gdb/
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / utils.c
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1/* General utility routines for GDB, the GNU debugger.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996,
4 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008,
5 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6
7 This file is part of GDB.
8
9 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
10 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
11 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
12 (at your option) any later version.
13
14 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
15 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
16 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
17 GNU General Public License for more details.
18
19 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
20 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
21
22#include "defs.h"
23#include "gdb_assert.h"
24#include <ctype.h>
25#include "gdb_string.h"
26#include "event-top.h"
27#include "exceptions.h"
28#include "gdbthread.h"
29#ifdef HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H
30#include <sys/resource.h>
31#endif /* HAVE_SYS_RESOURCE_H */
32
33#ifdef TUI
34#include "tui/tui.h" /* For tui_get_command_dimension. */
35#endif
36
37#ifdef __GO32__
38#include <pc.h>
39#endif
40
41/* SunOS's curses.h has a '#define reg register' in it. Thank you Sun. */
42#ifdef reg
43#undef reg
44#endif
45
46#include <signal.h>
47#include "gdbcmd.h"
48#include "serial.h"
49#include "bfd.h"
50#include "target.h"
51#include "demangle.h"
52#include "expression.h"
53#include "language.h"
54#include "charset.h"
55#include "annotate.h"
56#include "filenames.h"
57#include "symfile.h"
58#include "gdb_obstack.h"
59#include "gdbcore.h"
60#include "top.h"
61#include "main.h"
62
63#include "inferior.h" /* for signed_pointer_to_address */
64
65#include <sys/param.h> /* For MAXPATHLEN */
66
67#include "gdb_curses.h"
68
69#include "readline/readline.h"
70
71#include <sys/time.h>
72#include <time.h>
73
74#include "gdb_usleep.h"
75#include "interps.h"
76
77#if !HAVE_DECL_MALLOC
78extern PTR malloc (); /* ARI: PTR */
79#endif
80#if !HAVE_DECL_REALLOC
81extern PTR realloc (); /* ARI: PTR */
82#endif
83#if !HAVE_DECL_FREE
84extern void free ();
85#endif
86
87/* readline defines this. */
88#undef savestring
89
90void (*deprecated_error_begin_hook) (void);
91
92/* Prototypes for local functions */
93
94static void vfprintf_maybe_filtered (struct ui_file *, const char *,
95 va_list, int) ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (2, 0);
96
97static void fputs_maybe_filtered (const char *, struct ui_file *, int);
98
99static void do_my_cleanups (struct cleanup **, struct cleanup *);
100
101static void prompt_for_continue (void);
102
103static void set_screen_size (void);
104static void set_width (void);
105
106/* A flag indicating whether to timestamp debugging messages. */
107
108static int debug_timestamp = 0;
109
110/* Chain of cleanup actions established with make_cleanup,
111 to be executed if an error happens. */
112
113static struct cleanup *cleanup_chain; /* cleaned up after a failed command */
114static struct cleanup *final_cleanup_chain; /* cleaned up when gdb exits */
115
116/* Nonzero if we have job control. */
117
118int job_control;
119
120/* Nonzero means a quit has been requested. */
121
122int quit_flag;
123
124/* Nonzero means quit immediately if Control-C is typed now, rather
125 than waiting until QUIT is executed. Be careful in setting this;
126 code which executes with immediate_quit set has to be very careful
127 about being able to deal with being interrupted at any time. It is
128 almost always better to use QUIT; the only exception I can think of
129 is being able to quit out of a system call (using EINTR loses if
130 the SIGINT happens between the previous QUIT and the system call).
131 To immediately quit in the case in which a SIGINT happens between
132 the previous QUIT and setting immediate_quit (desirable anytime we
133 expect to block), call QUIT after setting immediate_quit. */
134
135int immediate_quit;
136
137/* Nonzero means that encoded C++/ObjC names should be printed out in their
138 C++/ObjC form rather than raw. */
139
140int demangle = 1;
141static void
142show_demangle (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
143 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
144{
145 fprintf_filtered (file, _("\
146Demangling of encoded C++/ObjC names when displaying symbols is %s.\n"),
147 value);
148}
149
150/* Nonzero means that encoded C++/ObjC names should be printed out in their
151 C++/ObjC form even in assembler language displays. If this is set, but
152 DEMANGLE is zero, names are printed raw, i.e. DEMANGLE controls. */
153
154int asm_demangle = 0;
155static void
156show_asm_demangle (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
157 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
158{
159 fprintf_filtered (file, _("\
160Demangling of C++/ObjC names in disassembly listings is %s.\n"),
161 value);
162}
163
164/* Nonzero means that strings with character values >0x7F should be printed
165 as octal escapes. Zero means just print the value (e.g. it's an
166 international character, and the terminal or window can cope.) */
167
168int sevenbit_strings = 0;
169static void
170show_sevenbit_strings (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
171 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
172{
173 fprintf_filtered (file, _("\
174Printing of 8-bit characters in strings as \\nnn is %s.\n"),
175 value);
176}
177
178/* String to be printed before error messages, if any. */
179
180char *error_pre_print;
181
182/* String to be printed before quit messages, if any. */
183
184char *quit_pre_print;
185
186/* String to be printed before warning messages, if any. */
187
188char *warning_pre_print = "\nwarning: ";
189
190int pagination_enabled = 1;
191static void
192show_pagination_enabled (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
193 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
194{
195 fprintf_filtered (file, _("State of pagination is %s.\n"), value);
196}
197
198\f
199
200/* Add a new cleanup to the cleanup_chain,
201 and return the previous chain pointer
202 to be passed later to do_cleanups or discard_cleanups.
203 Args are FUNCTION to clean up with, and ARG to pass to it. */
204
205struct cleanup *
206make_cleanup (make_cleanup_ftype *function, void *arg)
207{
208 return make_my_cleanup (&cleanup_chain, function, arg);
209}
210
211struct cleanup *
212make_cleanup_dtor (make_cleanup_ftype *function, void *arg,
213 void (*dtor) (void *))
214{
215 return make_my_cleanup2 (&cleanup_chain,
216 function, arg, dtor);
217}
218
219struct cleanup *
220make_final_cleanup (make_cleanup_ftype *function, void *arg)
221{
222 return make_my_cleanup (&final_cleanup_chain, function, arg);
223}
224
225static void
226do_freeargv (void *arg)
227{
228 freeargv ((char **) arg);
229}
230
231struct cleanup *
232make_cleanup_freeargv (char **arg)
233{
234 return make_my_cleanup (&cleanup_chain, do_freeargv, arg);
235}
236
237static void
238do_bfd_close_cleanup (void *arg)
239{
240 bfd_close (arg);
241}
242
243struct cleanup *
244make_cleanup_bfd_close (bfd *abfd)
245{
246 return make_cleanup (do_bfd_close_cleanup, abfd);
247}
248
249static void
250do_close_cleanup (void *arg)
251{
252 int *fd = arg;
253
254 close (*fd);
255}
256
257struct cleanup *
258make_cleanup_close (int fd)
259{
260 int *saved_fd = xmalloc (sizeof (fd));
261
262 *saved_fd = fd;
263 return make_cleanup_dtor (do_close_cleanup, saved_fd, xfree);
264}
265
266/* Helper function which does the work for make_cleanup_fclose. */
267
268static void
269do_fclose_cleanup (void *arg)
270{
271 FILE *file = arg;
272
273 fclose (file);
274}
275
276/* Return a new cleanup that closes FILE. */
277
278struct cleanup *
279make_cleanup_fclose (FILE *file)
280{
281 return make_cleanup (do_fclose_cleanup, file);
282}
283
284/* Helper function which does the work for make_cleanup_obstack_free. */
285
286static void
287do_obstack_free (void *arg)
288{
289 struct obstack *ob = arg;
290
291 obstack_free (ob, NULL);
292}
293
294/* Return a new cleanup that frees OBSTACK. */
295
296struct cleanup *
297make_cleanup_obstack_free (struct obstack *obstack)
298{
299 return make_cleanup (do_obstack_free, obstack);
300}
301
302static void
303do_ui_file_delete (void *arg)
304{
305 ui_file_delete (arg);
306}
307
308struct cleanup *
309make_cleanup_ui_file_delete (struct ui_file *arg)
310{
311 return make_my_cleanup (&cleanup_chain, do_ui_file_delete, arg);
312}
313
314static void
315do_free_section_addr_info (void *arg)
316{
317 free_section_addr_info (arg);
318}
319
320struct cleanup *
321make_cleanup_free_section_addr_info (struct section_addr_info *addrs)
322{
323 return make_my_cleanup (&cleanup_chain, do_free_section_addr_info, addrs);
324}
325
326struct restore_integer_closure
327{
328 int *variable;
329 int value;
330};
331
332static void
333restore_integer (void *p)
334{
335 struct restore_integer_closure *closure = p;
336
337 *(closure->variable) = closure->value;
338}
339
340/* Remember the current value of *VARIABLE and make it restored when the cleanup
341 is run. */
342struct cleanup *
343make_cleanup_restore_integer (int *variable)
344{
345 struct restore_integer_closure *c =
346 xmalloc (sizeof (struct restore_integer_closure));
347
348 c->variable = variable;
349 c->value = *variable;
350
351 return make_my_cleanup2 (&cleanup_chain, restore_integer, (void *)c,
352 xfree);
353}
354
355/* Helper for make_cleanup_unpush_target. */
356
357static void
358do_unpush_target (void *arg)
359{
360 struct target_ops *ops = arg;
361
362 unpush_target (ops);
363}
364
365/* Return a new cleanup that unpushes OPS. */
366
367struct cleanup *
368make_cleanup_unpush_target (struct target_ops *ops)
369{
370 return make_my_cleanup (&cleanup_chain, do_unpush_target, ops);
371}
372
373struct cleanup *
374make_my_cleanup2 (struct cleanup **pmy_chain, make_cleanup_ftype *function,
375 void *arg, void (*free_arg) (void *))
376{
377 struct cleanup *new
378 = (struct cleanup *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct cleanup));
379 struct cleanup *old_chain = *pmy_chain;
380
381 new->next = *pmy_chain;
382 new->function = function;
383 new->free_arg = free_arg;
384 new->arg = arg;
385 *pmy_chain = new;
386
387 return old_chain;
388}
389
390struct cleanup *
391make_my_cleanup (struct cleanup **pmy_chain, make_cleanup_ftype *function,
392 void *arg)
393{
394 return make_my_cleanup2 (pmy_chain, function, arg, NULL);
395}
396
397/* Discard cleanups and do the actions they describe
398 until we get back to the point OLD_CHAIN in the cleanup_chain. */
399
400void
401do_cleanups (struct cleanup *old_chain)
402{
403 do_my_cleanups (&cleanup_chain, old_chain);
404}
405
406void
407do_final_cleanups (struct cleanup *old_chain)
408{
409 do_my_cleanups (&final_cleanup_chain, old_chain);
410}
411
412static void
413do_my_cleanups (struct cleanup **pmy_chain,
414 struct cleanup *old_chain)
415{
416 struct cleanup *ptr;
417
418 while ((ptr = *pmy_chain) != old_chain)
419 {
420 *pmy_chain = ptr->next; /* Do this first incase recursion */
421 (*ptr->function) (ptr->arg);
422 if (ptr->free_arg)
423 (*ptr->free_arg) (ptr->arg);
424 xfree (ptr);
425 }
426}
427
428/* Discard cleanups, not doing the actions they describe,
429 until we get back to the point OLD_CHAIN in the cleanup_chain. */
430
431void
432discard_cleanups (struct cleanup *old_chain)
433{
434 discard_my_cleanups (&cleanup_chain, old_chain);
435}
436
437void
438discard_final_cleanups (struct cleanup *old_chain)
439{
440 discard_my_cleanups (&final_cleanup_chain, old_chain);
441}
442
443void
444discard_my_cleanups (struct cleanup **pmy_chain,
445 struct cleanup *old_chain)
446{
447 struct cleanup *ptr;
448
449 while ((ptr = *pmy_chain) != old_chain)
450 {
451 *pmy_chain = ptr->next;
452 if (ptr->free_arg)
453 (*ptr->free_arg) (ptr->arg);
454 xfree (ptr);
455 }
456}
457
458/* Set the cleanup_chain to 0, and return the old cleanup chain. */
459struct cleanup *
460save_cleanups (void)
461{
462 return save_my_cleanups (&cleanup_chain);
463}
464
465struct cleanup *
466save_final_cleanups (void)
467{
468 return save_my_cleanups (&final_cleanup_chain);
469}
470
471struct cleanup *
472save_my_cleanups (struct cleanup **pmy_chain)
473{
474 struct cleanup *old_chain = *pmy_chain;
475
476 *pmy_chain = 0;
477 return old_chain;
478}
479
480/* Restore the cleanup chain from a previously saved chain. */
481void
482restore_cleanups (struct cleanup *chain)
483{
484 restore_my_cleanups (&cleanup_chain, chain);
485}
486
487void
488restore_final_cleanups (struct cleanup *chain)
489{
490 restore_my_cleanups (&final_cleanup_chain, chain);
491}
492
493void
494restore_my_cleanups (struct cleanup **pmy_chain, struct cleanup *chain)
495{
496 *pmy_chain = chain;
497}
498
499/* This function is useful for cleanups.
500 Do
501
502 foo = xmalloc (...);
503 old_chain = make_cleanup (free_current_contents, &foo);
504
505 to arrange to free the object thus allocated. */
506
507void
508free_current_contents (void *ptr)
509{
510 void **location = ptr;
511
512 if (location == NULL)
513 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
514 _("free_current_contents: NULL pointer"));
515 if (*location != NULL)
516 {
517 xfree (*location);
518 *location = NULL;
519 }
520}
521
522/* Provide a known function that does nothing, to use as a base for
523 for a possibly long chain of cleanups. This is useful where we
524 use the cleanup chain for handling normal cleanups as well as dealing
525 with cleanups that need to be done as a result of a call to error().
