Fix ARC TLS support.
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / breakpoint.h
CommitLineData
c906108c 1/* Data structures associated with breakpoints in GDB.
618f726f 2 Copyright (C) 1992-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
c906108c 3
c5aa993b 4 This file is part of GDB.
c906108c 5
c5aa993b
JM
6 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
7 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
a9762ec7 8 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
c5aa993b 9 (at your option) any later version.
c906108c 10
c5aa993b
JM
11 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
12 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
13 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
14 GNU General Public License for more details.
c906108c 15
c5aa993b 16 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
a9762ec7 17 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
c906108c
SS
18
19#if !defined (BREAKPOINT_H)
20#define BREAKPOINT_H 1
21
22#include "frame.h"
23#include "value.h"
d6e956e5 24#include "vec.h"
b775012e 25#include "ax.h"
625e8578 26#include "command.h"
de6f69ad 27#include "break-common.h"
729662a5 28#include "probe.h"
c906108c 29
278cd55f 30struct value;
fe898f56 31struct block;
4cb0213d 32struct gdbpy_breakpoint_object;
ed3ef339 33struct gdbscm_breakpoint_object;
197f0a60 34struct get_number_or_range_state;
619cebe8 35struct thread_info;
28010a5d
PA
36struct bpstats;
37struct bp_location;
983af33b
SDJ
38struct linespec_result;
39struct linespec_sals;
f00aae0f 40struct event_location;
278cd55f 41
0e2de366
MS
42/* This is the maximum number of bytes a breakpoint instruction can
43 take. Feel free to increase it. It's just used in a few places to
44 size arrays that should be independent of the target
45 architecture. */
c906108c
SS
46
47#define BREAKPOINT_MAX 16
48\f
a96d9b2e
SDJ
49
50/* Type of breakpoint. */
c5aa993b
JM
51
52enum bptype
53 {
0e2de366 54 bp_none = 0, /* Eventpoint has been deleted */
c5aa993b
JM
55 bp_breakpoint, /* Normal breakpoint */
56 bp_hardware_breakpoint, /* Hardware assisted breakpoint */
7c16b83e 57 bp_single_step, /* Software single-step */
c5aa993b
JM
58 bp_until, /* used by until command */
59 bp_finish, /* used by finish command */
60 bp_watchpoint, /* Watchpoint */
61 bp_hardware_watchpoint, /* Hardware assisted watchpoint */
62 bp_read_watchpoint, /* read watchpoint, (hardware assisted) */
63 bp_access_watchpoint, /* access watchpoint, (hardware assisted) */
64 bp_longjmp, /* secret breakpoint to find longjmp() */
65 bp_longjmp_resume, /* secret breakpoint to escape longjmp() */
66
e2e4d78b
JK
67 /* Breakpoint placed to the same location(s) like bp_longjmp but used to
68 protect against stale DUMMY_FRAME. Multiple bp_longjmp_call_dummy and
69 one bp_call_dummy are chained together by related_breakpoint for each
70 DUMMY_FRAME. */
71 bp_longjmp_call_dummy,
72
186c406b
TT
73 /* An internal breakpoint that is installed on the unwinder's
74 debug hook. */
75 bp_exception,
76 /* An internal breakpoint that is set at the point where an
77 exception will land. */
78 bp_exception_resume,
79
0e2de366 80 /* Used by wait_for_inferior for stepping over subroutine calls,
2c03e5be 81 and for skipping prologues. */
c5aa993b
JM
82 bp_step_resume,
83
2c03e5be
PA
84 /* Used by wait_for_inferior for stepping over signal
85 handlers. */
86 bp_hp_step_resume,
87
c5aa993b
JM
88 /* Used to detect when a watchpoint expression has gone out of
89 scope. These breakpoints are usually not visible to the user.
90
91 This breakpoint has some interesting properties:
c906108c
SS
92
93 1) There's always a 1:1 mapping between watchpoints
94 on local variables and watchpoint_scope breakpoints.
95
96 2) It automatically deletes itself and the watchpoint it's
97 associated with when hit.
98
99 3) It can never be disabled. */
c5aa993b
JM
100 bp_watchpoint_scope,
101
e2e4d78b
JK
102 /* The breakpoint at the end of a call dummy. See bp_longjmp_call_dummy it
103 is chained with by related_breakpoint. */
c5aa993b
JM
104 bp_call_dummy,
105
aa7d318d
TT
106 /* A breakpoint set on std::terminate, that is used to catch
107 otherwise uncaught exceptions thrown during an inferior call. */
108 bp_std_terminate,
109
c5aa993b
JM
110 /* Some dynamic linkers (HP, maybe Solaris) can arrange for special
111 code in the inferior to run when significant events occur in the
112 dynamic linker (for example a library is loaded or unloaded).
