Push thread->control.command_interp to the struct thread_fsm
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / infcall.c
1 /* Perform an inferior function call, for GDB, the GNU debugger.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1986-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
5 This file is part of GDB.
6
7 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
10 (at your option) any later version.
11
12 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15 GNU General Public License for more details.
16
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
19
20 #include "defs.h"
21 #include "infcall.h"
22 #include "breakpoint.h"
23 #include "tracepoint.h"
24 #include "target.h"
25 #include "regcache.h"
26 #include "inferior.h"
27 #include "infrun.h"
28 #include "block.h"
29 #include "gdbcore.h"
30 #include "language.h"
31 #include "objfiles.h"
32 #include "gdbcmd.h"
33 #include "command.h"
34 #include "dummy-frame.h"
35 #include "ada-lang.h"
36 #include "gdbthread.h"
37 #include "event-top.h"
38 #include "observer.h"
39 #include "top.h"
40 #include "interps.h"
41 #include "thread-fsm.h"
42
43 /* If we can't find a function's name from its address,
44 we print this instead. */
45 #define RAW_FUNCTION_ADDRESS_FORMAT "at 0x%s"
46 #define RAW_FUNCTION_ADDRESS_SIZE (sizeof (RAW_FUNCTION_ADDRESS_FORMAT) \
47 + 2 * sizeof (CORE_ADDR))
48
49 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-04-16: What's the future of this code?
50
51 GDB needs an asynchronous expression evaluator, that means an
52 asynchronous inferior function call implementation, and that in
53 turn means restructuring the code so that it is event driven. */
54
55 /* How you should pass arguments to a function depends on whether it
56 was defined in K&R style or prototype style. If you define a
57 function using the K&R syntax that takes a `float' argument, then
58 callers must pass that argument as a `double'. If you define the
59 function using the prototype syntax, then you must pass the
60 argument as a `float', with no promotion.
61
62 Unfortunately, on certain older platforms, the debug info doesn't
63 indicate reliably how each function was defined. A function type's
64 TYPE_FLAG_PROTOTYPED flag may be clear, even if the function was
65 defined in prototype style. When calling a function whose
66 TYPE_FLAG_PROTOTYPED flag is clear, GDB consults this flag to
67 decide what to do.
68
69 For modern targets, it is proper to assume that, if the prototype
70 flag is clear, that can be trusted: `float' arguments should be
71 promoted to `double'. For some older targets, if the prototype
72 flag is clear, that doesn't tell us anything. The default is to
73 trust the debug information; the user can override this behavior
74 with "set coerce-float-to-double 0". */
75
76 static int coerce_float_to_double_p = 1;
77 static void
78 show_coerce_float_to_double_p (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
79 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
80 {
81 fprintf_filtered (file,
82 _("Coercion of floats to doubles "
83 "when calling functions is %s.\n"),
84 value);
85 }
86
87 /* This boolean tells what gdb should do if a signal is received while
88 in a function called from gdb (call dummy). If set, gdb unwinds
89 the stack and restore the context to what as it was before the
90 call.
91
92 The default is to stop in the frame where the signal was received. */
93
94 static int unwind_on_signal_p = 0;
95 static void
96 show_unwind_on_signal_p (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
97 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
98 {
99 fprintf_filtered (file,
100 _("Unwinding of stack if a signal is "
101 "received while in a call dummy is %s.\n"),
102 value);
103 }
104
105 /* This boolean tells what gdb should do if a std::terminate call is
106 made while in a function called from gdb (call dummy).
107 As the confines of a single dummy stack prohibit out-of-frame
108 handlers from handling a raised exception, and as out-of-frame
109 handlers are common in C++, this can lead to no handler being found
110 by the unwinder, and a std::terminate call. This is a false positive.
111 If set, gdb unwinds the stack and restores the context to what it
112 was before the call.
113
114 The default is to unwind the frame if a std::terminate call is
115 made. */
116
117 static int unwind_on_terminating_exception_p = 1;
118
119 static void
120 show_unwind_on_terminating_exception_p (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
121 struct cmd_list_element *c,
122 const char *value)
123
124 {
125 fprintf_filtered (file,
126 _("Unwind stack if a C++ exception is "
127 "unhandled while in a call dummy is %s.\n"),
128 value);
129 }
130
131 /* Perform the standard coercions that are specified
132 for arguments to be passed to C or Ada functions.
133
134 If PARAM_TYPE is non-NULL, it is the expected parameter type.
135 IS_PROTOTYPED is non-zero if the function declaration is prototyped.
136 SP is the stack pointer were additional data can be pushed (updating
137 its value as needed). */
138
139 static struct value *
140 value_arg_coerce (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct value *arg,
141 struct type *param_type, int is_prototyped, CORE_ADDR *sp)
142 {
143 const struct builtin_type *builtin = builtin_type (gdbarch);
144 struct type *arg_type = check_typedef (value_type (arg));
145 struct type *type
146 = param_type ? check_typedef (param_type) : arg_type;
147
148 /* Perform any Ada-specific coercion first. */
149 if (current_language->la_language == language_ada)
150 arg = ada_convert_actual (arg, type);
151
152 /* Force the value to the target if we will need its address. At
153 this point, we could allocate arguments on the stack instead of
154 calling malloc if we knew that their addresses would not be
155 saved by the called function. */
156 arg = value_coerce_to_target (arg);
157
158 switch (TYPE_CODE (type))
159 {
160 case TYPE_CODE_REF:
161 {
162 struct value *new_value;
163
164 if (TYPE_CODE (arg_type) == TYPE_CODE_REF)
165 return value_cast_pointers (type, arg, 0);
166
167 /* Cast the value to the reference's target type, and then
168 convert it back to a reference. This will issue an error
169 if the value was not previously in memory - in some cases
170 we should clearly be allowing this, but how? */
171 new_value = value_cast (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type), arg);
172 new_value = value_ref (new_value);
173 return new_value;
174 }
175 case TYPE_CODE_INT:
176 case TYPE_CODE_CHAR:
177 case TYPE_CODE_BOOL:
178 case TYPE_CODE_ENUM:
179 /* If we don't have a prototype, coerce to integer type if necessary. */
180 if (!is_prototyped)
181 {
182 if (TYPE_LENGTH (type) < TYPE_LENGTH (builtin->builtin_int))
183 type = builtin->builtin_int;
184 }
185 /* Currently all target ABIs require at least the width of an integer
186 type for an argument. We may have to conditionalize the following
187 type coercion for future targets. */
188 if (TYPE_LENGTH (type) < TYPE_LENGTH (builtin->builtin_int))
189 type = builtin->builtin_int;
190 break;
191 case TYPE_CODE_FLT:
192 if (!is_prototyped && coerce_float_to_double_p)
193 {
194 if (TYPE_LENGTH (type) < TYPE_LENGTH (builtin->builtin_double))
195 type = builtin->builtin_double;
196 else if (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > TYPE_LENGTH (builtin->builtin_double))
197 type = builtin->builtin_long_double;
198 }
199 break;
200 case TYPE_CODE_FUNC:
201 type = lookup_pointer_type (type);
202 break;
203 case TYPE_CODE_ARRAY:
204 /* Arrays are coerced to pointers to their first element, unless
205 they are vectors, in which case we want to leave them alone,
206 because they are passed by value. */
207 if (current_language->c_style_arrays)
208 if (!TYPE_VECTOR (type))
209 type = lookup_pointer_type (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type));
210 break;
211 case TYPE_CODE_UNDEF:
212 case TYPE_CODE_PTR:
213 case TYPE_CODE_STRUCT:
214 case TYPE_CODE_UNION:
215 case TYPE_CODE_VOID:
216 case TYPE_CODE_SET:
217 case TYPE_CODE_RANGE:
218 case TYPE_CODE_STRING:
219 case TYPE_CODE_ERROR:
220 case TYPE_CODE_MEMBERPTR:
221 case TYPE_CODE_METHODPTR:
222 case TYPE_CODE_METHOD:
223 case TYPE_CODE_COMPLEX:
224 default:
225 break;
226 }
227
228 return value_cast (type, arg);
229 }
230
231 /* Return the return type of a function with its first instruction exactly at
232 the PC address. Return NULL otherwise. */
233
234 static struct type *
235 find_function_return_type (CORE_ADDR pc)
236 {
237 struct symbol *sym = find_pc_function (pc);
238
239 if (sym != NULL && BLOCK_START (SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE (sym)) == pc
240 && SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) != NULL)
241 return TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym));
242
243 return NULL;
244 }
245
246 /* Determine a function's address and its return type from its value.
