallexample
551
552@noindent
553The result of the operation @code{val3} is also a @code{gdb.Value}
554object corresponding to the value returned by the overloaded @code{+}
555operator. In general, overloaded operators are invoked for the
556following operations: @code{+} (binary addition), @code{-} (binary
557subtraction), @code{*} (multiplication), @code{/}, @code{%}, @code{<<},
558@code{>>}, @code{|}, @code{&}, @code{^}.
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559
560Inferior values that are structures or instances of some class can
561be accessed using the Python @dfn{dictionary syntax}. For example, if
562@code{some_val} is a @code{gdb.Value} instance holding a structure, you
563can access its @code{foo} element with:
564
565@smallexample
566bar = some_val['foo']
567@end smallexample
568
569@cindex getting structure elements using gdb.Field objects as subscripts
570Again, @code{bar} will also be a @code{gdb.Value} object. Structure
571elements can also be accessed by using @code{gdb.Field} objects as
572subscripts (@pxref{Types In Python}, for more information on
573@code{gdb.Field} objects). For example, if @code{foo_field} is a
574@code{gdb.Field} object corresponding to element @code{foo} of the above
575structure, then @code{bar} can also be accessed as follows:
576
577@smallexample
578bar = some_val[foo_field]
579@end smallexample
580
581A @code{gdb.Value} that represents a function can be executed via
582inferior function call. Any arguments provided to the call must match
583the function's prototype, and must be provided in the order specified
584by that prototype.
585
586For example, @code{some_val} is a @code{gdb.Value} instance
587representing a function that takes two integers as arguments. To
588execute this function, call it like so:
589
590@smallexample
591result = some_val (10,20)
592@end smallexample
593
594Any values returned from a function call will be stored as a
595@code{gdb.Value}.
596
597The following attributes are provided:
598
599@defvar Value.address
600If this object is addressable, this read-only attribute holds a
601@code{gdb.Value} object representing the address. Otherwise,
602this attribute holds @code{None}.
603@end defvar
604
605@cindex optimized out value in Python
606@defvar Value.is_optimized_out
607This read-only boolean attribute is true if the compiler optimized out
608this value, thus it is not available for fetching from the inferior.
609@end defvar
610
611@defvar Value.type
612The type of this @code{gdb.Value}. The value of this attribute is a
613@code{gdb.Type} object (@pxref{Types In Python}).
614@end defvar
615
616@defvar Value.dynamic_type
617The dynamic type of this @code{gdb.Value}. This uses C@t{++} run-time
618type information (@acronym{RTTI}) to determine the dynamic type of the
619value. If this value is of class type, it will return the class in
620which the value is embedded, if any. If this value is of pointer or
621reference to a class type, it will compute the dynamic type of the
622referenced object, and return a pointer or reference to that type,
623respectively. In all other cases, it will return the value's static
624type.
625
626Note that this feature will only work when debugging a C@t{++} program
627that includes @acronym{RTTI} for the object in question. Otherwise,
628it will just return the static type of the value as in @kbd{ptype foo}
629(@pxref{Symbols, ptype}).
630@end defvar
631
632@defvar Value.is_lazy
633The value of this read-only boolean attribute is @code{True} if this
634@code{gdb.Value} has not yet been fetched from the inferior.
635@value{GDBN} does not fetch values until necessary, for efficiency.
636For example:
637
638@smallexample
639myval = gdb.parse_and_eval ('somevar')
640@end smallexample
641
642The value of @code{somevar} is not fetched at this time. It will be
643fetched when the value is needed, or when the @code{fetch_lazy}
644method is invoked.
645@end defvar
646
647The following methods are provided:
648
649@defun Value.__init__ (@var{val})
650Many Python values can be converted directly to a @code{gdb.Value} via
651this object initializer. Specifically:
652
653@table @asis
654@item Python boolean
655A Python boolean is converted to the boolean type from the current
656language.
657
658@item Python integer
659A Python integer is converted to the C @code{long} type for the
660current architecture.
661
662@item Python long
663A Python long is converted to the C @code{long long} type for the
664current architecture.
665
666@item Python float
667A Python float is converted to the C @code{double} type for the
668current architecture.
669
670@item Python string
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671A Python string is converted to a target string in the current target
672language using the current target encoding.
673If a character cannot be represented in the current target encoding,
674then an exception is thrown.
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675
676@item @code{gdb.Value}
677If @code{val} is a @code{gdb.Value}, then a copy of the value is made.
678
679@item @code{gdb.LazyString}
680If @code{val} is a @code{gdb.LazyString} (@pxref{Lazy Strings In
681Python}), then the lazy string's @code{value} method is called, and
682its result is used.
683@end table
684@end defun
685
686@defun Value.cast (type)
687Return a new instance of @code{gdb.Value} that is the result of
688casting this instance to the type described by @var{type}, which must
689be a @code{gdb.Type} object. If the cast cannot be performed for some
690reason, this method throws an exception.
691@end defun
692
693@defun Value.dereference ()
694For pointer data types, this method returns a new @code{gdb.Value} object
695whose contents is the object pointed to by the pointer. For example, if
696@code{foo} is a C pointer to an @code{int}, declared in your C program as
697
698@smallexample
699int *foo;
700@end smallexample
701
702@noindent
703then you can use the corresponding @code{gdb.Value} to access what
704@code{foo} points to like this:
705
706@smallexample
707bar = foo.dereference ()
708@end smallexample
709
710The result @code{bar} will be a @code{gdb.Value} object holding the
711value pointed to by @code{foo}.
712
713A similar function @code{Value.referenced_value} exists which also
714returns @code{gdb.Value} objects corresonding to the values pointed to
715by pointer values (and additionally, values referenced by reference
716values). However, the behavior of @code{Value.dereference}
717differs from @code{Value.referenced_value} by the fact that the
718behavior of @code{Value.dereference} is identical to applying the C
719unary operator @code{*} on a given value. For example, consider a
720reference to a pointer @code{ptrref}, declared in your C@t{++} program
721as
722
723@smallexample
724typedef int *intptr;
725...
726int val = 10;
727intptr ptr = &val;
728intptr &ptrref = ptr;
729@end smallexample
730
731Though @code{ptrref} is a reference value, one can apply the method
732@code{Value.dereference} to the @code{gdb.Value} object corresponding
733to it and obtain a @code{gdb.Value} which is identical to that
734corresponding to @code{val}. However, if you apply the method
735@code{Value.referenced_value}, the result would be a @code{gdb.Value}
736object identical to that corresponding to @code{ptr}.
737
738@smallexample
739py_ptrref = gdb.parse_and_eval ("ptrref")
740py_val = py_ptrref.dereference ()
741py_ptr = py_ptrref.referenced_value ()
742@end smallexample
743
744The @code{gdb.Value} object @code{py_val} is identical to that
745corresponding to @code{val}, and @code{py_ptr} is identical to that
746corresponding to @code{ptr}. In general, @code{Value.dereference} can
747be applied whenever the C unary operator @code{*} can be applied
748to the corresponding C value. For those cases where applying both
749@code{Value.dereference} and @code{Value.referenced_value} is allowed,
750the results obtained need not be identical (as we have seen in the above
751example). The results are however identical when applied on
752@code{gdb.Value} objects corresponding to pointers (@code{gdb.Value}
753objects with type code @code{TYPE_CODE_PTR}) in a C/C@t{++} program.
754@end defun
755
756@defun Value.referenced_value ()
757For pointer or reference data types, this method returns a new
758@code{gdb.Value} object corresponding to the value referenced by the
759pointer/reference value. For pointer data types,
760@code{Value.dereference} and @code{Value.referenced_value} produce
761identical results. The difference between these methods is that
762@code{Value.dereference} cannot get the values referenced by reference
763values. For example, consider a reference to an @code{int}, declared
764in your C@t{++} program as
765
766@smallexample
767int val = 10;
768int &ref = val;
769@end smallexample
770
771@noindent
772then applying @code{Value.dereference} to the @code{gdb.Value} object
773corresponding to @code{ref} will result in an error, while applying
774@code{Value.referenced_value} will result in a @code{gdb.Value} object
775identical to that corresponding to @code{val}.
776
777@smallexample
778py_ref = gdb.parse_and_eval ("ref")
779er_ref = py_ref.dereference () # Results in error
780py_val = py_ref.referenced_value () # Returns the referenced value
781@end smallexample
782
783The @code{gdb.Value} object @code{py_val} is identical to that
784corresponding to @code{val}.
785@end defun
786
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787@defun Value.reference_value ()
788Return a @code{gdb.Value} object which is a reference to the value
789encapsulated by this instance.
790@end defun
791
792@defun Value.const_value ()
793Return a @code{gdb.Value} object which is a @code{const} version of the
794value encapsulated by this instance.
795@end defun
796
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797@defun Value.dynamic_cast (type)
798Like @code{Value.cast}, but works as if the C@t{++} @code{dynamic_cast}
799operator were used. Consult a C@t{++} reference for details.
800@end defun
801
802@defun Value.reinterpret_cast (type)
803Like @code{Value.cast}, but works as if the C@t{++} @code{reinterpret_cast}
804operator were used. Consult a C@t{++} reference for details.
805@end defun
806
807@defun Value.string (@r{[}encoding@r{[}, errors@r{[}, length@r{]]]})
808If this @code{gdb.Value} represents a string, then this method
809converts the contents to a Python string. Otherwise, this method will
810throw an exception.
811
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812Values are interpreted as strings according to the rules of the
813current language. If the optional length argument is given, the
814string will be converted to that length, and will include any embedded
815zeroes that the string may contain. Otherwise, for languages
816where the string is zero-terminated, the entire string will be
817converted.
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819For example, in C-like languages, a value is a string if it is a pointer
820to or an array of characters or ints of type @code{wchar_t}, @code{char16_t},
821or @code{char32_t}.
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822
823If the optional @var{encoding} argument is given, it must be a string
824naming the encoding of the string in the @code{gdb.Value}, such as
825@code{"ascii"}, @code{"iso-8859-6"} or @code{"utf-8"}. It accepts
826the same encodings as the corresponding argument to Python's
827@code{string.decode} method, and the Python codec machinery will be used
828to convert the string. If @var{encoding} is not given, or if
829@var{encoding} is the empty string, then either the @code{target-charset}
830(@pxref{Character Sets}) will be used, or a language-specific encoding
831will be used, if the current language is able to supply one.
832
833The optional @var{errors} argument is the same as the corresponding
834argument to Python's @code{string.decode} method.
835
836If the optional @var{length} argument is given, the string will be
837fetched and converted to the given length.
838@end defun
839
840@defun Value.lazy_string (@r{[}encoding @r{[}, length@r{]]})
841If this @code{gdb.Value} represents a string, then this method
842converts the contents to a @code{gdb.LazyString} (@pxref{Lazy Strings
843In Python}). Otherwise, this method will throw an exception.
844
845If the optional @var{encoding} argument is given, it must be a string
846naming the encoding of the @code{gdb.LazyString}. Some examples are:
847@samp{ascii}, @samp{iso-8859-6} or @samp{utf-8}. If the
848@var{encoding} argument is an encoding that @value{GDBN} does
849recognize, @value{GDBN} will raise an error.
850
851When a lazy string is printed, the @value{GDBN} encoding machinery is
852used to convert the string during printing. If the optional
853@var{encoding} argument is not provided, or is an empty string,
854@value{GDBN} will automatically select the encoding most suitable for
855the string type. For further information on encoding in @value{GDBN}
856please see @ref{Character Sets}.
857
858If the optional @var{length} argument is given, the string will be
859fetched and encoded to the length of characters specified. If
860the @var{length} argument is not provided, the string will be fetched
861and encoded until a null of appropriate width is found.
862@end defun
863
864@defun Value.fetch_lazy ()
865If the @code{gdb.Value} object is currently a lazy value
866(@code{gdb.Value.is_lazy} is @code{True}), then the value is
867fetched from the inferior. Any errors that occur in the process
868will produce a Python exception.
869
870If the @code{gdb.Value} object is not a lazy value, this method
871has no effect.
872
873This method does not return a value.
874@end defun
875
876
877@node Types In Python
878@subsubsection Types In Python
879@cindex types in Python
880@cindex Python, working with types
881
882@tindex gdb.Type
883@value{GDBN} represents types from the inferior using the class
884@code{gdb.Type}.
885
886The following type-related functions are available in the @code{gdb}
887module:
888
889@findex gdb.lookup_type
890@defun gdb.lookup_type (name @r{[}, block@r{]})
697aa1b7 891This function looks up a type by its @var{name}, which must be a string.
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892
893If @var{block} is given, then @var{name} is looked up in that scope.
894Otherwise, it is searched for globally.
895
896Ordinarily, this function will return an instance of @code{gdb.Type}.
897If the named type cannot be found, it will throw an exception.
898@end defun
899
900If the type is a structure or class type, or an enum type, the fields
901of that type can be accessed using the Python @dfn{dictionary syntax}.
902For example, if @code{some_type} is a @code{gdb.Type} instance holding
903a structure type, you can access its @code{foo} field with:
904
905@smallexample
906bar = some_type['foo']
907@end smallexample
908
909@code{bar} will be a @code{gdb.Field} object; see below under the
910description of the @code{Type.fields} method for a description of the
911@code{gdb.Field} class.
912
913An instance of @code{Type} has the following attributes:
914
915@defvar Type.code
916The type code for this type. The type code will be one of the
917@code{TYPE_CODE_} constants defined below.
918@end defvar
919
920@defvar Type.name
921The name of this type. If this type has no name, then @code{None}
922is returned.
923@end defvar
924
925@defvar Type.sizeof
926The size of this type, in target @code{char} units. Usually, a
927target's @code{char} type will be an 8-bit byte. However, on some
928unusual platforms, this type may have a different size.
929@end defvar
930
931@defvar Type.tag
932The tag name for this type. The tag name is the name after
933@code{struct}, @code{union}, or @code{enum} in C and C@t{++}; not all
934languages have this concept. If this type has no tag name, then
935@code{None} is returned.
936@end defvar
937
938The following methods are provided:
939
940@defun Type.fields ()
941For structure and union types, this method returns the fields. Range
942types have two fields, the minimum and maximum values. Enum types
943have one field per enum constant. Function and method types have one
944field per parameter. The base types of C@t{++} classes are also
945represented as fields. If the type has no fields, or does not fit
946into one of these categories, an empty sequence will be returned.
947
948Each field is a @code{gdb.Field} object, with some pre-defined attributes:
949@table @code
950@item bitpos
951This attribute is not available for @code{enum} or @code{static}
952(as in C@t{++} or Java) fields. The value is the position, counting
953in bits, from the start of the containing type.
954
955@item enumval
956This attribute is only available for @code{enum} fields, and its value
957is the enumeration member's integer representation.
958
959@item name
960The name of the field, or @code{None} for anonymous fields.
961
962@item artificial
963This is @code{True} if the field is artificial, usually meaning that
964it was provided by the compiler and not the user. This attribute is
965always provided, and is @code{False} if the field is not artificial.
966
967@item is_base_class
968This is @code{True} if the field represents a base class of a C@t{++}
969structure. This attribute is always provided, and is @code{False}
970if the field is not a base class of the type that is the argument of
971@code{fields}, or if that type was not a C@t{++} class.
972
973@item bitsize
974If the field is packed, or is a bitfield, then this will have a
975non-zero value, which is the size of the field in bits. Otherwise,
976this will be zero; in this case the field's size is given by its type.
977
978@item type
979The type of the field. This is usually an instance of @code{Type},
980but it can be @code{None} in some situations.
981
982@item parent_type
983The type which contains this field. This is an instance of
984@code{gdb.Type}.
985@end table
986@end defun
987
988@defun Type.array (@var{n1} @r{[}, @var{n2}@r{]})
989Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents an array of this
990type. If one argument is given, it is the inclusive upper bound of
991the array; in this case the lower bound is zero. If two arguments are
992given, the first argument is the lower bound of the array, and the
993second argument is the upper bound of the array. An array's length
994must not be negative, but the bounds can be.
995@end defun
996
997@defun Type.vector (@var{n1} @r{[}, @var{n2}@r{]})
998Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents a vector of this
999type. If one argument is given, it is the inclusive upper bound of
1000the vector; in this case the lower bound is zero. If two arguments are
1001given, the first argument is the lower bound of the vector, and the
1002second argument is the upper bound of the vector. A vector's length
1003must not be negative, but the bounds can be.
1004
1005The difference between an @code{array} and a @code{vector} is that
1006arrays behave like in C: when used in expressions they decay to a pointer
1007to the first element whereas vectors are treated as first class values.
1008@end defun
1009
1010@defun Type.const ()
1011Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents a
1012@code{const}-qualified variant of this type.
1013@end defun
1014
1015@defun Type.volatile ()
1016Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents a
1017@code{volatile}-qualified variant of this type.
1018@end defun
1019
1020@defun Type.unqualified ()
1021Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents an unqualified
1022variant of this type. That is, the result is neither @code{const} nor
1023@code{volatile}.
1024@end defun
1025
1026@defun Type.range ()
1027Return a Python @code{Tuple} object that contains two elements: the
1028low bound of the argument type and the high bound of that type. If
1029the type does not have a range, @value{GDBN} will raise a
1030@code{gdb.error} exception (@pxref{Exception Handling}).
1031@end defun
1032
1033@defun Type.reference ()
1034Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents a reference to this
1035type.
1036@end defun
1037
1038@defun Type.pointer ()
1039Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents a pointer to this
1040type.
1041@end defun
1042
1043@defun Type.strip_typedefs ()
1044Return a new @code{gdb.Type} that represents the real type,
1045after removing all layers of typedefs.
1046@end defun
1047
1048@defun Type.target ()
1049Return a new @code{gdb.Type} object which represents the target type
1050of this type.
1051
1052For a pointer type, the target type is the type of the pointed-to
1053object. For an array type (meaning C-like arrays), the target type is
1054the type of the elements of the array. For a function or method type,
1055the target type is the type of the return value. For a complex type,
1056the target type is the type of the elements. For a typedef, the
1057target type is the aliased type.
1058
1059If the type does not have a target, this method will throw an
1060exception.
1061@end defun
1062
1063@defun Type.template_argument (n @r{[}, block@r{]})
1064If this @code{gdb.Type} is an instantiation of a template, this will
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1065return a new @code{gdb.Value} or @code{gdb.Type} which represents the
1066value of the @var{n}th template argument (indexed starting at 0).
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1068If this @code{gdb.Type} is not a template type, or if the type has fewer
1069than @var{n} template arguments, this will throw an exception.
1070Ordinarily, only C@t{++} code will have template types.
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1071
1072If @var{block} is given, then @var{name} is looked up in that scope.
1073Otherwise, it is searched for globally.
1074@end defun
1075
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1076@defun Type.optimized_out ()
1077Return @code{gdb.Value} instance of this type whose value is optimized
1078out. This allows a frame decorator to indicate that the value of an
1079argument or a local variable is not known.
1080@end defun
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1081
1082Each type has a code, which indicates what category this type falls
1083into. The available type categories are represented by constants
1084defined in the @code{gdb} module:
1085
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1086@vtable @code
1087@vindex TYPE_CODE_PTR
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1088@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_PTR
1089The type is a pointer.
1090
b3ce5e5f 1091@vindex TYPE_CODE_ARRAY
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1092@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_ARRAY
1093The type is an array.
1094
b3ce5e5f 1095@vindex TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
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1096@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
1097The type is a structure.
1098
b3ce5e5f 1099@vindex TYPE_CODE_UNION
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1100@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_UNION
1101The type is a union.
1102
b3ce5e5f 1103@vindex TYPE_CODE_ENUM
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1104@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_ENUM
1105The type is an enum.
1106
b3ce5e5f 1107@vindex TYPE_CODE_FLAGS
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1108@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_FLAGS
1109A bit flags type, used for things such as status registers.
1110
b3ce5e5f 1111@vindex TYPE_CODE_FUNC
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1112@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_FUNC
1113The type is a function.
1114
b3ce5e5f 1115@vindex TYPE_CODE_INT
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1116@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_INT
1117The type is an integer type.
1118
b3ce5e5f 1119@vindex TYPE_CODE_FLT
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1120@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_FLT
1121A floating point type.
1122
b3ce5e5f 1123@vindex TYPE_CODE_VOID
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1124@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_VOID
1125The special type @code{void}.
1126
b3ce5e5f 1127@vindex TYPE_CODE_SET
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1128@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_SET
1129A Pascal set type.
1130
b3ce5e5f 1131@vindex TYPE_CODE_RANGE
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1132@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_RANGE
1133A range type, that is, an integer type with bounds.
1134
b3ce5e5f 1135@vindex TYPE_CODE_STRING
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1136@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_STRING
1137A string type. Note that this is only used for certain languages with
1138language-defined string types; C strings are not represented this way.
1139
b3ce5e5f 1140@vindex TYPE_CODE_BITSTRING
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1141@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_BITSTRING
1142A string of bits. It is deprecated.
1143
b3ce5e5f 1144@vindex TYPE_CODE_ERROR
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1145@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_ERROR
1146An unknown or erroneous type.
1147
b3ce5e5f 1148@vindex TYPE_CODE_METHOD
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1149@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_METHOD
1150A method type, as found in C@t{++} or Java.
1151
b3ce5e5f 1152@vindex TYPE_CODE_METHODPTR
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1153@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_METHODPTR
1154A pointer-to-member-function.
1155
b3ce5e5f 1156@vindex TYPE_CODE_MEMBERPTR
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1157@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_MEMBERPTR
1158A pointer-to-member.
1159
b3ce5e5f 1160@vindex TYPE_CODE_REF
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1161@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_REF
1162A reference type.
1163
b3ce5e5f 1164@vindex TYPE_CODE_CHAR
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1165@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_CHAR
1166A character type.
1167
b3ce5e5f 1168@vindex TYPE_CODE_BOOL
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1169@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_BOOL
1170A boolean type.
1171
b3ce5e5f 1172@vindex TYPE_CODE_COMPLEX
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1173@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_COMPLEX
1174A complex float type.