113
114 By placing a breakpoint in this magic code GDB will get control
115 when these significant events occur. GDB can then re-examine
116 the dynamic linker's data structures to discover any newly loaded
117 dynamic libraries. */
118 bp_shlib_event,
119
c4093a6a
JM
120 /* Some multi-threaded systems can arrange for a location in the
121 inferior to be executed when certain thread-related events occur
122 (such as thread creation or thread death).
123
124 By placing a breakpoint at one of these locations, GDB will get
125 control when these events occur. GDB can then update its thread
126 lists etc. */
127
128 bp_thread_event,
129
1900040c
MS
130 /* On the same principal, an overlay manager can arrange to call a
131 magic location in the inferior whenever there is an interesting
132 change in overlay status. GDB can update its overlay tables
133 and fiddle with breakpoints in overlays when this breakpoint
134 is hit. */
135
136 bp_overlay_event,
137
0fd8e87f
UW
138 /* Master copies of longjmp breakpoints. These are always installed
139 as soon as an objfile containing longjmp is loaded, but they are
140 always disabled. While necessary, temporary clones of bp_longjmp
141 type will be created and enabled. */
142
143 bp_longjmp_master,
144
aa7d318d
TT
145 /* Master copies of std::terminate breakpoints. */
146 bp_std_terminate_master,
147
186c406b
TT
148 /* Like bp_longjmp_master, but for exceptions. */
149 bp_exception_master,
150
ce78b96d 151 bp_catchpoint,
1042e4c0
SS
152
153 bp_tracepoint,
7a697b8d 154 bp_fast_tracepoint,
0fb4aa4b 155 bp_static_tracepoint,
4efc6507 156
e7e0cddf
SS
157 /* A dynamic printf stops at the given location, does a formatted
158 print, then automatically continues. (Although this is sort of
159 like a macro packaging up standard breakpoint functionality,
160 GDB doesn't have a way to construct types of breakpoint from
161 elements of behavior.) */
162 bp_dprintf,
163
4efc6507
DE
164 /* Event for JIT compiled code generation or deletion. */
165 bp_jit_event,
0e30163f
JK
166
167 /* Breakpoint is placed at the STT_GNU_IFUNC resolver. When hit GDB
168 inserts new bp_gnu_ifunc_resolver_return at the caller.
169 bp_gnu_ifunc_resolver is still being kept here as a different thread
170 may still hit it before bp_gnu_ifunc_resolver_return is hit by the
171 original thread. */
172 bp_gnu_ifunc_resolver,
173
174 /* On its hit GDB now know the resolved address of the target
175 STT_GNU_IFUNC function. Associated bp_gnu_ifunc_resolver can be
176 deleted now and the breakpoint moved to the target function entry
177 point. */
178 bp_gnu_ifunc_resolver_return,
c5aa993b 179 };
c906108c 180
0e2de366 181/* States of enablement of breakpoint. */
c906108c 182
b5de0fa7 183enum enable_state
c5aa993b 184 {
0e2de366
MS
185 bp_disabled, /* The eventpoint is inactive, and cannot
186 trigger. */
187 bp_enabled, /* The eventpoint is active, and can
188 trigger. */
189 bp_call_disabled, /* The eventpoint has been disabled while a
190 call into the inferior is "in flight",
191 because some eventpoints interfere with
192 the implementation of a call on some
193 targets. The eventpoint will be
194 automatically enabled and reset when the
195 call "lands" (either completes, or stops
196 at another eventpoint). */
c5aa993b 197 };
c906108c
SS
198
199
0e2de366 200/* Disposition of breakpoint. Ie: what to do after hitting it. */
c906108c 201
c5aa993b
JM
202enum bpdisp
203 {
b5de0fa7 204 disp_del, /* Delete it */
0e2de366
MS
205 disp_del_at_next_stop, /* Delete at next stop,
206 whether hit or not */
b5de0fa7
EZ
207 disp_disable, /* Disable it */
208 disp_donttouch /* Leave it alone */
c5aa993b 209 };
c906108c 210
b775012e
LM
211/* Status of breakpoint conditions used when synchronizing
212 conditions with the target. */
213
214enum condition_status
215 {
216 condition_unchanged = 0,
217 condition_modified,
218 condition_updated
219 };
220
8181d85f
DJ
221/* Information used by targets to insert and remove breakpoints. */
222
223struct bp_target_info
224{
6c95b8df
PA
225 /* Address space at which the breakpoint was placed. */
226 struct address_space *placed_address_space;
227
0d5ed153
MR
228 /* Address at which the breakpoint was placed. This is normally