247 Calls error() if the function is not valid for calling. */
248
249 CORE_ADDR
250 find_function_addr (struct value *function, struct type **retval_type)
251 {
252 struct type *ftype = check_typedef (value_type (function));
253 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_type_arch (ftype);
254 struct type *value_type = NULL;
255 /* Initialize it just to avoid a GCC false warning. */
256 CORE_ADDR funaddr = 0;
257
258 /* If it's a member function, just look at the function
259 part of it. */
260
261 /* Determine address to call. */
262 if (TYPE_CODE (ftype) == TYPE_CODE_FUNC
263 || TYPE_CODE (ftype) == TYPE_CODE_METHOD)
264 funaddr = value_address (function);
265 else if (TYPE_CODE (ftype) == TYPE_CODE_PTR)
266 {
267 funaddr = value_as_address (function);
268 ftype = check_typedef (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (ftype));
269 if (TYPE_CODE (ftype) == TYPE_CODE_FUNC
270 || TYPE_CODE (ftype) == TYPE_CODE_METHOD)
271 funaddr = gdbarch_convert_from_func_ptr_addr (gdbarch, funaddr,
272 &current_target);
273 }
274 if (TYPE_CODE (ftype) == TYPE_CODE_FUNC
275 || TYPE_CODE (ftype) == TYPE_CODE_METHOD)
276 {
277 value_type = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (ftype);
278
279 if (TYPE_GNU_IFUNC (ftype))
280 {
281 funaddr = gnu_ifunc_resolve_addr (gdbarch, funaddr);
282
283 /* Skip querying the function symbol if no RETVAL_TYPE has been
284 asked for. */
285 if (retval_type)
286 value_type = find_function_return_type (funaddr);
287 }
288 }
289 else if (TYPE_CODE (ftype) == TYPE_CODE_INT)
290 {
291 /* Handle the case of functions lacking debugging info.
292 Their values are characters since their addresses are char. */
293 if (TYPE_LENGTH (ftype) == 1)
294 funaddr = value_as_address (value_addr (function));
295 else
296 {
297 /* Handle function descriptors lacking debug info. */
298 int found_descriptor = 0;
299
300 funaddr = 0; /* pacify "gcc -Werror" */
301 if (VALUE_LVAL (function) == lval_memory)
302 {
303 CORE_ADDR nfunaddr;
304
305 funaddr = value_as_address (value_addr (function));
306 nfunaddr = funaddr;
307 funaddr = gdbarch_convert_from_func_ptr_addr (gdbarch, funaddr,
308 &current_target);
309 if (funaddr != nfunaddr)
310 found_descriptor = 1;
311 }
312 if (!found_descriptor)
313 /* Handle integer used as address of a function. */
314 funaddr = (CORE_ADDR) value_as_long (function);
315 }
316 }
317 else
318 error (_("Invalid data type for function to be called."));
319
320 if (retval_type != NULL)
321 *retval_type = value_type;
322 return funaddr + gdbarch_deprecated_function_start_offset (gdbarch);
323 }
324
325 /* For CALL_DUMMY_ON_STACK, push a breakpoint sequence that the called
326 function returns to. */
327
328 static CORE_ADDR
329 push_dummy_code (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
330 CORE_ADDR sp, CORE_ADDR funaddr,
331 struct value **args, int nargs,
332 struct type *value_type,
333 CORE_ADDR *real_pc, CORE_ADDR *bp_addr,
334 struct regcache *regcache)
335 {
336 gdb_assert (gdbarch_push_dummy_code_p (gdbarch));
337
338 return gdbarch_push_dummy_code (gdbarch, sp, funaddr,
339 args, nargs, value_type, real_pc, bp_addr,
340 regcache);
341 }
342
343 /* Fetch the name of the function at FUNADDR.