1175
b3ce5e5f 1176@vindex TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF
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1177@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF
1178A typedef to some other type.
1179
b3ce5e5f 1180@vindex TYPE_CODE_NAMESPACE
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1181@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_NAMESPACE
1182A C@t{++} namespace.
1183
b3ce5e5f 1184@vindex TYPE_CODE_DECFLOAT
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1185@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_DECFLOAT
1186A decimal floating point type.
1187
b3ce5e5f 1188@vindex TYPE_CODE_INTERNAL_FUNCTION
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1189@item gdb.TYPE_CODE_INTERNAL_FUNCTION
1190A function internal to @value{GDBN}. This is the type used to represent
1191convenience functions.
b3ce5e5f 1192@end vtable
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1193
1194Further support for types is provided in the @code{gdb.types}
1195Python module (@pxref{gdb.types}).
1196
1197@node Pretty Printing API
1198@subsubsection Pretty Printing API
b3ce5e5f 1199@cindex python pretty printing api
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1200
1201An example output is provided (@pxref{Pretty Printing}).
1202
1203A pretty-printer is just an object that holds a value and implements a
1204specific interface, defined here.
1205
1206@defun pretty_printer.children (self)
1207@value{GDBN} will call this method on a pretty-printer to compute the
1208children of the pretty-printer's value.
1209
1210This method must return an object conforming to the Python iterator
1211protocol. Each item returned by the iterator must be a tuple holding
1212two elements. The first element is the ``name'' of the child; the
1213second element is the child's value. The value can be any Python
1214object which is convertible to a @value{GDBN} value.
1215
1216This method is optional. If it does not exist, @value{GDBN} will act
1217as though the value has no children.
1218@end defun
1219
1220@defun pretty_printer.display_hint (self)
1221The CLI may call this method and use its result to change the
1222formatting of a value. The result will also be supplied to an MI
1223consumer as a @samp{displayhint} attribute of the variable being
1224printed.
1225
1226This method is optional. If it does exist, this method must return a
1227string.
1228
1229Some display hints are predefined by @value{GDBN}:
1230
1231@table @samp
1232@item array
1233Indicate that the object being printed is ``array-like''. The CLI
1234uses this to respect parameters such as @code{set print elements} and
1235@code{set print array}.
1236
1237@item map
1238Indicate that the object being printed is ``map-like'', and that the
1239children of this value can be assumed to alternate between keys and
1240values.
1241
1242@item string
1243Indicate that the object being printed is ``string-like''. If the
1244printer's @code{to_string} method returns a Python string of some
1245kind, then @value{GDBN} will call its internal language-specific
1246string-printing function to format the string. For the CLI this means
1247adding quotation marks, possibly escaping some characters, respecting
1248@code{set print elements}, and the like.
1249@end table
1250@end defun
1251
1252@defun pretty_printer.to_string (self)
1253@value{GDBN} will call this method to display the string
1254representation of the value passed to the object's constructor.
1255
1256When printing from the CLI, if the @code{to_string} method exists,
1257then @value{GDBN} will prepend its result to the values returned by
1258@code{children}. Exactly how this formatting is done is dependent on
1259the display hint, and may change as more hints are added. Also,
1260depending on the print settings (@pxref{Print Settings}), the CLI may
1261print just the result of @code{to_string} in a stack trace, omitting
1262the result of @code{children}.
1263
1264If this method returns a string, it is printed verbatim.
1265
1266Otherwise, if this method returns an instance of @code{gdb.Value},
1267then @value{GDBN} prints this value. This may result in a call to
1268another pretty-printer.
1269
1270If instead the method returns a Python value which is convertible to a
1271@code{gdb.Value}, then @value{GDBN} performs the conversion and prints
1272the resulting value. Again, this may result in a call to another
1273pretty-printer. Python scalars (integers, floats, and booleans) and
1274strings are convertible to @code{gdb.Value}; other types are not.
1275
1276Finally, if this method returns @code{None} then no further operations
1277are peformed in this method and nothing is printed.
1278
1279If the result is not one of these types, an exception is raised.
1280@end defun
1281
1282@value{GDBN} provides a function which can be used to look up the
1283default pretty-printer for a @code{gdb.Value}:
1284
1285@findex gdb.default_visualizer
1286@defun gdb.default_visualizer (value)
1287This function takes a @code{gdb.Value} object as an argument. If a
1288pretty-printer for this value exists, then it is returned. If no such
1289printer exists, then this returns @code{None}.
1290@end defun
1291
1292@node Selecting Pretty-Printers
1293@subsubsection Selecting Pretty-Printers
b3ce5e5f 1294@cindex selecting python pretty-printers
329baa95
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1295
1296The Python list @code{gdb.pretty_printers} contains an array of
1297functions or callable objects that have been registered via addition
1298as a pretty-printer. Printers in this list are called @code{global}
1299printers, they're available when debugging all inferiors.
1300Each @code{gdb.Progspace} contains a @code{pretty_printers} attribute.
1301Each @code{gdb.Objfile} also contains a @code{pretty_printers}
1302attribute.
1303
1304Each function on these lists is passed a single @code{gdb.Value}
1305argument and should return a pretty-printer object conforming to the
1306interface definition above (@pxref{Pretty Printing API}). If a function
1307cannot create a pretty-printer for the value, it should return
1308@code{None}.
1309
1310@value{GDBN} first checks the @code{pretty_printers} attribute of each
1311@code{gdb.Objfile} in the current program space and iteratively calls
1312each enabled lookup routine in the list for that @code{gdb.Objfile}
1313until it receives a pretty-printer object.
1314If no pretty-printer is found in the objfile lists, @value{GDBN} then
1315searches the pretty-printer list of the current program space,
1316calling each enabled function until an object is returned.
1317After these lists have been exhausted, it tries the global
1318@code{gdb.pretty_printers} list, again calling each enabled function until an
1319object is returned.
1320
1321The order in which the objfiles are searched is not specified. For a
1322given list, functions are always invoked from the head of the list,
1323and iterated over sequentially until the end of the list, or a printer
1324object is returned.
1325
1326For various reasons a pretty-printer may not work.
1327For example, the underlying data structure may have changed and
1328the pretty-printer is out of date.
1329
1330The consequences of a broken pretty-printer are severe enough that
1331@value{GDBN} provides support for enabling and disabling individual
1332printers. For example, if @code{print frame-arguments} is on,
1333a backtrace can become highly illegible if any argument is printed
1334with a broken printer.
1335
1336Pretty-printers are enabled and disabled by attaching an @code{enabled}
1337attribute to the registered function or callable object. If this attribute
1338is present and its value is @code{False}, the printer is disabled, otherwise
1339the printer is enabled.
1340
1341@node Writing a Pretty-Printer
1342@subsubsection Writing a Pretty-Printer
1343@cindex writing a pretty-printer
1344
1345A pretty-printer consists of two parts: a lookup function to detect
1346if the type is supported, and the printer itself.
1347
1348Here is an example showing how a @code{std::string} printer might be
1349written. @xref{Pretty Printing API}, for details on the API this class
1350must provide.
1351
1352@smallexample
1353class StdStringPrinter(object):
1354 "Print a std::string"
1355
1356 def __init__(self, val):
1357 self.val = val
1358
1359 def to_string(self):
1360 return self.val['_M_dataplus']['_M_p']
1361
1362 def display_hint(self):
1363 return 'string'
1364@end smallexample
1365
1366And here is an example showing how a lookup function for the printer
1367example above might be written.
1368
1369@smallexample
1370def str_lookup_function(val):
1371 lookup_tag = val.type.tag
1372 if lookup_tag == None:
1373 return None
1374 regex = re.compile("^std::basic_string<char,.*>$")
1375 if regex.match(lookup_tag):
1376 return StdStringPrinter(val)
1377 return None
1378@end smallexample
1379
1380The example lookup function extracts the value's type, and attempts to
1381match it to a type that it can pretty-print. If it is a type the
1382printer can pretty-print, it will return a printer object. If not, it
1383returns @code{None}.
1384
1385We recommend that you put your core pretty-printers into a Python
1386package. If your pretty-printers are for use with a library, we
1387further recommend embedding a version number into the package name.
1388This practice will enable @value{GDBN} to load multiple versions of
1389your pretty-printers at the same time, because they will have
1390different names.
1391
1392You should write auto-loaded code (@pxref{Python Auto-loading}) such that it
1393can be evaluated multiple times without changing its meaning. An
1394ideal auto-load file will consist solely of @code{import}s of your
1395printer modules, followed by a call to a register pretty-printers with
1396the current objfile.
1397
1398Taken as a whole, this approach will scale nicely to multiple
1399inferiors, each potentially using a different library version.
1400Embedding a version number in the Python package name will ensure that
1401@value{GDBN} is able to load both sets of printers simultaneously.
1402Then, because the search for pretty-printers is done by objfile, and
1403because your auto-loaded code took care to register your library's
1404printers with a specific objfile, @value{GDBN} will find the correct
1405printers for the specific version of the library used by each
1406inferior.
1407
1408To continue the @code{std::string} example (@pxref{Pretty Printing API}),
1409this code might appear in @code{gdb.libstdcxx.v6}:
1410
1411@smallexample
1412def register_printers(objfile):
1413 objfile.pretty_printers.append(str_lookup_function)
1414@end smallexample
1415
1416@noindent
1417And then the corresponding contents of the auto-load file would be:
1418
1419@smallexample
1420import gdb.libstdcxx.v6
1421gdb.libstdcxx.v6.register_printers(gdb.current_objfile())
1422@end smallexample
1423
1424The previous example illustrates a basic pretty-printer.
1425There are a few things that can be improved on.
1426The printer doesn't have a name, making it hard to identify in a
1427list of installed printers. The lookup function has a name, but
1428lookup functions can have arbitrary, even identical, names.
1429
1430Second, the printer only handles one type, whereas a library typically has
1431several types. One could install a lookup function for each desired type
1432in the library, but one could also have a single lookup function recognize
1433several types. The latter is the conventional way this is handled.
1434If a pretty-printer can handle multiple data types, then its
1435@dfn{subprinters} are the printers for the individual data types.
1436
1437The @code{gdb.printing} module provides a formal way of solving these
1438problems (@pxref{gdb.printing}).
1439Here is another example that handles multiple types.
1440
1441These are the types we are going to pretty-print:
1442
1443@smallexample
1444struct foo @{ int a, b; @};
1445struct bar @{ struct foo x, y; @};
1446@end smallexample
1447
1448Here are the printers:
1449
1450@smallexample
1451class fooPrinter:
1452 """Print a foo object."""
1453
1454 def __init__(self, val):
1455 self.val = val
1456
1457 def to_string(self):
1458 return ("a=<" + str(self.val["a"]) +
1459 "> b=<" + str(self.val["b"]) + ">")
1460
1461class barPrinter:
1462 """Print a bar object."""
1463
1464 def __init__(self, val):
1465 self.val = val
1466
1467 def to_string(self):
1468 return ("x=<" + str(self.val["x"]) +
1469 "> y=<" + str(self.val["y"]) + ">")
1470@end smallexample
1471
1472This example doesn't need a lookup function, that is handled by the
1473@code{gdb.printing} module. Instead a function is provided to build up
1474the object that handles the lookup.
1475
1476@smallexample
1477import gdb.printing
1478
1479def build_pretty_printer():
1480 pp = gdb.printing.RegexpCollectionPrettyPrinter(
1481 "my_library")
1482 pp.add_printer('foo', '^foo$', fooPrinter)
1483 pp.add_printer('bar', '^bar$', barPrinter)
1484 return pp
1485@end smallexample
1486
1487And here is the autoload support:
1488
1489@smallexample
1490import gdb.printing
1491import my_library
1492gdb.printing.register_pretty_printer(
1493 gdb.current_objfile(),
1494 my_library.build_pretty_printer())
1495@end smallexample
1496
1497Finally, when this printer is loaded into @value{GDBN}, here is the
1498corresponding output of @samp{info pretty-printer}:
1499
1500@smallexample
1501(gdb) info pretty-printer
1502my_library.so:
1503 my_library
1504 foo
1505 bar
1506@end smallexample
1507
1508@node Type Printing API
1509@subsubsection Type Printing API
1510@cindex type printing API for Python
1511
1512@value{GDBN} provides a way for Python code to customize type display.
1513This is mainly useful for substituting canonical typedef names for
1514types.
1515
1516@cindex type printer
1517A @dfn{type printer} is just a Python object conforming to a certain
1518protocol. A simple base class implementing the protocol is provided;
1519see @ref{gdb.types}. A type printer must supply at least:
1520
1521@defivar type_printer enabled
1522A boolean which is True if the printer is enabled, and False
1523otherwise. This is manipulated by the @code{enable type-printer}
1524and @code{disable type-printer} commands.
1525@end defivar
1526
1527@defivar type_printer name
1528The name of the type printer. This must be a string. This is used by
1529the @code{enable type-printer} and @code{disable type-printer}
1530commands.
1531@end defivar
1532
1533@defmethod type_printer instantiate (self)
1534This is called by @value{GDBN} at the start of type-printing. It is
1535only called if the type printer is enabled. This method must return a
1536new object that supplies a @code{recognize} method, as described below.
1537@end defmethod
1538
1539
1540When displaying a type, say via the @code{ptype} command, @value{GDBN}
1541will compute a list of type recognizers. This is done by iterating
1542first over the per-objfile type printers (@pxref{Objfiles In Python}),
1543followed by the per-progspace type printers (@pxref{Progspaces In
1544Python}), and finally the global type printers.
1545
1546@value{GDBN} will call the @code{instantiate} method of each enabled
1547type printer. If this method returns @code{None}, then the result is
1548ignored; otherwise, it is appended to the list of recognizers.
1549
1550Then, when @value{GDBN} is going to display a type name, it iterates
1551over the list of recognizers. For each one, it calls the recognition
1552function, stopping if the function returns a non-@code{None} value.
1553The recognition function is defined as:
1554
1555@defmethod type_recognizer recognize (self, type)
1556If @var{type} is not recognized, return @code{None}. Otherwise,
1557return a string which is to be printed as the name of @var{type}.
697aa1b7
EZ
1558The @var{type} argument will be an instance of @code{gdb.Type}
1559(@pxref{Types In Python}).
329baa95
DE
1560@end defmethod
1561
1562@value{GDBN} uses this two-pass approach so that type printers can
1563efficiently cache information without holding on to it too long. For
1564example, it can be convenient to look up type information in a type
1565printer and hold it for a recognizer's lifetime; if a single pass were
1566done then type printers would have to make use of the event system in
1567order to avoid holding information that could become stale as the
1568inferior changed.
1569
1570@node Frame Filter API
1571@subsubsection Filtering Frames.
1572@cindex frame filters api
1573
1574Frame filters are Python objects that manipulate the visibility of a
1575frame or frames when a backtrace (@pxref{Backtrace}) is printed by
1576@value{GDBN}.
1577
1578Only commands that print a backtrace, or, in the case of @sc{gdb/mi}
1579commands (@pxref{GDB/MI}), those that return a collection of frames
1580are affected. The commands that work with frame filters are:
1581
1582@code{backtrace} (@pxref{backtrace-command,, The backtrace command}),
1583@code{-stack-list-frames}
1584(@pxref{-stack-list-frames,, The -stack-list-frames command}),
1585@code{-stack-list-variables} (@pxref{-stack-list-variables,, The
1586-stack-list-variables command}), @code{-stack-list-arguments}
1587@pxref{-stack-list-arguments,, The -stack-list-arguments command}) and
1588@code{-stack-list-locals} (@pxref{-stack-list-locals,, The
1589-stack-list-locals command}).
1590
1591A frame filter works by taking an iterator as an argument, applying
1592actions to the contents of that iterator, and returning another
1593iterator (or, possibly, the same iterator it was provided in the case
1594where the filter does not perform any operations). Typically, frame
1595filters utilize tools such as the Python's @code{itertools} module to
1596work with and create new iterators from the source iterator.
1597Regardless of how a filter chooses to apply actions, it must not alter
1598the underlying @value{GDBN} frame or frames, or attempt to alter the
1599call-stack within @value{GDBN}. This preserves data integrity within
1600@value{GDBN}. Frame filters are executed on a priority basis and care
1601should be taken that some frame filters may have been executed before,
1602and that some frame filters will be executed after.
1603
1604An important consideration when designing frame filters, and well
1605worth reflecting upon, is that frame filters should avoid unwinding
1606the call stack if possible. Some stacks can run very deep, into the
1607tens of thousands in some cases. To search every frame when a frame
1608filter executes may be too expensive at that step. The frame filter
1609cannot know how many frames it has to iterate over, and it may have to
1610iterate through them all. This ends up duplicating effort as
1611@value{GDBN} performs this iteration when it prints the frames. If
1612the filter can defer unwinding frames until frame decorators are
1613executed, after the last filter has executed, it should. @xref{Frame
1614Decorator API}, for more information on decorators. Also, there are
1615examples for both frame decorators and filters in later chapters.
1616@xref{Writing a Frame Filter}, for more information.
1617
1618The Python dictionary @code{gdb.frame_filters} contains key/object
1619pairings that comprise a frame filter. Frame filters in this
1620dictionary are called @code{global} frame filters, and they are
1621available when debugging all inferiors. These frame filters must
1622register with the dictionary directly. In addition to the
1623@code{global} dictionary, there are other dictionaries that are loaded
1624with different inferiors via auto-loading (@pxref{Python
1625Auto-loading}). The two other areas where frame filter dictionaries
1626can be found are: @code{gdb.Progspace} which contains a
1627@code{frame_filters} dictionary attribute, and each @code{gdb.Objfile}
1628object which also contains a @code{frame_filters} dictionary
1629attribute.
1630
1631When a command is executed from @value{GDBN} that is compatible with
1632frame filters, @value{GDBN} combines the @code{global},
1633@code{gdb.Progspace} and all @code{gdb.Objfile} dictionaries currently
1634loaded. All of the @code{gdb.Objfile} dictionaries are combined, as
1635several frames, and thus several object files, might be in use.
1636@value{GDBN} then prunes any frame filter whose @code{enabled}
1637attribute is @code{False}. This pruned list is then sorted according
1638to the @code{priority} attribute in each filter.
1639
1640Once the dictionaries are combined, pruned and sorted, @value{GDBN}
1641creates an iterator which wraps each frame in the call stack in a
1642@code{FrameDecorator} object, and calls each filter in order. The
1643output from the previous filter will always be the input to the next
1644filter, and so on.
1645
1646Frame filters have a mandatory interface which each frame filter must
1647implement, defined here:
1648
1649@defun FrameFilter.filter (iterator)
1650@value{GDBN} will call this method on a frame filter when it has
1651reached the order in the priority list for that filter.
1652
1653For example, if there are four frame filters:
1654
1655@smallexample
1656Name Priority
1657
1658Filter1 5
1659Filter2 10
1660Filter3 100
1661Filter4 1
1662@end smallexample
1663
1664The order that the frame filters will be called is:
1665
1666@smallexample
1667Filter3 -> Filter2 -> Filter1 -> Filter4
1668@end smallexample
1669
1670Note that the output from @code{Filter3} is passed to the input of
1671@code{Filter2}, and so on.
1672
1673This @code{filter} method is passed a Python iterator. This iterator
1674contains a sequence of frame decorators that wrap each
1675@code{gdb.Frame}, or a frame decorator that wraps another frame
1676decorator. The first filter that is executed in the sequence of frame
1677filters will receive an iterator entirely comprised of default
1678@code{FrameDecorator} objects. However, after each frame filter is
1679executed, the previous frame filter may have wrapped some or all of
1680the frame decorators with their own frame decorator. As frame
1681decorators must also conform to a mandatory interface, these
1682decorators can be assumed to act in a uniform manner (@pxref{Frame
1683Decorator API}).
1684
1685This method must return an object conforming to the Python iterator
1686protocol. Each item in the iterator must be an object conforming to
1687the frame decorator interface. If a frame filter does not wish to
1688perform any operations on this iterator, it should return that
1689iterator untouched.
1690
1691This method is not optional. If it does not exist, @value{GDBN} will
1692raise and print an error.
1693@end defun
1694
1695@defvar FrameFilter.name
1696The @code{name} attribute must be Python string which contains the
1697name of the filter displayed by @value{GDBN} (@pxref{Frame Filter
1698Management}). This attribute may contain any combination of letters
1699or numbers. Care should be taken to ensure that it is unique. This
1700attribute is mandatory.
1701@end defvar
1702
1703@defvar FrameFilter.enabled
1704The @code{enabled} attribute must be Python boolean. This attribute
1705indicates to @value{GDBN} whether the frame filter is enabled, and
1706should be considered when frame filters are executed. If
1707@code{enabled} is @code{True}, then the frame filter will be executed
1708when any of the backtrace commands detailed earlier in this chapter
1709are executed. If @code{enabled} is @code{False}, then the frame
1710filter will not be executed. This attribute is mandatory.
1711@end defvar
1712
1713@defvar FrameFilter.priority
1714The @code{priority} attribute must be Python integer. This attribute
1715controls the order of execution in relation to other frame filters.
1716There are no imposed limits on the range of @code{priority} other than
1717it must be a valid integer. The higher the @code{priority} attribute,
1718the sooner the frame filter will be executed in relation to other
1719frame filters. Although @code{priority} can be negative, it is
1720recommended practice to assume zero is the lowest priority that a
1721frame filter can be assigned. Frame filters that have the same
1722priority are executed in unsorted order in that priority slot. This
1723attribute is mandatory.
1724@end defvar
1725
1726@node Frame Decorator API
1727@subsubsection Decorating Frames.
1728@cindex frame decorator api
1729
1730Frame decorators are sister objects to frame filters (@pxref{Frame
1731Filter API}). Frame decorators are applied by a frame filter and can
1732only be used in conjunction with frame filters.
1733
1734The purpose of a frame decorator is to customize the printed content
1735of each @code{gdb.Frame} in commands where frame filters are executed.
1736This concept is called decorating a frame. Frame decorators decorate
1737a @code{gdb.Frame} with Python code contained within each API call.