229 the same as REQUESTED_ADDRESS, except when adjustment happens in
230 gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc. The most common form of adjustment
231 is stripping an alternate ISA marker from the PC which is used
232 to determine the type of breakpoint to insert. */
8181d85f
DJ
233 CORE_ADDR placed_address;
234
0d5ed153
MR
235 /* Address at which the breakpoint was requested. */
236 CORE_ADDR reqstd_address;
237
f1310107
TJB
238 /* If this is a ranged breakpoint, then this field contains the
239 length of the range that will be watched for execution. */
240 int length;
241
8181d85f
DJ
242 /* If the breakpoint lives in memory and reading that memory would
243 give back the breakpoint, instead of the original contents, then
244 the original contents are cached here. Only SHADOW_LEN bytes of
245 this buffer are valid, and only when the breakpoint is inserted. */
246 gdb_byte shadow_contents[BREAKPOINT_MAX];
247
248 /* The length of the data cached in SHADOW_CONTENTS. */
249 int shadow_len;
250
251 /* The size of the placed breakpoint, according to
0e2de366
MS
252 gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc, when the breakpoint was inserted.
253 This is generally the same as SHADOW_LEN, unless we did not need
8181d85f 254 to read from the target to implement the memory breakpoint
0e2de366
MS
255 (e.g. if a remote stub handled the details). We may still need
256 the size to remove the breakpoint safely. */
8181d85f 257 int placed_size;
b775012e
LM
258
259 /* Vector of conditions the target should evaluate if it supports target-side
260 breakpoint conditions. */
261 VEC(agent_expr_p) *conditions;
d3ce09f5
SS
262
263 /* Vector of commands the target should evaluate if it supports
264 target-side breakpoint commands. */
265 VEC(agent_expr_p) *tcommands;
266
267 /* Flag that is true if the breakpoint should be left in place even
268 when GDB is not connected. */
269 int persist;
8181d85f
DJ
270};
271
5cab636d
DJ
272/* GDB maintains two types of information about each breakpoint (or
273 watchpoint, or other related event). The first type corresponds
274 to struct breakpoint; this is a relatively high-level structure
275 which contains the source location(s), stopping conditions, user
276 commands to execute when the breakpoint is hit, and so forth.
277
278 The second type of information corresponds to struct bp_location.
279 Each breakpoint has one or (eventually) more locations associated
280 with it, which represent target-specific and machine-specific
281 mechanisms for stopping the program. For instance, a watchpoint
282 expression may require multiple hardware watchpoints in order to
283 catch all changes in the value of the expression being watched. */
284
285enum bp_loc_type
286{
287 bp_loc_software_breakpoint,
288 bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint,
289 bp_loc_hardware_watchpoint,
290 bp_loc_other /* Miscellaneous... */
291};
292
28010a5d
PA
293/* This structure is a collection of function pointers that, if
294 available, will be called instead of performing the default action
295 for this bp_loc_type. */
296
297struct bp_location_ops
298{
299 /* Destructor. Releases everything from SELF (but not SELF
300 itself). */
301 void (*dtor) (struct bp_location *self);
302};
303
5cab636d
DJ
304struct bp_location
305{
0d381245
VP
306 /* Chain pointer to the next breakpoint location for
307 the same parent breakpoint. */
7cc221ef
DJ
308 struct bp_location *next;
309
28010a5d
PA
310 /* Methods associated with this location. */
311 const struct bp_location_ops *ops;
312
f431efe5
PA
313 /* The reference count. */
314 int refc;
315
5cab636d
DJ
316 /* Type of this breakpoint location. */
317 enum bp_loc_type loc_type;
318
319 /* Each breakpoint location must belong to exactly one higher-level
f431efe5
PA
320 breakpoint. This pointer is NULL iff this bp_location is no
321 longer attached to a breakpoint. For example, when a breakpoint
322 is deleted, its locations may still be found in the
323 moribund_locations list, or if we had stopped for it, in
324 bpstats. */
5cab636d
DJ
325 struct breakpoint *owner;
326
60e1c644
PA
327 /* Conditional. Break only if this expression's value is nonzero.