526 In such cases, we may not be certain where the first cleanup is, unless
527 we have a do-nothing one to always use as the base. */
528
529void
530null_cleanup (void *arg)
531{
532}
533
534/* If nonzero, display time usage both at startup and for each command. */
535
536static int display_time;
537
538/* If nonzero, display space usage both at startup and for each command. */
539
540static int display_space;
541
542/* Records a run time and space usage to be used as a base for
543 reporting elapsed time or change in space. In addition,
544 the msg_type field indicates whether the saved time is from the
545 beginning of GDB execution (0) or the beginning of an individual
546 command execution (1). */
547struct cmd_stats
548{
549 int msg_type;
550 long start_time;
551 long start_space;
552};
553
554/* Set whether to display time statistics to NEW_VALUE (non-zero
555 means true). */
556void
557set_display_time (int new_value)
558{
559 display_time = new_value;
560}
561
562/* Set whether to display space statistics to NEW_VALUE (non-zero
563 means true). */
564void
565set_display_space (int new_value)
566{
567 display_space = new_value;
568}
569
570/* As indicated by display_time and display_space, report GDB's elapsed time
571 and space usage from the base time and space provided in ARG, which
572 must be a pointer to a struct cmd_stat. This function is intended
573 to be called as a cleanup. */
574static void
575report_command_stats (void *arg)
576{
577 struct cmd_stats *start_stats = (struct cmd_stats *) arg;
578 int msg_type = start_stats->msg_type;
579
580 if (display_time)
581 {
582 long cmd_time = get_run_time () - start_stats->start_time;
583
584 printf_unfiltered (msg_type == 0
585 ? _("Startup time: %ld.%06ld\n")
586 : _("Command execution time: %ld.%06ld\n"),
587 cmd_time / 1000000, cmd_time % 1000000);
588 }
589
590 if (display_space)
591 {
592#ifdef HAVE_SBRK
593 char *lim = (char *) sbrk (0);
594
595 long space_now = lim - lim_at_start;
596 long space_diff = space_now - start_stats->start_space;
597
598 printf_unfiltered (msg_type == 0
599 ? _("Space used: %ld (%c%ld during startup)\n")
600 : _("Space used: %ld (%c%ld for this command)\n"),
601 space_now,
602 (space_diff >= 0 ? '+' : '-'),
603 space_diff);
604#endif
605 }
606}
607
608/* Create a cleanup that reports time and space used since its
609 creation. Precise messages depend on MSG_TYPE:
610 0: Initial time/space
611 1: Individual command time/space. */
612struct cleanup *
613make_command_stats_cleanup (int msg_type)
614{
615 struct cmd_stats *new_stat = XMALLOC (struct cmd_stats);
616
617#ifdef HAVE_SBRK
618 char *lim = (char *) sbrk (0);
619 new_stat->start_space = lim - lim_at_start;
620#endif
621
622 new_stat->msg_type = msg_type;
623 new_stat->start_time = get_run_time ();
624
625 return make_cleanup_dtor (report_command_stats, new_stat, xfree);
626}
627
628/* Continuations are implemented as cleanups internally. Inherit from
629 cleanups. */
630struct continuation
631{
632 struct cleanup base;
633};
634
635/* Add a continuation to the continuation list of THREAD. The new
636 continuation will be added at the front. */
637void
638add_continuation (struct thread_info *thread,
639 void (*continuation_hook) (void *), void *args,
640 void (*continuation_free_args) (void *))
641{
642 struct cleanup *as_cleanup = &thread->continuations->base;
643 make_cleanup_ftype *continuation_hook_fn = continuation_hook;
644
645 make_my_cleanup2 (&as_cleanup,
646 continuation_hook_fn,
647 args,
648 continuation_free_args);
649
650 thread->continuations = (struct continuation *) as_cleanup;
651}
652
653/* Add a continuation to the continuation list of INFERIOR. The new
654 continuation will be added at the front. */
655
656void
657add_inferior_continuation (void (*continuation_hook) (void *), void *args,
658 void (*continuation_free_args) (void *))
659{
660 struct inferior *inf = current_inferior ();
661 struct cleanup *as_cleanup = &inf->continuations->base;
662 make_cleanup_ftype *continuation_hook_fn = continuation_hook;
663
664 make_my_cleanup2 (&as_cleanup,
665 continuation_hook_fn,
666 args,
667 continuation_free_args);
668
669 inf->continuations = (struct continuation *) as_cleanup;
670}
671
672/* Do all continuations of the current inferior. */
673
674void
675do_all_inferior_continuations (void)
676{
677 struct cleanup *as_cleanup;
678 struct inferior *inf = current_inferior ();
679
680 if (inf->continuations == NULL)
681 return;
682
683 /* Copy the list header into another pointer, and set the global
684 list header to null, so that the global list can change as a side
685 effect of invoking the continuations and the processing of the
686 preexisting continuations will not be affected. */
687
688 as_cleanup = &inf->continuations->base;
689 inf->continuations = NULL;
690
691 /* Work now on the list we have set aside. */
692 do_my_cleanups (&as_cleanup, NULL);
693}
694
695/* Get rid of all the inferior-wide continuations of INF. */
696
697void
698discard_all_inferior_continuations (struct inferior *inf)
699{
700 struct cleanup *continuation_ptr = &inf->continuations->base;
701
702 discard_my_cleanups (&continuation_ptr, NULL);
703 inf->continuations = NULL;
704}
705
706static void
707restore_thread_cleanup (void *arg)
708{
709 ptid_t *ptid_p = arg;
710
711 switch_to_thread (*ptid_p);
712}
713
714/* Walk down the continuation list of PTID, and execute all the
715 continuations. There is a problem though. In some cases new
716 continuations may be added while we are in the middle of this loop.
717 If this happens they will be added in the front, and done before we
718 have a chance of exhausting those that were already there. We need
719 to then save the beginning of the list in a pointer and do the
720 continuations from there on, instead of using the global beginning
721 of list as our iteration pointer. */
722static void
723do_all_continuations_ptid (ptid_t ptid,
724 struct continuation **continuations_p)
725{
726 struct cleanup *old_chain;
727 ptid_t current_thread;
728 struct cleanup *as_cleanup;
729
730 if (*continuations_p == NULL)
731 return;
732
733 current_thread = inferior_ptid;
734
735 /* Restore selected thread on exit. Don't try to restore the frame
736 as well, because:
737
738 - When running continuations, the selected frame is always #0.
739
740 - The continuations may trigger symbol file loads, which may
741 change the frame layout (frame ids change), which would trigger
742 a warning if we used make_cleanup_restore_current_thread. */
743
744 old_chain = make_cleanup (restore_thread_cleanup, &current_thread);
745
746 /* Let the continuation see this thread as selected. */
747 switch_to_thread (ptid);
748
749 /* Copy the list header into another pointer, and set the global
750 list header to null, so that the global list can change as a side
751 effect of invoking the continuations and the processing of the
752 preexisting continuations will not be affected. */
753
754 as_cleanup = &(*continuations_p)->base;
755 *continuations_p = NULL;
756
757 /* Work now on the list we have set aside. */
758 do_my_cleanups (&as_cleanup, NULL);
759
760 do_cleanups (old_chain);
761}
762
763/* Callback for iterate over threads. */
764static int
765do_all_continuations_thread_callback (struct thread_info *thread, void *data)
766{
767 do_all_continuations_ptid (thread->ptid, &thread->continuations);
768 return 0;
769}
770
771/* Do all continuations of thread THREAD. */
772void
773do_all_continuations_thread (struct thread_info *thread)
774{
775 do_all_continuations_thread_callback (thread, NULL);
776}
777
778/* Do all continuations of all threads. */
779void
780do_all_continuations (void)
781{
782 iterate_over_threads (do_all_continuations_thread_callback, NULL);
783}
784
785/* Callback for iterate over threads. */
786static int
787discard_all_continuations_thread_callback (struct thread_info *thread,
788 void *data)
789{
790 struct cleanup *continuation_ptr = &thread->continuations->base;
791
792 discard_my_cleanups (&continuation_ptr, NULL);
793 thread->continuations = NULL;
794 return 0;
795}
796
797/* Get rid of all the continuations of THREAD. */
798void
799discard_all_continuations_thread (struct thread_info *thread)
800{
801 discard_all_continuations_thread_callback (thread, NULL);
802}
803
804/* Get rid of all the continuations of all threads. */
805void
806discard_all_continuations (void)
807{
808 iterate_over_threads (discard_all_continuations_thread_callback, NULL);
809}
810
811
812/* Add a continuation to the intermediate continuation list of THREAD.
813 The new continuation will be added at the front. */
814void
815add_intermediate_continuation (struct thread_info *thread,
816 void (*continuation_hook)
817 (void *), void *args,
818 void (*continuation_free_args) (void *))
819{
820 struct cleanup *as_cleanup = &thread->intermediate_continuations->base;
821 make_cleanup_ftype *continuation_hook_fn = continuation_hook;
822
823 make_my_cleanup2 (&as_cleanup,
824 continuation_hook_fn,
825 args,
826 continuation_free_args);
827
828 thread->intermediate_continuations = (struct continuation *) as_cleanup;
829}
830
831/* Walk down the cmd_continuation list, and execute all the
832 continuations. There is a problem though. In some cases new
833 continuations may be added while we are in the middle of this
834 loop. If this happens they will be added in the front, and done
835 before we have a chance of exhausting those that were already
836 there. We need to then save the beginning of the list in a pointer
837 and do the continuations from there on, instead of using the
838 global beginning of list as our iteration pointer.*/
839static int
840do_all_intermediate_continuations_thread_callback (struct thread_info *thread,
841 void *data)
842{
843 do_all_continuations_ptid (thread->ptid,
844 &thread->intermediate_continuations);
845 return 0;
846}
847
848/* Do all intermediate continuations of thread THREAD. */
849void
850do_all_intermediate_continuations_thread (struct thread_info *thread)
851{
852 do_all_intermediate_continuations_thread_callback (thread, NULL);
853}
854
855/* Do all intermediate continuations of all threads. */
856void
857do_all_intermediate_continuations (void)
858{
859 iterate_over_threads (do_all_intermediate_continuations_thread_callback, NULL);
860}
861
862/* Callback for iterate over threads. */
863static int
864discard_all_intermediate_continuations_thread_callback (struct thread_info *thread,
865 void *data)
866{
867 struct cleanup *continuation_ptr = &thread->intermediate_continuations->base;
868
869 discard_my_cleanups (&continuation_ptr, NULL);
870 thread->intermediate_continuations = NULL;
871 return 0;
872}
873
874/* Get rid of all the intermediate continuations of THREAD. */
875void
876discard_all_intermediate_continuations_thread (struct thread_info *thread)
877{
878 discard_all_intermediate_continuations_thread_callback (thread, NULL);
879}
880
881/* Get rid of all the intermediate continuations of all threads. */
882void
883discard_all_intermediate_continuations (void)
884{
885 iterate_over_threads (discard_all_intermediate_continuations_thread_callback, NULL);
886}
887\f
888
889
890/* Print a warning message. The first argument STRING is the warning
891 message, used as an fprintf format string, the second is the
892 va_list of arguments for that string. A warning is unfiltered (not
893 paginated) so that the user does not need to page through each
894 screen full of warnings when there are lots of them. */
895
896void
897vwarning (const char *string, va_list args)
898{
899 if (deprecated_warning_hook)
900 (*deprecated_warning_hook) (string, args);
901 else
902 {
903 target_terminal_ours ();
904 wrap_here (""); /* Force out any buffered output */
905 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
906 if (warning_pre_print)
907 fputs_unfiltered (warning_pre_print, gdb_stderr);
908 vfprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, string, args);
909 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "\n");
910 va_end (args);
911 }
912}
913
914/* Print a warning message.
915 The first argument STRING is the warning message, used as a fprintf string,
916 and the remaining args are passed as arguments to it.
917 The primary difference between warnings and errors is that a warning
918 does not force the return to command level. */
919
920void
921warning (const char *string, ...)
922{
923 va_list args;
924
925 va_start (args, string);
926 vwarning (string, args);
927 va_end (args);
928}
929
930/* Print an error message and return to command level.
931 The first argument STRING is the error message, used as a fprintf string,
932 and the remaining args are passed as arguments to it. */
933
934void
935verror (const char *string, va_list args)
936{
937 throw_verror (GENERIC_ERROR, string, args);
938}
939
940void
941error (const char *string, ...)
942{
943 va_list args;
944
945 va_start (args, string);
946 throw_verror (GENERIC_ERROR, string, args);
947 va_end (args);
948}
949
950/* Print an error message and quit.
951 The first argument STRING is the error message, used as a fprintf string,
952 and the remaining args are passed as arguments to it. */
953
954void
955vfatal (const char *string, va_list args)
956{
957 throw_vfatal (string, args);
958}
959
960void
961fatal (const char *string, ...)
962{
963 va_list args;
964
965 va_start (args, string);
966 throw_vfatal (string, args);
967 va_end (args);
968}
969
970void
971error_stream (struct ui_file *stream)
972{
973 char *message = ui_file_xstrdup (stream, NULL);
974
975 make_cleanup (xfree, message);
976 error (("%s"), message);
977}
978
979/* Dump core trying to increase the core soft limit to hard limit first. */
980
981static void
982dump_core (void)
983{
984#ifdef HAVE_SETRLIMIT
985 struct rlimit rlim = { RLIM_INFINITY, RLIM_INFINITY };
986
987 setrlimit (RLIMIT_CORE, &rlim);
988#endif /* HAVE_SETRLIMIT */
989
990 abort (); /* NOTE: GDB has only three calls to abort(). */
991}
992
993/* Check whether GDB will be able to dump core using the dump_core function. */
994
995static int
996can_dump_core (const char *reason)
997{
998#ifdef HAVE_GETRLIMIT
999 struct rlimit rlim;
1000
1001 /* Be quiet and assume we can dump if an error is returned. */
1002 if (getrlimit (RLIMIT_CORE, &rlim) != 0)
1003 return 1;
1004
1005 if (rlim.rlim_max == 0)
1006 {
1007 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr,
1008 _("%s\nUnable to dump core, use `ulimit -c unlimited'"
1009 " before executing GDB next time.\n"), reason);
1010 return 0;
1011 }
1012#endif /* HAVE_GETRLIMIT */
1013
1014 return 1;
1015}
1016
1017/* Allow the user to configure the debugger behavior with respect to
1018 what to do when an internal problem is detected. */
1019
1020const char internal_problem_ask[] = "ask";
1021const char internal_problem_yes[] = "yes";
1022const char internal_problem_no[] = "no";
1023static const char *internal_problem_modes[] =
1024{
1025 internal_problem_ask,
1026 internal_problem_yes,
1027 internal_problem_no,
1028 NULL
1029};
1030
1031/* Print a message reporting an internal error/warning. Ask the user
1032 if they want to continue, dump core, or just exit. Return
1033 something to indicate a quit. */
1034
1035struct internal_problem
1036{
1037 const char *name;
1038 const char *should_quit;
1039 const char *should_dump_core;
1040};
1041
1042/* Report a problem, internal to GDB, to the user. Once the problem
1043 has been reported, and assuming GDB didn't quit, the caller can
1044 either allow execution to resume or throw an error. */
1045
1046static void ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (4, 0)
1047internal_vproblem (struct internal_problem *problem,
1048 const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
1049{
1050 static int dejavu;
1051 int quit_p;
1052 int dump_core_p;
1053 char *reason;
1054
1055 /* Don't allow infinite error/warning recursion. */
1056 {
1057 static char msg[] = "Recursive internal problem.\n";
1058
1059 switch (dejavu)
1060 {
1061 case 0:
1062 dejavu = 1;
1063 break;
1064 case 1:
1065 dejavu = 2;
1066 fputs_unfiltered (msg, gdb_stderr);
1067 abort (); /* NOTE: GDB has only three calls to abort(). */
1068 default:
1069 dejavu = 3;
1070 /* Newer GLIBC versions put the warn_unused_result attribute
1071 on write, but this is one of those rare cases where
1072 ignoring the return value is correct. Casting to (void)
1073 does not fix this problem. This is the solution suggested
1074 at http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=25509. */
1075 if (write (STDERR_FILENO, msg, sizeof (msg)) != sizeof (msg))
1076 abort (); /* NOTE: GDB has only three calls to abort(). */
1077 exit (1);
1078 }
1079 }
1080
1081 /* Try to get the message out and at the start of a new line. */
1082 target_terminal_ours ();
1083 begin_line ();
1084
1085 /* Create a string containing the full error/warning message. Need
1086 to call query with this full string, as otherwize the reason
1087 (error/warning) and question become separated. Format using a
1088 style similar to a compiler error message. Include extra detail
1089 so that the user knows that they are living on the edge. */
1090 {
1091 char *msg;
1092
1093 msg = xstrvprintf (fmt, ap);
1094 reason = xstrprintf ("\
1095%s:%d: %s: %s\n\
1096A problem internal to GDB has been detected,\n\
1097further debugging may prove unreliable.", file, line, problem->name, msg);
1098 xfree (msg);
1099 make_cleanup (xfree, reason);
1100 }
1101
1102 if (problem->should_quit == internal_problem_ask)
1103 {
1104 /* Default (yes/batch case) is to quit GDB. When in batch mode
1105 this lessens the likelihood of GDB going into an infinite
1106 loop. */
1107 if (caution == 0)
1108 {
1109 /* Emit the message and quit. */
1110 fputs_unfiltered (reason, gdb_stderr);
1111 fputs_unfiltered ("\n", gdb_stderr);
1112 quit_p = 1;
1113 }
1114 else
1115 quit_p = query (_("%s\nQuit this debugging session? "), reason);
1116 }
1117 else if (problem->should_quit == internal_problem_yes)
1118 quit_p = 1;
1119 else if (problem->should_quit == internal_problem_no)
1120 quit_p = 0;
1121 else
1122 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("bad switch"));
1123
1124 if (problem->should_dump_core == internal_problem_ask)
1125 {
1126 if (!can_dump_core (reason))
1127 dump_core_p = 0;
1128 else
1129 {
1130 /* Default (yes/batch case) is to dump core. This leaves a GDB
1131 `dropping' so that it is easier to see that something went
1132 wrong in GDB. */
1133 dump_core_p = query (_("%s\nCreate a core file of GDB? "), reason);
1134 }
1135 }
1136 else if (problem->should_dump_core == internal_problem_yes)
1137 dump_core_p = can_dump_core (reason);
1138 else if (problem->should_dump_core == internal_problem_no)
1139 dump_core_p = 0;
1140 else
1141 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("bad switch"));
1142
1143 if (quit_p)
1144 {
1145 if (dump_core_p)
1146 dump_core ();
1147 else
1148 exit (1);
1149 }
1150 else
1151 {
1152 if (dump_core_p)
1153 {
1154#ifdef HAVE_WORKING_FORK
1155 if (fork () == 0)
1156 dump_core ();
1157#endif
1158 }
1159 }
1160
1161 dejavu = 0;
1162}
1163
1164static struct internal_problem internal_error_problem = {
1165 "internal-error", internal_problem_ask, internal_problem_ask
1166};
1167
1168void
1169internal_verror (const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
1170{
1171 internal_vproblem (&internal_error_problem, file, line, fmt, ap);
1172 deprecated_throw_reason (RETURN_ERROR);
1173}
1174
1175void
1176internal_error (const char *file, int line, const char *string, ...)