1738This separates the actual data contained in a @code{gdb.Frame} from
1739the decorated data produced by a frame decorator. This abstraction is
1740necessary to maintain integrity of the data contained in each
1741@code{gdb.Frame}.
1742
1743Frame decorators have a mandatory interface, defined below.
1744
1745@value{GDBN} already contains a frame decorator called
1746@code{FrameDecorator}. This contains substantial amounts of
1747boilerplate code to decorate the content of a @code{gdb.Frame}. It is
1748recommended that other frame decorators inherit and extend this
1749object, and only to override the methods needed.
1750
1751@defun FrameDecorator.elided (self)
1752
1753The @code{elided} method groups frames together in a hierarchical
1754system. An example would be an interpreter, where multiple low-level
1755frames make up a single call in the interpreted language. In this
1756example, the frame filter would elide the low-level frames and present
1757a single high-level frame, representing the call in the interpreted
1758language, to the user.
1759
1760The @code{elided} function must return an iterable and this iterable
1761must contain the frames that are being elided wrapped in a suitable
1762frame decorator. If no frames are being elided this function may
1763return an empty iterable, or @code{None}. Elided frames are indented
1764from normal frames in a @code{CLI} backtrace, or in the case of
1765@code{GDB/MI}, are placed in the @code{children} field of the eliding
1766frame.
1767
1768It is the frame filter's task to also filter out the elided frames from
1769the source iterator. This will avoid printing the frame twice.
1770@end defun
1771
1772@defun FrameDecorator.function (self)
1773
1774This method returns the name of the function in the frame that is to
1775be printed.
1776
1777This method must return a Python string describing the function, or
1778@code{None}.
1779
1780If this function returns @code{None}, @value{GDBN} will not print any
1781data for this field.
1782@end defun
1783
1784@defun FrameDecorator.address (self)
1785
1786This method returns the address of the frame that is to be printed.
1787
1788This method must return a Python numeric integer type of sufficient
1789size to describe the address of the frame, or @code{None}.
1790
1791If this function returns a @code{None}, @value{GDBN} will not print
1792any data for this field.
1793@end defun
1794
1795@defun FrameDecorator.filename (self)
1796
1797This method returns the filename and path associated with this frame.
1798
1799This method must return a Python string containing the filename and
1800the path to the object file backing the frame, or @code{None}.
1801
1802If this function returns a @code{None}, @value{GDBN} will not print
1803any data for this field.
1804@end defun
1805
1806@defun FrameDecorator.line (self):
1807
1808This method returns the line number associated with the current
1809position within the function addressed by this frame.
1810
1811This method must return a Python integer type, or @code{None}.
1812
1813If this function returns a @code{None}, @value{GDBN} will not print
1814any data for this field.
1815@end defun
1816
1817@defun FrameDecorator.frame_args (self)
1818@anchor{frame_args}
1819
1820This method must return an iterable, or @code{None}. Returning an
1821empty iterable, or @code{None} means frame arguments will not be
1822printed for this frame. This iterable must contain objects that
1823implement two methods, described here.
1824
1825This object must implement a @code{argument} method which takes a
1826single @code{self} parameter and must return a @code{gdb.Symbol}
1827(@pxref{Symbols In Python}), or a Python string. The object must also
1828implement a @code{value} method which takes a single @code{self}
1829parameter and must return a @code{gdb.Value} (@pxref{Values From
1830Inferior}), a Python value, or @code{None}. If the @code{value}
1831method returns @code{None}, and the @code{argument} method returns a
1832@code{gdb.Symbol}, @value{GDBN} will look-up and print the value of
1833the @code{gdb.Symbol} automatically.
1834
1835A brief example:
1836
1837@smallexample
1838class SymValueWrapper():
1839
1840 def __init__(self, symbol, value):
1841 self.sym = symbol
1842 self.val = value
1843
1844 def value(self):
1845 return self.val
1846
1847 def symbol(self):
1848 return self.sym
1849
1850class SomeFrameDecorator()
1851...
1852...
1853 def frame_args(self):
1854 args = []
1855 try:
1856 block = self.inferior_frame.block()
1857 except:
1858 return None
1859
1860 # Iterate over all symbols in a block. Only add
1861 # symbols that are arguments.
1862 for sym in block:
1863 if not sym.is_argument:
1864 continue
1865 args.append(SymValueWrapper(sym,None))
1866
1867 # Add example synthetic argument.
1868 args.append(SymValueWrapper(``foo'', 42))
1869
1870 return args
1871@end smallexample
1872@end defun
1873
1874@defun FrameDecorator.frame_locals (self)
1875
1876This method must return an iterable or @code{None}. Returning an
1877empty iterable, or @code{None} means frame local arguments will not be
1878printed for this frame.
1879
1880The object interface, the description of the various strategies for
1881reading frame locals, and the example are largely similar to those
1882described in the @code{frame_args} function, (@pxref{frame_args,,The
1883frame filter frame_args function}). Below is a modified example:
1884
1885@smallexample
1886class SomeFrameDecorator()
1887...
1888...
1889 def frame_locals(self):
1890 vars = []
1891 try:
1892 block = self.inferior_frame.block()
1893 except:
1894 return None
1895
1896 # Iterate over all symbols in a block. Add all
1897 # symbols, except arguments.
1898 for sym in block:
1899 if sym.is_argument:
1900 continue
1901 vars.append(SymValueWrapper(sym,None))
1902
1903 # Add an example of a synthetic local variable.
1904 vars.append(SymValueWrapper(``bar'', 99))
1905
1906 return vars
1907@end smallexample
1908@end defun
1909
1910@defun FrameDecorator.inferior_frame (self):
1911
1912This method must return the underlying @code{gdb.Frame} that this
1913frame decorator is decorating. @value{GDBN} requires the underlying
1914frame for internal frame information to determine how to print certain
1915values when printing a frame.
1916@end defun
1917
1918@node Writing a Frame Filter
1919@subsubsection Writing a Frame Filter
1920@cindex writing a frame filter
1921
1922There are three basic elements that a frame filter must implement: it
1923must correctly implement the documented interface (@pxref{Frame Filter
1924API}), it must register itself with @value{GDBN}, and finally, it must
1925decide if it is to work on the data provided by @value{GDBN}. In all
1926cases, whether it works on the iterator or not, each frame filter must
1927return an iterator. A bare-bones frame filter follows the pattern in
1928the following example.
1929
1930@smallexample
1931import gdb
1932
1933class FrameFilter():
1934
1935 def __init__(self):
1936 # Frame filter attribute creation.
1937 #
1938 # 'name' is the name of the filter that GDB will display.
1939 #
1940 # 'priority' is the priority of the filter relative to other
1941 # filters.
1942 #
1943 # 'enabled' is a boolean that indicates whether this filter is
1944 # enabled and should be executed.
1945
1946 self.name = "Foo"
1947 self.priority = 100
1948 self.enabled = True
1949
1950 # Register this frame filter with the global frame_filters
1951 # dictionary.
1952 gdb.frame_filters[self.name] = self
1953
1954 def filter(self, frame_iter):
1955 # Just return the iterator.
1956 return frame_iter
1957@end smallexample
1958
1959The frame filter in the example above implements the three
1960requirements for all frame filters. It implements the API, self
1961registers, and makes a decision on the iterator (in this case, it just
1962returns the iterator untouched).
1963
1964The first step is attribute creation and assignment, and as shown in
1965the comments the filter assigns the following attributes: @code{name},
1966@code{priority} and whether the filter should be enabled with the
1967@code{enabled} attribute.
1968
1969The second step is registering the frame filter with the dictionary or
1970dictionaries that the frame filter has interest in. As shown in the
1971comments, this filter just registers itself with the global dictionary
1972@code{gdb.frame_filters}. As noted earlier, @code{gdb.frame_filters}
1973is a dictionary that is initialized in the @code{gdb} module when
1974@value{GDBN} starts. What dictionary a filter registers with is an
1975important consideration. Generally, if a filter is specific to a set
1976of code, it should be registered either in the @code{objfile} or
1977@code{progspace} dictionaries as they are specific to the program
1978currently loaded in @value{GDBN}. The global dictionary is always
1979present in @value{GDBN} and is never unloaded. Any filters registered
1980with the global dictionary will exist until @value{GDBN} exits. To
1981avoid filters that may conflict, it is generally better to register
1982frame filters against the dictionaries that more closely align with
1983the usage of the filter currently in question. @xref{Python
1984Auto-loading}, for further information on auto-loading Python scripts.
1985
1986@value{GDBN} takes a hands-off approach to frame filter registration,
1987therefore it is the frame filter's responsibility to ensure
1988registration has occurred, and that any exceptions are handled
1989appropriately. In particular, you may wish to handle exceptions
1990relating to Python dictionary key uniqueness. It is mandatory that
1991the dictionary key is the same as frame filter's @code{name}
1992attribute. When a user manages frame filters (@pxref{Frame Filter
1993Management}), the names @value{GDBN} will display are those contained
1994in the @code{name} attribute.
1995
1996The final step of this example is the implementation of the
1997@code{filter} method. As shown in the example comments, we define the
1998@code{filter} method and note that the method must take an iterator,
1999and also must return an iterator. In this bare-bones example, the
2000frame filter is not very useful as it just returns the iterator
2001untouched. However this is a valid operation for frame filters that
2002have the @code{enabled} attribute set, but decide not to operate on
2003any frames.
2004
2005In the next example, the frame filter operates on all frames and
2006utilizes a frame decorator to perform some work on the frames.
2007@xref{Frame Decorator API}, for further information on the frame
2008decorator interface.
2009
2010This example works on inlined frames. It highlights frames which are
2011inlined by tagging them with an ``[inlined]'' tag. By applying a
2012frame decorator to all frames with the Python @code{itertools imap}
2013method, the example defers actions to the frame decorator. Frame
2014decorators are only processed when @value{GDBN} prints the backtrace.
2015
2016This introduces a new decision making topic: whether to perform
2017decision making operations at the filtering step, or at the printing
2018step. In this example's approach, it does not perform any filtering
2019decisions at the filtering step beyond mapping a frame decorator to
2020each frame. This allows the actual decision making to be performed
2021when each frame is printed. This is an important consideration, and
2022well worth reflecting upon when designing a frame filter. An issue
2023that frame filters should avoid is unwinding the stack if possible.
2024Some stacks can run very deep, into the tens of thousands in some
2025cases. To search every frame to determine if it is inlined ahead of
2026time may be too expensive at the filtering step. The frame filter
2027cannot know how many frames it has to iterate over, and it would have
2028to iterate through them all. This ends up duplicating effort as
2029@value{GDBN} performs this iteration when it prints the frames.
2030
2031In this example decision making can be deferred to the printing step.
2032As each frame is printed, the frame decorator can examine each frame
2033in turn when @value{GDBN} iterates. From a performance viewpoint,
2034this is the most appropriate decision to make as it avoids duplicating
2035the effort that the printing step would undertake anyway. Also, if
2036there are many frame filters unwinding the stack during filtering, it
2037can substantially delay the printing of the backtrace which will
2038result in large memory usage, and a poor user experience.
2039
2040@smallexample
2041class InlineFilter():
2042
2043 def __init__(self):
2044 self.name = "InlinedFrameFilter"
2045 self.priority = 100
2046 self.enabled = True
2047 gdb.frame_filters[self.name] = self
2048
2049 def filter(self, frame_iter):
2050 frame_iter = itertools.imap(InlinedFrameDecorator,
2051 frame_iter)
2052 return frame_iter
2053@end smallexample
2054
2055This frame filter is somewhat similar to the earlier example, except
2056that the @code{filter} method applies a frame decorator object called
2057@code{InlinedFrameDecorator} to each element in the iterator. The
2058@code{imap} Python method is light-weight. It does not proactively
2059iterate over the iterator, but rather creates a new iterator which
2060wraps the existing one.
2061
2062Below is the frame decorator for this example.
2063
2064@smallexample
2065class InlinedFrameDecorator(FrameDecorator):
2066
2067 def __init__(self, fobj):
2068 super(InlinedFrameDecorator, self).__init__(fobj)
2069
2070 def function(self):
2071 frame = fobj.inferior_frame()
2072 name = str(frame.name())
2073
2074 if frame.type() == gdb.INLINE_FRAME:
2075 name = name + " [inlined]"
2076
2077 return name
2078@end smallexample
2079
2080This frame decorator only defines and overrides the @code{function}
2081method. It lets the supplied @code{FrameDecorator}, which is shipped
2082with @value{GDBN}, perform the other work associated with printing
2083this frame.
2084
2085The combination of these two objects create this output from a
2086backtrace:
2087
2088@smallexample
2089#0 0x004004e0 in bar () at inline.c:11
2090#1 0x00400566 in max [inlined] (b=6, a=12) at inline.c:21
2091#2 0x00400566 in main () at inline.c:31
2092@end smallexample
2093
2094So in the case of this example, a frame decorator is applied to all
2095frames, regardless of whether they may be inlined or not. As
2096@value{GDBN} iterates over the iterator produced by the frame filters,
2097@value{GDBN} executes each frame decorator which then makes a decision
2098on what to print in the @code{function} callback. Using a strategy
2099like this is a way to defer decisions on the frame content to printing
2100time.
2101
2102@subheading Eliding Frames
2103
2104It might be that the above example is not desirable for representing
2105inlined frames, and a hierarchical approach may be preferred. If we
2106want to hierarchically represent frames, the @code{elided} frame
2107decorator interface might be preferable.
2108
2109This example approaches the issue with the @code{elided} method. This
2110example is quite long, but very simplistic. It is out-of-scope for
2111this section to write a complete example that comprehensively covers
2112all approaches of finding and printing inlined frames. However, this
2113example illustrates the approach an author might use.
2114
2115This example comprises of three sections.
2116
2117@smallexample
2118class InlineFrameFilter():
2119
2120 def __init__(self):
2121 self.name = "InlinedFrameFilter"
2122 self.priority = 100
2123 self.enabled = True
2124 gdb.frame_filters[self.name] = self
2125
2126 def filter(self, frame_iter):
2127 return ElidingInlineIterator(frame_iter)
2128@end smallexample
2129
2130This frame filter is very similar to the other examples. The only
2131difference is this frame filter is wrapping the iterator provided to
2132it (@code{frame_iter}) with a custom iterator called
2133@code{ElidingInlineIterator}. This again defers actions to when
2134@value{GDBN} prints the backtrace, as the iterator is not traversed
2135until printing.
2136
2137The iterator for this example is as follows. It is in this section of
2138the example where decisions are made on the content of the backtrace.
2139
2140@smallexample
2141class ElidingInlineIterator:
2142 def __init__(self, ii):
2143 self.input_iterator = ii
2144
2145 def __iter__(self):
2146 return self
2147
2148 def next(self):
2149 frame = next(self.input_iterator)
2150
2151 if frame.inferior_frame().type() != gdb.INLINE_FRAME:
2152 return frame
2153
2154 try:
2155 eliding_frame = next(self.input_iterator)
2156 except StopIteration:
2157 return frame
2158 return ElidingFrameDecorator(eliding_frame, [frame])
2159@end smallexample
2160
2161This iterator implements the Python iterator protocol. When the
2162@code{next} function is called (when @value{GDBN} prints each frame),
2163the iterator checks if this frame decorator, @code{frame}, is wrapping
2164an inlined frame. If it is not, it returns the existing frame decorator
2165untouched. If it is wrapping an inlined frame, it assumes that the
2166inlined frame was contained within the next oldest frame,
2167@code{eliding_frame}, which it fetches. It then creates and returns a
2168frame decorator, @code{ElidingFrameDecorator}, which contains both the
2169elided frame, and the eliding frame.
2170
2171@smallexample
2172class ElidingInlineDecorator(FrameDecorator):
2173
2174 def __init__(self, frame, elided_frames):
2175 super(ElidingInlineDecorator, self).__init__(frame)
2176 self.frame = frame
2177 self.elided_frames = elided_frames
2178
2179 def elided(self):
2180 return iter(self.elided_frames)
2181@end smallexample
2182
2183This frame decorator overrides one function and returns the inlined
2184frame in the @code{elided} method. As before it lets
2185@code{FrameDecorator} do the rest of the work involved in printing
2186this frame. This produces the following output.
2187
2188@smallexample
2189#0 0x004004e0 in bar () at inline.c:11
2190#2 0x00400529 in main () at inline.c:25
2191 #1 0x00400529 in max (b=6, a=12) at inline.c:15
2192@end smallexample
2193
2194In that output, @code{max} which has been inlined into @code{main} is
2195printed hierarchically. Another approach would be to combine the
2196@code{function} method, and the @code{elided} method to both print a
2197marker in the inlined frame, and also show the hierarchical
2198relationship.
2199
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SS
2200@node Unwinding Frames in Python
2201@subsubsection Unwinding Frames in Python
2202@cindex unwinding frames in Python
2203
2204In @value{GDBN} terminology ``unwinding'' is the process of finding
2205the previous frame (that is, caller's) from the current one. An
2206unwinder has three methods. The first one checks if it can handle
2207given frame (``sniff'' it). For the frames it can sniff an unwinder
2208provides two additional methods: it can return frame's ID, and it can
2209fetch registers from the previous frame. A running @value{GDBN}
2210mantains a list of the unwinders and calls each unwinder's sniffer in
2211turn until it finds the one that recognizes the current frame. There
2212is an API to register an unwinder.
2213
2214The unwinders that come with @value{GDBN} handle standard frames.
2215However, mixed language applications (for example, an application
2216running Java Virtual Machine) sometimes use frame layouts that cannot
2217be handled by the @value{GDBN} unwinders. You can write Python code
2218that can handle such custom frames.
2219
2220You implement a frame unwinder in Python as a class with which has two
2221attributes, @code{name} and @code{enabled}, with obvious meanings, and
2222a single method @code{__call__}, which examines a given frame and
2223returns an object (an instance of @code{gdb.UnwindInfo class)}
2224describing it. If an unwinder does not recognize a frame, it should
2225return @code{None}. The code in @value{GDBN} that enables writing
2226unwinders in Python uses this object to return frame's ID and previous
2227frame registers when @value{GDBN} core asks for them.
2228
2229@subheading Unwinder Input
2230
2231An object passed to an unwinder (a @code{gdb.PendingFrame} instance)
2232provides a method to read frame's registers:
2233
2234@defun PendingFrame.read_register (reg)
2235This method returns the contents of the register @var{regn} in the
2236frame as a @code{gdb.Value} object. @var{reg} can be either a
2237register number or a register name; the values are platform-specific.
2238They are usually found in the corresponding
2239@file{@var{platform}-tdep.h} file in the @value{GDBN} source tree.
2240@end defun
2241
2242It also provides a factory method to create a @code{gdb.UnwindInfo}
2243instance to be returned to @value{GDBN}:
2244
2245@defun PendingFrame.create_unwind_info (frame_id)
2246Returns a new @code{gdb.UnwindInfo} instance identified by given
2247@var{frame_id}. The argument is used to build @value{GDBN}'s frame ID
2248using one of functions provided by @value{GDBN}. @var{frame_id}'s attributes
2249determine which function will be used, as follows:
2250
2251@table @code
2252@item sp, pc, special
2253@code{frame_id_build_special (@var{frame_id}.sp, @var{frame_id}.pc, @var{frame_id}.special)}
2254
2255@item sp, pc
2256@code{frame_id_build (@var{frame_id}.sp, @var{frame_id}.pc)}
2257
2258This is the most common case.
2259
2260@item sp
2261@code{frame_id_build_wild (@var{frame_id}.sp)}
2262@end table
2263The attribute values should be @code{gdb.Value}
2264
2265@end defun
2266
2267@subheading Unwinder Output: UnwindInfo
2268
2269Use @code{PendingFrame.create_unwind_info} method described above to
2270create a @code{gdb.UnwindInfo} instance. Use the following method to
2271specify caller registers that have been saved in this frame:
2272
2273@defun gdb.UnwindInfo.add_saved_register (reg, value)
2274@var{reg} identifies the register. It can be a number or a name, just
2275as for the @code{PendingFrame.read_register} method above.
2276@var{value} is a register value (a @code{gdb.Value} object).
2277@end defun
2278
2279@subheading Unwinder Skeleton Code
2280
2281@value{GDBN} comes with the module containing the base @code{Unwinder}
2282class. Derive your unwinder class from it and structure the code as
2283follows:
2284
2285@smallexample
2286from gdb.unwinders import Unwinder
2287
2288class FrameId(object):
2289 def __init__(self, sp, pc):
2290 self.sp = sp
2291 self.pc = pc
2292
2293
2294class MyUnwinder(Unwinder):
2295 def __init__(....):
2296 supe(MyUnwinder, self).__init___(<expects unwinder name argument>)
2297
2298 def __call__(pending_frame):
2299 if not <we recognize frame>:
2300 return None
2301 # Create UnwindInfo. Usually the frame is identified by the stack
2302 # pointer and the program counter.
2303 sp = pending_frame.read_register(<SP number>)
2304 pc = pending_frame.read_register(<PC number>)
2305 unwind_info = pending_frame.create_unwind_info(FrameId(sp, pc))
2306
2307 # Find the values of the registers in the caller's frame and
2308 # save them in the result:
2309 unwind_info.add_saved_register(<register>, <value>)
2310 ....
2311
2312 # Return the result:
2313 return unwind_info
2314
2315@end smallexample
2316
2317@subheading Registering a Unwinder
2318
2319An object file, a program space, and the @value{GDBN} proper can have
2320unwinders registered with it.
2321
2322The @code{gdb.unwinders} module provides the function to register a
2323unwinder:
2324
2325@defun gdb.unwinder.register_unwinder (locus, unwinder, replace=False)
2326@var{locus} is specifies an object file or a program space to which
2327@var{unwinder} is added. Passing @code{None} or @code{gdb} adds
2328@var{unwinder} to the @value{GDBN}'s global unwinder list. The newly
2329added @var{unwinder} will be called before any other unwinder from the
2330same locus. Two unwinders in the same locus cannot have the same
2331name. An attempt to add a unwinder with already existing name raises
2332an exception unless @var{replace} is @code{True}, in which case the
2333old unwinder is deleted.