328 Unlike string form of condition, which is associated with
329 breakpoint, this is associated with location, since if breakpoint
330 has several locations, the evaluation of expression can be
331 different for different locations. Only valid for real
332 breakpoints; a watchpoint's conditional expression is stored in
333 the owner breakpoint object. */
511a6cd4 334 struct expression *cond;
0d381245 335
b775012e
LM
336 /* Conditional expression in agent expression
337 bytecode form. This is used for stub-side breakpoint
338 condition evaluation. */
339 struct agent_expr *cond_bytecode;
340
341 /* Signals that the condition has changed since the last time
342 we updated the global location list. This means the condition
343 needs to be sent to the target again. This is used together
344 with target-side breakpoint conditions.
345
346 condition_unchanged: It means there has been no condition changes.
347
348 condition_modified: It means this location had its condition modified.
349
350 condition_updated: It means we already marked all the locations that are
351 duplicates of this location and thus we don't need to call
352 force_breakpoint_reinsertion (...) for this location. */
353
354 enum condition_status condition_changed;
355
d3ce09f5
SS
356 struct agent_expr *cmd_bytecode;
357
358 /* Signals that breakpoint conditions and/or commands need to be
359 re-synched with the target. This has no use other than
360 target-side breakpoints. */
b775012e
LM
361 char needs_update;
362
0d381245
VP
363 /* This location's address is in an unloaded solib, and so this
364 location should not be inserted. It will be automatically
365 enabled when that solib is loaded. */
366 char shlib_disabled;
367
368 /* Is this particular location enabled. */
369 char enabled;
511a6cd4 370
5cab636d
DJ
371 /* Nonzero if this breakpoint is now inserted. */
372 char inserted;
373
1a853c52
PA
374 /* Nonzero if this is a permanent breakpoint. There is a breakpoint
375 instruction hard-wired into the target's code. Don't try to
376 write another breakpoint instruction on top of it, or restore its
377 value. Step over it using the architecture's
378 gdbarch_skip_permanent_breakpoint method. */
379 char permanent;
380
5cab636d 381 /* Nonzero if this is not the first breakpoint in the list
1e4d1764
YQ
382 for the given address. location of tracepoint can _never_
383 be duplicated with other locations of tracepoints and other
384 kinds of breakpoints, because two locations at the same
385 address may have different actions, so both of these locations
386 should be downloaded and so that `tfind N' always works. */
5cab636d
DJ
387 char duplicate;
388
389 /* If we someday support real thread-specific breakpoints, then
390 the breakpoint location will need a thread identifier. */
391
392 /* Data for specific breakpoint types. These could be a union, but
393 simplicity is more important than memory usage for breakpoints. */
394
a6d9a66e
UW
395 /* Architecture associated with this location's address. May be
396 different from the breakpoint architecture. */
397 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
398
6c95b8df
PA
399 /* The program space associated with this breakpoint location
400 address. Note that an address space may be represented in more
401 than one program space (e.g. each uClinux program will be given
402 its own program space, but there will only be one address space
403 for all of them), but we must not insert more than one location
404 at the same address in the same address space. */
405 struct program_space *pspace;
406
5cab636d
DJ
407 /* Note that zero is a perfectly valid code address on some platforms
408 (for example, the mn10200 (OBSOLETE) and mn10300 simulators). NULL
409 is not a special value for this field. Valid for all types except
410 bp_loc_other. */
411 CORE_ADDR address;
412
a3be7890 413 /* For hardware watchpoints, the size of the memory region being
f1310107
TJB
414 watched. For hardware ranged breakpoints, the size of the
415 breakpoint range. */
a5606eee
VP
416 int length;
417
0e2de366 418 /* Type of hardware watchpoint. */
a5606eee
VP
419 enum target_hw_bp_type watchpoint_type;
420
714835d5 421 /* For any breakpoint type with an address, this is the section
0e2de366
MS
422 associated with the address. Used primarily for overlay
423 debugging. */
714835d5 424 struct obj_section *section;
cf3a9e5b 425
5cab636d
DJ
426 /* Address at which breakpoint was requested, either by the user or
427 by GDB for internal breakpoints. This will usually be the same
428 as ``address'' (above) except for cases in which
429 ADJUST_BREAKPOINT_ADDRESS has computed a different address at
430 which to place the breakpoint in order to comply with a
431 processor's architectual constraints. */
432 CORE_ADDR requested_address;
8181d85f 433
6a3a010b
MR
434 /* An additional address assigned with this location. This is currently
435 only used by STT_GNU_IFUNC resolver breakpoints to hold the address
436 of the resolver function. */
437 CORE_ADDR related_address;
438
55aa24fb
SDJ
439 /* If the location comes from a probe point, this is the probe associated
440 with it. */
729662a5 441 struct bound_probe probe;
55aa24fb 442
0d381245
VP
443 char *function_name;
444
8181d85f
DJ
445 /* Details of the placed breakpoint, when inserted. */
446 struct bp_target_info target_info;
447
448 /* Similarly, for the breakpoint at an overlay's LMA, if necessary. */
449 struct bp_target_info overlay_target_info;
20874c92
VP
450
451 /* In a non-stop mode, it's possible that we delete a breakpoint,
452 but as we do that, some still running thread hits that breakpoint.