1177{
1178 va_list ap;
1179
1180 va_start (ap, string);
1181 internal_verror (file, line, string, ap);
1182 va_end (ap);
1183}
1184
1185static struct internal_problem internal_warning_problem = {
1186 "internal-warning", internal_problem_ask, internal_problem_ask
1187};
1188
1189void
1190internal_vwarning (const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
1191{
1192 internal_vproblem (&internal_warning_problem, file, line, fmt, ap);
1193}
1194
1195void
1196internal_warning (const char *file, int line, const char *string, ...)
1197{
1198 va_list ap;
1199
1200 va_start (ap, string);
1201 internal_vwarning (file, line, string, ap);
1202 va_end (ap);
1203}
1204
1205/* Dummy functions to keep add_prefix_cmd happy. */
1206
1207static void
1208set_internal_problem_cmd (char *args, int from_tty)
1209{
1210}
1211
1212static void
1213show_internal_problem_cmd (char *args, int from_tty)
1214{
1215}
1216
1217/* When GDB reports an internal problem (error or warning) it gives
1218 the user the opportunity to quit GDB and/or create a core file of
1219 the current debug session. This function registers a few commands
1220 that make it possible to specify that GDB should always or never
1221 quit or create a core file, without asking. The commands look
1222 like:
1223
1224 maint set PROBLEM-NAME quit ask|yes|no
1225 maint show PROBLEM-NAME quit
1226 maint set PROBLEM-NAME corefile ask|yes|no
1227 maint show PROBLEM-NAME corefile
1228
1229 Where PROBLEM-NAME is currently "internal-error" or
1230 "internal-warning". */
1231
1232static void
1233add_internal_problem_command (struct internal_problem *problem)
1234{
1235 struct cmd_list_element **set_cmd_list;
1236 struct cmd_list_element **show_cmd_list;
1237 char *set_doc;
1238 char *show_doc;
1239
1240 set_cmd_list = xmalloc (sizeof (*set_cmd_list));
1241 show_cmd_list = xmalloc (sizeof (*set_cmd_list));
1242 *set_cmd_list = NULL;
1243 *show_cmd_list = NULL;
1244
1245 set_doc = xstrprintf (_("Configure what GDB does when %s is detected."),
1246 problem->name);
1247
1248 show_doc = xstrprintf (_("Show what GDB does when %s is detected."),
1249 problem->name);
1250
1251 add_prefix_cmd ((char*) problem->name,
1252 class_maintenance, set_internal_problem_cmd, set_doc,
1253 set_cmd_list,
1254 concat ("maintenance set ", problem->name, " ",
1255 (char *) NULL),
1256 0/*allow-unknown*/, &maintenance_set_cmdlist);
1257
1258 add_prefix_cmd ((char*) problem->name,
1259 class_maintenance, show_internal_problem_cmd, show_doc,
1260 show_cmd_list,
1261 concat ("maintenance show ", problem->name, " ",
1262 (char *) NULL),
1263 0/*allow-unknown*/, &maintenance_show_cmdlist);
1264
1265 set_doc = xstrprintf (_("\
1266Set whether GDB should quit when an %s is detected"),
1267 problem->name);
1268 show_doc = xstrprintf (_("\
1269Show whether GDB will quit when an %s is detected"),
1270 problem->name);
1271 add_setshow_enum_cmd ("quit", class_maintenance,
1272 internal_problem_modes,
1273 &problem->should_quit,
1274 set_doc,
1275 show_doc,
1276 NULL, /* help_doc */
1277 NULL, /* setfunc */
1278 NULL, /* showfunc */
1279 set_cmd_list,
1280 show_cmd_list);
1281
1282 xfree (set_doc);
1283 xfree (show_doc);
1284
1285 set_doc = xstrprintf (_("\
1286Set whether GDB should create a core file of GDB when %s is detected"),
1287 problem->name);
1288 show_doc = xstrprintf (_("\
1289Show whether GDB will create a core file of GDB when %s is detected"),
1290 problem->name);
1291 add_setshow_enum_cmd ("corefile", class_maintenance,
1292 internal_problem_modes,
1293 &problem->should_dump_core,
1294 set_doc,
1295 show_doc,
1296 NULL, /* help_doc */
1297 NULL, /* setfunc */
1298 NULL, /* showfunc */
1299 set_cmd_list,
1300 show_cmd_list);
1301
1302 xfree (set_doc);
1303 xfree (show_doc);
1304}
1305
1306/* Print the system error message for errno, and also mention STRING
1307 as the file name for which the error was encountered.
1308 Then return to command level. */
1309
1310void
1311perror_with_name (const char *string)
1312{
1313 char *err;
1314 char *combined;
1315
1316 err = safe_strerror (errno);
1317 combined = (char *) alloca (strlen (err) + strlen (string) + 3);
1318 strcpy (combined, string);
1319 strcat (combined, ": ");
1320 strcat (combined, err);
1321
1322 /* I understand setting these is a matter of taste. Still, some people
1323 may clear errno but not know about bfd_error. Doing this here is not
1324 unreasonable. */
1325 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_no_error);
1326 errno = 0;
1327
1328 error (_("%s."), combined);
1329}
1330
1331/* Print the system error message for ERRCODE, and also mention STRING
1332 as the file name for which the error was encountered. */
1333
1334void
1335print_sys_errmsg (const char *string, int errcode)
1336{
1337 char *err;
1338 char *combined;
1339
1340 err = safe_strerror (errcode);
1341 combined = (char *) alloca (strlen (err) + strlen (string) + 3);
1342 strcpy (combined, string);
1343 strcat (combined, ": ");
1344 strcat (combined, err);
1345
1346 /* We want anything which was printed on stdout to come out first, before
1347 this message. */
1348 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
1349 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "%s.\n", combined);
1350}
1351
1352/* Control C eventually causes this to be called, at a convenient time. */
1353
1354void
1355quit (void)
1356{
1357#ifdef __MSDOS__
1358 /* No steenking SIGINT will ever be coming our way when the
1359 program is resumed. Don't lie. */
1360 fatal ("Quit");
1361#else
1362 if (job_control
1363 /* If there is no terminal switching for this target, then we can't
1364 possibly get screwed by the lack of job control. */
1365 || current_target.to_terminal_ours == NULL)
1366 fatal ("Quit");
1367 else
1368 fatal ("Quit (expect signal SIGINT when the program is resumed)");
1369#endif
1370}
1371
1372\f
1373/* Called when a memory allocation fails, with the number of bytes of
1374 memory requested in SIZE. */
1375
1376void
1377nomem (long size)
1378{
1379 if (size > 0)
1380 {
1381 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1382 _("virtual memory exhausted: can't allocate %ld bytes."),
1383 size);
1384 }
1385 else
1386 {
1387 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("virtual memory exhausted."));
1388 }
1389}
1390
1391/* The xmalloc() (libiberty.h) family of memory management routines.
1392
1393 These are like the ISO-C malloc() family except that they implement
1394 consistent semantics and guard against typical memory management
1395 problems. */
1396
1397/* NOTE: These are declared using PTR to ensure consistency with
1398 "libiberty.h". xfree() is GDB local. */
1399
1400PTR /* ARI: PTR */
1401xmalloc (size_t size)
1402{
1403 void *val;
1404
1405 /* See libiberty/xmalloc.c. This function need's to match that's
1406 semantics. It never returns NULL. */
1407 if (size == 0)
1408 size = 1;
1409
1410 val = malloc (size); /* ARI: malloc */
1411 if (val == NULL)
1412 nomem (size);
1413
1414 return (val);
1415}
1416
1417void *
1418xzalloc (size_t size)
1419{
1420 return xcalloc (1, size);
1421}
1422
1423PTR /* ARI: PTR */
1424xrealloc (PTR ptr, size_t size) /* ARI: PTR */
1425{
1426 void *val;
1427
1428 /* See libiberty/xmalloc.c. This function need's to match that's
1429 semantics. It never returns NULL. */
1430 if (size == 0)
1431 size = 1;
1432
1433 if (ptr != NULL)
1434 val = realloc (ptr, size); /* ARI: realloc */
1435 else
1436 val = malloc (size); /* ARI: malloc */
1437 if (val == NULL)
1438 nomem (size);
1439
1440 return (val);
1441}
1442
1443PTR /* ARI: PTR */
1444xcalloc (size_t number, size_t size)
1445{
1446 void *mem;
1447
1448 /* See libiberty/xmalloc.c. This function need's to match that's
1449 semantics. It never returns NULL. */
1450 if (number == 0 || size == 0)
1451 {
1452 number = 1;
1453 size = 1;
1454 }
1455
1456 mem = calloc (number, size); /* ARI: xcalloc */
1457 if (mem == NULL)
1458 nomem (number * size);
1459
1460 return mem;
1461}
1462
1463void
1464xfree (void *ptr)
1465{
1466 if (ptr != NULL)
1467 free (ptr); /* ARI: free */
1468}
1469\f
1470
1471/* Like asprintf/vasprintf but get an internal_error if the call
1472 fails. */
1473
1474char *
1475xstrprintf (const char *format, ...)
1476{
1477 char *ret;
1478 va_list args;
1479
1480 va_start (args, format);
1481 ret = xstrvprintf (format, args);
1482 va_end (args);
1483 return ret;
1484}
1485
1486void
1487xasprintf (char **ret, const char *format, ...)
1488{
1489 va_list args;
1490
1491 va_start (args, format);
1492 (*ret) = xstrvprintf (format, args);
1493 va_end (args);
1494}
1495
1496void
1497xvasprintf (char **ret, const char *format, va_list ap)
1498{
1499 (*ret) = xstrvprintf (format, ap);
1500}
1501
1502char *
1503xstrvprintf (const char *format, va_list ap)
1504{
1505 char *ret = NULL;
1506 int status = vasprintf (&ret, format, ap);
1507
1508 /* NULL is returned when there was a memory allocation problem, or
1509 any other error (for instance, a bad format string). A negative
1510 status (the printed length) with a non-NULL buffer should never
1511 happen, but just to be sure. */
1512 if (ret == NULL || status < 0)
1513 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("vasprintf call failed"));
1514 return ret;
1515}
1516
1517int
1518xsnprintf (char *str, size_t size, const char *format, ...)
1519{
1520 va_list args;
1521 int ret;
1522
1523 va_start (args, format);
1524 ret = vsnprintf (str, size, format, args);
1525 gdb_assert (ret < size);
1526 va_end (args);
1527
1528 return ret;
1529}
1530
1531/* My replacement for the read system call.
1532 Used like `read' but keeps going if `read' returns too soon. */
1533
1534int
1535myread (int desc, char *addr, int len)
1536{
1537 int val;
1538 int orglen = len;
1539
1540 while (len > 0)
1541 {
1542 val = read (desc, addr, len);
1543 if (val < 0)
1544 return val;
1545 if (val == 0)
1546 return orglen - len;
1547 len -= val;
1548 addr += val;
1549 }
1550 return orglen;
1551}
1552\f
1553/* Make a copy of the string at PTR with SIZE characters
1554 (and add a null character at the end in the copy).
1555 Uses malloc to get the space. Returns the address of the copy. */
1556
1557char *
1558savestring (const char *ptr, size_t size)
1559{
1560 char *p = (char *) xmalloc (size + 1);
1561
1562 memcpy (p, ptr, size);
1563 p[size] = 0;
1564 return p;
1565}
1566
1567void
1568print_spaces (int n, struct ui_file *file)
1569{
1570 fputs_unfiltered (n_spaces (n), file);
1571}
1572
1573/* Print a host address. */
1574
1575void
1576gdb_print_host_address (const void *addr, struct ui_file *stream)
1577{
1578 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%s", host_address_to_string (addr));
1579}
1580\f
1581
1582/* This function supports the query, nquery, and yquery functions.
1583 Ask user a y-or-n question and return 0 if answer is no, 1 if
1584 answer is yes, or default the answer to the specified default
1585 (for yquery or nquery). DEFCHAR may be 'y' or 'n' to provide a
1586 default answer, or '\0' for no default.