2334@end defun
2335
2336@subheading Unwinder Precedence
2337
2338@value{GDBN} first calls the unwinders from all the object files in no
2339particular order, then the unwinders from the current program space,
2340and finally the unwinders from @value{GDBN}.
2341
0c6e92a5
SC
2342@node Xmethods In Python
2343@subsubsection Xmethods In Python
2344@cindex xmethods in Python
2345
2346@dfn{Xmethods} are additional methods or replacements for existing
2347methods of a C@t{++} class. This feature is useful for those cases
2348where a method defined in C@t{++} source code could be inlined or
2349optimized out by the compiler, making it unavailable to @value{GDBN}.
2350For such cases, one can define an xmethod to serve as a replacement
2351for the method defined in the C@t{++} source code. @value{GDBN} will
2352then invoke the xmethod, instead of the C@t{++} method, to
2353evaluate expressions. One can also use xmethods when debugging
2354with core files. Moreover, when debugging live programs, invoking an
2355xmethod need not involve running the inferior (which can potentially
2356perturb its state). Hence, even if the C@t{++} method is available, it
2357is better to use its replacement xmethod if one is defined.
2358
2359The xmethods feature in Python is available via the concepts of an
2360@dfn{xmethod matcher} and an @dfn{xmethod worker}. To
2361implement an xmethod, one has to implement a matcher and a
2362corresponding worker for it (more than one worker can be
2363implemented, each catering to a different overloaded instance of the
2364method). Internally, @value{GDBN} invokes the @code{match} method of a
2365matcher to match the class type and method name. On a match, the
2366@code{match} method returns a list of matching @emph{worker} objects.
2367Each worker object typically corresponds to an overloaded instance of
2368the xmethod. They implement a @code{get_arg_types} method which
2369returns a sequence of types corresponding to the arguments the xmethod
2370requires. @value{GDBN} uses this sequence of types to perform
2371overload resolution and picks a winning xmethod worker. A winner
2372is also selected from among the methods @value{GDBN} finds in the
2373C@t{++} source code. Next, the winning xmethod worker and the
2374winning C@t{++} method are compared to select an overall winner. In
2375case of a tie between a xmethod worker and a C@t{++} method, the
2376xmethod worker is selected as the winner. That is, if a winning
2377xmethod worker is found to be equivalent to the winning C@t{++}
2378method, then the xmethod worker is treated as a replacement for
2379the C@t{++} method. @value{GDBN} uses the overall winner to invoke the
2380method. If the winning xmethod worker is the overall winner, then
897c3d32 2381the corresponding xmethod is invoked via the @code{__call__} method
0c6e92a5
SC
2382of the worker object.
2383
2384If one wants to implement an xmethod as a replacement for an
2385existing C@t{++} method, then they have to implement an equivalent
2386xmethod which has exactly the same name and takes arguments of
2387exactly the same type as the C@t{++} method. If the user wants to
2388invoke the C@t{++} method even though a replacement xmethod is
2389available for that method, then they can disable the xmethod.
2390
2391@xref{Xmethod API}, for API to implement xmethods in Python.
2392@xref{Writing an Xmethod}, for implementing xmethods in Python.
2393
2394@node Xmethod API
2395@subsubsection Xmethod API
2396@cindex xmethod API
2397
2398The @value{GDBN} Python API provides classes, interfaces and functions
2399to implement, register and manipulate xmethods.
2400@xref{Xmethods In Python}.
2401
2402An xmethod matcher should be an instance of a class derived from
2403@code{XMethodMatcher} defined in the module @code{gdb.xmethod}, or an
2404object with similar interface and attributes. An instance of
2405@code{XMethodMatcher} has the following attributes:
2406
2407@defvar name
2408The name of the matcher.
2409@end defvar
2410
2411@defvar enabled
2412A boolean value indicating whether the matcher is enabled or disabled.
2413@end defvar
2414
2415@defvar methods
2416A list of named methods managed by the matcher. Each object in the list
2417is an instance of the class @code{XMethod} defined in the module
2418@code{gdb.xmethod}, or any object with the following attributes:
2419
2420@table @code
2421
2422@item name
2423Name of the xmethod which should be unique for each xmethod
2424managed by the matcher.
2425
2426@item enabled
2427A boolean value indicating whether the xmethod is enabled or
2428disabled.
2429
2430@end table
2431
2432The class @code{XMethod} is a convenience class with same
2433attributes as above along with the following constructor:
2434
dd5d5494 2435@defun XMethod.__init__ (self, name)
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2436Constructs an enabled xmethod with name @var{name}.
2437@end defun
2438@end defvar
2439
2440@noindent
2441The @code{XMethodMatcher} class has the following methods:
2442
dd5d5494 2443@defun XMethodMatcher.__init__ (self, name)
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2444Constructs an enabled xmethod matcher with name @var{name}. The
2445@code{methods} attribute is initialized to @code{None}.
2446@end defun
2447
dd5d5494 2448@defun XMethodMatcher.match (self, class_type, method_name)
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2449Derived classes should override this method. It should return a
2450xmethod worker object (or a sequence of xmethod worker
2451objects) matching the @var{class_type} and @var{method_name}.
2452@var{class_type} is a @code{gdb.Type} object, and @var{method_name}
2453is a string value. If the matcher manages named methods as listed in
2454its @code{methods} attribute, then only those worker objects whose
2455corresponding entries in the @code{methods} list are enabled should be
2456returned.
2457@end defun
2458
2459An xmethod worker should be an instance of a class derived from
2460@code{XMethodWorker} defined in the module @code{gdb.xmethod},
2461or support the following interface:
2462
dd5d5494 2463@defun XMethodWorker.get_arg_types (self)
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2464This method returns a sequence of @code{gdb.Type} objects corresponding
2465to the arguments that the xmethod takes. It can return an empty
2466sequence or @code{None} if the xmethod does not take any arguments.
2467If the xmethod takes a single argument, then a single
2468@code{gdb.Type} object corresponding to it can be returned.
2469@end defun
2470
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2471@defun XMethodWorker.get_result_type (self, *args)
2472This method returns a @code{gdb.Type} object representing the type
2473of the result of invoking this xmethod.
2474The @var{args} argument is the same tuple of arguments that would be
2475passed to the @code{__call__} method of this worker.
2476@end defun
2477
dd5d5494 2478@defun XMethodWorker.__call__ (self, *args)
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2479This is the method which does the @emph{work} of the xmethod. The
2480@var{args} arguments is the tuple of arguments to the xmethod. Each
2481element in this tuple is a gdb.Value object. The first element is
2482always the @code{this} pointer value.
2483@end defun
2484
2485For @value{GDBN} to lookup xmethods, the xmethod matchers
2486should be registered using the following function defined in the module
2487@code{gdb.xmethod}:
2488
dd5d5494 2489@defun register_xmethod_matcher (locus, matcher, replace=False)
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2490The @code{matcher} is registered with @code{locus}, replacing an
2491existing matcher with the same name as @code{matcher} if
2492@code{replace} is @code{True}. @code{locus} can be a
2493@code{gdb.Objfile} object (@pxref{Objfiles In Python}), or a
1e47491b 2494@code{gdb.Progspace} object (@pxref{Progspaces In Python}), or
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2495@code{None}. If it is @code{None}, then @code{matcher} is registered
2496globally.
2497@end defun
2498
2499@node Writing an Xmethod
2500@subsubsection Writing an Xmethod
2501@cindex writing xmethods in Python
2502
2503Implementing xmethods in Python will require implementing xmethod
2504matchers and xmethod workers (@pxref{Xmethods In Python}). Consider
2505the following C@t{++} class:
2506
2507@smallexample
2508class MyClass
2509@{
2510public:
2511 MyClass (int a) : a_(a) @{ @}
2512
2513 int geta (void) @{ return a_; @}
2514 int operator+ (int b);
2515
2516private:
2517 int a_;
2518@};
2519
2520int
2521MyClass::operator+ (int b)
2522@{
2523 return a_ + b;
2524@}
2525@end smallexample
2526
2527@noindent
2528Let us define two xmethods for the class @code{MyClass}, one
2529replacing the method @code{geta}, and another adding an overloaded
2530flavor of @code{operator+} which takes a @code{MyClass} argument (the
2531C@t{++} code above already has an overloaded @code{operator+}
2532which takes an @code{int} argument). The xmethod matcher can be
2533defined as follows:
2534
2535@smallexample
2536class MyClass_geta(gdb.xmethod.XMethod):
2537 def __init__(self):
2538 gdb.xmethod.XMethod.__init__(self, 'geta')
2539
2540 def get_worker(self, method_name):
2541 if method_name == 'geta':
2542 return MyClassWorker_geta()
2543
2544
2545class MyClass_sum(gdb.xmethod.XMethod):
2546 def __init__(self):
2547 gdb.xmethod.XMethod.__init__(self, 'sum')
2548
2549 def get_worker(self, method_name):
2550 if method_name == 'operator+':
2551 return MyClassWorker_plus()
2552
2553
2554class MyClassMatcher(gdb.xmethod.XMethodMatcher):
2555 def __init__(self):
2556 gdb.xmethod.XMethodMatcher.__init__(self, 'MyClassMatcher')
2557 # List of methods 'managed' by this matcher
2558 self.methods = [MyClass_geta(), MyClass_sum()]
2559
2560 def match(self, class_type, method_name):
2561 if class_type.tag != 'MyClass':
2562 return None
2563 workers = []
2564 for method in self.methods:
2565 if method.enabled:
2566 worker = method.get_worker(method_name)
2567 if worker:
2568 workers.append(worker)
2569
2570 return workers
2571@end smallexample
2572
2573@noindent
2574Notice that the @code{match} method of @code{MyClassMatcher} returns
2575a worker object of type @code{MyClassWorker_geta} for the @code{geta}
2576method, and a worker object of type @code{MyClassWorker_plus} for the
2577@code{operator+} method. This is done indirectly via helper classes
2578derived from @code{gdb.xmethod.XMethod}. One does not need to use the
2579@code{methods} attribute in a matcher as it is optional. However, if a
2580matcher manages more than one xmethod, it is a good practice to list the
2581xmethods in the @code{methods} attribute of the matcher. This will then
2582facilitate enabling and disabling individual xmethods via the
2583@code{enable/disable} commands. Notice also that a worker object is
2584returned only if the corresponding entry in the @code{methods} attribute
2585of the matcher is enabled.
2586
2587The implementation of the worker classes returned by the matcher setup
2588above is as follows:
2589
2590@smallexample
2591class MyClassWorker_geta(gdb.xmethod.XMethodWorker):
2592 def get_arg_types(self):
2593 return None
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2594
2595 def get_result_type(self, obj):
2596 return gdb.lookup_type('int')
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2597
2598 def __call__(self, obj):
2599 return obj['a_']
2600
2601
2602class MyClassWorker_plus(gdb.xmethod.XMethodWorker):
2603 def get_arg_types(self):
2604 return gdb.lookup_type('MyClass')
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2605
2606 def get_result_type(self, obj):
2607 return gdb.lookup_type('int')
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2608
2609 def __call__(self, obj, other):
2610 return obj['a_'] + other['a_']
2611@end smallexample
2612
2613For @value{GDBN} to actually lookup a xmethod, it has to be
2614registered with it. The matcher defined above is registered with
2615@value{GDBN} globally as follows:
2616
2617@smallexample
2618gdb.xmethod.register_xmethod_matcher(None, MyClassMatcher())
2619@end smallexample
2620
2621If an object @code{obj} of type @code{MyClass} is initialized in C@t{++}
2622code as follows:
2623
2624@smallexample
2625MyClass obj(5);
2626@end smallexample
2627
2628@noindent
2629then, after loading the Python script defining the xmethod matchers
2630and workers into @code{GDBN}, invoking the method @code{geta} or using
2631the operator @code{+} on @code{obj} will invoke the xmethods
2632defined above:
2633
2634@smallexample
2635(gdb) p obj.geta()
2636$1 = 5
2637
2638(gdb) p obj + obj
2639$2 = 10
2640@end smallexample
2641
2642Consider another example with a C++ template class:
2643
2644@smallexample
2645template <class T>
2646class MyTemplate
2647@{
2648public:
2649 MyTemplate () : dsize_(10), data_ (new T [10]) @{ @}
2650 ~MyTemplate () @{ delete [] data_; @}
2651
2652 int footprint (void)
2653 @{
2654 return sizeof (T) * dsize_ + sizeof (MyTemplate<T>);
2655 @}
2656
2657private:
2658 int dsize_;
2659 T *data_;
2660@};
2661@end smallexample
2662
2663Let us implement an xmethod for the above class which serves as a
2664replacement for the @code{footprint} method. The full code listing
2665of the xmethod workers and xmethod matchers is as follows:
2666
2667@smallexample
2668class MyTemplateWorker_footprint(gdb.xmethod.XMethodWorker):
2669 def __init__(self, class_type):
2670 self.class_type = class_type
2ce1cdbf 2671
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2672 def get_arg_types(self):
2673 return None
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2674
2675 def get_result_type(self):
2676 return gdb.lookup_type('int')
2677
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2678 def __call__(self, obj):
2679 return (self.class_type.sizeof +
2680 obj['dsize_'] *
2681 self.class_type.template_argument(0).sizeof)
2682
2683
2684class MyTemplateMatcher_footprint(gdb.xmethod.XMethodMatcher):
2685 def __init__(self):
2686 gdb.xmethod.XMethodMatcher.__init__(self, 'MyTemplateMatcher')
2687
2688 def match(self, class_type, method_name):
2689 if (re.match('MyTemplate<[ \t\n]*[_a-zA-Z][ _a-zA-Z0-9]*>',
2690 class_type.tag) and
2691 method_name == 'footprint'):
2692 return MyTemplateWorker_footprint(class_type)
2693@end smallexample
2694
2695Notice that, in this example, we have not used the @code{methods}
2696attribute of the matcher as the matcher manages only one xmethod. The
2697user can enable/disable this xmethod by enabling/disabling the matcher
2698itself.
2699
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2700@node Inferiors In Python
2701@subsubsection Inferiors In Python
2702@cindex inferiors in Python
2703
2704@findex gdb.Inferior
2705Programs which are being run under @value{GDBN} are called inferiors
2706(@pxref{Inferiors and Programs}). Python scripts can access
2707information about and manipulate inferiors controlled by @value{GDBN}
2708via objects of the @code{gdb.Inferior} class.
2709
2710The following inferior-related functions are available in the @code{gdb}
2711module:
2712
2713@defun gdb.inferiors ()
2714Return a tuple containing all inferior objects.
2715@end defun
2716
2717@defun gdb.selected_inferior ()
2718Return an object representing the current inferior.
2719@end defun
2720
2721A @code{gdb.Inferior} object has the following attributes:
2722
2723@defvar Inferior.num
2724ID of inferior, as assigned by GDB.
2725@end defvar
2726
2727@defvar Inferior.pid
2728Process ID of the inferior, as assigned by the underlying operating
2729system.
2730@end defvar
2731
2732@defvar Inferior.was_attached
2733Boolean signaling whether the inferior was created using `attach', or
2734started by @value{GDBN} itself.
2735@end defvar
2736
2737A @code{gdb.Inferior} object has the following methods:
2738
2739@defun Inferior.is_valid ()
2740Returns @code{True} if the @code{gdb.Inferior} object is valid,
2741@code{False} if not. A @code{gdb.Inferior} object will become invalid
2742if the inferior no longer exists within @value{GDBN}. All other
2743@code{gdb.Inferior} methods will throw an exception if it is invalid
2744at the time the method is called.
2745@end defun
2746
2747@defun Inferior.threads ()
2748This method returns a tuple holding all the threads which are valid
2749when it is called. If there are no valid threads, the method will
2750return an empty tuple.
2751@end defun
2752
2753@findex Inferior.read_memory
2754@defun Inferior.read_memory (address, length)
a86c90e6 2755Read @var{length} addressable memory units from the inferior, starting at
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2756@var{address}. Returns a buffer object, which behaves much like an array
2757or a string. It can be modified and given to the
2758@code{Inferior.write_memory} function. In @code{Python} 3, the return
2759value is a @code{memoryview} object.
2760@end defun
2761
2762@findex Inferior.write_memory
2763@defun Inferior.write_memory (address, buffer @r{[}, length@r{]})
2764Write the contents of @var{buffer} to the inferior, starting at
2765@var{address}. The @var{buffer} parameter must be a Python object
2766which supports the buffer protocol, i.e., a string, an array or the
2767object returned from @code{Inferior.read_memory}. If given, @var{length}
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2768determines the number of addressable memory units from @var{buffer} to be
2769written.
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2770@end defun
2771
2772@findex gdb.search_memory
2773@defun Inferior.search_memory (address, length, pattern)
2774Search a region of the inferior memory starting at @var{address} with
2775the given @var{length} using the search pattern supplied in
2776@var{pattern}. The @var{pattern} parameter must be a Python object
2777which supports the buffer protocol, i.e., a string, an array or the
2778object returned from @code{gdb.read_memory}. Returns a Python @code{Long}
2779containing the address where the pattern was found, or @code{None} if
2780the pattern could not be found.
2781@end defun
2782
2783@node Events In Python
2784@subsubsection Events In Python
2785@cindex inferior events in Python
2786
2787@value{GDBN} provides a general event facility so that Python code can be
2788notified of various state changes, particularly changes that occur in
2789the inferior.
2790
2791An @dfn{event} is just an object that describes some state change. The
2792type of the object and its attributes will vary depending on the details
2793of the change. All the existing events are described below.
2794
2795In order to be notified of an event, you must register an event handler
2796with an @dfn{event registry}. An event registry is an object in the
2797@code{gdb.events} module which dispatches particular events. A registry
2798provides methods to register and unregister event handlers:
2799
2800@defun EventRegistry.connect (object)
2801Add the given callable @var{object} to the registry. This object will be
2802called when an event corresponding to this registry occurs.
2803@end defun
2804
2805@defun EventRegistry.disconnect (object)
2806Remove the given @var{object} from the registry. Once removed, the object
2807will no longer receive notifications of events.
2808@end defun
2809
2810Here is an example:
2811
2812@smallexample
2813def exit_handler (event):
2814 print "event type: exit"
2815 print "exit code: %d" % (event.exit_code)
2816
2817gdb.events.exited.connect (exit_handler)
2818@end smallexample
2819
2820In the above example we connect our handler @code{exit_handler} to the
2821registry @code{events.exited}. Once connected, @code{exit_handler} gets
2822called when the inferior exits. The argument @dfn{event} in this example is
2823of type @code{gdb.ExitedEvent}. As you can see in the example the
2824@code{ExitedEvent} object has an attribute which indicates the exit code of
2825the inferior.
2826
2827The following is a listing of the event registries that are available and
2828details of the events they emit:
2829
2830@table @code
2831
2832@item events.cont
2833Emits @code{gdb.ThreadEvent}.
2834
2835Some events can be thread specific when @value{GDBN} is running in non-stop
2836mode. When represented in Python, these events all extend
2837@code{gdb.ThreadEvent}. Note, this event is not emitted directly; instead,
2838events which are emitted by this or other modules might extend this event.
2839Examples of these events are @code{gdb.BreakpointEvent} and
2840@code{gdb.ContinueEvent}.
2841
2842@defvar ThreadEvent.inferior_thread
2843In non-stop mode this attribute will be set to the specific thread which was
2844involved in the emitted event. Otherwise, it will be set to @code{None}.
2845@end defvar
2846
2847Emits @code{gdb.ContinueEvent} which extends @code{gdb.ThreadEvent}.
2848
2849This event indicates that the inferior has been continued after a stop. For
2850inherited attribute refer to @code{gdb.ThreadEvent} above.
2851
2852@item events.exited
2853Emits @code{events.ExitedEvent} which indicates that the inferior has exited.
2854@code{events.ExitedEvent} has two attributes:
2855@defvar ExitedEvent.exit_code
2856An integer representing the exit code, if available, which the inferior
2857has returned. (The exit code could be unavailable if, for example,
2858@value{GDBN} detaches from the inferior.) If the exit code is unavailable,
2859the attribute does not exist.
2860@end defvar
2861@defvar ExitedEvent inferior
2862A reference to the inferior which triggered the @code{exited} event.
2863@end defvar
2864
2865@item events.stop
2866Emits @code{gdb.StopEvent} which extends @code{gdb.ThreadEvent}.
2867
2868Indicates that the inferior has stopped. All events emitted by this registry
2869extend StopEvent. As a child of @code{gdb.ThreadEvent}, @code{gdb.StopEvent}
2870will indicate the stopped thread when @value{GDBN} is running in non-stop
2871mode. Refer to @code{gdb.ThreadEvent} above for more details.
2872
2873Emits @code{gdb.SignalEvent} which extends @code{gdb.StopEvent}.
2874
2875This event indicates that the inferior or one of its threads has received as
2876signal. @code{gdb.SignalEvent} has the following attributes:
2877
2878@defvar SignalEvent.stop_signal
2879A string representing the signal received by the inferior. A list of possible
2880signal values can be obtained by running the command @code{info signals} in
2881the @value{GDBN} command prompt.
2882@end defvar
2883
2884Also emits @code{gdb.BreakpointEvent} which extends @code{gdb.StopEvent}.
2885
2886@code{gdb.BreakpointEvent} event indicates that one or more breakpoints have
2887been hit, and has the following attributes:
2888
2889@defvar BreakpointEvent.breakpoints
2890A sequence containing references to all the breakpoints (type
2891@code{gdb.Breakpoint}) that were hit.
2892@xref{Breakpoints In Python}, for details of the @code{gdb.Breakpoint} object.
2893@end defvar
2894@defvar BreakpointEvent.breakpoint
2895A reference to the first breakpoint that was hit.
2896This function is maintained for backward compatibility and is now deprecated
2897in favor of the @code{gdb.BreakpointEvent.breakpoints} attribute.