453 For that reason, we need to keep locations belonging to deleted
454 breakpoints for a bit, so that don't report unexpected SIGTRAP.
455 We can't keep such locations forever, so we use a heuristic --
456 after we process certain number of inferior events since
457 breakpoint was deleted, we retire all locations of that breakpoint.
458 This variable keeps a number of events still to go, when
459 it becomes 0 this location is retired. */
460 int events_till_retirement;
f8eba3c6 461
2f202fde
JK
462 /* Line number which was used to place this location.
463
464 Breakpoint placed into a comment keeps it's user specified line number
465 despite ADDRESS resolves into a different line number. */
f8eba3c6
TT
466
467 int line_number;
468
2f202fde
JK
469 /* Symtab which was used to place this location. This is used
470 to find the corresponding source file name. */
f8eba3c6 471
2f202fde 472 struct symtab *symtab;
5cab636d
DJ
473};
474
64166036
PA
475/* The possible return values for print_bpstat, print_it_normal,
476 print_it_done, print_it_noop. */
477enum print_stop_action
478{
479 /* We printed nothing or we need to do some more analysis. */
480 PRINT_UNKNOWN = -1,
481
482 /* We printed something, and we *do* desire that something to be
483 followed by a location. */
484 PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC,
485
486 /* We printed something, and we do *not* desire that something to be
487 followed by a location. */
488 PRINT_SRC_ONLY,
489
490 /* We already printed all we needed to print, don't print anything
491 else. */
492 PRINT_NOTHING
493};
494
3086aeae
DJ
495/* This structure is a collection of function pointers that, if available,
496 will be called instead of the performing the default action for this
497 bptype. */
498
77b06cd7 499struct breakpoint_ops
3086aeae 500{
be5c67c1
PA
501 /* Destructor. Releases everything from SELF (but not SELF
502 itself). */
503 void (*dtor) (struct breakpoint *self);
504
28010a5d
PA
505 /* Allocate a location for this breakpoint. */
506 struct bp_location * (*allocate_location) (struct breakpoint *);
507
508 /* Reevaluate a breakpoint. This is necessary after symbols change
509 (e.g., an executable or DSO was loaded, or the inferior just
510 started). */
511 void (*re_set) (struct breakpoint *self);
512
77b06cd7 513 /* Insert the breakpoint or watchpoint or activate the catchpoint.
348d480f
PA
514 Return 0 for success, 1 if the breakpoint, watchpoint or
515 catchpoint type is not supported, -1 for failure. */
77b06cd7 516 int (*insert_location) (struct bp_location *);
ce78b96d
JB
517
518 /* Remove the breakpoint/catchpoint that was previously inserted
77b06cd7
TJB
519 with the "insert" method above. Return 0 for success, 1 if the
520 breakpoint, watchpoint or catchpoint type is not supported,
521 -1 for failure. */
522 int (*remove_location) (struct bp_location *);
ce78b96d 523
28010a5d
PA
524 /* Return true if it the target has stopped due to hitting
525 breakpoint location BL. This function does not check if we
09ac7c10
TT
526 should stop, only if BL explains the stop. ASPACE is the address
527 space in which the event occurred, BP_ADDR is the address at
528 which the inferior stopped, and WS is the target_waitstatus
529 describing the event. */
530 int (*breakpoint_hit) (const struct bp_location *bl,
531 struct address_space *aspace,
532 CORE_ADDR bp_addr,
533 const struct target_waitstatus *ws);
ce78b96d 534
28010a5d
PA
535 /* Check internal conditions of the breakpoint referred to by BS.