1587 CTLSTR is the control string and should end in "? ". It should
1588 not say how to answer, because we do that.
1589 ARGS are the arguments passed along with the CTLSTR argument to
1590 printf. */
1591
1592static int ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (1, 0)
1593defaulted_query (const char *ctlstr, const char defchar, va_list args)
1594{
1595 int answer;
1596 int ans2;
1597 int retval;
1598 int def_value;
1599 char def_answer, not_def_answer;
1600 char *y_string, *n_string, *question;
1601
1602 /* Set up according to which answer is the default. */
1603 if (defchar == '\0')
1604 {
1605 def_value = 1;
1606 def_answer = 'Y';
1607 not_def_answer = 'N';
1608 y_string = "y";
1609 n_string = "n";
1610 }
1611 else if (defchar == 'y')
1612 {
1613 def_value = 1;
1614 def_answer = 'Y';
1615 not_def_answer = 'N';
1616 y_string = "[y]";
1617 n_string = "n";
1618 }
1619 else
1620 {
1621 def_value = 0;
1622 def_answer = 'N';
1623 not_def_answer = 'Y';
1624 y_string = "y";
1625 n_string = "[n]";
1626 }
1627
1628 /* Automatically answer the default value if the user did not want
1629 prompts or the command was issued with the server prefix. */
1630 if (! caution || server_command)
1631 return def_value;
1632
1633 /* If input isn't coming from the user directly, just say what
1634 question we're asking, and then answer the default automatically. This
1635 way, important error messages don't get lost when talking to GDB
1636 over a pipe. */
1637 if (batch_flag || ! input_from_terminal_p ())
1638 {
1639 wrap_here ("");
1640 vfprintf_filtered (gdb_stdout, ctlstr, args);
1641
1642 printf_filtered (_("(%s or %s) [answered %c; input not from terminal]\n"),
1643 y_string, n_string, def_answer);
1644 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
1645
1646 return def_value;
1647 }
1648
1649 if (deprecated_query_hook)
1650 {
1651 return deprecated_query_hook (ctlstr, args);
1652 }
1653
1654 /* Format the question outside of the loop, to avoid reusing args. */
1655 question = xstrvprintf (ctlstr, args);
1656
1657 while (1)
1658 {
1659 wrap_here (""); /* Flush any buffered output */
1660 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
1661
1662 if (annotation_level > 1)
1663 printf_filtered (("\n\032\032pre-query\n"));
1664
1665 fputs_filtered (question, gdb_stdout);
1666 printf_filtered (_("(%s or %s) "), y_string, n_string);
1667
1668 if (annotation_level > 1)
1669 printf_filtered (("\n\032\032query\n"));
1670
1671 wrap_here ("");
1672 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
1673
1674 answer = fgetc (stdin);
1675
1676 /* We expect fgetc to block until a character is read. But
1677 this may not be the case if the terminal was opened with
1678 the NONBLOCK flag. In that case, if there is nothing to
1679 read on stdin, fgetc returns EOF, but also sets the error
1680 condition flag on stdin and errno to EAGAIN. With a true
1681 EOF, stdin's error condition flag is not set.
1682
1683 A situation where this behavior was observed is a pseudo
1684 terminal on AIX. */
1685 while (answer == EOF && ferror (stdin) && errno == EAGAIN)
1686 {
1687 /* Not a real EOF. Wait a little while and try again until
1688 we read something. */
1689 clearerr (stdin);
1690 gdb_usleep (10000);
1691 answer = fgetc (stdin);
1692 }
1693
1694 clearerr (stdin); /* in case of C-d */
1695 if (answer == EOF) /* C-d */
1696 {
1697 printf_filtered ("EOF [assumed %c]\n", def_answer);
1698 retval = def_value;
1699 break;
1700 }
1701 /* Eat rest of input line, to EOF or newline */
1702 if (answer != '\n')
1703 do
1704 {
1705 ans2 = fgetc (stdin);
1706 clearerr (stdin);
1707 }
1708 while (ans2 != EOF && ans2 != '\n' && ans2 != '\r');
1709
1710 if (answer >= 'a')
1711 answer -= 040;
1712 /* Check answer. For the non-default, the user must specify
1713 the non-default explicitly. */
1714 if (answer == not_def_answer)
1715 {
1716 retval = !def_value;
1717 break;
1718 }
1719 /* Otherwise, if a default was specified, the user may either
1720 specify the required input or have it default by entering
1721 nothing. */
1722 if (answer == def_answer
1723 || (defchar != '\0' &&
1724 (answer == '\n' || answer == '\r' || answer == EOF)))
1725 {
1726 retval = def_value;
1727 break;
1728 }
1729 /* Invalid entries are not defaulted and require another selection. */
1730 printf_filtered (_("Please answer %s or %s.\n"),
1731 y_string, n_string);
1732 }
1733
1734 xfree (question);
1735 if (annotation_level > 1)
1736 printf_filtered (("\n\032\032post-query\n"));
1737 return retval;
1738}
1739\f
1740
1741/* Ask user a y-or-n question and return 0 if answer is no, 1 if
1742 answer is yes, or 0 if answer is defaulted.
1743 Takes three args which are given to printf to print the question.
1744 The first, a control string, should end in "? ".
1745 It should not say how to answer, because we do that. */
1746
1747int
1748nquery (const char *ctlstr, ...)
1749{
1750 va_list args;
1751
1752 va_start (args, ctlstr);
1753 return defaulted_query (ctlstr, 'n', args);
1754 va_end (args);
1755}
1756
1757/* Ask user a y-or-n question and return 0 if answer is no, 1 if
1758 answer is yes, or 1 if answer is defaulted.
1759 Takes three args which are given to printf to print the question.
1760 The first, a control string, should end in "? ".
1761 It should not say how to answer, because we do that. */
1762
1763int
1764yquery (const char *ctlstr, ...)
1765{
1766 va_list args;
1767
1768 va_start (args, ctlstr);
1769 return defaulted_query (ctlstr, 'y', args);
1770 va_end (args);
1771}
1772
1773/* Ask user a y-or-n question and return 1 iff answer is yes.
1774 Takes three args which are given to printf to print the question.
1775 The first, a control string, should end in "? ".
1776 It should not say how to answer, because we do that. */
1777
1778int
1779query (const char *ctlstr, ...)
1780{
1781 va_list args;
1782
1783 va_start (args, ctlstr);
1784 return defaulted_query (ctlstr, '\0', args);
1785 va_end (args);
1786}
1787
1788/* A helper for parse_escape that converts a host character to a
1789 target character. C is the host character. If conversion is
1790 possible, then the target character is stored in *TARGET_C and the
1791 function returns 1. Otherwise, the function returns 0. */
1792
1793static int
1794host_char_to_target (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int c, int *target_c)
1795{
1796 struct obstack host_data;
1797 char the_char = c;
1798 struct cleanup *cleanups;
1799 int result = 0;
1800
1801 obstack_init (&host_data);
1802 cleanups = make_cleanup_obstack_free (&host_data);
1803
1804 convert_between_encodings (target_charset (gdbarch), host_charset (),
1805 &the_char, 1, 1, &host_data, translit_none);
1806
1807 if (obstack_object_size (&host_data) == 1)
1808 {
1809 result = 1;
1810 *target_c = *(char *) obstack_base (&host_data);
1811 }
1812
1813 do_cleanups (cleanups);
1814 return result;
1815}
1816
1817/* Parse a C escape sequence. STRING_PTR points to a variable
1818 containing a pointer to the string to parse. That pointer
1819 should point to the character after the \. That pointer
1820 is updated past the characters we use. The value of the
1821 escape sequence is returned.
1822
1823 A negative value means the sequence \ newline was seen,
1824 which is supposed to be equivalent to nothing at all.
1825
1826 If \ is followed by a null character, we return a negative
1827 value and leave the string pointer pointing at the null character.
1828
1829 If \ is followed by 000, we return 0 and leave the string pointer
1830 after the zeros. A value of 0 does not mean end of string. */
1831
1832int
1833parse_escape (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, char **string_ptr)
1834{
1835 int target_char = -2; /* initialize to avoid GCC warnings */
1836 int c = *(*string_ptr)++;
1837
1838 switch (c)
1839 {
1840 case '\n':
1841 return -2;
1842 case 0:
1843 (*string_ptr)--;
1844 return 0;
1845
1846 case '0':
1847 case '1':
1848 case '2':
1849 case '3':
1850 case '4':
1851 case '5':
1852 case '6':
1853 case '7':
1854 {
1855 int i = host_hex_value (c);
1856 int count = 0;
1857 while (++count < 3)
1858 {
1859 c = (**string_ptr);
1860 if (isdigit (c) && c != '8' && c != '9')
1861 {
1862 (*string_ptr)++;
1863 i *= 8;
1864 i += host_hex_value (c);
1865 }
1866 else
1867 {
1868 break;
1869 }
1870 }
1871 return i;
1872 }
1873
1874 case 'a':
1875 c = '\a';
1876 break;
1877 case 'b':
1878 c = '\b';
1879 break;
1880 case 'f':
1881 c = '\f';
1882 break;
1883 case 'n':
1884 c = '\n';
1885 break;
1886 case 'r':
1887 c = '\r';
1888 break;
1889 case 't':
1890 c = '\t';
1891 break;
1892 case 'v':
1893 c = '\v';
1894 break;
1895
1896 default:
1897 break;
1898 }
1899
1900 if (!host_char_to_target (gdbarch, c, &target_char))
1901 error
1902 ("The escape sequence `\%c' is equivalent to plain `%c', which"
1903 " has no equivalent\n" "in the `%s' character set.", c, c,
1904 target_charset (gdbarch));
1905 return target_char;
1906}
1907\f
1908/* Print the character C on STREAM as part of the contents of a literal
1909 string whose delimiter is QUOTER. Note that this routine should only
1910 be call for printing things which are independent of the language
1911 of the program being debugged. */
1912
1913static void
1914printchar (int c, void (*do_fputs) (const char *, struct ui_file *),
1915 void (*do_fprintf) (struct ui_file *, const char *, ...)
1916 ATTRIBUTE_FPTR_PRINTF_2, struct ui_file *stream, int quoter)
1917{
1918 c &= 0xFF; /* Avoid sign bit follies */
1919
1920 if (c < 0x20 || /* Low control chars */
1921 (c >= 0x7F && c < 0xA0) || /* DEL, High controls */
1922 (sevenbit_strings && c >= 0x80))
1923 { /* high order bit set */
1924 switch (c)
1925 {
1926 case '\n':
1927 do_fputs ("\\n", stream);
1928 break;
1929 case '\b':
1930 do_fputs ("\\b", stream);
1931 break;
1932 case '\t':
1933 do_fputs ("\\t", stream);
1934 break;
1935 case '\f':
1936 do_fputs ("\\f", stream);
1937 break;
1938 case '\r':
1939 do_fputs ("\\r", stream);
1940 break;
1941 case '\033':
1942 do_fputs ("\\e", stream);
1943 break;
1944 case '\007':
1945 do_fputs ("\\a", stream);
1946 break;
1947 default:
1948 do_fprintf (stream, "\\%.3o", (unsigned int) c);
1949 break;
1950 }
1951 }
1952 else
1953 {
1954 if (c == '\\' || c == quoter)
1955 do_fputs ("\\", stream);
1956 do_fprintf (stream, "%c", c);
1957 }
1958}
1959
1960/* Print the character C on STREAM as part of the contents of a
1961 literal string whose delimiter is QUOTER. Note that these routines
1962 should only be call for printing things which are independent of
1963 the language of the program being debugged. */
1964
1965void
1966fputstr_filtered (const char *str, int quoter, struct ui_file *stream)
1967{
1968 while (*str)
1969 printchar (*str++, fputs_filtered, fprintf_filtered, stream, quoter);
1970}
1971
1972void
1973fputstr_unfiltered (const char *str, int quoter, struct ui_file *stream)
1974{
1975 while (*str)
1976 printchar (*str++, fputs_unfiltered, fprintf_unfiltered, stream, quoter);
1977}
1978
1979void
1980fputstrn_filtered (const char *str, int n, int quoter,
1981 struct ui_file *stream)
1982{
1983 int i;
1984
1985 for (i = 0; i < n; i++)
1986 printchar (str[i], fputs_filtered, fprintf_filtered, stream, quoter);
1987}
1988
1989void
1990fputstrn_unfiltered (const char *str, int n, int quoter,
1991 struct ui_file *stream)
1992{
1993 int i;
1994
1995 for (i = 0; i < n; i++)
1996 printchar (str[i], fputs_unfiltered, fprintf_unfiltered, stream, quoter);
1997}
1998\f
1999
2000/* Number of lines per page or UINT_MAX if paging is disabled. */
2001static unsigned int lines_per_page;
2002static void
2003show_lines_per_page (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
2004 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
2005{
2006 fprintf_filtered (file, _("\
2007Number of lines gdb thinks are in a page is %s.\n"),
2008 value);
2009}
2010
2011/* Number of chars per line or UINT_MAX if line folding is disabled. */
2012static unsigned int chars_per_line;
2013static void
2014show_chars_per_line (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
2015 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
2016{
2017 fprintf_filtered (file, _("\
2018Number of characters gdb thinks are in a line is %s.\n"),
2019 value);
2020}
2021
2022/* Current count of lines printed on this page, chars on this line. */
2023static unsigned int lines_printed, chars_printed;
2024
2025/* Buffer and start column of buffered text, for doing smarter word-
2026 wrapping. When someone calls wrap_here(), we start buffering output
2027 that comes through fputs_filtered(). If we see a newline, we just
2028 spit it out and forget about the wrap_here(). If we see another
2029 wrap_here(), we spit it out and remember the newer one. If we see
2030 the end of the line, we spit out a newline, the indent, and then
2031 the buffered output. */
2032
2033/* Malloc'd buffer with chars_per_line+2 bytes. Contains characters which
2034 are waiting to be output (they have already been counted in chars_printed).