2898@end defvar
2899
2900@item events.new_objfile
2901Emits @code{gdb.NewObjFileEvent} which indicates that a new object file has
2902been loaded by @value{GDBN}. @code{gdb.NewObjFileEvent} has one attribute:
2903
2904@defvar NewObjFileEvent.new_objfile
2905A reference to the object file (@code{gdb.Objfile}) which has been loaded.
2906@xref{Objfiles In Python}, for details of the @code{gdb.Objfile} object.
2907@end defvar
2908
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2909@item events.clear_objfiles
2910Emits @code{gdb.ClearObjFilesEvent} which indicates that the list of object
2911files for a program space has been reset.
2912@code{gdb.ClearObjFilesEvent} has one attribute:
2913
2914@defvar ClearObjFilesEvent.progspace
2915A reference to the program space (@code{gdb.Progspace}) whose objfile list has
2916been cleared. @xref{Progspaces In Python}.
2917@end defvar
2918
162078c8
NB
2919@item events.inferior_call_pre
2920Emits @code{gdb.InferiorCallPreEvent} which indicates that a function in
2921the inferior is about to be called.
2922
2923@defvar InferiorCallPreEvent.ptid
2924The thread in which the call will be run.
2925@end defvar
2926
2927@defvar InferiorCallPreEvent.address
2928The location of the function to be called.
2929@end defvar
2930
2931@item events.inferior_call_post
2932Emits @code{gdb.InferiorCallPostEvent} which indicates that a function in
2933the inferior has returned.
2934
2935@defvar InferiorCallPostEvent.ptid
2936The thread in which the call was run.
2937@end defvar
2938
2939@defvar InferiorCallPostEvent.address
2940The location of the function that was called.
2941@end defvar
2942
2943@item events.memory_changed
2944Emits @code{gdb.MemoryChangedEvent} which indicates that the memory of the
2945inferior has been modified by the @value{GDBN} user, for instance via a
2946command like @w{@code{set *addr = value}}. The event has the following
2947attributes:
2948
2949@defvar MemoryChangedEvent.address
2950The start address of the changed region.
2951@end defvar
2952
2953@defvar MemoryChangedEvent.length
2954Length in bytes of the changed region.
2955@end defvar
2956
2957@item events.register_changed
2958Emits @code{gdb.RegisterChangedEvent} which indicates that a register in the
2959inferior has been modified by the @value{GDBN} user.
2960
2961@defvar RegisterChangedEvent.frame
2962A gdb.Frame object representing the frame in which the register was modified.
2963@end defvar
2964@defvar RegisterChangedEvent.regnum
2965Denotes which register was modified.
2966@end defvar
2967
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2968@end table
2969
2970@node Threads In Python
2971@subsubsection Threads In Python
2972@cindex threads in python
2973
2974@findex gdb.InferiorThread
2975Python scripts can access information about, and manipulate inferior threads
2976controlled by @value{GDBN}, via objects of the @code{gdb.InferiorThread} class.
2977
2978The following thread-related functions are available in the @code{gdb}
2979module:
2980
2981@findex gdb.selected_thread
2982@defun gdb.selected_thread ()
2983This function returns the thread object for the selected thread. If there
2984is no selected thread, this will return @code{None}.
2985@end defun
2986
2987A @code{gdb.InferiorThread} object has the following attributes:
2988
2989@defvar InferiorThread.name
2990The name of the thread. If the user specified a name using
2991@code{thread name}, then this returns that name. Otherwise, if an
2992OS-supplied name is available, then it is returned. Otherwise, this
2993returns @code{None}.
2994
2995This attribute can be assigned to. The new value must be a string
2996object, which sets the new name, or @code{None}, which removes any
2997user-specified thread name.
2998@end defvar
2999
3000@defvar InferiorThread.num
5d5658a1 3001The per-inferior number of the thread, as assigned by GDB.
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3002@end defvar
3003
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3004@defvar InferiorThread.global_num
3005The global ID of the thread, as assigned by GDB. You can use this to
3006make Python breakpoints thread-specific, for example
3007(@pxref{python_breakpoint_thread,,The Breakpoint.thread attribute}).
3008@end defvar
3009
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3010@defvar InferiorThread.ptid
3011ID of the thread, as assigned by the operating system. This attribute is a
3012tuple containing three integers. The first is the Process ID (PID); the second
3013is the Lightweight Process ID (LWPID), and the third is the Thread ID (TID).
3014Either the LWPID or TID may be 0, which indicates that the operating system
3015does not use that identifier.
3016@end defvar
3017
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3018@defvar InferiorThread.inferior
3019The inferior this thread belongs to. This attribute is represented as
3020a @code{gdb.Inferior} object. This attribute is not writable.
3021@end defvar
3022
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3023A @code{gdb.InferiorThread} object has the following methods:
3024
3025@defun InferiorThread.is_valid ()
3026Returns @code{True} if the @code{gdb.InferiorThread} object is valid,
3027@code{False} if not. A @code{gdb.InferiorThread} object will become
3028invalid if the thread exits, or the inferior that the thread belongs
3029is deleted. All other @code{gdb.InferiorThread} methods will throw an
3030exception if it is invalid at the time the method is called.
3031@end defun
3032
3033@defun InferiorThread.switch ()
3034This changes @value{GDBN}'s currently selected thread to the one represented
3035by this object.
3036@end defun
3037
3038@defun InferiorThread.is_stopped ()
3039Return a Boolean indicating whether the thread is stopped.
3040@end defun
3041
3042@defun InferiorThread.is_running ()
3043Return a Boolean indicating whether the thread is running.
3044@end defun
3045
3046@defun InferiorThread.is_exited ()
3047Return a Boolean indicating whether the thread is exited.
3048@end defun
3049
3050@node Commands In Python
3051@subsubsection Commands In Python
3052
3053@cindex commands in python
3054@cindex python commands
3055You can implement new @value{GDBN} CLI commands in Python. A CLI
3056command is implemented using an instance of the @code{gdb.Command}
3057class, most commonly using a subclass.
3058
3059@defun Command.__init__ (name, @var{command_class} @r{[}, @var{completer_class} @r{[}, @var{prefix}@r{]]})
3060The object initializer for @code{Command} registers the new command
3061with @value{GDBN}. This initializer is normally invoked from the
3062subclass' own @code{__init__} method.
3063
3064@var{name} is the name of the command. If @var{name} consists of
3065multiple words, then the initial words are looked for as prefix
3066commands. In this case, if one of the prefix commands does not exist,
3067an exception is raised.
3068
3069There is no support for multi-line commands.
3070
3071@var{command_class} should be one of the @samp{COMMAND_} constants
3072defined below. This argument tells @value{GDBN} how to categorize the
3073new command in the help system.
3074
3075@var{completer_class} is an optional argument. If given, it should be
3076one of the @samp{COMPLETE_} constants defined below. This argument
3077tells @value{GDBN} how to perform completion for this command. If not
3078given, @value{GDBN} will attempt to complete using the object's
3079@code{complete} method (see below); if no such method is found, an
3080error will occur when completion is attempted.
3081
3082@var{prefix} is an optional argument. If @code{True}, then the new
3083command is a prefix command; sub-commands of this command may be
3084registered.
3085
3086The help text for the new command is taken from the Python
3087documentation string for the command's class, if there is one. If no
3088documentation string is provided, the default value ``This command is
3089not documented.'' is used.
3090@end defun
3091
3092@cindex don't repeat Python command
3093@defun Command.dont_repeat ()
3094By default, a @value{GDBN} command is repeated when the user enters a
3095blank line at the command prompt. A command can suppress this
3096behavior by invoking the @code{dont_repeat} method. This is similar
3097to the user command @code{dont-repeat}, see @ref{Define, dont-repeat}.
3098@end defun
3099
3100@defun Command.invoke (argument, from_tty)
3101This method is called by @value{GDBN} when this command is invoked.
3102
3103@var{argument} is a string. It is the argument to the command, after
3104leading and trailing whitespace has been stripped.
3105
3106@var{from_tty} is a boolean argument. When true, this means that the
3107command was entered by the user at the terminal; when false it means
3108that the command came from elsewhere.
3109
3110If this method throws an exception, it is turned into a @value{GDBN}
3111@code{error} call. Otherwise, the return value is ignored.
3112
3113@findex gdb.string_to_argv
3114To break @var{argument} up into an argv-like string use
3115@code{gdb.string_to_argv}. This function behaves identically to
3116@value{GDBN}'s internal argument lexer @code{buildargv}.
3117It is recommended to use this for consistency.
3118Arguments are separated by spaces and may be quoted.
3119Example:
3120
3121@smallexample
3122print gdb.string_to_argv ("1 2\ \\\"3 '4 \"5' \"6 '7\"")
3123['1', '2 "3', '4 "5', "6 '7"]
3124@end smallexample
3125
3126@end defun
3127
3128@cindex completion of Python commands
3129@defun Command.complete (text, word)
3130This method is called by @value{GDBN} when the user attempts
3131completion on this command. All forms of completion are handled by
3132this method, that is, the @key{TAB} and @key{M-?} key bindings
3133(@pxref{Completion}), and the @code{complete} command (@pxref{Help,
3134complete}).
3135
697aa1b7
EZ
3136The arguments @var{text} and @var{word} are both strings; @var{text}
3137holds the complete command line up to the cursor's location, while
329baa95
DE
3138@var{word} holds the last word of the command line; this is computed
3139using a word-breaking heuristic.
3140
3141The @code{complete} method can return several values:
3142@itemize @bullet
3143@item
3144If the return value is a sequence, the contents of the sequence are
3145used as the completions. It is up to @code{complete} to ensure that the
3146contents actually do complete the word. A zero-length sequence is
3147allowed, it means that there were no completions available. Only
3148string elements of the sequence are used; other elements in the
3149sequence are ignored.
3150
3151@item
3152If the return value is one of the @samp{COMPLETE_} constants defined
3153below, then the corresponding @value{GDBN}-internal completion
3154function is invoked, and its result is used.
3155
3156@item
3157All other results are treated as though there were no available
3158completions.
3159@end itemize
3160@end defun
3161
3162When a new command is registered, it must be declared as a member of
3163some general class of commands. This is used to classify top-level
3164commands in the on-line help system; note that prefix commands are not
3165listed under their own category but rather that of their top-level
3166command. The available classifications are represented by constants
3167defined in the @code{gdb} module:
3168
3169@table @code
3170@findex COMMAND_NONE
3171@findex gdb.COMMAND_NONE
3172@item gdb.COMMAND_NONE
3173The command does not belong to any particular class. A command in
3174this category will not be displayed in any of the help categories.
3175
3176@findex COMMAND_RUNNING
3177@findex gdb.COMMAND_RUNNING
3178@item gdb.COMMAND_RUNNING
3179The command is related to running the inferior. For example,
3180@code{start}, @code{step}, and @code{continue} are in this category.
3181Type @kbd{help running} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of
3182commands in this category.
3183
3184@findex COMMAND_DATA
3185@findex gdb.COMMAND_DATA
3186@item gdb.COMMAND_DATA
3187The command is related to data or variables. For example,
3188@code{call}, @code{find}, and @code{print} are in this category. Type
3189@kbd{help data} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of commands
3190in this category.
3191
3192@findex COMMAND_STACK
3193@findex gdb.COMMAND_STACK
3194@item gdb.COMMAND_STACK
3195The command has to do with manipulation of the stack. For example,
3196@code{backtrace}, @code{frame}, and @code{return} are in this
3197category. Type @kbd{help stack} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a
3198list of commands in this category.
3199
3200@findex COMMAND_FILES
3201@findex gdb.COMMAND_FILES
3202@item gdb.COMMAND_FILES
3203This class is used for file-related commands. For example,
3204@code{file}, @code{list} and @code{section} are in this category.
3205Type @kbd{help files} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of
3206commands in this category.
3207
3208@findex COMMAND_SUPPORT
3209@findex gdb.COMMAND_SUPPORT
3210@item gdb.COMMAND_SUPPORT
3211This should be used for ``support facilities'', generally meaning
3212things that are useful to the user when interacting with @value{GDBN},
3213but not related to the state of the inferior. For example,
3214@code{help}, @code{make}, and @code{shell} are in this category. Type
3215@kbd{help support} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of
3216commands in this category.
3217
3218@findex COMMAND_STATUS
3219@findex gdb.COMMAND_STATUS
3220@item gdb.COMMAND_STATUS
3221The command is an @samp{info}-related command, that is, related to the
3222state of @value{GDBN} itself. For example, @code{info}, @code{macro},
3223and @code{show} are in this category. Type @kbd{help status} at the
3224@value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of commands in this category.
3225
3226@findex COMMAND_BREAKPOINTS
3227@findex gdb.COMMAND_BREAKPOINTS
3228@item gdb.COMMAND_BREAKPOINTS
3229The command has to do with breakpoints. For example, @code{break},
3230@code{clear}, and @code{delete} are in this category. Type @kbd{help
3231breakpoints} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of commands in
3232this category.
3233
3234@findex COMMAND_TRACEPOINTS
3235@findex gdb.COMMAND_TRACEPOINTS
3236@item gdb.COMMAND_TRACEPOINTS
3237The command has to do with tracepoints. For example, @code{trace},
3238@code{actions}, and @code{tfind} are in this category. Type
3239@kbd{help tracepoints} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of
3240commands in this category.
3241
3242@findex COMMAND_USER
3243@findex gdb.COMMAND_USER
3244@item gdb.COMMAND_USER
3245The command is a general purpose command for the user, and typically
3246does not fit in one of the other categories.
3247Type @kbd{help user-defined} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see
3248a list of commands in this category, as well as the list of gdb macros
3249(@pxref{Sequences}).
3250
3251@findex COMMAND_OBSCURE
3252@findex gdb.COMMAND_OBSCURE
3253@item gdb.COMMAND_OBSCURE
3254The command is only used in unusual circumstances, or is not of
3255general interest to users. For example, @code{checkpoint},
3256@code{fork}, and @code{stop} are in this category. Type @kbd{help
3257obscure} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of commands in this
3258category.
3259
3260@findex COMMAND_MAINTENANCE
3261@findex gdb.COMMAND_MAINTENANCE
3262@item gdb.COMMAND_MAINTENANCE
3263The command is only useful to @value{GDBN} maintainers. The
3264@code{maintenance} and @code{flushregs} commands are in this category.
3265Type @kbd{help internals} at the @value{GDBN} prompt to see a list of
3266commands in this category.
3267@end table
3268
3269A new command can use a predefined completion function, either by
3270specifying it via an argument at initialization, or by returning it
3271from the @code{complete} method. These predefined completion
3272constants are all defined in the @code{gdb} module:
3273
b3ce5e5f
DE
3274@vtable @code
3275@vindex COMPLETE_NONE
329baa95
DE
3276@item gdb.COMPLETE_NONE
3277This constant means that no completion should be done.
3278
b3ce5e5f 3279@vindex COMPLETE_FILENAME
329baa95
DE
3280@item gdb.COMPLETE_FILENAME
3281This constant means that filename completion should be performed.
3282
b3ce5e5f 3283@vindex COMPLETE_LOCATION
329baa95
DE
3284@item gdb.COMPLETE_LOCATION
3285This constant means that location completion should be done.
3286@xref{Specify Location}.
3287
b3ce5e5f 3288@vindex COMPLETE_COMMAND
329baa95
DE
3289@item gdb.COMPLETE_COMMAND
3290This constant means that completion should examine @value{GDBN}
3291command names.
3292
b3ce5e5f 3293@vindex COMPLETE_SYMBOL
329baa95
DE
3294@item gdb.COMPLETE_SYMBOL
3295This constant means that completion should be done using symbol names
3296as the source.
3297
b3ce5e5f 3298@vindex COMPLETE_EXPRESSION
329baa95
DE
3299@item gdb.COMPLETE_EXPRESSION
3300This constant means that completion should be done on expressions.
3301Often this means completing on symbol names, but some language
3302parsers also have support for completing on field names.
b3ce5e5f 3303@end vtable
329baa95
DE
3304
3305The following code snippet shows how a trivial CLI command can be
3306implemented in Python:
3307
3308@smallexample
3309class HelloWorld (gdb.Command):
3310 """Greet the whole world."""
3311
3312 def __init__ (self):
3313 super (HelloWorld, self).__init__ ("hello-world", gdb.COMMAND_USER)
3314
3315 def invoke (self, arg, from_tty):
3316 print "Hello, World!"
3317
3318HelloWorld ()
3319@end smallexample
3320
3321The last line instantiates the class, and is necessary to trigger the
3322registration of the command with @value{GDBN}. Depending on how the
3323Python code is read into @value{GDBN}, you may need to import the
3324@code{gdb} module explicitly.
3325
3326@node Parameters In Python
3327@subsubsection Parameters In Python
3328
3329@cindex parameters in python
3330@cindex python parameters
3331@tindex gdb.Parameter
3332@tindex Parameter
3333You can implement new @value{GDBN} parameters using Python. A new
3334parameter is implemented as an instance of the @code{gdb.Parameter}
3335class.
3336
3337Parameters are exposed to the user via the @code{set} and
3338@code{show} commands. @xref{Help}.
3339
3340There are many parameters that already exist and can be set in
3341@value{GDBN}. Two examples are: @code{set follow fork} and
3342@code{set charset}. Setting these parameters influences certain
3343behavior in @value{GDBN}. Similarly, you can define parameters that
3344can be used to influence behavior in custom Python scripts and commands.
3345
3346@defun Parameter.__init__ (name, @var{command-class}, @var{parameter-class} @r{[}, @var{enum-sequence}@r{]})
3347The object initializer for @code{Parameter} registers the new
3348parameter with @value{GDBN}. This initializer is normally invoked
3349from the subclass' own @code{__init__} method.
3350
3351@var{name} is the name of the new parameter. If @var{name} consists
3352of multiple words, then the initial words are looked for as prefix
3353parameters. An example of this can be illustrated with the
3354@code{set print} set of parameters. If @var{name} is
3355@code{print foo}, then @code{print} will be searched as the prefix
3356parameter. In this case the parameter can subsequently be accessed in
3357@value{GDBN} as @code{set print foo}.
3358
3359If @var{name} consists of multiple words, and no prefix parameter group
3360can be found, an exception is raised.
3361
3362@var{command-class} should be one of the @samp{COMMAND_} constants
3363(@pxref{Commands In Python}). This argument tells @value{GDBN} how to
3364categorize the new parameter in the help system.
3365
3366@var{parameter-class} should be one of the @samp{PARAM_} constants
3367defined below. This argument tells @value{GDBN} the type of the new
3368parameter; this information is used for input validation and
3369completion.
3370
3371If @var{parameter-class} is @code{PARAM_ENUM}, then
3372@var{enum-sequence} must be a sequence of strings. These strings
3373represent the possible values for the parameter.
3374
3375If @var{parameter-class} is not @code{PARAM_ENUM}, then the presence
3376of a fourth argument will cause an exception to be thrown.
3377
3378The help text for the new parameter is taken from the Python
3379documentation string for the parameter's class, if there is one. If
3380there is no documentation string, a default value is used.
3381@end defun
3382
3383@defvar Parameter.set_doc
3384If this attribute exists, and is a string, then its value is used as
3385the help text for this parameter's @code{set} command. The value is
3386examined when @code{Parameter.__init__} is invoked; subsequent changes
3387have no effect.
3388@end defvar
3389
3390@defvar Parameter.show_doc
3391If this attribute exists, and is a string, then its value is used as
3392the help text for this parameter's @code{show} command. The value is
3393examined when @code{Parameter.__init__} is invoked; subsequent changes
3394have no effect.
3395@end defvar
3396
3397@defvar Parameter.value
3398The @code{value} attribute holds the underlying value of the
3399parameter. It can be read and assigned to just as any other
3400attribute. @value{GDBN} does validation when assignments are made.
3401@end defvar
3402
3403There are two methods that should be implemented in any
3404@code{Parameter} class. These are:
3405
3406@defun Parameter.get_set_string (self)
3407@value{GDBN} will call this method when a @var{parameter}'s value has
3408been changed via the @code{set} API (for example, @kbd{set foo off}).
3409The @code{value} attribute has already been populated with the new
3410value and may be used in output. This method must return a string.
3411@end defun
3412
3413@defun Parameter.get_show_string (self, svalue)
3414@value{GDBN} will call this method when a @var{parameter}'s
3415@code{show} API has been invoked (for example, @kbd{show foo}). The
3416argument @code{svalue} receives the string representation of the
3417current value. This method must return a string.
3418@end defun
3419
3420When a new parameter is defined, its type must be specified. The
3421available types are represented by constants defined in the @code{gdb}
3422module:
3423
3424@table @code
3425@findex PARAM_BOOLEAN
3426@findex gdb.PARAM_BOOLEAN
3427@item gdb.PARAM_BOOLEAN
3428The value is a plain boolean. The Python boolean values, @code{True}
3429and @code{False} are the only valid values.
3430
3431@findex PARAM_AUTO_BOOLEAN
3432@findex gdb.PARAM_AUTO_BOOLEAN
3433@item gdb.PARAM_AUTO_BOOLEAN
3434The value has three possible states: true, false, and @samp{auto}. In
3435Python, true and false are represented using boolean constants, and
3436@samp{auto} is represented using @code{None}.
3437
3438@findex PARAM_UINTEGER
3439@findex gdb.PARAM_UINTEGER
3440@item gdb.PARAM_UINTEGER
3441The value is an unsigned integer. The value of 0 should be
3442interpreted to mean ``unlimited''.
3443
3444@findex PARAM_INTEGER
3445@findex gdb.PARAM_INTEGER
3446@item gdb.PARAM_INTEGER
3447The value is a signed integer. The value of 0 should be interpreted
3448to mean ``unlimited''.
3449
3450@findex PARAM_STRING
3451@findex gdb.PARAM_STRING
3452@item gdb.PARAM_STRING
3453The value is a string. When the user modifies the string, any escape
3454sequences, such as @samp{\t}, @samp{\f}, and octal escapes, are
3455translated into corresponding characters and encoded into the current
3456host charset.
3457
3458@findex PARAM_STRING_NOESCAPE
3459@findex gdb.PARAM_STRING_NOESCAPE
3460@item gdb.PARAM_STRING_NOESCAPE
3461The value is a string. When the user modifies the string, escapes are
3462passed through untranslated.