536 If we should not stop for this breakpoint, set BS->stop to 0. */
537 void (*check_status) (struct bpstats *bs);
538
e09342b5
TJB
539 /* Tell how many hardware resources (debug registers) are needed
540 for this breakpoint. If this function is not provided, then
541 the breakpoint or watchpoint needs one debug register. */
542 int (*resources_needed) (const struct bp_location *);
543
9c06b0b4
TJB
544 /* Tell whether we can downgrade from a hardware watchpoint to a software
545 one. If not, the user will not be able to enable the watchpoint when
546 there are not enough hardware resources available. */
547 int (*works_in_software_mode) (const struct breakpoint *);
548
3086aeae
DJ
549 /* The normal print routine for this breakpoint, called when we
550 hit it. */
348d480f 551 enum print_stop_action (*print_it) (struct bpstats *bs);
3086aeae 552
0e2de366
MS
553 /* Display information about this breakpoint, for "info
554 breakpoints". */
a6d9a66e 555 void (*print_one) (struct breakpoint *, struct bp_location **);
3086aeae 556
f1310107
TJB
557 /* Display extra information about this breakpoint, below the normal
558 breakpoint description in "info breakpoints".
559
560 In the example below, the "address range" line was printed
561 by print_one_detail_ranged_breakpoint.
562
563 (gdb) info breakpoints
564 Num Type Disp Enb Address What
565 2 hw breakpoint keep y in main at test-watch.c:70
566 address range: [0x10000458, 0x100004c7]
567
568 */
569 void (*print_one_detail) (const struct breakpoint *, struct ui_out *);
570
0e2de366
MS
571 /* Display information about this breakpoint after setting it
572 (roughly speaking; this is called from "mention"). */
3086aeae 573 void (*print_mention) (struct breakpoint *);
6149aea9
PA
574
575 /* Print to FP the CLI command that recreates this breakpoint. */
576 void (*print_recreate) (struct breakpoint *, struct ui_file *fp);
983af33b 577
5f700d83 578 /* Create SALs from location, storing the result in linespec_result.
983af33b
SDJ
579
580 For an explanation about the arguments, see the function
5f700d83 581 `create_sals_from_location_default'.
983af33b
SDJ
582
583 This function is called inside `create_breakpoint'. */
f00aae0f
KS
584 void (*create_sals_from_location) (const struct event_location *location,
585 struct linespec_result *canonical,
586 enum bptype type_wanted);
983af33b
SDJ
587
588 /* This method will be responsible for creating a breakpoint given its SALs.
589 Usually, it just calls `create_breakpoints_sal' (for ordinary
590 breakpoints). However, there may be some special cases where we might
591 need to do some tweaks, e.g., see
592 `strace_marker_create_breakpoints_sal'.
593
594 This function is called inside `create_breakpoint'. */
595 void (*create_breakpoints_sal) (struct gdbarch *,
596 struct linespec_result *,
52d361e1 597 char *, char *,
983af33b
SDJ
598 enum bptype, enum bpdisp, int, int,
599 int, const struct breakpoint_ops *,
44f238bb 600 int, int, int, unsigned);
983af33b 601
c2f4122d
PA
602 /* Given the location (second parameter), this method decodes it and
603 provides the SAL locations related to it. For ordinary
604 breakpoints, it calls `decode_line_full'. If SEARCH_PSPACE is
605 not NULL, symbol search is restricted to just that program space.
983af33b 606
5f700d83 607 This function is called inside `location_to_sals'. */
f00aae0f
KS
608 void (*decode_location) (struct breakpoint *b,
609 const struct event_location *location,
c2f4122d 610 struct program_space *search_pspace,
f00aae0f 611 struct symtabs_and_lines *sals);
ab04a2af 612
47591c29 613 /* Return true if this breakpoint explains a signal. See
ab04a2af 614 bpstat_explains_signal. */
47591c29 615 int (*explains_signal) (struct breakpoint *, enum gdb_signal);
9d6e6e84
HZ
616
617 /* Called after evaluating the breakpoint's condition,
618 and only if it evaluated true. */
619 void (*after_condition_true) (struct bpstats *bs);
3086aeae
DJ
620};
621
d9b3f62e
PA
622/* Helper for breakpoint_ops->print_recreate implementations. Prints
623 the "thread" or "task" condition of B, and then a newline.