344 This is used in printing an error message for call_function_by_hand.
345 BUF is used to print FUNADDR in hex if the function name cannot be
346 determined. It must be large enough to hold formatted result of
347 RAW_FUNCTION_ADDRESS_FORMAT. */
348
349 static const char *
350 get_function_name (CORE_ADDR funaddr, char *buf, int buf_size)
351 {
352 {
353 struct symbol *symbol = find_pc_function (funaddr);
354
355 if (symbol)
356 return SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (symbol);
357 }
358
359 {
360 /* Try the minimal symbols. */
361 struct bound_minimal_symbol msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (funaddr);
362
363 if (msymbol.minsym)
364 return MSYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (msymbol.minsym);
365 }
366
367 {
368 char *tmp = xstrprintf (_(RAW_FUNCTION_ADDRESS_FORMAT),
369 hex_string (funaddr));
370
371 gdb_assert (strlen (tmp) + 1 <= buf_size);
372 strcpy (buf, tmp);
373 xfree (tmp);
374 return buf;
375 }
376 }
377
378 /* All the meta data necessary to extract the call's return value. */
379
380 struct call_return_meta_info
381 {
382 /* The caller frame's architecture. */
383 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
384
385 /* The called function. */
386 struct value *function;
387
388 /* The return value's type. */
389 struct type *value_type;
390
391 /* Are we returning a value using a structure return or a normal
392 value return? */
393 int struct_return_p;
394
395 /* If using a structure return, this is the structure's address. */
396 CORE_ADDR struct_addr;
397
398 /* Whether stack temporaries are enabled. */
399 int stack_temporaries_enabled;
400 };
401
402 /* Extract the called function's return value. */
403
404 static struct value *
405 get_call_return_value (struct call_return_meta_info *ri)
406 {
407 struct value *retval = NULL;
408 int stack_temporaries = thread_stack_temporaries_enabled_p (inferior_ptid);
409
410 if (TYPE_CODE (ri->value_type) == TYPE_CODE_VOID)
411 retval = allocate_value (ri->value_type);
412 else if (ri->struct_return_p)
413 {
414 if (stack_temporaries)
415 {
416 retval = value_from_contents_and_address (ri->value_type, NULL,
417 ri->struct_addr);
418 push_thread_stack_temporary (inferior_ptid, retval);
419 }
420 else
421 {
422 retval = allocate_value (ri->value_type);
423 read_value_memory (retval, 0, 1, ri->struct_addr,
424 value_contents_raw (retval),
425 TYPE_LENGTH (ri->value_type));
426 }
427 }
428 else
429 {
430 retval = allocate_value (ri->value_type);
431 gdbarch_return_value (ri->gdbarch, ri->function, ri->value_type,
432 get_current_regcache (),
433 value_contents_raw (retval), NULL);
434 if (stack_temporaries && class_or_union_p (ri->value_type))
435 {
436 /* Values of class type returned in registers are copied onto
437 the stack and their lval_type set to lval_memory. This is
438 required because further evaluation of the expression
439 could potentially invoke methods on the return value
440 requiring GDB to evaluate the "this" pointer. To evaluate
441 the this pointer, GDB needs the memory address of the
442 value. */
443 value_force_lval (retval, ri->struct_addr);
444 push_thread_stack_temporary (inferior_ptid, retval);
445 }
446 }
447
448 gdb_assert (retval != NULL);
449 return retval;
450 }
451
452 /* Data for the FSM that manages an infcall. It's main job is to
453 record the called function's return value. */
454
455 struct call_thread_fsm
456 {
457 /* The base class. */
458 struct thread_fsm thread_fsm;
459
460 /* All the info necessary to be able to extract the return
461 value. */
462 struct call_return_meta_info return_meta_info;
463
464 /* The called function's return value. This is extracted from the
465 target before the dummy frame is popped. */
466 struct value *return_value;
467
468 /* The top level that started the infcall (and is synchronously
469 waiting for it to end). */
470 struct ui *waiting_ui;
471 };
472
473 static int call_thread_fsm_should_stop (struct thread_fsm *self,
474 struct thread_info *thread);
475 static int call_thread_fsm_should_notify_stop (struct thread_fsm *self);
476
477 /* call_thread_fsm's vtable. */
478
479 static struct thread_fsm_ops call_thread_fsm_ops =
480 {
481 NULL, /*dtor */
482 NULL, /* clean_up */
483 call_thread_fsm_should_stop,
484 NULL, /* return_value */
485 NULL, /* async_reply_reason*/
486 call_thread_fsm_should_notify_stop,
487 };
488
489 /* Allocate a new call_thread_fsm object. */
490
491 static struct call_thread_fsm *
492 new_call_thread_fsm (struct ui *waiting_ui, struct interp *cmd_interp,
493 struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct value *function,
494 struct type *value_type,
495 int struct_return_p, CORE_ADDR struct_addr)
496 {
497 struct call_thread_fsm *sm;
498
499 sm = XCNEW (struct call_thread_fsm);
500 thread_fsm_ctor (&sm->thread_fsm, &call_thread_fsm_ops, cmd_interp);
501
502 sm->return_meta_info.gdbarch = gdbarch;
503 sm->return_meta_info.function = function;
504 sm->return_meta_info.value_type = value_type;
505 sm->return_meta_info.struct_return_p = struct_return_p;
506 sm->return_meta_info.struct_addr = struct_addr;
507
508 sm->waiting_ui = waiting_ui;
509
510 return sm;
511 }
512
513 /* Implementation of should_stop method for infcalls. */
514
515 static int
516 call_thread_fsm_should_stop (struct thread_fsm *self,
517 struct thread_info *thread)
518 {
519 struct call_thread_fsm *f = (struct call_thread_fsm *) self;
520
521 if (stop_stack_dummy == STOP_STACK_DUMMY)
522 {
523 struct cleanup *old_chain;
524
525 /* Done. */
526 thread_fsm_set_finished (self);
527
528 /* Stash the return value before the dummy frame is popped and
529 registers are restored to what they were before the
530 call.. */
531 f->return_value = get_call_return_value (&f->return_meta_info);
532
533 /* Break out of wait_sync_command_done. */
534 old_chain = make_cleanup (restore_ui_cleanup, current_ui);
535 current_ui = f->waiting_ui;
536 target_terminal_ours ();
537 f->waiting_ui->prompt_state = PROMPT_NEEDED;
538
539 /* This restores the previous UI. */
540 do_cleanups (old_chain);
541 }
542
543 return 1;
544 }
545
546 /* Implementation of should_notify_stop method for infcalls. */
547
548 static int
549 call_thread_fsm_should_notify_stop (struct thread_fsm *self)
550 {
551 if (thread_fsm_finished_p (self))
552 {
553 /* Infcall succeeded. Be silent and proceed with evaluating the
554 expression. */
555 return 0;
556 }
557
558 /* Something wrong happened. E.g., an unexpected breakpoint
559 triggered, or a signal was intercepted. Notify the stop. */
560 return 1;
561 }
562
563 /* Subroutine of call_function_by_hand to simplify it.
564 Start up the inferior and wait for it to stop.
565 Return the exception if there's an error, or an exception with
566 reason >= 0 if there's no error.