3463
3464@findex PARAM_OPTIONAL_FILENAME
3465@findex gdb.PARAM_OPTIONAL_FILENAME
3466@item gdb.PARAM_OPTIONAL_FILENAME
3467The value is a either a filename (a string), or @code{None}.
3468
3469@findex PARAM_FILENAME
3470@findex gdb.PARAM_FILENAME
3471@item gdb.PARAM_FILENAME
3472The value is a filename. This is just like
3473@code{PARAM_STRING_NOESCAPE}, but uses file names for completion.
3474
3475@findex PARAM_ZINTEGER
3476@findex gdb.PARAM_ZINTEGER
3477@item gdb.PARAM_ZINTEGER
3478The value is an integer. This is like @code{PARAM_INTEGER}, except 0
3479is interpreted as itself.
3480
3481@findex PARAM_ENUM
3482@findex gdb.PARAM_ENUM
3483@item gdb.PARAM_ENUM
3484The value is a string, which must be one of a collection string
3485constants provided when the parameter is created.
3486@end table
3487
3488@node Functions In Python
3489@subsubsection Writing new convenience functions
3490
3491@cindex writing convenience functions
3492@cindex convenience functions in python
3493@cindex python convenience functions
3494@tindex gdb.Function
3495@tindex Function
3496You can implement new convenience functions (@pxref{Convenience Vars})
3497in Python. A convenience function is an instance of a subclass of the
3498class @code{gdb.Function}.
3499
3500@defun Function.__init__ (name)
3501The initializer for @code{Function} registers the new function with
3502@value{GDBN}. The argument @var{name} is the name of the function,
3503a string. The function will be visible to the user as a convenience
3504variable of type @code{internal function}, whose name is the same as
3505the given @var{name}.
3506
3507The documentation for the new function is taken from the documentation
3508string for the new class.
3509@end defun
3510
3511@defun Function.invoke (@var{*args})
3512When a convenience function is evaluated, its arguments are converted
3513to instances of @code{gdb.Value}, and then the function's
3514@code{invoke} method is called. Note that @value{GDBN} does not
3515predetermine the arity of convenience functions. Instead, all
3516available arguments are passed to @code{invoke}, following the
3517standard Python calling convention. In particular, a convenience
3518function can have default values for parameters without ill effect.
3519
3520The return value of this method is used as its value in the enclosing
3521expression. If an ordinary Python value is returned, it is converted
3522to a @code{gdb.Value} following the usual rules.
3523@end defun
3524
3525The following code snippet shows how a trivial convenience function can
3526be implemented in Python:
3527
3528@smallexample
3529class Greet (gdb.Function):
3530 """Return string to greet someone.
3531Takes a name as argument."""
3532
3533 def __init__ (self):
3534 super (Greet, self).__init__ ("greet")
3535
3536 def invoke (self, name):
3537 return "Hello, %s!" % name.string ()
3538
3539Greet ()
3540@end smallexample
3541
3542The last line instantiates the class, and is necessary to trigger the
3543registration of the function with @value{GDBN}. Depending on how the
3544Python code is read into @value{GDBN}, you may need to import the
3545@code{gdb} module explicitly.
3546
3547Now you can use the function in an expression:
3548
3549@smallexample
3550(gdb) print $greet("Bob")
3551$1 = "Hello, Bob!"
3552@end smallexample
3553
3554@node Progspaces In Python
3555@subsubsection Program Spaces In Python
3556
3557@cindex progspaces in python
3558@tindex gdb.Progspace
3559@tindex Progspace
3560A program space, or @dfn{progspace}, represents a symbolic view
3561of an address space.
3562It consists of all of the objfiles of the program.
3563@xref{Objfiles In Python}.
3564@xref{Inferiors and Programs, program spaces}, for more details
3565about program spaces.
3566
3567The following progspace-related functions are available in the
3568@code{gdb} module:
3569
3570@findex gdb.current_progspace
3571@defun gdb.current_progspace ()
3572This function returns the program space of the currently selected inferior.
3573@xref{Inferiors and Programs}.
3574@end defun
3575
3576@findex gdb.progspaces
3577@defun gdb.progspaces ()
3578Return a sequence of all the progspaces currently known to @value{GDBN}.
3579@end defun
3580
3581Each progspace is represented by an instance of the @code{gdb.Progspace}
3582class.
3583
3584@defvar Progspace.filename
3585The file name of the progspace as a string.
3586@end defvar
3587
3588@defvar Progspace.pretty_printers
3589The @code{pretty_printers} attribute is a list of functions. It is
3590used to look up pretty-printers. A @code{Value} is passed to each
3591function in order; if the function returns @code{None}, then the
3592search continues. Otherwise, the return value should be an object
3593which is used to format the value. @xref{Pretty Printing API}, for more
3594information.
3595@end defvar
3596
3597@defvar Progspace.type_printers
3598The @code{type_printers} attribute is a list of type printer objects.
3599@xref{Type Printing API}, for more information.
3600@end defvar
3601
3602@defvar Progspace.frame_filters
3603The @code{frame_filters} attribute is a dictionary of frame filter
3604objects. @xref{Frame Filter API}, for more information.
3605@end defvar
3606
02be9a71
DE
3607One may add arbitrary attributes to @code{gdb.Progspace} objects
3608in the usual Python way.
3609This is useful if, for example, one needs to do some extra record keeping
3610associated with the program space.
3611
3612In this contrived example, we want to perform some processing when
3613an objfile with a certain symbol is loaded, but we only want to do
3614this once because it is expensive. To achieve this we record the results
3615with the program space because we can't predict when the desired objfile
3616will be loaded.
3617
3618@smallexample
3619(gdb) python
3620def clear_objfiles_handler(event):
3621 event.progspace.expensive_computation = None
3622def expensive(symbol):
3623 """A mock routine to perform an "expensive" computation on symbol."""
3624 print "Computing the answer to the ultimate question ..."
3625 return 42
3626def new_objfile_handler(event):
3627 objfile = event.new_objfile
3628 progspace = objfile.progspace
3629 if not hasattr(progspace, 'expensive_computation') or \
3630 progspace.expensive_computation is None:
3631 # We use 'main' for the symbol to keep the example simple.
3632 # Note: There's no current way to constrain the lookup
3633 # to one objfile.
3634 symbol = gdb.lookup_global_symbol('main')
3635 if symbol is not None:
3636 progspace.expensive_computation = expensive(symbol)
3637gdb.events.clear_objfiles.connect(clear_objfiles_handler)
3638gdb.events.new_objfile.connect(new_objfile_handler)
3639end
3640(gdb) file /tmp/hello
3641Reading symbols from /tmp/hello...done.
3642Computing the answer to the ultimate question ...
3643(gdb) python print gdb.current_progspace().expensive_computation
364442
3645(gdb) run
3646Starting program: /tmp/hello
3647Hello.
3648[Inferior 1 (process 4242) exited normally]
3649@end smallexample
3650
329baa95
DE
3651@node Objfiles In Python
3652@subsubsection Objfiles In Python
3653
3654@cindex objfiles in python
3655@tindex gdb.Objfile
3656@tindex Objfile
3657@value{GDBN} loads symbols for an inferior from various
3658symbol-containing files (@pxref{Files}). These include the primary
3659executable file, any shared libraries used by the inferior, and any
3660separate debug info files (@pxref{Separate Debug Files}).
3661@value{GDBN} calls these symbol-containing files @dfn{objfiles}.
3662
3663The following objfile-related functions are available in the
3664@code{gdb} module:
3665
3666@findex gdb.current_objfile
3667@defun gdb.current_objfile ()
3668When auto-loading a Python script (@pxref{Python Auto-loading}), @value{GDBN}
3669sets the ``current objfile'' to the corresponding objfile. This
3670function returns the current objfile. If there is no current objfile,
3671this function returns @code{None}.
3672@end defun
3673
3674@findex gdb.objfiles
3675@defun gdb.objfiles ()
3676Return a sequence of all the objfiles current known to @value{GDBN}.
3677@xref{Objfiles In Python}.
3678@end defun
3679
6dddd6a5
DE
3680@findex gdb.lookup_objfile
3681@defun gdb.lookup_objfile (name @r{[}, by_build_id{]})
3682Look up @var{name}, a file name or build ID, in the list of objfiles
3683for the current program space (@pxref{Progspaces In Python}).
3684If the objfile is not found throw the Python @code{ValueError} exception.
3685
3686If @var{name} is a relative file name, then it will match any
3687source file name with the same trailing components. For example, if
3688@var{name} is @samp{gcc/expr.c}, then it will match source file
3689name of @file{/build/trunk/gcc/expr.c}, but not
3690@file{/build/trunk/libcpp/expr.c} or @file{/build/trunk/gcc/x-expr.c}.
3691
3692If @var{by_build_id} is provided and is @code{True} then @var{name}
3693is the build ID of the objfile. Otherwise, @var{name} is a file name.
3694This is supported only on some operating systems, notably those which use
3695the ELF format for binary files and the @sc{gnu} Binutils. For more details
3696about this feature, see the description of the @option{--build-id}
3697command-line option in @ref{Options, , Command Line Options, ld.info,
3698The GNU Linker}.
3699@end defun
3700
329baa95
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3701Each objfile is represented by an instance of the @code{gdb.Objfile}
3702class.
3703
3704@defvar Objfile.filename
1b549396
DE
3705The file name of the objfile as a string, with symbolic links resolved.
3706
3707The value is @code{None} if the objfile is no longer valid.
3708See the @code{gdb.Objfile.is_valid} method, described below.
329baa95
DE
3709@end defvar
3710
3a8b707a
DE
3711@defvar Objfile.username
3712The file name of the objfile as specified by the user as a string.
3713
3714The value is @code{None} if the objfile is no longer valid.
3715See the @code{gdb.Objfile.is_valid} method, described below.
3716@end defvar
3717
a0be3e44
DE
3718@defvar Objfile.owner
3719For separate debug info objfiles this is the corresponding @code{gdb.Objfile}
3720object that debug info is being provided for.
3721Otherwise this is @code{None}.
3722Separate debug info objfiles are added with the
3723@code{gdb.Objfile.add_separate_debug_file} method, described below.
3724@end defvar
3725
7c50a931
DE
3726@defvar Objfile.build_id
3727The build ID of the objfile as a string.
3728If the objfile does not have a build ID then the value is @code{None}.
3729
3730This is supported only on some operating systems, notably those which use
3731the ELF format for binary files and the @sc{gnu} Binutils. For more details
3732about this feature, see the description of the @option{--build-id}
3733command-line option in @ref{Options, , Command Line Options, ld.info,
3734The GNU Linker}.
3735@end defvar
3736
d096d8c1
DE
3737@defvar Objfile.progspace
3738The containing program space of the objfile as a @code{gdb.Progspace}
3739object. @xref{Progspaces In Python}.
3740@end defvar
3741
329baa95
DE
3742@defvar Objfile.pretty_printers
3743The @code{pretty_printers} attribute is a list of functions. It is
3744used to look up pretty-printers. A @code{Value} is passed to each
3745function in order; if the function returns @code{None}, then the
3746search continues. Otherwise, the return value should be an object
3747which is used to format the value. @xref{Pretty Printing API}, for more
3748information.
3749@end defvar
3750
3751@defvar Objfile.type_printers
3752The @code{type_printers} attribute is a list of type printer objects.
3753@xref{Type Printing API}, for more information.
3754@end defvar
3755
3756@defvar Objfile.frame_filters
3757The @code{frame_filters} attribute is a dictionary of frame filter
3758objects. @xref{Frame Filter API}, for more information.
3759@end defvar
3760
02be9a71
DE
3761One may add arbitrary attributes to @code{gdb.Objfile} objects
3762in the usual Python way.
3763This is useful if, for example, one needs to do some extra record keeping
3764associated with the objfile.
3765
3766In this contrived example we record the time when @value{GDBN}
3767loaded the objfile.
3768
3769@smallexample
3770(gdb) python
3771import datetime
3772def new_objfile_handler(event):
3773 # Set the time_loaded attribute of the new objfile.
3774 event.new_objfile.time_loaded = datetime.datetime.today()
3775gdb.events.new_objfile.connect(new_objfile_handler)
3776end
3777(gdb) file ./hello
3778Reading symbols from ./hello...done.
3779(gdb) python print gdb.objfiles()[0].time_loaded
37802014-10-09 11:41:36.770345
3781@end smallexample
3782
329baa95
DE
3783A @code{gdb.Objfile} object has the following methods:
3784
3785@defun Objfile.is_valid ()
3786Returns @code{True} if the @code{gdb.Objfile} object is valid,
3787@code{False} if not. A @code{gdb.Objfile} object can become invalid
3788if the object file it refers to is not loaded in @value{GDBN} any
3789longer. All other @code{gdb.Objfile} methods will throw an exception
3790if it is invalid at the time the method is called.
3791@end defun
3792
86e4ed39
DE
3793@defun Objfile.add_separate_debug_file (file)
3794Add @var{file} to the list of files that @value{GDBN} will search for
3795debug information for the objfile.
3796This is useful when the debug info has been removed from the program
3797and stored in a separate file. @value{GDBN} has built-in support for
3798finding separate debug info files (@pxref{Separate Debug Files}), but if
3799the file doesn't live in one of the standard places that @value{GDBN}
3800searches then this function can be used to add a debug info file
3801from a different place.
3802@end defun
3803
329baa95
DE
3804@node Frames In Python
3805@subsubsection Accessing inferior stack frames from Python.
3806
3807@cindex frames in python
3808When the debugged program stops, @value{GDBN} is able to analyze its call
3809stack (@pxref{Frames,,Stack frames}). The @code{gdb.Frame} class
3810represents a frame in the stack. A @code{gdb.Frame} object is only valid
3811while its corresponding frame exists in the inferior's stack. If you try
3812to use an invalid frame object, @value{GDBN} will throw a @code{gdb.error}
3813exception (@pxref{Exception Handling}).
3814
3815Two @code{gdb.Frame} objects can be compared for equality with the @code{==}
3816operator, like:
3817
3818@smallexample
3819(@value{GDBP}) python print gdb.newest_frame() == gdb.selected_frame ()
3820True
3821@end smallexample
3822
3823The following frame-related functions are available in the @code{gdb} module:
3824
3825@findex gdb.selected_frame
3826@defun gdb.selected_frame ()
3827Return the selected frame object. (@pxref{Selection,,Selecting a Frame}).
3828@end defun
3829
3830@findex gdb.newest_frame
3831@defun gdb.newest_frame ()
3832Return the newest frame object for the selected thread.
3833@end defun
3834
3835@defun gdb.frame_stop_reason_string (reason)
3836Return a string explaining the reason why @value{GDBN} stopped unwinding
3837frames, as expressed by the given @var{reason} code (an integer, see the
3838@code{unwind_stop_reason} method further down in this section).
3839@end defun
3840
e0f3fd7c
TT
3841@findex gdb.invalidate_cached_frames
3842@defun gdb.invalidate_cached_frames
3843@value{GDBN} internally keeps a cache of the frames that have been
3844unwound. This function invalidates this cache.
3845
3846This function should not generally be called by ordinary Python code.
3847It is documented for the sake of completeness.
3848@end defun
3849
329baa95
DE
3850A @code{gdb.Frame} object has the following methods:
3851
3852@defun Frame.is_valid ()
3853Returns true if the @code{gdb.Frame} object is valid, false if not.
3854A frame object can become invalid if the frame it refers to doesn't
3855exist anymore in the inferior. All @code{gdb.Frame} methods will throw
3856an exception if it is invalid at the time the method is called.
3857@end defun
3858
3859@defun Frame.name ()
3860Returns the function name of the frame, or @code{None} if it can't be
3861obtained.
3862@end defun
3863
3864@defun Frame.architecture ()
3865Returns the @code{gdb.Architecture} object corresponding to the frame's
3866architecture. @xref{Architectures In Python}.
3867@end defun
3868
3869@defun Frame.type ()
3870Returns the type of the frame. The value can be one of:
3871@table @code
3872@item gdb.NORMAL_FRAME
3873An ordinary stack frame.
3874
3875@item gdb.DUMMY_FRAME
3876A fake stack frame that was created by @value{GDBN} when performing an
3877inferior function call.
3878
3879@item gdb.INLINE_FRAME
3880A frame representing an inlined function. The function was inlined
3881into a @code{gdb.NORMAL_FRAME} that is older than this one.
3882
3883@item gdb.TAILCALL_FRAME
3884A frame representing a tail call. @xref{Tail Call Frames}.
3885
3886@item gdb.SIGTRAMP_FRAME
3887A signal trampoline frame. This is the frame created by the OS when
3888it calls into a signal handler.
3889
3890@item gdb.ARCH_FRAME
3891A fake stack frame representing a cross-architecture call.
3892
3893@item gdb.SENTINEL_FRAME
3894This is like @code{gdb.NORMAL_FRAME}, but it is only used for the
3895newest frame.
3896@end table
3897@end defun
3898
3899@defun Frame.unwind_stop_reason ()
3900Return an integer representing the reason why it's not possible to find
3901more frames toward the outermost frame. Use
3902@code{gdb.frame_stop_reason_string} to convert the value returned by this
3903function to a string. The value can be one of:
3904
3905@table @code
3906@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_NO_REASON
3907No particular reason (older frames should be available).
3908
3909@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_NULL_ID
3910The previous frame's analyzer returns an invalid result. This is no
3911longer used by @value{GDBN}, and is kept only for backward
3912compatibility.
3913
3914@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_OUTERMOST
3915This frame is the outermost.
3916
3917@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_UNAVAILABLE
3918Cannot unwind further, because that would require knowing the
3919values of registers or memory that have not been collected.
3920
3921@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_INNER_ID
3922This frame ID looks like it ought to belong to a NEXT frame,
3923but we got it for a PREV frame. Normally, this is a sign of
3924unwinder failure. It could also indicate stack corruption.
3925
3926@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_SAME_ID
3927This frame has the same ID as the previous one. That means
3928that unwinding further would almost certainly give us another
3929frame with exactly the same ID, so break the chain. Normally,
3930this is a sign of unwinder failure. It could also indicate
3931stack corruption.
3932
3933@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_NO_SAVED_PC
3934The frame unwinder did not find any saved PC, but we needed
3935one to unwind further.
3936
53e8a631
AB
3937@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_MEMORY_ERROR
3938The frame unwinder caused an error while trying to access memory.
3939
329baa95
DE
3940@item gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_FIRST_ERROR
3941Any stop reason greater or equal to this value indicates some kind
3942of error. This special value facilitates writing code that tests
3943for errors in unwinding in a way that will work correctly even if
3944the list of the other values is modified in future @value{GDBN}
3945versions. Using it, you could write:
3946@smallexample
3947reason = gdb.selected_frame().unwind_stop_reason ()
3948reason_str = gdb.frame_stop_reason_string (reason)
3949if reason >= gdb.FRAME_UNWIND_FIRST_ERROR:
3950 print "An error occured: %s" % reason_str
3951@end smallexample
3952@end table
3953
3954@end defun
3955
3956@defun Frame.pc ()
3957Returns the frame's resume address.
3958@end defun
3959
3960@defun Frame.block ()
3961Return the frame's code block. @xref{Blocks In Python}.
3962@end defun
3963
3964@defun Frame.function ()
3965Return the symbol for the function corresponding to this frame.
3966@xref{Symbols In Python}.
3967@end defun
3968
3969@defun Frame.older ()
3970Return the frame that called this frame.
3971@end defun
3972
3973@defun Frame.newer ()
3974Return the frame called by this frame.
3975@end defun
3976
3977@defun Frame.find_sal ()
3978Return the frame's symtab and line object.
3979@xref{Symbol Tables In Python}.
3980@end defun
3981
5f3b99cf
SS
3982@defun Frame.read_register (register)
3983Return the value of @var{register} in this frame. The @var{register}
3984argument must be a string (e.g., @code{'sp'} or @code{'rax'}).
3985Returns a @code{Gdb.Value} object. Throws an exception if @var{register}
3986does not exist.
3987@end defun
3988
329baa95
DE
3989@defun Frame.read_var (variable @r{[}, block@r{]})
3990Return the value of @var{variable} in this frame. If the optional
3991argument @var{block} is provided, search for the variable from that
3992block; otherwise start at the frame's current block (which is
697aa1b7
EZ
3993determined by the frame's current program counter). The @var{variable}
3994argument must be a string or a @code{gdb.Symbol} object; @var{block} must be a
329baa95
DE
3995@code{gdb.Block} object.
3996@end defun
3997
3998@defun Frame.select ()
3999Set this frame to be the selected frame. @xref{Stack, ,Examining the
4000Stack}.
4001@end defun
4002
4003@node Blocks In Python
4004@subsubsection Accessing blocks from Python.
4005
4006@cindex blocks in python
4007@tindex gdb.Block
4008
4009In @value{GDBN}, symbols are stored in blocks. A block corresponds
4010roughly to a scope in the source code. Blocks are organized
4011hierarchically, and are represented individually in Python as a
4012@code{gdb.Block}. Blocks rely on debugging information being
4013available.
4014
4015A frame has a block. Please see @ref{Frames In Python}, for a more
4016in-depth discussion of frames.
4017
4018The outermost block is known as the @dfn{global block}. The global
4019block typically holds public global variables and functions.
4020
4021The block nested just inside the global block is the @dfn{static
4022block}. The static block typically holds file-scoped variables and
4023functions.
4024
4025@value{GDBN} provides a method to get a block's superblock, but there
4026is currently no way to examine the sub-blocks of a block, or to
4027iterate over all the blocks in a symbol table (@pxref{Symbol Tables In
4028Python}).