2035 When wrap_buffer[0] is null, the buffer is empty. */
2036static char *wrap_buffer;
2037
2038/* Pointer in wrap_buffer to the next character to fill. */
2039static char *wrap_pointer;
2040
2041/* String to indent by if the wrap occurs. Must not be NULL if wrap_column
2042 is non-zero. */
2043static char *wrap_indent;
2044
2045/* Column number on the screen where wrap_buffer begins, or 0 if wrapping
2046 is not in effect. */
2047static int wrap_column;
2048\f
2049
2050/* Inialize the number of lines per page and chars per line. */
2051
2052void
2053init_page_info (void)
2054{
2055#if defined(TUI)
2056 if (!tui_get_command_dimension (&chars_per_line, &lines_per_page))
2057#endif
2058 {
2059 int rows, cols;
2060
2061#if defined(__GO32__)
2062 rows = ScreenRows ();
2063 cols = ScreenCols ();
2064 lines_per_page = rows;
2065 chars_per_line = cols;
2066#else
2067 /* Make sure Readline has initialized its terminal settings. */
2068 rl_reset_terminal (NULL);
2069
2070 /* Get the screen size from Readline. */
2071 rl_get_screen_size (&rows, &cols);
2072 lines_per_page = rows;
2073 chars_per_line = cols;
2074
2075 /* Readline should have fetched the termcap entry for us. */
2076 if (tgetnum ("li") < 0 || getenv ("EMACS"))
2077 {
2078 /* The number of lines per page is not mentioned in the
2079 terminal description. This probably means that paging is
2080 not useful (e.g. emacs shell window), so disable paging. */
2081 lines_per_page = UINT_MAX;
2082 }
2083
2084 /* FIXME: Get rid of this junk. */
2085#if defined(SIGWINCH) && defined(SIGWINCH_HANDLER)
2086 SIGWINCH_HANDLER (SIGWINCH);
2087#endif
2088
2089 /* If the output is not a terminal, don't paginate it. */
2090 if (!ui_file_isatty (gdb_stdout))
2091 lines_per_page = UINT_MAX;
2092#endif
2093 }
2094
2095 set_screen_size ();
2096 set_width ();
2097}
2098
2099/* Set the screen size based on LINES_PER_PAGE and CHARS_PER_LINE. */
2100
2101static void
2102set_screen_size (void)
2103{
2104 int rows = lines_per_page;
2105 int cols = chars_per_line;
2106
2107 if (rows <= 0)
2108 rows = INT_MAX;
2109
2110 if (cols <= 0)
2111 cols = INT_MAX;
2112
2113 /* Update Readline's idea of the terminal size. */
2114 rl_set_screen_size (rows, cols);
2115}
2116
2117/* Reinitialize WRAP_BUFFER according to the current value of
2118 CHARS_PER_LINE. */
2119
2120static void
2121set_width (void)
2122{
2123 if (chars_per_line == 0)
2124 init_page_info ();
2125
2126 if (!wrap_buffer)
2127 {
2128 wrap_buffer = (char *) xmalloc (chars_per_line + 2);
2129 wrap_buffer[0] = '\0';
2130 }
2131 else
2132 wrap_buffer = (char *) xrealloc (wrap_buffer, chars_per_line + 2);
2133 wrap_pointer = wrap_buffer; /* Start it at the beginning. */
2134}
2135
2136static void
2137set_width_command (char *args, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c)
2138{
2139 set_screen_size ();
2140 set_width ();
2141}
2142
2143static void
2144set_height_command (char *args, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c)
2145{
2146 set_screen_size ();
2147}
2148
2149/* Wait, so the user can read what's on the screen. Prompt the user
2150 to continue by pressing RETURN. */
2151
2152static void
2153prompt_for_continue (void)
2154{
2155 char *ignore;
2156 char cont_prompt[120];
2157
2158 if (annotation_level > 1)
2159 printf_unfiltered (("\n\032\032pre-prompt-for-continue\n"));
2160
2161 strcpy (cont_prompt,
2162 "---Type <return> to continue, or q <return> to quit---");
2163 if (annotation_level > 1)
2164 strcat (cont_prompt, "\n\032\032prompt-for-continue\n");
2165
2166 /* We must do this *before* we call gdb_readline, else it will eventually
2167 call us -- thinking that we're trying to print beyond the end of the
2168 screen. */
2169 reinitialize_more_filter ();
2170
2171 immediate_quit++;
2172 /* On a real operating system, the user can quit with SIGINT.
2173 But not on GO32.
2174
2175 'q' is provided on all systems so users don't have to change habits
2176 from system to system, and because telling them what to do in
2177 the prompt is more user-friendly than expecting them to think of
2178 SIGINT. */
2179 /* Call readline, not gdb_readline, because GO32 readline handles control-C
2180 whereas control-C to gdb_readline will cause the user to get dumped
2181 out to DOS. */
2182 ignore = gdb_readline_wrapper (cont_prompt);
2183
2184 if (annotation_level > 1)
2185 printf_unfiltered (("\n\032\032post-prompt-for-continue\n"));
2186
2187 if (ignore)
2188 {
2189 char *p = ignore;
2190
2191 while (*p == ' ' || *p == '\t')
2192 ++p;
2193 if (p[0] == 'q')
2194 async_request_quit (0);
2195 xfree (ignore);
2196 }
2197 immediate_quit--;
2198
2199 /* Now we have to do this again, so that GDB will know that it doesn't
2200 need to save the ---Type <return>--- line at the top of the screen. */
2201 reinitialize_more_filter ();
2202
2203 dont_repeat (); /* Forget prev cmd -- CR won't repeat it. */
2204}
2205
2206/* Reinitialize filter; ie. tell it to reset to original values. */
2207
2208void
2209reinitialize_more_filter (void)
2210{
2211 lines_printed = 0;
2212 chars_printed = 0;
2213}
2214
2215/* Indicate that if the next sequence of characters overflows the line,
2216 a newline should be inserted here rather than when it hits the end.
2217 If INDENT is non-null, it is a string to be printed to indent the
2218 wrapped part on the next line. INDENT must remain accessible until
2219 the next call to wrap_here() or until a newline is printed through
2220 fputs_filtered().
2221
2222 If the line is already overfull, we immediately print a newline and
2223 the indentation, and disable further wrapping.
2224
2225 If we don't know the width of lines, but we know the page height,
2226 we must not wrap words, but should still keep track of newlines
2227 that were explicitly printed.
2228
2229 INDENT should not contain tabs, as that will mess up the char count
2230 on the next line. FIXME.
2231
2232 This routine is guaranteed to force out any output which has been
2233 squirreled away in the wrap_buffer, so wrap_here ((char *)0) can be
2234 used to force out output from the wrap_buffer. */
2235
2236void
2237wrap_here (char *indent)
2238{
2239 /* This should have been allocated, but be paranoid anyway. */
2240 if (!wrap_buffer)
2241 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("failed internal consistency check"));
2242
2243 if (wrap_buffer[0])
2244 {
2245 *wrap_pointer = '\0';
2246 fputs_unfiltered (wrap_buffer, gdb_stdout);
2247 }
2248 wrap_pointer = wrap_buffer;
2249 wrap_buffer[0] = '\0';
2250 if (chars_per_line == UINT_MAX) /* No line overflow checking */
2251 {
2252 wrap_column = 0;
2253 }
2254 else if (chars_printed >= chars_per_line)
2255 {
2256 puts_filtered ("\n");
2257 if (indent != NULL)
2258 puts_filtered (indent);
2259 wrap_column = 0;
2260 }
2261 else
2262 {
2263 wrap_column = chars_printed;
2264 if (indent == NULL)
2265 wrap_indent = "";
2266 else
2267 wrap_indent = indent;
2268 }
2269}
2270
2271/* Print input string to gdb_stdout, filtered, with wrap,
2272 arranging strings in columns of n chars. String can be
2273 right or left justified in the column. Never prints
2274 trailing spaces. String should never be longer than
2275 width. FIXME: this could be useful for the EXAMINE
2276 command, which currently doesn't tabulate very well */
2277
2278void
2279puts_filtered_tabular (char *string, int width, int right)
2280{
2281 int spaces = 0;
2282 int stringlen;
2283 char *spacebuf;
2284
2285 gdb_assert (chars_per_line > 0);
2286 if (chars_per_line == UINT_MAX)
2287 {
2288 fputs_filtered (string, gdb_stdout);
2289 fputs_filtered ("\n", gdb_stdout);
2290 return;
2291 }
2292
2293 if (((chars_printed - 1) / width + 2) * width >= chars_per_line)
2294 fputs_filtered ("\n", gdb_stdout);
2295
2296 if (width >= chars_per_line)
2297 width = chars_per_line - 1;
2298
2299 stringlen = strlen (string);
2300
2301 if (chars_printed > 0)
2302 spaces = width - (chars_printed - 1) % width - 1;
2303 if (right)
2304 spaces += width - stringlen;
2305
2306 spacebuf = alloca (spaces + 1);
2307 spacebuf[spaces] = '\0';
2308 while (spaces--)
2309 spacebuf[spaces] = ' ';
2310
2311 fputs_filtered (spacebuf, gdb_stdout);
2312 fputs_filtered (string, gdb_stdout);
2313}
2314
2315
2316/* Ensure that whatever gets printed next, using the filtered output
2317 commands, starts at the beginning of the line. I.E. if there is
2318 any pending output for the current line, flush it and start a new
2319 line. Otherwise do nothing. */
2320
2321void
2322begin_line (void)
2323{
2324 if (chars_printed > 0)
2325 {
2326 puts_filtered ("\n");
2327 }
2328}
2329
2330
2331/* Like fputs but if FILTER is true, pause after every screenful.
2332
2333 Regardless of FILTER can wrap at points other than the final
2334 character of a line.
2335
2336 Unlike fputs, fputs_maybe_filtered does not return a value.
2337 It is OK for LINEBUFFER to be NULL, in which case just don't print
2338 anything.
2339
2340 Note that a longjmp to top level may occur in this routine (only if
2341 FILTER is true) (since prompt_for_continue may do so) so this
2342 routine should not be called when cleanups are not in place. */
2343
2344static void
2345fputs_maybe_filtered (const char *linebuffer, struct ui_file *stream,
2346 int filter)
2347{
2348 const char *lineptr;
2349
2350 if (linebuffer == 0)
2351 return;
2352
2353 /* Don't do any filtering if it is disabled. */
2354 if (stream != gdb_stdout
2355 || !pagination_enabled
2356 || (lines_per_page == UINT_MAX && chars_per_line == UINT_MAX)
2357 || top_level_interpreter () == NULL
2358 || ui_out_is_mi_like_p (interp_ui_out (top_level_interpreter ())))
2359 {
2360 fputs_unfiltered (linebuffer, stream);
2361 return;
2362 }
2363
2364 /* Go through and output each character. Show line extension
2365 when this is necessary; prompt user for new page when this is
2366 necessary. */
2367
2368 lineptr = linebuffer;
2369 while (*lineptr)
2370 {
2371 /* Possible new page. */
2372 if (filter && (lines_printed >= lines_per_page - 1))
2373 prompt_for_continue ();
2374
2375 while (*lineptr && *lineptr != '\n')
2376 {
2377 /* Print a single line. */
2378 if (*lineptr == '\t')
2379 {
2380 if (wrap_column)
2381 *wrap_pointer++ = '\t';
2382 else
2383 fputc_unfiltered ('\t', stream);
2384 /* Shifting right by 3 produces the number of tab stops
2385 we have already passed, and then adding one and
2386 shifting left 3 advances to the next tab stop. */
2387 chars_printed = ((chars_printed >> 3) + 1) << 3;
2388 lineptr++;
2389 }
2390 else
2391 {
2392 if (wrap_column)
2393 *wrap_pointer++ = *lineptr;
2394 else
2395 fputc_unfiltered (*lineptr, stream);
2396 chars_printed++;
2397 lineptr++;
2398 }
2399
2400 if (chars_printed >= chars_per_line)
2401 {
2402 unsigned int save_chars = chars_printed;
2403
2404 chars_printed = 0;
2405 lines_printed++;
2406 /* If we aren't actually wrapping, don't output newline --
2407 if chars_per_line is right, we probably just overflowed
2408 anyway; if it's wrong, let us keep going. */
2409 if (wrap_column)
2410 fputc_unfiltered ('\n', stream);
2411
2412 /* Possible new page. */
2413 if (lines_printed >= lines_per_page - 1)
2414 prompt_for_continue ();
2415
2416 /* Now output indentation and wrapped string */
2417 if (wrap_column)
2418 {
2419 fputs_unfiltered (wrap_indent, stream);
2420 *wrap_pointer = '\0'; /* Null-terminate saved stuff */
2421 fputs_unfiltered (wrap_buffer, stream); /* and eject it */
2422 /* FIXME, this strlen is what prevents wrap_indent from
2423 containing tabs. However, if we recurse to print it
2424 and count its chars, we risk trouble if wrap_indent is
2425 longer than (the user settable) chars_per_line.
2426 Note also that this can set chars_printed > chars_per_line
2427 if we are printing a long string. */
2428 chars_printed = strlen (wrap_indent)
2429 + (save_chars - wrap_column);
2430 wrap_pointer = wrap_buffer; /* Reset buffer */
2431 wrap_buffer[0] = '\0';
2432 wrap_column = 0; /* And disable fancy wrap */
2433 }
2434 }
2435 }
2436
2437 if (*lineptr == '\n')
2438 {
2439 chars_printed = 0;
2440 wrap_here ((char *) 0); /* Spit out chars, cancel further wraps */
2441 lines_printed++;
2442 fputc_unfiltered ('\n', stream);
2443 lineptr++;
2444 }
2445 }
2446}
2447
2448void
2449fputs_filtered (const char *linebuffer, struct ui_file *stream)
2450{
2451 fputs_maybe_filtered (linebuffer, stream, 1);
2452}
2453
2454int
2455putchar_unfiltered (int c)
2456{
2457 char buf = c;
2458
2459 ui_file_write (gdb_stdout, &buf, 1);
2460 return c;
2461}
2462
2463/* Write character C to gdb_stdout using GDB's paging mechanism and return C.
2464 May return nonlocally. */
2465
2466int
2467putchar_filtered (int c)
2468{
2469 return fputc_filtered (c, gdb_stdout);
2470}
2471
2472int
2473fputc_unfiltered (int c, struct ui_file *stream)
2474{
2475 char buf = c;
2476
2477 ui_file_write (stream, &buf, 1);
2478 return c;
2479}
2480
2481int
2482fputc_filtered (int c, struct ui_file *stream)
2483{
2484 char buf[2];
2485
2486 buf[0] = c;
2487 buf[1] = 0;
2488 fputs_filtered (buf, stream);
2489 return c;
2490}
2491
2492/* puts_debug is like fputs_unfiltered, except it prints special
2493 characters in printable fashion. */
2494
2495void
2496puts_debug (char *prefix, char *string, char *suffix)
2497{
2498 int ch;
2499
2500 /* Print prefix and suffix after each line. */
2501 static int new_line = 1;
2502 static int return_p = 0;
2503 static char *prev_prefix = "";
2504 static char *prev_suffix = "";
2505
2506 if (*string == '\n')
2507 return_p = 0;
2508
2509 /* If the prefix is changing, print the previous suffix, a new line,
2510 and the new prefix. */
2511 if ((return_p || (strcmp (prev_prefix, prefix) != 0)) && !new_line)
2512 {
2513 fputs_unfiltered (prev_suffix, gdb_stdlog);
2514 fputs_unfiltered ("\n", gdb_stdlog);
2515 fputs_unfiltered (prefix, gdb_stdlog);
2516 }
2517
2518 /* Print prefix if we printed a newline during the previous call. */
2519 if (new_line)
2520 {
2521 new_line = 0;
2522 fputs_unfiltered (prefix, gdb_stdlog);
2523 }
2524
2525 prev_prefix = prefix;
2526 prev_suffix = suffix;
2527
2528 /* Output characters in a printable format. */
2529 while ((ch = *string++) != '\0')
2530 {
2531 switch (ch)
2532 {
2533 default:
2534 if (isprint (ch))
2535 fputc_unfiltered (ch, gdb_stdlog);
2536
2537 else
2538 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "\\x%02x", ch & 0xff);
2539 break;
2540
2541 case '\\':
2542 fputs_unfiltered ("\\\\", gdb_stdlog);
2543 break;
2544 case '\b':
2545 fputs_unfiltered ("\\b", gdb_stdlog);
2546 break;
2547 case '\f':
2548 fputs_unfiltered ("\\f", gdb_stdlog);
2549 break;
2550 case '\n':
2551 new_line = 1;
2552 fputs_unfiltered ("\\n", gdb_stdlog);
2553 break;
2554 case '\r':
2555 fputs_unfiltered ("\\r", gdb_stdlog);
2556 break;
2557 case '\t':
2558 fputs_unfiltered ("\\t", gdb_stdlog);
2559 break;
2560 case '\v':
2561 fputs_unfiltered ("\\v", gdb_stdlog);
2562 break;
2563 }
2564
2565 return_p = ch == '\r';
2566 }
2567
2568 /* Print suffix if we printed a newline. */
2569 if (new_line)
2570 {
2571 fputs_unfiltered (suffix, gdb_stdlog);
2572 fputs_unfiltered ("\n", gdb_stdlog);
2573 }
2574}
2575
2576
2577/* Print a variable number of ARGS using format FORMAT. If this
2578 information is going to put the amount written (since the last call
2579 to REINITIALIZE_MORE_FILTER or the last page break) over the page size,
2580 call prompt_for_continue to get the users permision to continue.