567
568 This is done inside a TRY_CATCH so the caller needn't worry about
569 thrown errors. The caller should rethrow if there's an error. */
570
571 static struct gdb_exception
572 run_inferior_call (struct call_thread_fsm *sm,
573 struct thread_info *call_thread, CORE_ADDR real_pc)
574 {
575 struct gdb_exception caught_error = exception_none;
576 int saved_in_infcall = call_thread->control.in_infcall;
577 ptid_t call_thread_ptid = call_thread->ptid;
578 enum prompt_state saved_prompt_state = current_ui->prompt_state;
579 int was_running = call_thread->state == THREAD_RUNNING;
580 int saved_ui_async = current_ui->async;
581
582 /* Infcalls run synchronously, in the foreground. */
583 current_ui->prompt_state = PROMPT_BLOCKED;
584 /* So that we don't print the prompt prematurely in
585 fetch_inferior_event. */
586 current_ui->async = 0;
587
588 call_thread->control.in_infcall = 1;
589
590 clear_proceed_status (0);
591
592 /* Associate the FSM with the thread after clear_proceed_status
593 (otherwise it'd clear this FSM), and before anything throws, so
594 we don't leak it (and any resources it manages). */
595 call_thread->thread_fsm = &sm->thread_fsm;
596
597 disable_watchpoints_before_interactive_call_start ();
598
599 /* We want to print return value, please... */
600 call_thread->control.proceed_to_finish = 1;
601
602 TRY
603 {
604 proceed (real_pc, GDB_SIGNAL_0);
605
606 /* Inferior function calls are always synchronous, even if the
607 target supports asynchronous execution. */
608 wait_sync_command_done ();
609 }
610 CATCH (e, RETURN_MASK_ALL)
611 {
612 caught_error = e;
613 }
614 END_CATCH
615
616 /* If GDB has the prompt blocked before, then ensure that it remains
617 so. normal_stop calls async_enable_stdin, so reset the prompt
618 state again here. In other cases, stdin will be re-enabled by
619 inferior_event_handler, when an exception is thrown. */
620 current_ui->prompt_state = saved_prompt_state;
621 current_ui->async = saved_ui_async;
622
623 /* At this point the current thread may have changed. Refresh
624 CALL_THREAD as it could be invalid if its thread has exited. */
625 call_thread = find_thread_ptid (call_thread_ptid);
626
627 /* If the infcall does NOT succeed, normal_stop will have already
628 finished the thread states. However, on success, normal_stop
629 defers here, so that we can set back the thread states to what
630 they were before the call. Note that we must also finish the
631 state of new threads that might have spawned while the call was
632 running. The main cases to handle are:
633
634 - "(gdb) print foo ()", or any other command that evaluates an
635 expression at the prompt. (The thread was marked stopped before.)
636
637 - "(gdb) break foo if return_false()" or similar cases where we
638 do an infcall while handling an event (while the thread is still
639 marked running). In this example, whether the condition
640 evaluates true and thus we'll present a user-visible stop is
641 decided elsewhere. */
642 if (!was_running
643 && ptid_equal (call_thread_ptid, inferior_ptid)
644 && stop_stack_dummy == STOP_STACK_DUMMY)
645 finish_thread_state (user_visible_resume_ptid (0));
646
647 enable_watchpoints_after_interactive_call_stop ();
648
649 /* Call breakpoint_auto_delete on the current contents of the bpstat
650 of inferior call thread.
651 If all error()s out of proceed ended up calling normal_stop
652 (and perhaps they should; it already does in the special case
653 of error out of resume()), then we wouldn't need this. */
654 if (caught_error.reason < 0)
655 {
656 if (call_thread != NULL)
657 breakpoint_auto_delete (call_thread->control.stop_bpstat);
658 }
659
660 if (call_thread != NULL)
661 call_thread->control.in_infcall = saved_in_infcall;
662
663 return caught_error;
664 }
665
666 /* A cleanup function that calls delete_std_terminate_breakpoint. */
667 static void
668 cleanup_delete_std_terminate_breakpoint (void *ignore)
669 {
670 delete_std_terminate_breakpoint ();
671 }
672
673 /* See infcall.h. */
674
675 struct value *
676 call_function_by_hand (struct value *function, int nargs, struct value **args)
677 {
678 return call_function_by_hand_dummy (function, nargs, args, NULL, NULL);
679 }
680
681 /* All this stuff with a dummy frame may seem unnecessarily complicated
682 (why not just save registers in GDB?). The purpose of pushing a dummy
683 frame which looks just like a real frame is so that if you call a
684 function and then hit a breakpoint (get a signal, etc), "backtrace"
685 will look right. Whether the backtrace needs to actually show the
686 stack at the time the inferior function was called is debatable, but
687 it certainly needs to not display garbage. So if you are contemplating
688 making dummy frames be different from normal frames, consider that. */
689
690 /* Perform a function call in the inferior.
691 ARGS is a vector of values of arguments (NARGS of them).
692 FUNCTION is a value, the function to be called.
693 Returns a value representing what the function returned.
694 May fail to return, if a breakpoint or signal is hit
695 during the execution of the function.
696
697 ARGS is modified to contain coerced values. */
698
699 struct value *
700 call_function_by_hand_dummy (struct value *function,
701 int nargs, struct value **args,
702 dummy_frame_dtor_ftype *dummy_dtor,
703 void *dummy_dtor_data)
704 {
705 CORE_ADDR sp;
706 struct type *values_type, *target_values_type;
707 unsigned char struct_return = 0, hidden_first_param_p = 0;
708 CORE_ADDR struct_addr = 0;
709 struct infcall_control_state *inf_status;
710 struct cleanup *inf_status_cleanup;
711 struct infcall_suspend_state *caller_state;
712 CORE_ADDR funaddr;
713 CORE_ADDR real_pc;
714 struct type *ftype = check_typedef (value_type (function));
715 CORE_ADDR bp_addr;
716 struct frame_id dummy_id;
717 struct cleanup *args_cleanup;
718 struct frame_info *frame;
719 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
720 struct cleanup *terminate_bp_cleanup;
721 ptid_t call_thread_ptid;
722 struct gdb_exception e;
723 char name_buf[RAW_FUNCTION_ADDRESS_SIZE];
724 int stack_temporaries = thread_stack_temporaries_enabled_p (inferior_ptid);
725
726 if (TYPE_CODE (ftype) == TYPE_CODE_PTR)
727 ftype = check_typedef (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (ftype));
728
729 if (!target_has_execution)
730 noprocess ();
731
732 if (get_traceframe_number () >= 0)
733 error (_("May not call functions while looking at trace frames."));
734
735 if (execution_direction == EXEC_REVERSE)
736 error (_("Cannot call functions in reverse mode."));
737
738 frame = get_current_frame ();
739 gdbarch = get_frame_arch (frame);
740
741 if (!gdbarch_push_dummy_call_p (gdbarch))
742 error (_("This target does not support function calls."));
743
744 /* A cleanup for the inferior status.