4029
4030Here is a short example that should help explain blocks:
4031
4032@smallexample
4033/* This is in the global block. */
4034int global;
4035
4036/* This is in the static block. */
4037static int file_scope;
4038
4039/* 'function' is in the global block, and 'argument' is
4040 in a block nested inside of 'function'. */
4041int function (int argument)
4042@{
4043 /* 'local' is in a block inside 'function'. It may or may
4044 not be in the same block as 'argument'. */
4045 int local;
4046
4047 @{
4048 /* 'inner' is in a block whose superblock is the one holding
4049 'local'. */
4050 int inner;
4051
4052 /* If this call is expanded by the compiler, you may see
4053 a nested block here whose function is 'inline_function'
4054 and whose superblock is the one holding 'inner'. */
4055 inline_function ();
4056 @}
4057@}
4058@end smallexample
4059
4060A @code{gdb.Block} is iterable. The iterator returns the symbols
4061(@pxref{Symbols In Python}) local to the block. Python programs
4062should not assume that a specific block object will always contain a
4063given symbol, since changes in @value{GDBN} features and
4064infrastructure may cause symbols move across blocks in a symbol
4065table.
4066
4067The following block-related functions are available in the @code{gdb}
4068module:
4069
4070@findex gdb.block_for_pc
4071@defun gdb.block_for_pc (pc)
4072Return the innermost @code{gdb.Block} containing the given @var{pc}
4073value. If the block cannot be found for the @var{pc} value specified,
4074the function will return @code{None}.
4075@end defun
4076
4077A @code{gdb.Block} object has the following methods:
4078
4079@defun Block.is_valid ()
4080Returns @code{True} if the @code{gdb.Block} object is valid,
4081@code{False} if not. A block object can become invalid if the block it
4082refers to doesn't exist anymore in the inferior. All other
4083@code{gdb.Block} methods will throw an exception if it is invalid at
4084the time the method is called. The block's validity is also checked
4085during iteration over symbols of the block.
4086@end defun
4087
4088A @code{gdb.Block} object has the following attributes:
4089
4090@defvar Block.start
4091The start address of the block. This attribute is not writable.
4092@end defvar
4093
4094@defvar Block.end
4095The end address of the block. This attribute is not writable.
4096@end defvar
4097
4098@defvar Block.function
4099The name of the block represented as a @code{gdb.Symbol}. If the
4100block is not named, then this attribute holds @code{None}. This
4101attribute is not writable.
4102
4103For ordinary function blocks, the superblock is the static block.
4104However, you should note that it is possible for a function block to
4105have a superblock that is not the static block -- for instance this
4106happens for an inlined function.
4107@end defvar
4108
4109@defvar Block.superblock
4110The block containing this block. If this parent block does not exist,
4111this attribute holds @code{None}. This attribute is not writable.
4112@end defvar
4113
4114@defvar Block.global_block
4115The global block associated with this block. This attribute is not
4116writable.
4117@end defvar
4118
4119@defvar Block.static_block
4120The static block associated with this block. This attribute is not
4121writable.
4122@end defvar
4123
4124@defvar Block.is_global
4125@code{True} if the @code{gdb.Block} object is a global block,
4126@code{False} if not. This attribute is not
4127writable.
4128@end defvar
4129
4130@defvar Block.is_static
4131@code{True} if the @code{gdb.Block} object is a static block,
4132@code{False} if not. This attribute is not writable.
4133@end defvar
4134
4135@node Symbols In Python
4136@subsubsection Python representation of Symbols.
4137
4138@cindex symbols in python
4139@tindex gdb.Symbol
4140
4141@value{GDBN} represents every variable, function and type as an
4142entry in a symbol table. @xref{Symbols, ,Examining the Symbol Table}.
4143Similarly, Python represents these symbols in @value{GDBN} with the
4144@code{gdb.Symbol} object.
4145
4146The following symbol-related functions are available in the @code{gdb}
4147module:
4148
4149@findex gdb.lookup_symbol
4150@defun gdb.lookup_symbol (name @r{[}, block @r{[}, domain@r{]]})
4151This function searches for a symbol by name. The search scope can be
4152restricted to the parameters defined in the optional domain and block
4153arguments.
4154
4155@var{name} is the name of the symbol. It must be a string. The
4156optional @var{block} argument restricts the search to symbols visible
4157in that @var{block}. The @var{block} argument must be a
4158@code{gdb.Block} object. If omitted, the block for the current frame
4159is used. The optional @var{domain} argument restricts
4160the search to the domain type. The @var{domain} argument must be a
4161domain constant defined in the @code{gdb} module and described later
4162in this chapter.
4163
4164The result is a tuple of two elements.
4165The first element is a @code{gdb.Symbol} object or @code{None} if the symbol
4166is not found.
4167If the symbol is found, the second element is @code{True} if the symbol
4168is a field of a method's object (e.g., @code{this} in C@t{++}),
4169otherwise it is @code{False}.
4170If the symbol is not found, the second element is @code{False}.
4171@end defun
4172
4173@findex gdb.lookup_global_symbol
4174@defun gdb.lookup_global_symbol (name @r{[}, domain@r{]})
4175This function searches for a global symbol by name.
4176The search scope can be restricted to by the domain argument.
4177
4178@var{name} is the name of the symbol. It must be a string.
4179The optional @var{domain} argument restricts the search to the domain type.
4180The @var{domain} argument must be a domain constant defined in the @code{gdb}
4181module and described later in this chapter.
4182
4183The result is a @code{gdb.Symbol} object or @code{None} if the symbol
4184is not found.
4185@end defun
4186
4187A @code{gdb.Symbol} object has the following attributes:
4188
4189@defvar Symbol.type
4190The type of the symbol or @code{None} if no type is recorded.
4191This attribute is represented as a @code{gdb.Type} object.
4192@xref{Types In Python}. This attribute is not writable.
4193@end defvar
4194
4195@defvar Symbol.symtab
4196The symbol table in which the symbol appears. This attribute is
4197represented as a @code{gdb.Symtab} object. @xref{Symbol Tables In
4198Python}. This attribute is not writable.
4199@end defvar
4200
4201@defvar Symbol.line
4202The line number in the source code at which the symbol was defined.
4203This is an integer.
4204@end defvar
4205
4206@defvar Symbol.name
4207The name of the symbol as a string. This attribute is not writable.
4208@end defvar
4209
4210@defvar Symbol.linkage_name
4211The name of the symbol, as used by the linker (i.e., may be mangled).
4212This attribute is not writable.
4213@end defvar
4214
4215@defvar Symbol.print_name
4216The name of the symbol in a form suitable for output. This is either
4217@code{name} or @code{linkage_name}, depending on whether the user
4218asked @value{GDBN} to display demangled or mangled names.
4219@end defvar
4220
4221@defvar Symbol.addr_class
4222The address class of the symbol. This classifies how to find the value
4223of a symbol. Each address class is a constant defined in the
4224@code{gdb} module and described later in this chapter.
4225@end defvar
4226
4227@defvar Symbol.needs_frame
4228This is @code{True} if evaluating this symbol's value requires a frame
4229(@pxref{Frames In Python}) and @code{False} otherwise. Typically,
4230local variables will require a frame, but other symbols will not.
4231@end defvar
4232
4233@defvar Symbol.is_argument
4234@code{True} if the symbol is an argument of a function.
4235@end defvar
4236
4237@defvar Symbol.is_constant
4238@code{True} if the symbol is a constant.
4239@end defvar
4240
4241@defvar Symbol.is_function
4242@code{True} if the symbol is a function or a method.
4243@end defvar
4244
4245@defvar Symbol.is_variable
4246@code{True} if the symbol is a variable.
4247@end defvar
4248
4249A @code{gdb.Symbol} object has the following methods:
4250
4251@defun Symbol.is_valid ()
4252Returns @code{True} if the @code{gdb.Symbol} object is valid,
4253@code{False} if not. A @code{gdb.Symbol} object can become invalid if
4254the symbol it refers to does not exist in @value{GDBN} any longer.
4255All other @code{gdb.Symbol} methods will throw an exception if it is
4256invalid at the time the method is called.
4257@end defun
4258
4259@defun Symbol.value (@r{[}frame@r{]})
4260Compute the value of the symbol, as a @code{gdb.Value}. For
4261functions, this computes the address of the function, cast to the
4262appropriate type. If the symbol requires a frame in order to compute
4263its value, then @var{frame} must be given. If @var{frame} is not
4264given, or if @var{frame} is invalid, then this method will throw an
4265exception.
4266@end defun
4267
4268The available domain categories in @code{gdb.Symbol} are represented
4269as constants in the @code{gdb} module:
4270
b3ce5e5f
DE
4271@vtable @code
4272@vindex SYMBOL_UNDEF_DOMAIN
329baa95
DE
4273@item gdb.SYMBOL_UNDEF_DOMAIN
4274This is used when a domain has not been discovered or none of the
4275following domains apply. This usually indicates an error either
4276in the symbol information or in @value{GDBN}'s handling of symbols.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4277
4278@vindex SYMBOL_VAR_DOMAIN
329baa95
DE
4279@item gdb.SYMBOL_VAR_DOMAIN
4280This domain contains variables, function names, typedef names and enum
4281type values.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4282
4283@vindex SYMBOL_STRUCT_DOMAIN
329baa95
DE
4284@item gdb.SYMBOL_STRUCT_DOMAIN
4285This domain holds struct, union and enum type names.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4286
4287@vindex SYMBOL_LABEL_DOMAIN
329baa95
DE
4288@item gdb.SYMBOL_LABEL_DOMAIN
4289This domain contains names of labels (for gotos).
b3ce5e5f
DE
4290
4291@vindex SYMBOL_VARIABLES_DOMAIN
329baa95
DE
4292@item gdb.SYMBOL_VARIABLES_DOMAIN
4293This domain holds a subset of the @code{SYMBOLS_VAR_DOMAIN}; it
4294contains everything minus functions and types.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4295
4296@vindex SYMBOL_FUNCTIONS_DOMAIN
329baa95
DE
4297@item gdb.SYMBOL_FUNCTION_DOMAIN
4298This domain contains all functions.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4299
4300@vindex SYMBOL_TYPES_DOMAIN
329baa95
DE
4301@item gdb.SYMBOL_TYPES_DOMAIN
4302This domain contains all types.
b3ce5e5f 4303@end vtable
329baa95
DE
4304
4305The available address class categories in @code{gdb.Symbol} are represented
4306as constants in the @code{gdb} module:
4307
b3ce5e5f
DE
4308@vtable @code
4309@vindex SYMBOL_LOC_UNDEF
329baa95
DE
4310@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_UNDEF
4311If this is returned by address class, it indicates an error either in
4312the symbol information or in @value{GDBN}'s handling of symbols.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4313
4314@vindex SYMBOL_LOC_CONST
329baa95
DE
4315@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_CONST
4316Value is constant int.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4317
4318@vindex SYMBOL_LOC_STATIC
329baa95
DE
4319@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_STATIC
4320Value is at a fixed address.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4321
4322@vindex SYMBOL_LOC_REGISTER
329baa95
DE
4323@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_REGISTER
4324Value is in a register.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4325
4326@vindex SYMBOL_LOC_ARG
329baa95
DE
4327@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_ARG
4328Value is an argument. This value is at the offset stored within the
4329symbol inside the frame's argument list.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4330
4331@vindex SYMBOL_LOC_REF_ARG
329baa95
DE
4332@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_REF_ARG
4333Value address is stored in the frame's argument list. Just like
4334@code{LOC_ARG} except that the value's address is stored at the
4335offset, not the value itself.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4336
4337@vindex SYMBOL_LOC_REGPARM_ADDR
329baa95
DE
4338@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_REGPARM_ADDR
4339Value is a specified register. Just like @code{LOC_REGISTER} except
4340the register holds the address of the argument instead of the argument
4341itself.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4342
4343@vindex SYMBOL_LOC_LOCAL
329baa95
DE
4344@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_LOCAL
4345Value is a local variable.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4346
4347@vindex SYMBOL_LOC_TYPEDEF
329baa95
DE
4348@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_TYPEDEF
4349Value not used. Symbols in the domain @code{SYMBOL_STRUCT_DOMAIN} all
4350have this class.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4351
4352@vindex SYMBOL_LOC_BLOCK
329baa95
DE
4353@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_BLOCK
4354Value is a block.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4355
4356@vindex SYMBOL_LOC_CONST_BYTES
329baa95
DE
4357@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_CONST_BYTES
4358Value is a byte-sequence.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4359
4360@vindex SYMBOL_LOC_UNRESOLVED
329baa95
DE
4361@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_UNRESOLVED
4362Value is at a fixed address, but the address of the variable has to be
4363determined from the minimal symbol table whenever the variable is
4364referenced.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4365
4366@vindex SYMBOL_LOC_OPTIMIZED_OUT
329baa95
DE
4367@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_OPTIMIZED_OUT
4368The value does not actually exist in the program.
b3ce5e5f
DE
4369
4370@vindex SYMBOL_LOC_COMPUTED
329baa95
DE
4371@item gdb.SYMBOL_LOC_COMPUTED
4372The value's address is a computed location.
b3ce5e5f 4373@end vtable
329baa95
DE
4374
4375@node Symbol Tables In Python
4376@subsubsection Symbol table representation in Python.
4377
4378@cindex symbol tables in python
4379@tindex gdb.Symtab
4380@tindex gdb.Symtab_and_line
4381
4382Access to symbol table data maintained by @value{GDBN} on the inferior
4383is exposed to Python via two objects: @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} and
4384@code{gdb.Symtab}. Symbol table and line data for a frame is returned
4385from the @code{find_sal} method in @code{gdb.Frame} object.
4386@xref{Frames In Python}.
4387
4388For more information on @value{GDBN}'s symbol table management, see
4389@ref{Symbols, ,Examining the Symbol Table}, for more information.
4390
4391A @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} object has the following attributes:
4392
4393@defvar Symtab_and_line.symtab
4394The symbol table object (@code{gdb.Symtab}) for this frame.
4395This attribute is not writable.
4396@end defvar
4397
4398@defvar Symtab_and_line.pc
4399Indicates the start of the address range occupied by code for the
4400current source line. This attribute is not writable.
4401@end defvar
4402
4403@defvar Symtab_and_line.last
4404Indicates the end of the address range occupied by code for the current
4405source line. This attribute is not writable.
4406@end defvar
4407
4408@defvar Symtab_and_line.line
4409Indicates the current line number for this object. This
4410attribute is not writable.
4411@end defvar
4412
4413A @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} object has the following methods:
4414
4415@defun Symtab_and_line.is_valid ()
4416Returns @code{True} if the @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} object is valid,
4417@code{False} if not. A @code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} object can become
4418invalid if the Symbol table and line object it refers to does not
4419exist in @value{GDBN} any longer. All other
4420@code{gdb.Symtab_and_line} methods will throw an exception if it is
4421invalid at the time the method is called.
4422@end defun
4423
4424A @code{gdb.Symtab} object has the following attributes:
4425
4426@defvar Symtab.filename
4427The symbol table's source filename. This attribute is not writable.
4428@end defvar
4429
4430@defvar Symtab.objfile
4431The symbol table's backing object file. @xref{Objfiles In Python}.
4432This attribute is not writable.
4433@end defvar
4434
2b4fd423
DE
4435@defvar Symtab.producer
4436The name and possibly version number of the program that
4437compiled the code in the symbol table.
4438The contents of this string is up to the compiler.
4439If no producer information is available then @code{None} is returned.
4440This attribute is not writable.
4441@end defvar
4442
329baa95
DE
4443A @code{gdb.Symtab} object has the following methods:
4444
4445@defun Symtab.is_valid ()
4446Returns @code{True} if the @code{gdb.Symtab} object is valid,
4447@code{False} if not. A @code{gdb.Symtab} object can become invalid if
4448the symbol table it refers to does not exist in @value{GDBN} any
4449longer. All other @code{gdb.Symtab} methods will throw an exception
4450if it is invalid at the time the method is called.
4451@end defun
4452
4453@defun Symtab.fullname ()
4454Return the symbol table's source absolute file name.
4455@end defun
4456
4457@defun Symtab.global_block ()
4458Return the global block of the underlying symbol table.
4459@xref{Blocks In Python}.
4460@end defun
4461
4462@defun Symtab.static_block ()
4463Return the static block of the underlying symbol table.
4464@xref{Blocks In Python}.
4465@end defun
4466
4467@defun Symtab.linetable ()
4468Return the line table associated with the symbol table.
4469@xref{Line Tables In Python}.
4470@end defun
4471
4472@node Line Tables In Python
4473@subsubsection Manipulating line tables using Python
4474
4475@cindex line tables in python
4476@tindex gdb.LineTable
4477
4478Python code can request and inspect line table information from a
4479symbol table that is loaded in @value{GDBN}. A line table is a
4480mapping of source lines to their executable locations in memory. To
4481acquire the line table information for a particular symbol table, use
4482the @code{linetable} function (@pxref{Symbol Tables In Python}).
4483
4484A @code{gdb.LineTable} is iterable. The iterator returns
4485@code{LineTableEntry} objects that correspond to the source line and
4486address for each line table entry. @code{LineTableEntry} objects have
4487the following attributes:
4488
4489@defvar LineTableEntry.line
4490The source line number for this line table entry. This number
4491corresponds to the actual line of source. This attribute is not
4492writable.
4493@end defvar
4494
4495@defvar LineTableEntry.pc
4496The address that is associated with the line table entry where the
4497executable code for that source line resides in memory. This
4498attribute is not writable.
4499@end defvar
4500
4501As there can be multiple addresses for a single source line, you may
4502receive multiple @code{LineTableEntry} objects with matching
4503@code{line} attributes, but with different @code{pc} attributes. The
4504iterator is sorted in ascending @code{pc} order. Here is a small
4505example illustrating iterating over a line table.
4506
4507@smallexample
4508symtab = gdb.selected_frame().find_sal().symtab
4509linetable = symtab.linetable()
4510for line in linetable:
4511 print "Line: "+str(line.line)+" Address: "+hex(line.pc)
4512@end smallexample
4513
4514This will have the following output:
4515
4516@smallexample
4517Line: 33 Address: 0x4005c8L
4518Line: 37 Address: 0x4005caL
4519Line: 39 Address: 0x4005d2L
4520Line: 40 Address: 0x4005f8L
4521Line: 42 Address: 0x4005ffL
4522Line: 44 Address: 0x400608L
4523Line: 42 Address: 0x40060cL
4524Line: 45 Address: 0x400615L
4525@end smallexample
4526
4527In addition to being able to iterate over a @code{LineTable}, it also
4528has the following direct access methods:
4529
4530@defun LineTable.line (line)
4531Return a Python @code{Tuple} of @code{LineTableEntry} objects for any
697aa1b7
EZ
4532entries in the line table for the given @var{line}, which specifies
4533the source code line. If there are no entries for that source code
329baa95
DE
4534@var{line}, the Python @code{None} is returned.
4535@end defun
4536
4537@defun LineTable.has_line (line)
4538Return a Python @code{Boolean} indicating whether there is an entry in
4539the line table for this source line. Return @code{True} if an entry
4540is found, or @code{False} if not.
4541@end defun
4542
4543@defun LineTable.source_lines ()
4544Return a Python @code{List} of the source line numbers in the symbol
4545table. Only lines with executable code locations are returned. The
4546contents of the @code{List} will just be the source line entries
4547represented as Python @code{Long} values.
4548@end defun
4549
4550@node Breakpoints In Python
4551@subsubsection Manipulating breakpoints using Python
4552
4553@cindex breakpoints in python
4554@tindex gdb.Breakpoint
4555
4556Python code can manipulate breakpoints via the @code{gdb.Breakpoint}
4557class.
4558
4559@defun Breakpoint.__init__ (spec @r{[}, type @r{[}, wp_class @r{[},internal @r{[},temporary@r{]]]]})
697aa1b7
EZ
4560Create a new breakpoint according to @var{spec}, which is a string
4561naming the location of the breakpoint, or an expression that defines a
4562watchpoint. The contents can be any location recognized by the
4563@code{break} command, or in the case of a watchpoint, by the
4564@code{watch} command. The optional @var{type} denotes the breakpoint
4565to create from the types defined later in this chapter. This argument
4566can be either @code{gdb.BP_BREAKPOINT} or @code{gdb.BP_WATCHPOINT}; it
329baa95
DE
4567defaults to @code{gdb.BP_BREAKPOINT}. The optional @var{internal}
4568argument allows the breakpoint to become invisible to the user. The
4569breakpoint will neither be reported when created, nor will it be
4570listed in the output from @code{info breakpoints} (but will be listed
4571with the @code{maint info breakpoints} command). The optional
4572@var{temporary} argument makes the breakpoint a temporary breakpoint.
4573Temporary breakpoints are deleted after they have been hit. Any
4574further access to the Python breakpoint after it has been hit will
4575result in a runtime error (as that breakpoint has now been
4576automatically deleted). The optional @var{wp_class} argument defines
4577the class of watchpoint to create, if @var{type} is
4578@code{gdb.BP_WATCHPOINT}. If a watchpoint class is not provided, it
4579is assumed to be a @code{gdb.WP_WRITE} class.
4580@end defun
4581
cda75e70
TT
4582The available types are represented by constants defined in the @code{gdb}
4583module:
4584
4585@vtable @code
4586@vindex BP_BREAKPOINT
4587@item gdb.BP_BREAKPOINT
4588Normal code breakpoint.
4589
4590@vindex BP_WATCHPOINT
4591@item gdb.BP_WATCHPOINT
4592Watchpoint breakpoint.
4593
4594@vindex BP_HARDWARE_WATCHPOINT
4595@item gdb.BP_HARDWARE_WATCHPOINT
4596Hardware assisted watchpoint.
4597
4598@vindex BP_READ_WATCHPOINT
4599@item gdb.BP_READ_WATCHPOINT
4600Hardware assisted read watchpoint.
4601
4602@vindex BP_ACCESS_WATCHPOINT
4603@item gdb.BP_ACCESS_WATCHPOINT
4604Hardware assisted access watchpoint.
4605@end vtable
4606
4607The available watchpoint types represented by constants are defined in the
4608@code{gdb} module:
4609
4610@vtable @code
4611@vindex WP_READ
4612@item gdb.WP_READ
4613Read only watchpoint.
4614
4615@vindex WP_WRITE
4616@item gdb.WP_WRITE
4617Write only watchpoint.