2581
2582 Unlike fprintf, this function does not return a value.
2583
2584 We implement three variants, vfprintf (takes a vararg list and stream),
2585 fprintf (takes a stream to write on), and printf (the usual).
2586
2587 Note also that a longjmp to top level may occur in this routine
2588 (since prompt_for_continue may do so) so this routine should not be
2589 called when cleanups are not in place. */
2590
2591static void
2592vfprintf_maybe_filtered (struct ui_file *stream, const char *format,
2593 va_list args, int filter)
2594{
2595 char *linebuffer;
2596 struct cleanup *old_cleanups;
2597
2598 linebuffer = xstrvprintf (format, args);
2599 old_cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, linebuffer);
2600 fputs_maybe_filtered (linebuffer, stream, filter);
2601 do_cleanups (old_cleanups);
2602}
2603
2604
2605void
2606vfprintf_filtered (struct ui_file *stream, const char *format, va_list args)
2607{
2608 vfprintf_maybe_filtered (stream, format, args, 1);
2609}
2610
2611void
2612vfprintf_unfiltered (struct ui_file *stream, const char *format, va_list args)
2613{
2614 char *linebuffer;
2615 struct cleanup *old_cleanups;
2616
2617 linebuffer = xstrvprintf (format, args);
2618 old_cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, linebuffer);
2619 if (debug_timestamp && stream == gdb_stdlog)
2620 {
2621 struct timeval tm;
2622 char *timestamp;
2623 int len, need_nl;
2624
2625 gettimeofday (&tm, NULL);
2626
2627 len = strlen (linebuffer);
2628 need_nl = (len > 0 && linebuffer[len - 1] != '\n');
2629
2630 timestamp = xstrprintf ("%ld:%ld %s%s",
2631 (long) tm.tv_sec, (long) tm.tv_usec,
2632 linebuffer,
2633 need_nl ? "\n": "");
2634 make_cleanup (xfree, timestamp);
2635 fputs_unfiltered (timestamp, stream);
2636 }
2637 else
2638 fputs_unfiltered (linebuffer, stream);
2639 do_cleanups (old_cleanups);
2640}
2641
2642void
2643vprintf_filtered (const char *format, va_list args)
2644{
2645 vfprintf_maybe_filtered (gdb_stdout, format, args, 1);
2646}
2647
2648void
2649vprintf_unfiltered (const char *format, va_list args)
2650{
2651 vfprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdout, format, args);
2652}
2653
2654void
2655fprintf_filtered (struct ui_file *stream, const char *format, ...)
2656{
2657 va_list args;
2658
2659 va_start (args, format);
2660 vfprintf_filtered (stream, format, args);
2661 va_end (args);
2662}
2663
2664void
2665fprintf_unfiltered (struct ui_file *stream, const char *format, ...)
2666{
2667 va_list args;
2668
2669 va_start (args, format);
2670 vfprintf_unfiltered (stream, format, args);
2671 va_end (args);
2672}
2673
2674/* Like fprintf_filtered, but prints its result indented.
2675 Called as fprintfi_filtered (spaces, stream, format, ...); */
2676
2677void
2678fprintfi_filtered (int spaces, struct ui_file *stream, const char *format,
2679 ...)
2680{
2681 va_list args;
2682
2683 va_start (args, format);
2684 print_spaces_filtered (spaces, stream);
2685
2686 vfprintf_filtered (stream, format, args);
2687 va_end (args);
2688}
2689
2690
2691void
2692printf_filtered (const char *format, ...)
2693{
2694 va_list args;
2695
2696 va_start (args, format);
2697 vfprintf_filtered (gdb_stdout, format, args);
2698 va_end (args);
2699}
2700
2701
2702void
2703printf_unfiltered (const char *format, ...)
2704{
2705 va_list args;
2706
2707 va_start (args, format);
2708 vfprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdout, format, args);
2709 va_end (args);
2710}
2711
2712/* Like printf_filtered, but prints it's result indented.
2713 Called as printfi_filtered (spaces, format, ...); */
2714
2715void
2716printfi_filtered (int spaces, const char *format, ...)
2717{
2718 va_list args;
2719
2720 va_start (args, format);
2721 print_spaces_filtered (spaces, gdb_stdout);
2722 vfprintf_filtered (gdb_stdout, format, args);
2723 va_end (args);
2724}
2725
2726/* Easy -- but watch out!
2727
2728 This routine is *not* a replacement for puts()! puts() appends a newline.
2729 This one doesn't, and had better not! */
2730
2731void
2732puts_filtered (const char *string)
2733{
2734 fputs_filtered (string, gdb_stdout);
2735}
2736
2737void
2738puts_unfiltered (const char *string)
2739{
2740 fputs_unfiltered (string, gdb_stdout);
2741}
2742
2743/* Return a pointer to N spaces and a null. The pointer is good
2744 until the next call to here. */
2745char *
2746n_spaces (int n)
2747{
2748 char *t;
2749 static char *spaces = 0;
2750 static int max_spaces = -1;
2751
2752 if (n > max_spaces)
2753 {
2754 if (spaces)
2755 xfree (spaces);
2756 spaces = (char *) xmalloc (n + 1);
2757 for (t = spaces + n; t != spaces;)
2758 *--t = ' ';
2759 spaces[n] = '\0';
2760 max_spaces = n;
2761 }
2762
2763 return spaces + max_spaces - n;
2764}
2765
2766/* Print N spaces. */
2767void
2768print_spaces_filtered (int n, struct ui_file *stream)
2769{
2770 fputs_filtered (n_spaces (n), stream);
2771}
2772\f
2773/* C++/ObjC demangler stuff. */
2774
2775/* fprintf_symbol_filtered attempts to demangle NAME, a symbol in language
2776 LANG, using demangling args ARG_MODE, and print it filtered to STREAM.
2777 If the name is not mangled, or the language for the name is unknown, or
2778 demangling is off, the name is printed in its "raw" form. */
2779
2780void
2781fprintf_symbol_filtered (struct ui_file *stream, char *name,
2782 enum language lang, int arg_mode)
2783{
2784 char *demangled;
2785
2786 if (name != NULL)
2787 {
2788 /* If user wants to see raw output, no problem. */
2789 if (!demangle)
2790 {
2791 fputs_filtered (name, stream);
2792 }
2793 else
2794 {
2795 demangled = language_demangle (language_def (lang), name, arg_mode);
2796 fputs_filtered (demangled ? demangled : name, stream);
2797 if (demangled != NULL)
2798 {
2799 xfree (demangled);
2800 }
2801 }
2802 }
2803}
2804
2805/* Do a strcmp() type operation on STRING1 and STRING2, ignoring any
2806 differences in whitespace. Returns 0 if they match, non-zero if they
2807 don't (slightly different than strcmp()'s range of return values).
2808
2809 As an extra hack, string1=="FOO(ARGS)" matches string2=="FOO".
2810 This "feature" is useful when searching for matching C++ function names
2811 (such as if the user types 'break FOO', where FOO is a mangled C++
2812 function). */
2813
2814int
2815strcmp_iw (const char *string1, const char *string2)
2816{
2817 while ((*string1 != '\0') && (*string2 != '\0'))
2818 {
2819 while (isspace (*string1))
2820 {
2821 string1++;
2822 }
2823 while (isspace (*string2))
2824 {
2825 string2++;
2826 }
2827 if (*string1 != *string2)
2828 {
2829 break;
2830 }
2831 if (*string1 != '\0')
2832 {
2833 string1++;
2834 string2++;
2835 }
2836 }
2837 return (*string1 != '\0' && *string1 != '(') || (*string2 != '\0');
2838}
2839
2840/* This is like strcmp except that it ignores whitespace and treats
2841 '(' as the first non-NULL character in terms of ordering. Like
2842 strcmp (and unlike strcmp_iw), it returns negative if STRING1 <
2843 STRING2, 0 if STRING2 = STRING2, and positive if STRING1 > STRING2
2844 according to that ordering.
2845
2846 If a list is sorted according to this function and if you want to
2847 find names in the list that match some fixed NAME according to
2848 strcmp_iw(LIST_ELT, NAME), then the place to start looking is right
2849 where this function would put NAME.
2850
2851 Here are some examples of why using strcmp to sort is a bad idea:
2852
2853 Whitespace example:
2854
2855 Say your partial symtab contains: "foo<char *>", "goo". Then, if
2856 we try to do a search for "foo<char*>", strcmp will locate this
2857 after "foo<char *>" and before "goo". Then lookup_partial_symbol
2858 will start looking at strings beginning with "goo", and will never
2859 see the correct match of "foo<char *>".
2860
2861 Parenthesis example:
2862
2863 In practice, this is less like to be an issue, but I'll give it a
2864 shot. Let's assume that '$' is a legitimate character to occur in
2865 symbols. (Which may well even be the case on some systems.) Then
2866 say that the partial symbol table contains "foo$" and "foo(int)".
2867 strcmp will put them in this order, since '$' < '('. Now, if the
2868 user searches for "foo", then strcmp will sort "foo" before "foo$".
2869 Then lookup_partial_symbol will notice that strcmp_iw("foo$",
2870 "foo") is false, so it won't proceed to the actual match of
2871 "foo(int)" with "foo". */
2872
2873int
2874strcmp_iw_ordered (const char *string1, const char *string2)
2875{
2876 while ((*string1 != '\0') && (*string2 != '\0'))
2877 {
2878 while (isspace (*string1))
2879 {
2880 string1++;
2881 }
2882 while (isspace (*string2))
2883 {
2884 string2++;
2885 }
2886 if (*string1 != *string2)
2887 {
2888 break;
2889 }
2890 if (*string1 != '\0')
2891 {
2892 string1++;
2893 string2++;
2894 }
2895 }
2896
2897 switch (*string1)
2898 {
2899 /* Characters are non-equal unless they're both '\0'; we want to
2900 make sure we get the comparison right according to our
2901 comparison in the cases where one of them is '\0' or '('. */
2902 case '\0':
2903 if (*string2 == '\0')
2904 return 0;
2905 else
2906 return -1;
2907 case '(':
2908 if (*string2 == '\0')
2909 return 1;
2910 else
2911 return -1;
2912 default:
2913 if (*string2 == '(')
2914 return 1;
2915 else
2916 return *string1 - *string2;
2917 }
2918}
2919
2920/* A simple comparison function with opposite semantics to strcmp. */
2921
2922int
2923streq (const char *lhs, const char *rhs)
2924{
2925 return !strcmp (lhs, rhs);
2926}
2927\f
2928
2929/*
2930 ** subset_compare()
2931 ** Answer whether string_to_compare is a full or partial match to
2932 ** template_string. The partial match must be in sequence starting
2933 ** at index 0.