745 This is only needed while we're preparing the inferior function call. */
746 inf_status = save_infcall_control_state ();
747 inf_status_cleanup
748 = make_cleanup_restore_infcall_control_state (inf_status);
749
750 /* Save the caller's registers and other state associated with the
751 inferior itself so that they can be restored once the
752 callee returns. To allow nested calls the registers are (further
753 down) pushed onto a dummy frame stack. Include a cleanup (which
754 is tossed once the regcache has been pushed). */
755 caller_state = save_infcall_suspend_state ();
756 make_cleanup_restore_infcall_suspend_state (caller_state);
757
758 /* Ensure that the initial SP is correctly aligned. */
759 {
760 CORE_ADDR old_sp = get_frame_sp (frame);
761
762 if (gdbarch_frame_align_p (gdbarch))
763 {
764 sp = gdbarch_frame_align (gdbarch, old_sp);
765 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-08-13: Skip the "red zone". For some
766 ABIs, a function can use memory beyond the inner most stack
767 address. AMD64 called that region the "red zone". Skip at
768 least the "red zone" size before allocating any space on
769 the stack. */
770 if (gdbarch_inner_than (gdbarch, 1, 2))
771 sp -= gdbarch_frame_red_zone_size (gdbarch);
772 else
773 sp += gdbarch_frame_red_zone_size (gdbarch);
774 /* Still aligned? */
775 gdb_assert (sp == gdbarch_frame_align (gdbarch, sp));
776 /* NOTE: cagney/2002-09-18:
777
778 On a RISC architecture, a void parameterless generic dummy
779 frame (i.e., no parameters, no result) typically does not
780 need to push anything the stack and hence can leave SP and
781 FP. Similarly, a frameless (possibly leaf) function does
782 not push anything on the stack and, hence, that too can
783 leave FP and SP unchanged. As a consequence, a sequence of
784 void parameterless generic dummy frame calls to frameless
785 functions will create a sequence of effectively identical
786 frames (SP, FP and TOS and PC the same). This, not
787 suprisingly, results in what appears to be a stack in an
788 infinite loop --- when GDB tries to find a generic dummy
789 frame on the internal dummy frame stack, it will always
790 find the first one.
791
792 To avoid this problem, the code below always grows the
793 stack. That way, two dummy frames can never be identical.
794 It does burn a few bytes of stack but that is a small price
795 to pay :-). */
796 if (sp == old_sp)
797 {
798 if (gdbarch_inner_than (gdbarch, 1, 2))
799 /* Stack grows down. */
800 sp = gdbarch_frame_align (gdbarch, old_sp - 1);
801 else
802 /* Stack grows up. */
803 sp = gdbarch_frame_align (gdbarch, old_sp + 1);
804 }
805 /* SP may have underflown address zero here from OLD_SP. Memory access
806 functions will probably fail in such case but that is a target's
807 problem. */
808 }
809 else
810 /* FIXME: cagney/2002-09-18: Hey, you loose!
811
812 Who knows how badly aligned the SP is!
813
814 If the generic dummy frame ends up empty (because nothing is
815 pushed) GDB won't be able to correctly perform back traces.
816 If a target is having trouble with backtraces, first thing to
817 do is add FRAME_ALIGN() to the architecture vector. If that
818 fails, try dummy_id().
819
820 If the ABI specifies a "Red Zone" (see the doco) the code
821 below will quietly trash it. */
822 sp = old_sp;
823
824 /* Skip over the stack temporaries that might have been generated during
825 the evaluation of an expression. */
826 if (stack_temporaries)
827 {
828 struct value *lastval;
829
830 lastval = get_last_thread_stack_temporary (inferior_ptid);
831 if (lastval != NULL)
832 {
833 CORE_ADDR lastval_addr = value_address (lastval);
834
835 if (gdbarch_inner_than (gdbarch, 1, 2))
836 {
837 gdb_assert (sp >= lastval_addr);
838 sp = lastval_addr;
839 }
840 else
841 {
842 gdb_assert (sp <= lastval_addr);
843 sp = lastval_addr + TYPE_LENGTH (value_type (lastval));
844 }
845
846 if (gdbarch_frame_align_p (gdbarch))
847 sp = gdbarch_frame_align (gdbarch, sp);
848 }
849 }
850 }
851
852 funaddr = find_function_addr (function, &values_type);
853 if (!values_type)
854 values_type = builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_int;
855
856 values_type = check_typedef (values_type);
857
858 /* Are we returning a value using a structure return (passing a
859 hidden argument pointing to storage) or a normal value return?
860 There are two cases: language-mandated structure return and
861 target ABI structure return. The variable STRUCT_RETURN only
862 describes the latter. The language version is handled by passing
863 the return location as the first parameter to the function,
864 even preceding "this". This is different from the target
865 ABI version, which is target-specific; for instance, on ia64
866 the first argument is passed in out0 but the hidden structure
867 return pointer would normally be passed in r8. */
868
869 if (gdbarch_return_in_first_hidden_param_p (gdbarch, values_type))
870 {
871 hidden_first_param_p = 1;
872
873 /* Tell the target specific argument pushing routine not to
874 expect a value. */
875 target_values_type = builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_void;
876 }
877 else
878 {
879 struct_return = using_struct_return (gdbarch, function, values_type);
880 target_values_type = values_type;
881 }
882
883 observer_notify_inferior_call_pre (inferior_ptid, funaddr);
884
885 /* Determine the location of the breakpoint (and possibly other
886 stuff) that the called function will return to. The SPARC, for a
887 function returning a structure or union, needs to make space for
888 not just the breakpoint but also an extra word containing the
889 size (?) of the structure being passed. */
890
891 switch (gdbarch_call_dummy_location (gdbarch))
892 {
893 case ON_STACK:
894 {
895 const gdb_byte *bp_bytes;
896 CORE_ADDR bp_addr_as_address;
897 int bp_size;
898
899 /* Be careful BP_ADDR is in inferior PC encoding while
900 BP_ADDR_AS_ADDRESS is a plain memory address. */
901
902 sp = push_dummy_code (gdbarch, sp, funaddr, args, nargs,
903 target_values_type, &real_pc, &bp_addr,
904 get_current_regcache ());
905
906 /* Write a legitimate instruction at the point where the infcall
907 breakpoint is going to be inserted. While this instruction
908 is never going to be executed, a user investigating the
909 memory from GDB would see this instruction instead of random
910 uninitialized bytes. We chose the breakpoint instruction
911 as it may look as the most logical one to the user and also
912 valgrind 3.7.0 needs it for proper vgdb inferior calls.