4618
4619@vindex WP_ACCESS
4620@item gdb.WP_ACCESS
4621Read/Write watchpoint.
4622@end vtable
4623
329baa95
DE
4624@defun Breakpoint.stop (self)
4625The @code{gdb.Breakpoint} class can be sub-classed and, in
4626particular, you may choose to implement the @code{stop} method.
4627If this method is defined in a sub-class of @code{gdb.Breakpoint},
4628it will be called when the inferior reaches any location of a
4629breakpoint which instantiates that sub-class. If the method returns
4630@code{True}, the inferior will be stopped at the location of the
4631breakpoint, otherwise the inferior will continue.
4632
4633If there are multiple breakpoints at the same location with a
4634@code{stop} method, each one will be called regardless of the
4635return status of the previous. This ensures that all @code{stop}
4636methods have a chance to execute at that location. In this scenario
4637if one of the methods returns @code{True} but the others return
4638@code{False}, the inferior will still be stopped.
4639
4640You should not alter the execution state of the inferior (i.e.@:, step,
4641next, etc.), alter the current frame context (i.e.@:, change the current
4642active frame), or alter, add or delete any breakpoint. As a general
4643rule, you should not alter any data within @value{GDBN} or the inferior
4644at this time.
4645
4646Example @code{stop} implementation:
4647
4648@smallexample
4649class MyBreakpoint (gdb.Breakpoint):
4650 def stop (self):
4651 inf_val = gdb.parse_and_eval("foo")
4652 if inf_val == 3:
4653 return True
4654 return False
4655@end smallexample
4656@end defun
4657
329baa95
DE
4658@defun Breakpoint.is_valid ()
4659Return @code{True} if this @code{Breakpoint} object is valid,
4660@code{False} otherwise. A @code{Breakpoint} object can become invalid
4661if the user deletes the breakpoint. In this case, the object still
4662exists, but the underlying breakpoint does not. In the cases of
4663watchpoint scope, the watchpoint remains valid even if execution of the
4664inferior leaves the scope of that watchpoint.
4665@end defun
4666
fab3a15d 4667@defun Breakpoint.delete ()
329baa95
DE
4668Permanently deletes the @value{GDBN} breakpoint. This also
4669invalidates the Python @code{Breakpoint} object. Any further access
4670to this object's attributes or methods will raise an error.
4671@end defun
4672
4673@defvar Breakpoint.enabled
4674This attribute is @code{True} if the breakpoint is enabled, and
fab3a15d
SM
4675@code{False} otherwise. This attribute is writable. You can use it to enable
4676or disable the breakpoint.
329baa95
DE
4677@end defvar
4678
4679@defvar Breakpoint.silent
4680This attribute is @code{True} if the breakpoint is silent, and
4681@code{False} otherwise. This attribute is writable.
4682
4683Note that a breakpoint can also be silent if it has commands and the
4684first command is @code{silent}. This is not reported by the
4685@code{silent} attribute.
4686@end defvar
4687
93daf339
TT
4688@defvar Breakpoint.pending
4689This attribute is @code{True} if the breakpoint is pending, and
4690@code{False} otherwise. @xref{Set Breaks}. This attribute is
4691read-only.
4692@end defvar
4693
22a02324 4694@anchor{python_breakpoint_thread}
329baa95 4695@defvar Breakpoint.thread
5d5658a1
PA
4696If the breakpoint is thread-specific, this attribute holds the
4697thread's global id. If the breakpoint is not thread-specific, this
4698attribute is @code{None}. This attribute is writable.
329baa95
DE
4699@end defvar
4700
4701@defvar Breakpoint.task
4702If the breakpoint is Ada task-specific, this attribute holds the Ada task
4703id. If the breakpoint is not task-specific (or the underlying
4704language is not Ada), this attribute is @code{None}. This attribute
4705is writable.
4706@end defvar
4707
4708@defvar Breakpoint.ignore_count
4709This attribute holds the ignore count for the breakpoint, an integer.
4710This attribute is writable.
4711@end defvar
4712
4713@defvar Breakpoint.number
4714This attribute holds the breakpoint's number --- the identifier used by
4715the user to manipulate the breakpoint. This attribute is not writable.
4716@end defvar
4717
4718@defvar Breakpoint.type
4719This attribute holds the breakpoint's type --- the identifier used to
4720determine the actual breakpoint type or use-case. This attribute is not
4721writable.
4722@end defvar
4723
4724@defvar Breakpoint.visible
4725This attribute tells whether the breakpoint is visible to the user
4726when set, or when the @samp{info breakpoints} command is run. This
4727attribute is not writable.
4728@end defvar
4729
4730@defvar Breakpoint.temporary
4731This attribute indicates whether the breakpoint was created as a
4732temporary breakpoint. Temporary breakpoints are automatically deleted
4733after that breakpoint has been hit. Access to this attribute, and all
4734other attributes and functions other than the @code{is_valid}
4735function, will result in an error after the breakpoint has been hit
4736(as it has been automatically deleted). This attribute is not
4737writable.
4738@end defvar
4739
329baa95
DE
4740@defvar Breakpoint.hit_count
4741This attribute holds the hit count for the breakpoint, an integer.
4742This attribute is writable, but currently it can only be set to zero.
4743@end defvar
4744
4745@defvar Breakpoint.location
4746This attribute holds the location of the breakpoint, as specified by
4747the user. It is a string. If the breakpoint does not have a location
4748(that is, it is a watchpoint) the attribute's value is @code{None}. This
4749attribute is not writable.
4750@end defvar
4751
4752@defvar Breakpoint.expression
4753This attribute holds a breakpoint expression, as specified by
4754the user. It is a string. If the breakpoint does not have an
4755expression (the breakpoint is not a watchpoint) the attribute's value
4756is @code{None}. This attribute is not writable.
4757@end defvar
4758
4759@defvar Breakpoint.condition
4760This attribute holds the condition of the breakpoint, as specified by
4761the user. It is a string. If there is no condition, this attribute's
4762value is @code{None}. This attribute is writable.
4763@end defvar
4764
4765@defvar Breakpoint.commands
4766This attribute holds the commands attached to the breakpoint. If
4767there are commands, this attribute's value is a string holding all the
4768commands, separated by newlines. If there are no commands, this
4769attribute is @code{None}. This attribute is not writable.
4770@end defvar
4771
4772@node Finish Breakpoints in Python
4773@subsubsection Finish Breakpoints
4774
4775@cindex python finish breakpoints
4776@tindex gdb.FinishBreakpoint
4777
4778A finish breakpoint is a temporary breakpoint set at the return address of
4779a frame, based on the @code{finish} command. @code{gdb.FinishBreakpoint}
4780extends @code{gdb.Breakpoint}. The underlying breakpoint will be disabled
4781and deleted when the execution will run out of the breakpoint scope (i.e.@:
4782@code{Breakpoint.stop} or @code{FinishBreakpoint.out_of_scope} triggered).
4783Finish breakpoints are thread specific and must be create with the right
4784thread selected.
4785
4786@defun FinishBreakpoint.__init__ (@r{[}frame@r{]} @r{[}, internal@r{]})
4787Create a finish breakpoint at the return address of the @code{gdb.Frame}
4788object @var{frame}. If @var{frame} is not provided, this defaults to the
4789newest frame. The optional @var{internal} argument allows the breakpoint to
4790become invisible to the user. @xref{Breakpoints In Python}, for further
4791details about this argument.
4792@end defun
4793
4794@defun FinishBreakpoint.out_of_scope (self)
4795In some circumstances (e.g.@: @code{longjmp}, C@t{++} exceptions, @value{GDBN}
4796@code{return} command, @dots{}), a function may not properly terminate, and
4797thus never hit the finish breakpoint. When @value{GDBN} notices such a
4798situation, the @code{out_of_scope} callback will be triggered.
4799
4800You may want to sub-class @code{gdb.FinishBreakpoint} and override this
4801method:
4802
4803@smallexample
4804class MyFinishBreakpoint (gdb.FinishBreakpoint)
4805 def stop (self):
4806 print "normal finish"
4807 return True
4808
4809 def out_of_scope ():
4810 print "abnormal finish"
4811@end smallexample
4812@end defun
4813
4814@defvar FinishBreakpoint.return_value
4815When @value{GDBN} is stopped at a finish breakpoint and the frame
4816used to build the @code{gdb.FinishBreakpoint} object had debug symbols, this
4817attribute will contain a @code{gdb.Value} object corresponding to the return
4818value of the function. The value will be @code{None} if the function return
4819type is @code{void} or if the return value was not computable. This attribute
4820is not writable.
4821@end defvar
4822
4823@node Lazy Strings In Python
4824@subsubsection Python representation of lazy strings.
4825
4826@cindex lazy strings in python
4827@tindex gdb.LazyString
4828
4829A @dfn{lazy string} is a string whose contents is not retrieved or
4830encoded until it is needed.
4831
4832A @code{gdb.LazyString} is represented in @value{GDBN} as an
4833@code{address} that points to a region of memory, an @code{encoding}
4834that will be used to encode that region of memory, and a @code{length}
4835to delimit the region of memory that represents the string. The
4836difference between a @code{gdb.LazyString} and a string wrapped within
4837a @code{gdb.Value} is that a @code{gdb.LazyString} will be treated
4838differently by @value{GDBN} when printing. A @code{gdb.LazyString} is
4839retrieved and encoded during printing, while a @code{gdb.Value}
4840wrapping a string is immediately retrieved and encoded on creation.
4841
4842A @code{gdb.LazyString} object has the following functions:
4843
4844@defun LazyString.value ()
4845Convert the @code{gdb.LazyString} to a @code{gdb.Value}. This value
4846will point to the string in memory, but will lose all the delayed
4847retrieval, encoding and handling that @value{GDBN} applies to a
4848@code{gdb.LazyString}.
4849@end defun
4850
4851@defvar LazyString.address
4852This attribute holds the address of the string. This attribute is not
4853writable.
4854@end defvar
4855
4856@defvar LazyString.length
4857This attribute holds the length of the string in characters. If the
4858length is -1, then the string will be fetched and encoded up to the
4859first null of appropriate width. This attribute is not writable.
4860@end defvar
4861
4862@defvar LazyString.encoding
4863This attribute holds the encoding that will be applied to the string
4864when the string is printed by @value{GDBN}. If the encoding is not
4865set, or contains an empty string, then @value{GDBN} will select the
4866most appropriate encoding when the string is printed. This attribute
4867is not writable.
4868@end defvar
4869
4870@defvar LazyString.type
4871This attribute holds the type that is represented by the lazy string's
4872type. For a lazy string this will always be a pointer type. To
4873resolve this to the lazy string's character type, use the type's
4874@code{target} method. @xref{Types In Python}. This attribute is not
4875writable.
4876@end defvar
4877
4878@node Architectures In Python
4879@subsubsection Python representation of architectures
4880@cindex Python architectures
4881
4882@value{GDBN} uses architecture specific parameters and artifacts in a
4883number of its various computations. An architecture is represented
4884by an instance of the @code{gdb.Architecture} class.
4885
4886A @code{gdb.Architecture} class has the following methods:
4887
4888@defun Architecture.name ()
4889Return the name (string value) of the architecture.
4890@end defun
4891
4892@defun Architecture.disassemble (@var{start_pc} @r{[}, @var{end_pc} @r{[}, @var{count}@r{]]})
4893Return a list of disassembled instructions starting from the memory
4894address @var{start_pc}. The optional arguments @var{end_pc} and
4895@var{count} determine the number of instructions in the returned list.
4896If both the optional arguments @var{end_pc} and @var{count} are
4897specified, then a list of at most @var{count} disassembled instructions
4898whose start address falls in the closed memory address interval from
4899@var{start_pc} to @var{end_pc} are returned. If @var{end_pc} is not
4900specified, but @var{count} is specified, then @var{count} number of
4901instructions starting from the address @var{start_pc} are returned. If
4902@var{count} is not specified but @var{end_pc} is specified, then all
4903instructions whose start address falls in the closed memory address
4904interval from @var{start_pc} to @var{end_pc} are returned. If neither
4905@var{end_pc} nor @var{count} are specified, then a single instruction at
4906@var{start_pc} is returned. For all of these cases, each element of the
4907returned list is a Python @code{dict} with the following string keys:
4908
4909@table @code
4910
4911@item addr
4912The value corresponding to this key is a Python long integer capturing
4913the memory address of the instruction.
4914
4915@item asm
4916The value corresponding to this key is a string value which represents
4917the instruction with assembly language mnemonics. The assembly
4918language flavor used is the same as that specified by the current CLI
4919variable @code{disassembly-flavor}. @xref{Machine Code}.
4920
4921@item length
4922The value corresponding to this key is the length (integer value) of the
4923instruction in bytes.
4924
4925@end table
4926@end defun
4927
4928@node Python Auto-loading
4929@subsection Python Auto-loading
4930@cindex Python auto-loading
4931
4932When a new object file is read (for example, due to the @code{file}
4933command, or because the inferior has loaded a shared library),
4934@value{GDBN} will look for Python support scripts in several ways:
4935@file{@var{objfile}-gdb.py} and @code{.debug_gdb_scripts} section.
4936@xref{Auto-loading extensions}.
4937
4938The auto-loading feature is useful for supplying application-specific
4939debugging commands and scripts.
4940
4941Auto-loading can be enabled or disabled,
4942and the list of auto-loaded scripts can be printed.
4943
4944@table @code
4945@anchor{set auto-load python-scripts}
4946@kindex set auto-load python-scripts
4947@item set auto-load python-scripts [on|off]
4948Enable or disable the auto-loading of Python scripts.
4949
4950@anchor{show auto-load python-scripts}
4951@kindex show auto-load python-scripts
4952@item show auto-load python-scripts
4953Show whether auto-loading of Python scripts is enabled or disabled.
4954
4955@anchor{info auto-load python-scripts}
4956@kindex info auto-load python-scripts
4957@cindex print list of auto-loaded Python scripts
4958@item info auto-load python-scripts [@var{regexp}]
4959Print the list of all Python scripts that @value{GDBN} auto-loaded.
4960
4961Also printed is the list of Python scripts that were mentioned in
9f050062
DE
4962the @code{.debug_gdb_scripts} section and were either not found
4963(@pxref{dotdebug_gdb_scripts section}) or were not auto-loaded due to
4964@code{auto-load safe-path} rejection (@pxref{Auto-loading}).
329baa95
DE
4965This is useful because their names are not printed when @value{GDBN}
4966tries to load them and fails. There may be many of them, and printing
4967an error message for each one is problematic.
4968
4969If @var{regexp} is supplied only Python scripts with matching names are printed.
4970
4971Example:
4972
4973@smallexample
4974(gdb) info auto-load python-scripts
4975Loaded Script
4976Yes py-section-script.py
4977 full name: /tmp/py-section-script.py
4978No my-foo-pretty-printers.py
4979@end smallexample
4980@end table
4981
9f050062 4982When reading an auto-loaded file or script, @value{GDBN} sets the
329baa95
DE
4983@dfn{current objfile}. This is available via the @code{gdb.current_objfile}
4984function (@pxref{Objfiles In Python}). This can be useful for
4985registering objfile-specific pretty-printers and frame-filters.
4986
4987@node Python modules
4988@subsection Python modules
4989@cindex python modules
4990
4991@value{GDBN} comes with several modules to assist writing Python code.
4992
4993@menu
4994* gdb.printing:: Building and registering pretty-printers.
4995* gdb.types:: Utilities for working with types.
4996* gdb.prompt:: Utilities for prompt value substitution.
4997@end menu
4998
4999@node gdb.printing
5000@subsubsection gdb.printing
5001@cindex gdb.printing
5002
5003This module provides a collection of utilities for working with
5004pretty-printers.
5005
5006@table @code
5007@item PrettyPrinter (@var{name}, @var{subprinters}=None)
5008This class specifies the API that makes @samp{info pretty-printer},
5009@samp{enable pretty-printer} and @samp{disable pretty-printer} work.
5010Pretty-printers should generally inherit from this class.
5011
5012@item SubPrettyPrinter (@var{name})
5013For printers that handle multiple types, this class specifies the
5014corresponding API for the subprinters.
5015
5016@item RegexpCollectionPrettyPrinter (@var{name})
5017Utility class for handling multiple printers, all recognized via
5018regular expressions.
5019@xref{Writing a Pretty-Printer}, for an example.
5020
5021@item FlagEnumerationPrinter (@var{name})
5022A pretty-printer which handles printing of @code{enum} values. Unlike
5023@value{GDBN}'s built-in @code{enum} printing, this printer attempts to
5024work properly when there is some overlap between the enumeration
697aa1b7
EZ
5025constants. The argument @var{name} is the name of the printer and
5026also the name of the @code{enum} type to look up.
329baa95
DE
5027
5028@item register_pretty_printer (@var{obj}, @var{printer}, @var{replace}=False)
5029Register @var{printer} with the pretty-printer list of @var{obj}.
5030If @var{replace} is @code{True} then any existing copy of the printer
5031is replaced. Otherwise a @code{RuntimeError} exception is raised
5032if a printer with the same name already exists.
5033@end table
5034
5035@node gdb.types
5036@subsubsection gdb.types
5037@cindex gdb.types
5038
5039This module provides a collection of utilities for working with
5040@code{gdb.Type} objects.
5041
5042@table @code
5043@item get_basic_type (@var{type})
5044Return @var{type} with const and volatile qualifiers stripped,
5045and with typedefs and C@t{++} references converted to the underlying type.
5046
5047C@t{++} example:
5048
5049@smallexample
5050typedef const int const_int;
5051const_int foo (3);
5052const_int& foo_ref (foo);
5053int main () @{ return 0; @}
5054@end smallexample
5055
5056Then in gdb:
5057
5058@smallexample
5059(gdb) start
5060(gdb) python import gdb.types
5061(gdb) python foo_ref = gdb.parse_and_eval("foo_ref")
5062(gdb) python print gdb.types.get_basic_type(foo_ref.type)
5063int
5064@end smallexample
5065
5066@item has_field (@var{type}, @var{field})
5067Return @code{True} if @var{type}, assumed to be a type with fields
5068(e.g., a structure or union), has field @var{field}.
5069
5070@item make_enum_dict (@var{enum_type})
5071Return a Python @code{dictionary} type produced from @var{enum_type}.
5072
5073@item deep_items (@var{type})
5074Returns a Python iterator similar to the standard
5075@code{gdb.Type.iteritems} method, except that the iterator returned
5076by @code{deep_items} will recursively traverse anonymous struct or
5077union fields. For example:
5078
5079@smallexample
5080struct A
5081@{
5082 int a;
5083 union @{
5084 int b0;
5085 int b1;
5086 @};
5087@};
5088@end smallexample
5089
5090@noindent
5091Then in @value{GDBN}:
5092@smallexample
5093(@value{GDBP}) python import gdb.types
5094(@value{GDBP}) python struct_a = gdb.lookup_type("struct A")
5095(@value{GDBP}) python print struct_a.keys ()
5096@{['a', '']@}
5097(@value{GDBP}) python print [k for k,v in gdb.types.deep_items(struct_a)]
5098@{['a', 'b0', 'b1']@}
5099@end smallexample
5100
5101@item get_type_recognizers ()
5102Return a list of the enabled type recognizers for the current context.
5103This is called by @value{GDBN} during the type-printing process
5104(@pxref{Type Printing API}).
5105
5106@item apply_type_recognizers (recognizers, type_obj)
5107Apply the type recognizers, @var{recognizers}, to the type object
5108@var{type_obj}. If any recognizer returns a string, return that
5109string. Otherwise, return @code{None}. This is called by
5110@value{GDBN} during the type-printing process (@pxref{Type Printing
5111API}).
5112
5113@item register_type_printer (locus, printer)
697aa1b7
EZ
5114This is a convenience function to register a type printer
5115@var{printer}. The printer must implement the type printer protocol.
5116The @var{locus} argument is either a @code{gdb.Objfile}, in which case
5117the printer is registered with that objfile; a @code{gdb.Progspace},
5118in which case the printer is registered with that progspace; or
5119@code{None}, in which case the printer is registered globally.
329baa95
DE
5120
5121@item TypePrinter
5122This is a base class that implements the type printer protocol. Type
5123printers are encouraged, but not required, to derive from this class.
5124It defines a constructor:
5125
5126@defmethod TypePrinter __init__ (self, name)
5127Initialize the type printer with the given name. The new printer
5128starts in the enabled state.
5129@end defmethod
5130
5131@end table
5132
5133@node gdb.prompt
5134@subsubsection gdb.prompt
5135@cindex gdb.prompt
5136
5137This module provides a method for prompt value-substitution.
5138
5139@table @code
5140@item substitute_prompt (@var{string})
5141Return @var{string} with escape sequences substituted by values. Some
5142escape sequences take arguments. You can specify arguments inside
5143``@{@}'' immediately following the escape sequence.
5144
5145The escape sequences you can pass to this function are:
5146
5147@table @code
5148@item \\
5149Substitute a backslash.
5150@item \e
5151Substitute an ESC character.
5152@item \f
5153Substitute the selected frame; an argument names a frame parameter.
5154@item \n
5155Substitute a newline.
5156@item \p
5157Substitute a parameter's value; the argument names the parameter.
5158@item \r
5159Substitute a carriage return.
5160@item \t
5161Substitute the selected thread; an argument names a thread parameter.
5162@item \v
5163Substitute the version of GDB.
5164@item \w
5165Substitute the current working directory.
5166@item \[
5167Begin a sequence of non-printing characters. These sequences are
5168typically used with the ESC character, and are not counted in the string
5169length. Example: ``\[\e[0;34m\](gdb)\[\e[0m\]'' will return a
5170blue-colored ``(gdb)'' prompt where the length is five.
5171@item \]
5172End a sequence of non-printing characters.
5173@end table
5174
5175For example:
5176
5177@smallexample
5178substitute_prompt (``frame: \f,
5179 print arguments: \p@{print frame-arguments@}'')
5180@end smallexample
5181
5182@exdent will return the string:
5183
5184@smallexample
5185"frame: main, print arguments: scalars"
5186@end smallexample
5187@end table
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