624
625 Necessary because most breakpoint implementations accept
626 thread/task conditions at the end of the spec line, like "break foo
627 thread 1", which needs outputting before any breakpoint-type
628 specific extra command necessary for B's recreation. */
629extern void print_recreate_thread (struct breakpoint *b, struct ui_file *fp);
630
d983da9c
DJ
631enum watchpoint_triggered
632{
633 /* This watchpoint definitely did not trigger. */
634 watch_triggered_no = 0,
635
636 /* Some hardware watchpoint triggered, and it might have been this
637 one, but we do not know which it was. */
638 watch_triggered_unknown,
639
640 /* This hardware watchpoint definitely did trigger. */
641 watch_triggered_yes
642};
643
74960c60
VP
644typedef struct bp_location *bp_location_p;
645DEF_VEC_P(bp_location_p);
646
9add0f1b 647/* A reference-counted struct command_line. This lets multiple
5cea2a26
PA
648 breakpoints share a single command list. This is an implementation
649 detail to the breakpoints module. */
650struct counted_command_line;
9add0f1b 651
e09342b5
TJB
652/* Some targets (e.g., embedded PowerPC) need two debug registers to set
653 a watchpoint over a memory region. If this flag is true, GDB will use
654 only one register per watchpoint, thus assuming that all acesses that
655 modify a memory location happen at its starting address. */
656
657extern int target_exact_watchpoints;
658
c906108c
SS
659/* Note that the ->silent field is not currently used by any commands
660 (though the code is in there if it was to be, and set_raw_breakpoint
661 does set it to 0). I implemented it because I thought it would be
662 useful for a hack I had to put in; I'm going to leave it in because
663 I can see how there might be times when it would indeed be useful */
664
3a5c3e22 665/* This is for all kinds of breakpoints. */
c906108c
SS
666
667struct breakpoint
c5aa993b 668 {
3a5c3e22 669 /* Methods associated with this breakpoint. */
c0a91b2b 670 const struct breakpoint_ops *ops;
3a5c3e22 671
c5aa993b 672 struct breakpoint *next;
0e2de366 673 /* Type of breakpoint. */
c5aa993b
JM
674 enum bptype type;
675 /* Zero means disabled; remember the info but don't break here. */
b5de0fa7 676 enum enable_state enable_state;
0e2de366 677 /* What to do with this breakpoint after we hit it. */
c5aa993b
JM
678 enum bpdisp disposition;
679 /* Number assigned to distinguish breakpoints. */
680 int number;
681
5cab636d
DJ
682 /* Location(s) associated with this high-level breakpoint. */
683 struct bp_location *loc;
76897487 684
c5aa993b 685 /* Non-zero means a silent breakpoint (don't print frame info
0e2de366 686 if we stop here). */
c5aa993b 687 unsigned char silent;
56435ebe
TT
688 /* Non-zero means display ADDR_STRING to the user verbatim. */
689 unsigned char display_canonical;
c5aa993b
JM
690 /* Number of stops at this breakpoint that should
691 be continued automatically before really stopping. */
692 int ignore_count;
816338b5
SS
693
694 /* Number of stops at this breakpoint before it will be
695 disabled. */
696 int enable_count;
697
0e2de366
MS
698 /* Chain of command lines to execute when this breakpoint is
699 hit. */
9add0f1b 700 struct counted_command_line *commands;
c5aa993b
JM
701 /* Stack depth (address of frame). If nonzero, break only if fp
702 equals this. */
818dd999 703 struct frame_id frame_id;
c5aa993b 704
f8eba3c6
TT
705 /* The program space used to set the breakpoint. This is only set
706 for breakpoints which are specific to a program space; for
cc72b2a2 707 non-thread-specific ordinary breakpoints this is NULL. */
6c95b8df
PA
708 struct program_space *pspace;
709
f00aae0f
KS
710 /* Location we used to set the breakpoint (malloc'd). */
711 struct event_location *location;
f1310107 712
f8eba3c6
TT
713 /* The filter that should be passed to decode_line_full when
714 re-setting this breakpoint. This may be NULL, but otherwise is
715 allocated with xmalloc. */
716 char *filter;
717
f00aae0f 718 /* For a ranged breakpoint, the location we used to find
f1310107 719 the end of the range (malloc'd). */
f00aae0f 720 struct event_location *location_range_end;
f1310107 721
a6d9a66e
UW
722 /* Architecture we used to set the breakpoint. */
723 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
c5aa993b
JM
724 /* Language we used to set the breakpoint. */
725 enum language language;
726 /* Input radix we used to set the breakpoint. */
727 int input_radix;
0e2de366
MS
728 /* String form of the breakpoint condition (malloc'd), or NULL if
729 there is no condition. */
c5aa993b 730 char *cond_string;
e7e0cddf 731
fb81d016
KS
732 /* String form of extra parameters, or NULL if there are none.