913
914 If software breakpoints are unsupported for this target we
915 leave the user visible memory content uninitialized. */
916
917 bp_addr_as_address = bp_addr;
918 bp_bytes = gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc (gdbarch, &bp_addr_as_address,
919 &bp_size);
920 if (bp_bytes != NULL)
921 write_memory (bp_addr_as_address, bp_bytes, bp_size);
922 }
923 break;
924 case AT_ENTRY_POINT:
925 {
926 CORE_ADDR dummy_addr;
927
928 real_pc = funaddr;
929 dummy_addr = entry_point_address ();
930
931 /* A call dummy always consists of just a single breakpoint, so
932 its address is the same as the address of the dummy.
933
934 The actual breakpoint is inserted separatly so there is no need to
935 write that out. */
936 bp_addr = dummy_addr;
937 break;
938 }
939 default:
940 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("bad switch"));
941 }
942
943 if (nargs < TYPE_NFIELDS (ftype))
944 error (_("Too few arguments in function call."));
945
946 {
947 int i;
948
949 for (i = nargs - 1; i >= 0; i--)
950 {
951 int prototyped;
952 struct type *param_type;
953
954 /* FIXME drow/2002-05-31: Should just always mark methods as
955 prototyped. Can we respect TYPE_VARARGS? Probably not. */
956 if (TYPE_CODE (ftype) == TYPE_CODE_METHOD)
957 prototyped = 1;
958 else if (i < TYPE_NFIELDS (ftype))
959 prototyped = TYPE_PROTOTYPED (ftype);
960 else
961 prototyped = 0;
962
963 if (i < TYPE_NFIELDS (ftype))
964 param_type = TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (ftype, i);
965 else
966 param_type = NULL;
967
968 args[i] = value_arg_coerce (gdbarch, args[i],
969 param_type, prototyped, &sp);
970
971 if (param_type != NULL && language_pass_by_reference (param_type))
972 args[i] = value_addr (args[i]);
973 }
974 }
975
976 /* Reserve space for the return structure to be written on the
977 stack, if necessary. Make certain that the value is correctly
978 aligned.
979
980 While evaluating expressions, we reserve space on the stack for
981 return values of class type even if the language ABI and the target
982 ABI do not require that the return value be passed as a hidden first
983 argument. This is because we want to store the return value as an
984 on-stack temporary while the expression is being evaluated. This
985 enables us to have chained function calls in expressions.
986
987 Keeping the return values as on-stack temporaries while the expression
988 is being evaluated is OK because the thread is stopped until the
989 expression is completely evaluated. */
990
991 if (struct_return || hidden_first_param_p
992 || (stack_temporaries && class_or_union_p (values_type)))
993 {
994 if (gdbarch_inner_than (gdbarch, 1, 2))
995 {
996 /* Stack grows downward. Align STRUCT_ADDR and SP after
997 making space for the return value. */
998 sp -= TYPE_LENGTH (values_type);
999 if (gdbarch_frame_align_p (gdbarch))
1000 sp = gdbarch_frame_align (gdbarch, sp);
1001 struct_addr = sp;
1002 }
1003 else
1004 {
1005 /* Stack grows upward. Align the frame, allocate space, and
1006 then again, re-align the frame??? */
1007 if (gdbarch_frame_align_p (gdbarch))
1008 sp = gdbarch_frame_align (gdbarch, sp);
1009 struct_addr = sp;
1010 sp += TYPE_LENGTH (values_type);
1011 if (gdbarch_frame_align_p (gdbarch))
1012 sp = gdbarch_frame_align (gdbarch, sp);
1013 }
1014 }
1015
1016 if (hidden_first_param_p)
1017 {
1018 struct value **new_args;
1019
1020 /* Add the new argument to the front of the argument list. */
1021 new_args = XNEWVEC (struct value *, nargs + 1);
1022 new_args[0] = value_from_pointer (lookup_pointer_type (values_type),
1023 struct_addr);
1024 memcpy (&new_args[1], &args[0], sizeof (struct value *) * nargs);
1025 args = new_args;
1026 nargs++;
1027 args_cleanup = make_cleanup (xfree, args);
1028 }
1029 else
1030 args_cleanup = make_cleanup (null_cleanup, NULL);
1031
1032 /* Create the dummy stack frame. Pass in the call dummy address as,
1033 presumably, the ABI code knows where, in the call dummy, the
1034 return address should be pointed. */
1035 sp = gdbarch_push_dummy_call (gdbarch, function, get_current_regcache (),
1036 bp_addr, nargs, args,
1037 sp, struct_return, struct_addr);
1038
1039 do_cleanups (args_cleanup);
1040
1041 /* Set up a frame ID for the dummy frame so we can pass it to
1042 set_momentary_breakpoint. We need to give the breakpoint a frame
1043 ID so that the breakpoint code can correctly re-identify the
1044 dummy breakpoint. */
1045 /* Sanity. The exact same SP value is returned by PUSH_DUMMY_CALL,
1046 saved as the dummy-frame TOS, and used by dummy_id to form
1047 the frame ID's stack address. */
1048 dummy_id = frame_id_build (sp, bp_addr);
1049
1050 /* Create a momentary breakpoint at the return address of the
1051 inferior. That way it breaks when it returns. */
1052
1053 {
1054 struct breakpoint *bpt, *longjmp_b;
1055 struct symtab_and_line sal;
1056
1057 init_sal (&sal); /* initialize to zeroes */
1058 sal.pspace = current_program_space;
1059 sal.pc = bp_addr;
1060 sal.section = find_pc_overlay (sal.pc);
1061 /* Sanity. The exact same SP value is returned by
1062 PUSH_DUMMY_CALL, saved as the dummy-frame TOS, and used by
1063 dummy_id to form the frame ID's stack address. */
1064 bpt = set_momentary_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, dummy_id, bp_call_dummy);
1065
1066 /* set_momentary_breakpoint invalidates FRAME. */
1067 frame = NULL;
1068
1069 bpt->disposition = disp_del;
1070 gdb_assert (bpt->related_breakpoint == bpt);
1071
1072 longjmp_b = set_longjmp_breakpoint_for_call_dummy ();
1073 if (longjmp_b)
1074 {
1075 /* Link BPT into the chain of LONGJMP_B. */
1076 bpt->related_breakpoint = longjmp_b;
1077 while (longjmp_b->related_breakpoint != bpt->related_breakpoint)
1078 longjmp_b = longjmp_b->related_breakpoint;
1079 longjmp_b->related_breakpoint = bpt;
1080 }
1081 }
1082
1083 /* Create a breakpoint in std::terminate.