2934 */
2935int
2936subset_compare (char *string_to_compare, char *template_string)
2937{
2938 int match;
2939
2940 if (template_string != (char *) NULL && string_to_compare != (char *) NULL
2941 && strlen (string_to_compare) <= strlen (template_string))
2942 match =
2943 (strncmp
2944 (template_string, string_to_compare, strlen (string_to_compare)) == 0);
2945 else
2946 match = 0;
2947 return match;
2948}
2949
2950static void
2951pagination_on_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
2952{
2953 pagination_enabled = 1;
2954}
2955
2956static void
2957pagination_off_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
2958{
2959 pagination_enabled = 0;
2960}
2961
2962static void
2963show_debug_timestamp (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
2964 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
2965{
2966 fprintf_filtered (file, _("Timestamping debugging messages is %s.\n"), value);
2967}
2968\f
2969
2970void
2971initialize_utils (void)
2972{
2973 add_setshow_uinteger_cmd ("width", class_support, &chars_per_line, _("\
2974Set number of characters gdb thinks are in a line."), _("\
2975Show number of characters gdb thinks are in a line."), NULL,
2976 set_width_command,
2977 show_chars_per_line,
2978 &setlist, &showlist);
2979
2980 add_setshow_uinteger_cmd ("height", class_support, &lines_per_page, _("\
2981Set number of lines gdb thinks are in a page."), _("\
2982Show number of lines gdb thinks are in a page."), NULL,
2983 set_height_command,
2984 show_lines_per_page,
2985 &setlist, &showlist);
2986
2987 init_page_info ();
2988
2989 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("demangle", class_support, &demangle, _("\
2990Set demangling of encoded C++/ObjC names when displaying symbols."), _("\
2991Show demangling of encoded C++/ObjC names when displaying symbols."), NULL,
2992 NULL,
2993 show_demangle,
2994 &setprintlist, &showprintlist);
2995
2996 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("pagination", class_support,
2997 &pagination_enabled, _("\
2998Set state of pagination."), _("\
2999Show state of pagination."), NULL,
3000 NULL,
3001 show_pagination_enabled,
3002 &setlist, &showlist);
3003
3004 if (xdb_commands)
3005 {
3006 add_com ("am", class_support, pagination_on_command,
3007 _("Enable pagination"));
3008 add_com ("sm", class_support, pagination_off_command,
3009 _("Disable pagination"));
3010 }
3011
3012 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("sevenbit-strings", class_support,
3013 &sevenbit_strings, _("\
3014Set printing of 8-bit characters in strings as \\nnn."), _("\
3015Show printing of 8-bit characters in strings as \\nnn."), NULL,
3016 NULL,
3017 show_sevenbit_strings,
3018 &setprintlist, &showprintlist);
3019
3020 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("asm-demangle", class_support, &asm_demangle, _("\
3021Set demangling of C++/ObjC names in disassembly listings."), _("\
3022Show demangling of C++/ObjC names in disassembly listings."), NULL,
3023 NULL,
3024 show_asm_demangle,
3025 &setprintlist, &showprintlist);
3026
3027 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("timestamp", class_maintenance,
3028 &debug_timestamp, _("\
3029Set timestamping of debugging messages."), _("\
3030Show timestamping of debugging messages."), _("\
3031When set, debugging messages will be marked with seconds and microseconds."),
3032 NULL,
3033 show_debug_timestamp,
3034 &setdebuglist, &showdebuglist);
3035}
3036
3037/* Machine specific function to handle SIGWINCH signal. */
3038
3039#ifdef SIGWINCH_HANDLER_BODY
3040SIGWINCH_HANDLER_BODY
3041#endif
3042/* print routines to handle variable size regs, etc. */
3043/* temporary storage using circular buffer */
3044#define NUMCELLS 16
3045#define CELLSIZE 50
3046static char *
3047get_cell (void)
3048{
3049 static char buf[NUMCELLS][CELLSIZE];
3050 static int cell = 0;
3051
3052 if (++cell >= NUMCELLS)
3053 cell = 0;
3054 return buf[cell];
3055}
3056
3057const char *
3058paddress (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR addr)
3059{
3060 /* Truncate address to the size of a target address, avoiding shifts
3061 larger or equal than the width of a CORE_ADDR. The local
3062 variable ADDR_BIT stops the compiler reporting a shift overflow
3063 when it won't occur. */
3064 /* NOTE: This assumes that the significant address information is
3065 kept in the least significant bits of ADDR - the upper bits were
3066 either zero or sign extended. Should gdbarch_address_to_pointer or
3067 some ADDRESS_TO_PRINTABLE() be used to do the conversion? */
3068
3069 int addr_bit = gdbarch_addr_bit (gdbarch);
3070
3071 if (addr_bit < (sizeof (CORE_ADDR) * HOST_CHAR_BIT))
3072 addr &= ((CORE_ADDR) 1 << addr_bit) - 1;
3073 return hex_string (addr);
3074}
3075
3076static char *
3077decimal2str (char *sign, ULONGEST addr, int width)
3078{
3079 /* Steal code from valprint.c:print_decimal(). Should this worry
3080 about the real size of addr as the above does? */
3081 unsigned long temp[3];
3082 char *str = get_cell ();
3083 int i = 0;
3084
3085 do
3086 {
3087 temp[i] = addr % (1000 * 1000 * 1000);
3088 addr /= (1000 * 1000 * 1000);
3089 i++;
3090 width -= 9;
3091 }
3092 while (addr != 0 && i < (sizeof (temp) / sizeof (temp[0])));
3093
3094 width += 9;
3095 if (width < 0)
3096 width = 0;
3097
3098 switch (i)
3099 {
3100 case 1:
3101 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "%s%0*lu", sign, width, temp[0]);
3102 break;
3103 case 2:
3104 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "%s%0*lu%09lu", sign, width,
3105 temp[1], temp[0]);
3106 break;
3107 case 3:
3108 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "%s%0*lu%09lu%09lu", sign, width,
3109 temp[2], temp[1], temp[0]);
3110 break;
3111 default:
3112 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
3113 _("failed internal consistency check"));
3114 }
3115
3116 return str;
3117}
3118
3119static char *
3120octal2str (ULONGEST addr, int width)
3121{
3122 unsigned long temp[3];
3123 char *str = get_cell ();
3124 int i = 0;
3125
3126 do
3127 {
3128 temp[i] = addr % (0100000 * 0100000);
3129 addr /= (0100000 * 0100000);
3130 i++;
3131 width -= 10;
3132 }
3133 while (addr != 0 && i < (sizeof (temp) / sizeof (temp[0])));
3134
3135 width += 10;
3136 if (width < 0)
3137 width = 0;
3138
3139 switch (i)
3140 {
3141 case 1:
3142 if (temp[0] == 0)
3143 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "%*o", width, 0);
3144 else
3145 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "0%0*lo", width, temp[0]);
3146 break;
3147 case 2:
3148 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "0%0*lo%010lo", width, temp[1], temp[0]);
3149 break;
3150 case 3:
3151 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "0%0*lo%010lo%010lo", width,
3152 temp[2], temp[1], temp[0]);
3153 break;
3154 default:
3155 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
3156 _("failed internal consistency check"));
3157 }
3158
3159 return str;
3160}
3161
3162char *
3163pulongest (ULONGEST u)
3164{
3165 return decimal2str ("", u, 0);
3166}
3167
3168char *
3169plongest (LONGEST l)
3170{
3171 if (l < 0)
3172 return decimal2str ("-", -l, 0);
3173 else
3174 return decimal2str ("", l, 0);
3175}
3176
3177/* Eliminate warning from compiler on 32-bit systems. */
3178static int thirty_two = 32;
3179
3180char *
3181phex (ULONGEST l, int sizeof_l)
3182{
3183 char *str;
3184
3185 switch (sizeof_l)
3186 {
3187 case 8:
3188 str = get_cell ();
3189 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "%08lx%08lx",
3190 (unsigned long) (l >> thirty_two),
3191 (unsigned long) (l & 0xffffffff));
3192 break;
3193 case 4:
3194 str = get_cell ();
3195 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "%08lx", (unsigned long) l);
3196 break;
3197 case 2:
3198 str = get_cell ();
3199 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "%04x", (unsigned short) (l & 0xffff));
3200 break;
3201 default:
3202 str = phex (l, sizeof (l));
3203 break;
3204 }
3205
3206 return str;
3207}
3208
3209char *
3210phex_nz (ULONGEST l, int sizeof_l)
3211{
3212 char *str;
3213
3214 switch (sizeof_l)
3215 {
3216 case 8:
3217 {
3218 unsigned long high = (unsigned long) (l >> thirty_two);
3219
3220 str = get_cell ();
3221 if (high == 0)
3222 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "%lx",
3223 (unsigned long) (l & 0xffffffff));
3224 else
3225 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "%lx%08lx", high,
3226 (unsigned long) (l & 0xffffffff));
3227 break;
3228 }
3229 case 4:
3230 str = get_cell ();
3231 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "%lx", (unsigned long) l);
3232 break;
3233 case 2:
3234 str = get_cell ();
3235 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "%x", (unsigned short) (l & 0xffff));
3236 break;
3237 default:
3238 str = phex_nz (l, sizeof (l));
3239 break;
3240 }
3241
3242 return str;
3243}
3244
3245/* Converts a LONGEST to a C-format hexadecimal literal and stores it
3246 in a static string. Returns a pointer to this string. */
3247char *
3248hex_string (LONGEST num)
3249{
3250 char *result = get_cell ();
3251
3252 xsnprintf (result, CELLSIZE, "0x%s", phex_nz (num, sizeof (num)));
3253 return result;
3254}
3255
3256/* Converts a LONGEST number to a C-format hexadecimal literal and
3257 stores it in a static string. Returns a pointer to this string
3258 that is valid until the next call. The number is padded on the
3259 left with 0s to at least WIDTH characters. */
3260char *
3261hex_string_custom (LONGEST num, int width)
3262{
3263 char *result = get_cell ();
3264 char *result_end = result + CELLSIZE - 1;
3265 const char *hex = phex_nz (num, sizeof (num));
3266 int hex_len = strlen (hex);
3267
3268 if (hex_len > width)
3269 width = hex_len;
3270 if (width + 2 >= CELLSIZE)
3271 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
3272 _("hex_string_custom: insufficient space to store result"));
3273
3274 strcpy (result_end - width - 2, "0x");
3275 memset (result_end - width, '0', width);
3276 strcpy (result_end - hex_len, hex);
3277 return result_end - width - 2;
3278}
3279
3280/* Convert VAL to a numeral in the given radix. For
3281 * radix 10, IS_SIGNED may be true, indicating a signed quantity;
3282 * otherwise VAL is interpreted as unsigned. If WIDTH is supplied,
3283 * it is the minimum width (0-padded if needed). USE_C_FORMAT means
3284 * to use C format in all cases. If it is false, then 'x'
3285 * and 'o' formats do not include a prefix (0x or leading 0). */
3286
3287char *
3288int_string (LONGEST val, int radix, int is_signed, int width,
3289 int use_c_format)
3290{
3291 switch (radix)
3292 {
3293 case 16:
3294 {
3295 char *result;
3296
3297 if (width == 0)
3298 result = hex_string (val);
3299 else
3300 result = hex_string_custom (val, width);
3301 if (! use_c_format)
3302 result += 2;
3303 return result;
3304 }
3305 case 10:
3306 {
3307 if (is_signed && val < 0)
3308 return decimal2str ("-", -val, width);
3309 else
3310 return decimal2str ("", val, width);
3311 }
3312 case 8:
3313 {
3314 char *result = octal2str (val, width);
3315
3316 if (use_c_format || val == 0)
3317 return result;
3318 else
3319 return result + 1;
3320 }
3321 default:
3322 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
3323 _("failed internal consistency check"));
3324 }
3325}
3326
3327/* Convert a CORE_ADDR into a string. */
3328const char *
3329core_addr_to_string (const CORE_ADDR addr)
3330{
3331 char *str = get_cell ();
3332
3333 strcpy (str, "0x");
3334 strcat (str, phex (addr, sizeof (addr)));
3335 return str;
3336}
3337
3338const char *
3339core_addr_to_string_nz (const CORE_ADDR addr)
3340{
3341 char *str = get_cell ();
3342
3343 strcpy (str, "0x");
3344 strcat (str, phex_nz (addr, sizeof (addr)));
3345 return str;
3346}
3347
3348/* Convert a string back into a CORE_ADDR. */
3349CORE_ADDR
3350string_to_core_addr (const char *my_string)
3351{
3352 CORE_ADDR addr = 0;
3353
3354 if (my_string[0] == '0' && tolower (my_string[1]) == 'x')
3355 {
3356 /* Assume that it is in hex. */
3357 int i;
3358
3359 for (i = 2; my_string[i] != '\0'; i++)
3360 {
3361 if (isdigit (my_string[i]))
3362 addr = (my_string[i] - '0') + (addr * 16);
3363 else if (isxdigit (my_string[i]))
3364 addr = (tolower (my_string[i]) - 'a' + 0xa) + (addr * 16);
3365 else
3366 error (_("invalid hex \"%s\""), my_string);
3367 }
3368 }
3369 else
3370 {
3371 /* Assume that it is in decimal. */
3372 int i;
3373
3374 for (i = 0; my_string[i] != '\0'; i++)
3375 {
3376 if (isdigit (my_string[i]))
3377 addr = (my_string[i] - '0') + (addr * 10);
3378 else
3379 error (_("invalid decimal \"%s\""), my_string);
3380 }
3381 }
3382
3383 return addr;
3384}
3385
3386const char *
3387host_address_to_string (const void *addr)
3388{
3389 char *str = get_cell ();
3390
3391 xsnprintf (str, CELLSIZE, "0x%s", phex_nz ((uintptr_t) addr, sizeof (addr)));
3392 return str;
3393}
3394
3395char *
3396gdb_realpath (const char *filename)
3397{
3398 /* Method 1: The system has a compile time upper bound on a filename
3399 path. Use that and realpath() to canonicalize the name. This is
3400 the most common case. Note that, if there isn't a compile time
3401 upper bound, you want to avoid realpath() at all costs. */
3402#if defined(HAVE_REALPATH)
3403 {
3404# if defined (PATH_MAX)
3405 char buf[PATH_MAX];
3406# define USE_REALPATH
3407# elif defined (MAXPATHLEN)
3408 char buf[MAXPATHLEN];
3409# define USE_REALPATH
3410# endif
3411# if defined (USE_REALPATH)
3412 const char *rp = realpath (filename, buf);
3413
3414 if (rp == NULL)
3415 rp = filename;
3416 return xstrdup (rp);
3417# endif
3418 }
3419#endif /* HAVE_REALPATH */
3420
3421 /* Method 2: The host system (i.e., GNU) has the function
3422 canonicalize_file_name() which malloc's a chunk of memory and
3423 returns that, use that. */
3424#if defined(HAVE_CANONICALIZE_FILE_NAME)
3425 {
3426 char *rp = canonicalize_file_name (filename);