1084 If a C++ exception is raised in the dummy-frame, and the
1085 exception handler is (normally, and expected to be) out-of-frame,
1086 the default C++ handler will (wrongly) be called in an inferior
1087 function call. This is wrong, as an exception can be normally
1088 and legally handled out-of-frame. The confines of the dummy frame
1089 prevent the unwinder from finding the correct handler (or any
1090 handler, unless it is in-frame). The default handler calls
1091 std::terminate. This will kill the inferior. Assert that
1092 terminate should never be called in an inferior function
1093 call. Place a momentary breakpoint in the std::terminate function
1094 and if triggered in the call, rewind. */
1095 if (unwind_on_terminating_exception_p)
1096 set_std_terminate_breakpoint ();
1097
1098 /* Discard both inf_status and caller_state cleanups.
1099 From this point on we explicitly restore the associated state
1100 or discard it. */
1101 discard_cleanups (inf_status_cleanup);
1102
1103 /* Everything's ready, push all the info needed to restore the
1104 caller (and identify the dummy-frame) onto the dummy-frame
1105 stack. */
1106 dummy_frame_push (caller_state, &dummy_id, inferior_ptid);
1107 if (dummy_dtor != NULL)
1108 register_dummy_frame_dtor (dummy_id, inferior_ptid,
1109 dummy_dtor, dummy_dtor_data);
1110
1111 /* Register a clean-up for unwind_on_terminating_exception_breakpoint. */
1112 terminate_bp_cleanup = make_cleanup (cleanup_delete_std_terminate_breakpoint,
1113 NULL);
1114
1115 /* - SNIP - SNIP - SNIP - SNIP - SNIP - SNIP - SNIP - SNIP - SNIP -
1116 If you're looking to implement asynchronous dummy-frames, then
1117 just below is the place to chop this function in two.. */
1118
1119 /* TP is invalid after run_inferior_call returns, so enclose this
1120 in a block so that it's only in scope during the time it's valid. */
1121 {
1122 struct thread_info *tp = inferior_thread ();
1123 struct thread_fsm *saved_sm;
1124 struct call_thread_fsm *sm;
1125
1126 /* Save the current FSM. We'll override it. */
1127 saved_sm = tp->thread_fsm;
1128 tp->thread_fsm = NULL;
1129
1130 /* Save this thread's ptid, we need it later but the thread
1131 may have exited. */
1132 call_thread_ptid = tp->ptid;
1133
1134 /* Run the inferior until it stops. */
1135
1136 /* Create the FSM used to manage the infcall. It tells infrun to
1137 not report the stop to the user, and captures the return value
1138 before the dummy frame is popped. run_inferior_call registers
1139 it with the thread ASAP. */
1140 sm = new_call_thread_fsm (current_ui, command_interp (),
1141 gdbarch, function,
1142 values_type,
1143 struct_return || hidden_first_param_p,
1144 struct_addr);
1145
1146 e = run_inferior_call (sm, tp, real_pc);
1147
1148 observer_notify_inferior_call_post (call_thread_ptid, funaddr);
1149
1150 tp = find_thread_ptid (call_thread_ptid);
1151 if (tp != NULL)
1152 {
1153 /* The FSM should still be the same. */
1154 gdb_assert (tp->thread_fsm == &sm->thread_fsm);
1155
1156 if (thread_fsm_finished_p (tp->thread_fsm))
1157 {
1158 struct value *retval;
1159
1160 /* The inferior call is successful. Pop the dummy frame,
1161 which runs its destructors and restores the inferior's
1162 suspend state, and restore the inferior control
1163 state. */
1164 dummy_frame_pop (dummy_id, call_thread_ptid);
1165 restore_infcall_control_state (inf_status);
1166
1167 /* Get the return value. */
1168 retval = sm->return_value;
1169
1170 /* Clean up / destroy the call FSM, and restore the
1171 original one. */
1172 thread_fsm_clean_up (tp->thread_fsm, tp);
1173 thread_fsm_delete (tp->thread_fsm);
1174 tp->thread_fsm = saved_sm;
1175
1176 maybe_remove_breakpoints ();
1177
1178 do_cleanups (terminate_bp_cleanup);
1179 gdb_assert (retval != NULL);
1180 return retval;
1181 }
1182
1183 /* Didn't complete. Restore previous state machine, and
1184 handle the error. */
1185 tp->thread_fsm = saved_sm;
1186 }
1187 }
1188
1189 /* Rethrow an error if we got one trying to run the inferior. */
1190
1191 if (e.reason < 0)
1192 {
1193 const char *name = get_function_name (funaddr,
1194 name_buf, sizeof (name_buf));
1195
1196 discard_infcall_control_state (inf_status);
1197
1198 /* We could discard the dummy frame here if the program exited,
1199 but it will get garbage collected the next time the program is
1200 run anyway. */
1201
1202 switch (e.reason)
1203 {
1204 case RETURN_ERROR:
1205 throw_error (e.error, _("%s\n\
1206 An error occurred while in a function called from GDB.\n\
1207 Evaluation of the expression containing the function\n\
1208 (%s) will be abandoned.\n\
1209 When the function is done executing, GDB will silently stop."),
1210 e.message, name);
1211 case RETURN_QUIT:
1212 default:
1213 throw_exception (e);
1214 }
1215 }
1216
1217 /* If the program has exited, or we stopped at a different thread,
1218 exit and inform the user. */
1219
1220 if (! target_has_execution)
1221 {
1222 const char *name = get_function_name (funaddr,
1223 name_buf, sizeof (name_buf));
1224
1225 /* If we try to restore the inferior status,
1226 we'll crash as the inferior is no longer running. */
1227 discard_infcall_control_state (inf_status);
1228
1229 /* We could discard the dummy frame here given that the program exited,
1230 but it will get garbage collected the next time the program is
1231 run anyway. */
1232
1233 error (_("The program being debugged exited while in a function "
1234 "called from GDB.\n"
1235 "Evaluation of the expression containing the function\n"
1236 "(%s) will be abandoned."),
1237 name);
1238 }
1239
1240 if (! ptid_equal (call_thread_ptid, inferior_ptid))
1241 {
1242 const char *name = get_function_name (funaddr,
1243 name_buf, sizeof (name_buf));
1244
1245 /* We've switched threads. This can happen if another thread gets a
1246 signal or breakpoint while our thread was running.
1247 There's no point in restoring the inferior status,
1248 we're in a different thread. */
1249 discard_infcall_control_state (inf_status);
1250 /* Keep the dummy frame record, if the user switches back to the
1251 thread with the hand-call, we'll need it. */
1252 if (stopped_by_random_signal)
1253 error (_("\
1254 The program received a signal in another thread while\n\
1255 making a function call from GDB.\n\
1256 Evaluation of the expression containing the function\n\
1257 (%s) will be abandoned.\n\
1258 When the function is done executing, GDB will silently stop."),
1259 name);
1260 else
1261 error (_("\
1262 The program stopped in another thread while making a function call from GDB.\n\
1263 Evaluation of the expression containing the function\n\
1264 (%s) will be abandoned.\n\
1265 When the function is done executing, GDB will silently stop."),
1266 name);
1267 }
1268
1269 {
1270 /* Make a copy as NAME may be in an objfile freed by dummy_frame_pop. */
1271 char *name = xstrdup (get_function_name (funaddr,
1272 name_buf, sizeof (name_buf)));
1273 make_cleanup (xfree, name);
1274
1275
1276 if (stopped_by_random_signal)
1277 {
1278 /* We stopped inside the FUNCTION because of a random
1279 signal. Further execution of the FUNCTION is not
1280 allowed. */
1281
1282 if (unwind_on_signal_p)
1283 {
1284 /* The user wants the context restored. */
1285
1286 /* We must get back to the frame we were before the
1287 dummy call. */
1288 dummy_frame_pop (dummy_id, call_thread_ptid);
1289
1290 /* We also need to restore inferior status to that before the
1291 dummy call. */
1292 restore_infcall_control_state (inf_status);
1293
1294 /* FIXME: Insert a bunch of wrap_here; name can be very
1295 long if it's a C++ name with arguments and stuff. */
1296 error (_("\
1297 The program being debugged was signaled while in a function called from GDB.\n\
1298 GDB has restored the context to what it was before the call.\n\
1299 To change this behavior use \"set unwindonsignal off\".\n\
1300 Evaluation of the expression containing the function\n\
1301 (%s) will be abandoned."),
1302 name);
1303 }
1304 else
1305 {
1306 /* The user wants to stay in the frame where we stopped
1307 (default).
1308 Discard inferior status, we're not at the same point
1309 we started at. */
1310 discard_infcall_control_state (inf_status);
1311
1312 /* FIXME: Insert a bunch of wrap_here; name can be very
1313 long if it's a C++ name with arguments and stuff. */
1314 error (_("\
1315 The program being debugged was signaled while in a function called from GDB.\n\
1316 GDB remains in the frame where the signal was received.\n\
1317 To change this behavior use \"set unwindonsignal on\".\n\
1318 Evaluation of the expression containing the function\n\
1319 (%s) will be abandoned.\n\
1320 When the function is done executing, GDB will silently stop."),
1321 name);
1322 }
1323 }
1324
1325 if (stop_stack_dummy == STOP_STD_TERMINATE)
1326 {
1327 /* We must get back to the frame we were before the dummy
1328 call. */
1329 dummy_frame_pop (dummy_id, call_thread_ptid);
1330
1331 /* We also need to restore inferior status to that before
1332 the dummy call. */
1333 restore_infcall_control_state (inf_status);
1334
1335 error (_("\
1336 The program being debugged entered a std::terminate call, most likely\n\
1337 caused by an unhandled C++ exception. GDB blocked this call in order\n\
1338 to prevent the program from being terminated, and has restored the\n\
1339 context to its original state before the call.\n\
1340 To change this behaviour use \"set unwind-on-terminating-exception off\".\n\
1341 Evaluation of the expression containing the function (%s)\n\
1342 will be abandoned."),
1343 name);
1344 }
1345 else if (stop_stack_dummy == STOP_NONE)
1346 {
1347
1348 /* We hit a breakpoint inside the FUNCTION.
1349 Keep the dummy frame, the user may want to examine its state.
1350 Discard inferior status, we're not at the same point
1351 we started at. */
1352 discard_infcall_control_state (inf_status);
1353
1354 /* The following error message used to say "The expression
1355 which contained the function call has been discarded."
1356 It is a hard concept to explain in a few words. Ideally,
1357 GDB would be able to resume evaluation of the expression
1358 when the function finally is done executing. Perhaps
1359 someday this will be implemented (it would not be easy). */
1360 /* FIXME: Insert a bunch of wrap_here; name can be very long if it's
1361 a C++ name with arguments and stuff. */
1362 error (_("\
1363 The program being debugged stopped while in a function called from GDB.\n\
1364 Evaluation of the expression containing the function\n\
1365 (%s) will be abandoned.\n\
1366 When the function is done executing, GDB will silently stop."),
1367 name);
1368 }
1369
1370 }
1371
1372 /* The above code errors out, so ... */
1373 gdb_assert_not_reached ("... should not be here");
1374 }
1375 \f
1376
1377 /* Provide a prototype to silence -Wmissing-prototypes. */
1378 void _initialize_infcall (void);
1379
1380 void
1381 _initialize_infcall (void)
1382 {
1383 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("coerce-float-to-double", class_obscure,
1384 &coerce_float_to_double_p, _("\
1385 Set coercion of floats to doubles when calling functions."), _("\
1386 Show coercion of floats to doubles when calling functions"), _("\
1387 Variables of type float should generally be converted to doubles before\n\
1388 calling an unprototyped function, and left alone when calling a prototyped\n\
1389 function. However, some older debug info formats do not provide enough\n\
1390 information to determine that a function is prototyped. If this flag is\n\
1391 set, GDB will perform the conversion for a function it considers\n\
1392 unprototyped.\n\
1393 The default is to perform the conversion.\n"),
1394 NULL,
1395 show_coerce_float_to_double_p,
1396 &setlist, &showlist);
1397
1398 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("unwindonsignal", no_class,
1399 &unwind_on_signal_p, _("\
1400 Set unwinding of stack if a signal is received while in a call dummy."), _("\
1401 Show unwinding of stack if a signal is received while in a call dummy."), _("\
1402 The unwindonsignal lets the user determine what gdb should do if a signal\n\
1403 is received while in a function called from gdb (call dummy). If set, gdb\n\
1404 unwinds the stack and restore the context to what as it was before the call.\n\
1405 The default is to stop in the frame where the signal was received."),
1406 NULL,
1407 show_unwind_on_signal_p,
1408 &setlist, &showlist);
1409
1410 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("unwind-on-terminating-exception", no_class,
1411 &unwind_on_terminating_exception_p, _("\
1412 Set unwinding of stack if std::terminate is called while in call dummy."), _("\
1413 Show unwinding of stack if std::terminate() is called while in a call dummy."),
1414 _("\
1415 The unwind on terminating exception flag lets the user determine\n\
1416 what gdb should do if a std::terminate() call is made from the\n\
1417 default exception handler. If set, gdb unwinds the stack and restores\n\
1418 the context to what it was before the call. If unset, gdb allows the\n\
1419 std::terminate call to proceed.\n\
1420 The default is to unwind the frame."),
1421 NULL,
1422 show_unwind_on_terminating_exception_p,
1423 &setlist, &showlist);
1424
1425 }
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