3427
3428 if (rp == NULL)
3429 return xstrdup (filename);
3430 else
3431 return rp;
3432 }
3433#endif
3434
3435 /* FIXME: cagney/2002-11-13:
3436
3437 Method 2a: Use realpath() with a NULL buffer. Some systems, due
3438 to the problems described in in method 3, have modified their
3439 realpath() implementation so that it will allocate a buffer when
3440 NULL is passed in. Before this can be used, though, some sort of
3441 configure time test would need to be added. Otherwize the code
3442 will likely core dump. */
3443
3444 /* Method 3: Now we're getting desperate! The system doesn't have a
3445 compile time buffer size and no alternative function. Query the
3446 OS, using pathconf(), for the buffer limit. Care is needed
3447 though, some systems do not limit PATH_MAX (return -1 for
3448 pathconf()) making it impossible to pass a correctly sized buffer
3449 to realpath() (it could always overflow). On those systems, we
3450 skip this. */
3451#if defined (HAVE_REALPATH) && defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H) && defined(HAVE_ALLOCA)
3452 {
3453 /* Find out the max path size. */
3454 long path_max = pathconf ("/", _PC_PATH_MAX);
3455
3456 if (path_max > 0)
3457 {
3458 /* PATH_MAX is bounded. */
3459 char *buf = alloca (path_max);
3460 char *rp = realpath (filename, buf);
3461
3462 return xstrdup (rp ? rp : filename);
3463 }
3464 }
3465#endif
3466
3467 /* This system is a lost cause, just dup the buffer. */
3468 return xstrdup (filename);
3469}
3470
3471/* Return a copy of FILENAME, with its directory prefix canonicalized
3472 by gdb_realpath. */
3473
3474char *
3475xfullpath (const char *filename)
3476{
3477 const char *base_name = lbasename (filename);
3478 char *dir_name;
3479 char *real_path;
3480 char *result;
3481
3482 /* Extract the basename of filename, and return immediately
3483 a copy of filename if it does not contain any directory prefix. */
3484 if (base_name == filename)
3485 return xstrdup (filename);
3486
3487 dir_name = alloca ((size_t) (base_name - filename + 2));
3488 /* Allocate enough space to store the dir_name + plus one extra
3489 character sometimes needed under Windows (see below), and
3490 then the closing \000 character */
3491 strncpy (dir_name, filename, base_name - filename);
3492 dir_name[base_name - filename] = '\000';
3493
3494#ifdef HAVE_DOS_BASED_FILE_SYSTEM
3495 /* We need to be careful when filename is of the form 'd:foo', which
3496 is equivalent of d:./foo, which is totally different from d:/foo. */
3497 if (strlen (dir_name) == 2 && isalpha (dir_name[0]) && dir_name[1] == ':')
3498 {
3499 dir_name[2] = '.';
3500 dir_name[3] = '\000';
3501 }
3502#endif
3503
3504 /* Canonicalize the directory prefix, and build the resulting
3505 filename. If the dirname realpath already contains an ending
3506 directory separator, avoid doubling it. */
3507 real_path = gdb_realpath (dir_name);
3508 if (IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (real_path[strlen (real_path) - 1]))
3509 result = concat (real_path, base_name, (char *) NULL);
3510 else
3511 result = concat (real_path, SLASH_STRING, base_name, (char *) NULL);
3512
3513 xfree (real_path);
3514 return result;
3515}
3516
3517
3518/* This is the 32-bit CRC function used by the GNU separate debug
3519 facility. An executable may contain a section named
3520 .gnu_debuglink, which holds the name of a separate executable file
3521 containing its debug info, and a checksum of that file's contents,
3522 computed using this function. */
3523unsigned long
3524gnu_debuglink_crc32 (unsigned long crc, unsigned char *buf, size_t len)
3525{
3526 static const unsigned int crc32_table[256] = {
3527 0x00000000, 0x77073096, 0xee0e612c, 0x990951ba, 0x076dc419,
3528 0x706af48f, 0xe963a535, 0x9e6495a3, 0x0edb8832, 0x79dcb8a4,
3529 0xe0d5e91e, 0x97d2d988, 0x09b64c2b, 0x7eb17cbd, 0xe7b82d07,
3530 0x90bf1d91, 0x1db71064, 0x6ab020f2, 0xf3b97148, 0x84be41de,
3531 0x1adad47d, 0x6ddde4eb, 0xf4d4b551, 0x83d385c7, 0x136c9856,
3532 0x646ba8c0, 0xfd62f97a, 0x8a65c9ec, 0x14015c4f, 0x63066cd9,
3533 0xfa0f3d63, 0x8d080df5, 0x3b6e20c8, 0x4c69105e, 0xd56041e4,
3534 0xa2677172, 0x3c03e4d1, 0x4b04d447, 0xd20d85fd, 0xa50ab56b,
3535 0x35b5a8fa, 0x42b2986c, 0xdbbbc9d6, 0xacbcf940, 0x32d86ce3,
3536 0x45df5c75, 0xdcd60dcf, 0xabd13d59, 0x26d930ac, 0x51de003a,
3537 0xc8d75180, 0xbfd06116, 0x21b4f4b5, 0x56b3c423, 0xcfba9599,
3538 0xb8bda50f, 0x2802b89e, 0x5f058808, 0xc60cd9b2, 0xb10be924,
3539 0x2f6f7c87, 0x58684c11, 0xc1611dab, 0xb6662d3d, 0x76dc4190,
3540 0x01db7106, 0x98d220bc, 0xefd5102a, 0x71b18589, 0x06b6b51f,
3541 0x9fbfe4a5, 0xe8b8d433, 0x7807c9a2, 0x0f00f934, 0x9609a88e,
3542 0xe10e9818, 0x7f6a0dbb, 0x086d3d2d, 0x91646c97, 0xe6635c01,
3543 0x6b6b51f4, 0x1c6c6162, 0x856530d8, 0xf262004e, 0x6c0695ed,
3544 0x1b01a57b, 0x8208f4c1, 0xf50fc457, 0x65b0d9c6, 0x12b7e950,
3545 0x8bbeb8ea, 0xfcb9887c, 0x62dd1ddf, 0x15da2d49, 0x8cd37cf3,
3546 0xfbd44c65, 0x4db26158, 0x3ab551ce, 0xa3bc0074, 0xd4bb30e2,
3547 0x4adfa541, 0x3dd895d7, 0xa4d1c46d, 0xd3d6f4fb, 0x4369e96a,
3548 0x346ed9fc, 0xad678846, 0xda60b8d0, 0x44042d73, 0x33031de5,
3549 0xaa0a4c5f, 0xdd0d7cc9, 0x5005713c, 0x270241aa, 0xbe0b1010,
3550 0xc90c2086, 0x5768b525, 0x206f85b3, 0xb966d409, 0xce61e49f,
3551 0x5edef90e, 0x29d9c998, 0xb0d09822, 0xc7d7a8b4, 0x59b33d17,
3552 0x2eb40d81, 0xb7bd5c3b, 0xc0ba6cad, 0xedb88320, 0x9abfb3b6,
3553 0x03b6e20c, 0x74b1d29a, 0xead54739, 0x9dd277af, 0x04db2615,
3554 0x73dc1683, 0xe3630b12, 0x94643b84, 0x0d6d6a3e, 0x7a6a5aa8,
3555 0xe40ecf0b, 0x9309ff9d, 0x0a00ae27, 0x7d079eb1, 0xf00f9344,
3556 0x8708a3d2, 0x1e01f268, 0x6906c2fe, 0xf762575d, 0x806567cb,
3557 0x196c3671, 0x6e6b06e7, 0xfed41b76, 0x89d32be0, 0x10da7a5a,
3558 0x67dd4acc, 0xf9b9df6f, 0x8ebeeff9, 0x17b7be43, 0x60b08ed5,
3559 0xd6d6a3e8, 0xa1d1937e, 0x38d8c2c4, 0x4fdff252, 0xd1bb67f1,
3560 0xa6bc5767, 0x3fb506dd, 0x48b2364b, 0xd80d2bda, 0xaf0a1b4c,
3561 0x36034af6, 0x41047a60, 0xdf60efc3, 0xa867df55, 0x316e8eef,
3562 0x4669be79, 0xcb61b38c, 0xbc66831a, 0x256fd2a0, 0x5268e236,
3563 0xcc0c7795, 0xbb0b4703, 0x220216b9, 0x5505262f, 0xc5ba3bbe,
3564 0xb2bd0b28, 0x2bb45a92, 0x5cb36a04, 0xc2d7ffa7, 0xb5d0cf31,
3565 0x2cd99e8b, 0x5bdeae1d, 0x9b64c2b0, 0xec63f226, 0x756aa39c,
3566 0x026d930a, 0x9c0906a9, 0xeb0e363f, 0x72076785, 0x05005713,
3567 0x95bf4a82, 0xe2b87a14, 0x7bb12bae, 0x0cb61b38, 0x92d28e9b,
3568 0xe5d5be0d, 0x7cdcefb7, 0x0bdbdf21, 0x86d3d2d4, 0xf1d4e242,
3569 0x68ddb3f8, 0x1fda836e, 0x81be16cd, 0xf6b9265b, 0x6fb077e1,
3570 0x18b74777, 0x88085ae6, 0xff0f6a70, 0x66063bca, 0x11010b5c,
3571 0x8f659eff, 0xf862ae69, 0x616bffd3, 0x166ccf45, 0xa00ae278,
3572 0xd70dd2ee, 0x4e048354, 0x3903b3c2, 0xa7672661, 0xd06016f7,
3573 0x4969474d, 0x3e6e77db, 0xaed16a4a, 0xd9d65adc, 0x40df0b66,
3574 0x37d83bf0, 0xa9bcae53, 0xdebb9ec5, 0x47b2cf7f, 0x30b5ffe9,
3575 0xbdbdf21c, 0xcabac28a, 0x53b39330, 0x24b4a3a6, 0xbad03605,
3576 0xcdd70693, 0x54de5729, 0x23d967bf, 0xb3667a2e, 0xc4614ab8,
3577 0x5d681b02, 0x2a6f2b94, 0xb40bbe37, 0xc30c8ea1, 0x5a05df1b,
3578 0x2d02ef8d
3579 };
3580 unsigned char *end;
3581
3582 crc = ~crc & 0xffffffff;
3583 for (end = buf + len; buf < end; ++buf)
3584 crc = crc32_table[(crc ^ *buf) & 0xff] ^ (crc >> 8);
3585 return ~crc & 0xffffffff;;
3586}
3587
3588ULONGEST
3589align_up (ULONGEST v, int n)
3590{
3591 /* Check that N is really a power of two. */
3592 gdb_assert (n && (n & (n-1)) == 0);
3593 return (v + n - 1) & -n;
3594}
3595
3596ULONGEST
3597align_down (ULONGEST v, int n)
3598{
3599 /* Check that N is really a power of two. */
3600 gdb_assert (n && (n & (n-1)) == 0);
3601 return (v & -n);
3602}
3603
3604/* Allocation function for the libiberty hash table which uses an
3605 obstack. The obstack is passed as DATA. */
3606
3607void *
3608hashtab_obstack_allocate (void *data, size_t size, size_t count)
3609{
3610 unsigned int total = size * count;
3611 void *ptr = obstack_alloc ((struct obstack *) data, total);
3612
3613 memset (ptr, 0, total);
3614 return ptr;
3615}
3616
3617/* Trivial deallocation function for the libiberty splay tree and hash
3618 table - don't deallocate anything. Rely on later deletion of the
3619 obstack. DATA will be the obstack, although it is not needed
3620 here. */
3621
3622void
3623dummy_obstack_deallocate (void *object, void *data)
3624{
3625 return;
3626}
3627
3628/* The bit offset of the highest byte in a ULONGEST, for overflow
3629 checking. */
3630
3631#define HIGH_BYTE_POSN ((sizeof (ULONGEST) - 1) * HOST_CHAR_BIT)
3632
3633/* True (non-zero) iff DIGIT is a valid digit in radix BASE,
3634 where 2 <= BASE <= 36. */
3635
3636static int
3637is_digit_in_base (unsigned char digit, int base)
3638{
3639 if (!isalnum (digit))
3640 return 0;
3641 if (base <= 10)
3642 return (isdigit (digit) && digit < base + '0');
3643 else
3644 return (isdigit (digit) || tolower (digit) < base - 10 + 'a');
3645}
3646
3647static int
3648digit_to_int (unsigned char c)
3649{
3650 if (isdigit (c))
3651 return c - '0';
3652 else
3653 return tolower (c) - 'a' + 10;
3654}
3655
3656/* As for strtoul, but for ULONGEST results. */
3657
3658ULONGEST
3659strtoulst (const char *num, const char **trailer, int base)
3660{
3661 unsigned int high_part;
3662 ULONGEST result;
3663 int minus = 0;
3664 int i = 0;
3665
3666 /* Skip leading whitespace. */
3667 while (isspace (num[i]))
3668 i++;
3669
3670 /* Handle prefixes. */
3671 if (num[i] == '+')
3672 i++;
3673 else if (num[i] == '-')
3674 {
3675 minus = 1;
3676 i++;
3677 }
3678
3679 if (base == 0 || base == 16)
3680 {
3681 if (num[i] == '0' && (num[i + 1] == 'x' || num[i + 1] == 'X'))
3682 {
3683 i += 2;
3684 if (base == 0)
3685 base = 16;
3686 }
3687 }
3688
3689 if (base == 0 && num[i] == '0')
3690 base = 8;
3691
3692 if (base == 0)
3693 base = 10;
3694
3695 if (base < 2 || base > 36)
3696 {
3697 errno = EINVAL;
3698 return 0;
3699 }
3700
3701 result = high_part = 0;
3702 for (; is_digit_in_base (num[i], base); i += 1)
3703 {
3704 result = result * base + digit_to_int (num[i]);
3705 high_part = high_part * base + (unsigned int) (result >> HIGH_BYTE_POSN);
3706 result &= ((ULONGEST) 1 << HIGH_BYTE_POSN) - 1;
3707 if (high_part > 0xff)
3708 {
3709 errno = ERANGE;
3710 result = ~ (ULONGEST) 0;
3711 high_part = 0;
3712 minus = 0;
3713 break;
3714 }
3715 }
3716
3717 if (trailer != NULL)
3718 *trailer = &num[i];
3719
3720 result = result + ((ULONGEST) high_part << HIGH_BYTE_POSN);
3721 if (minus)
3722 return -result;
3723 else
3724 return result;
3725}
3726
3727/* Simple, portable version of dirname that does not modify its
3728 argument. */
3729
3730char *
3731ldirname (const char *filename)
3732{
3733 const char *base = lbasename (filename);
3734 char *dirname;
3735
3736 while (base > filename && IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (base[-1]))
3737 --base;
3738
3739 if (base == filename)
3740 return NULL;
3741
3742 dirname = xmalloc (base - filename + 2);
3743 memcpy (dirname, filename, base - filename);
3744
3745 /* On DOS based file systems, convert "d:foo" to "d:.", so that we
3746 create "d:./bar" later instead of the (different) "d:/bar". */
3747 if (base - filename == 2 && IS_ABSOLUTE_PATH (base)
3748 && !IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (filename[0]))
3749 dirname[base++ - filename] = '.';
3750
3751 dirname[base - filename] = '\0';
3752 return dirname;
3753}
3754
3755/* Call libiberty's buildargv, and return the result.
3756 If buildargv fails due to out-of-memory, call nomem.
3757 Therefore, the returned value is guaranteed to be non-NULL,
3758 unless the parameter itself is NULL. */
3759
3760char **
3761gdb_buildargv (const char *s)
3762{
3763 char **argv = buildargv (s);
3764
3765 if (s != NULL && argv == NULL)
3766 nomem (0);
3767 return argv;
3768}
3769
3770int
3771compare_positive_ints (const void *ap, const void *bp)
3772{
3773 /* Because we know we're comparing two ints which are positive,
3774 there's no danger of overflow here. */
3775 return * (int *) ap - * (int *) bp;
3776}
3777
3778#define AMBIGUOUS_MESS1 ".\nMatching formats:"
3779#define AMBIGUOUS_MESS2 ".\nUse \"set gnutarget format-name\" to specify the format."
3780
3781const char *
3782gdb_bfd_errmsg (bfd_error_type error_tag, char **matching)
3783{
3784 char *ret, *retp;
3785 int ret_len;
3786 char **p;
3787
3788 /* Check if errmsg just need simple return. */
3789 if (error_tag != bfd_error_file_ambiguously_recognized || matching == NULL)
3790 return bfd_errmsg (error_tag);
3791
3792 ret_len = strlen (bfd_errmsg (error_tag)) + strlen (AMBIGUOUS_MESS1)
3793 + strlen (AMBIGUOUS_MESS2);
3794 for (p = matching; *p; p++)
3795 ret_len += strlen (*p) + 1;
3796 ret = xmalloc (ret_len + 1);
3797 retp = ret;
3798 make_cleanup (xfree, ret);
3799
3800 strcpy (retp, bfd_errmsg (error_tag));
3801 retp += strlen (retp);
3802
3803 strcpy (retp, AMBIGUOUS_MESS1);
3804 retp += strlen (retp);
3805
3806 for (p = matching; *p; p++)
3807 {
3808 sprintf (retp, " %s", *p);
3809 retp += strlen (retp);
3810 }
3811 xfree (matching);
3812
3813 strcpy (retp, AMBIGUOUS_MESS2);
3814
3815 return ret;
3816}
3817
3818/* Return ARGS parsed as a valid pid, or throw an error. */
3819
3820int
3821parse_pid_to_attach (char *args)
3822{
3823 unsigned long pid;
3824 char *dummy;
3825
3826 if (!args)
3827 error_no_arg (_("process-id to attach"));
3828
3829 dummy = args;
3830 pid = strtoul (args, &dummy, 0);
3831 /* Some targets don't set errno on errors, grrr! */
3832 if ((pid == 0 && dummy == args) || dummy != &args[strlen (args)])
3833 error (_("Illegal process-id: %s."), args);
3834
3835 return pid;
3836}
3837
3838/* Provide a prototype to silence -Wmissing-prototypes. */
3839extern initialize_file_ftype _initialize_utils;
3840
3841void
3842_initialize_utils (void)
3843{
3844 add_internal_problem_command (&internal_error_problem);
3845 add_internal_problem_command (&internal_warning_problem);
3846}
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