733 Malloc'd. */
e7e0cddf 734 char *extra_string;
c5aa993b 735
c5aa993b 736 /* Holds the address of the related watchpoint_scope breakpoint
0e2de366
MS
737 when using watchpoints on local variables (might the concept of
738 a related breakpoint be useful elsewhere, if not just call it
739 the watchpoint_scope breakpoint or something like that.
740 FIXME). */
c5aa993b
JM
741 struct breakpoint *related_breakpoint;
742
0e2de366
MS
743 /* Thread number for thread-specific breakpoint,
744 or -1 if don't care. */
c5aa993b
JM
745 int thread;
746
0e2de366
MS
747 /* Ada task number for task-specific breakpoint,
748 or 0 if don't care. */
4a306c9a
JB
749 int task;
750
c5aa993b
JM
751 /* Count of the number of times this breakpoint was taken, dumped
752 with the info, but not used for anything else. Useful for
753 seeing how many times you hit a break prior to the program
754 aborting, so you can back up to just before the abort. */
755 int hit_count;
756
0d381245
VP
757 /* Is breakpoint's condition not yet parsed because we found
758 no location initially so had no context to parse
759 the condition in. */
760 int condition_not_parsed;
1042e4c0 761
84f4c1fe
PM
762 /* With a Python scripting enabled GDB, store a reference to the
763 Python object that has been associated with this breakpoint.
764 This is always NULL for a GDB that is not script enabled. It
765 can sometimes be NULL for enabled GDBs as not all breakpoint
4cb0213d
DE
766 types are tracked by the scripting language API. */
767 struct gdbpy_breakpoint_object *py_bp_object;
ed3ef339
DE
768
769 /* Same as py_bp_object, but for Scheme. */
770 struct gdbscm_breakpoint_object *scm_bp_object;
3a5c3e22 771 };
e09342b5 772
3a5c3e22
PA
773/* An instance of this type is used to represent a watchpoint. It
774 includes a "struct breakpoint" as a kind of base class; users
775 downcast to "struct breakpoint *" when needed. */
9c06b0b4 776
3a5c3e22
PA
777struct watchpoint
778{
779 /* The base class. */
780 struct breakpoint base;
781
782 /* String form of exp to use for displaying to the user (malloc'd),
783 or NULL if none. */
784 char *exp_string;
785 /* String form to use for reparsing of EXP (malloc'd) or NULL. */
786 char *exp_string_reparse;
787
788 /* The expression we are watching, or NULL if not a watchpoint. */
789 struct expression *exp;
790 /* The largest block within which it is valid, or NULL if it is
791 valid anywhere (e.g. consists just of global symbols). */
270140bd 792 const struct block *exp_valid_block;
3a5c3e22
PA
793 /* The conditional expression if any. */
794 struct expression *cond_exp;
795 /* The largest block within which it is valid, or NULL if it is
796 valid anywhere (e.g. consists just of global symbols). */
270140bd 797 const struct block *cond_exp_valid_block;
3a5c3e22
PA
798 /* Value of the watchpoint the last time we checked it, or NULL when
799 we do not know the value yet or the value was not readable. VAL
800 is never lazy. */
801 struct value *val;
802 /* Nonzero if VAL is valid. If VAL_VALID is set but VAL is NULL,
803 then an error occurred reading the value. */
804 int val_valid;
805
bb9d5f81
PP
806 /* When watching the location of a bitfield, contains the offset and size of
807 the bitfield. Otherwise contains 0. */
808 int val_bitpos;
809 int val_bitsize;
810
3a5c3e22
PA
811 /* Holds the frame address which identifies the frame this
812 watchpoint should be evaluated in, or `null' if the watchpoint
813 should be evaluated on the outermost frame. */
814 struct frame_id watchpoint_frame;
815
816 /* Holds the thread which identifies the frame this watchpoint
817 should be considered in scope for, or `null_ptid' if the
818 watchpoint should be evaluated in all threads. */
819 ptid_t watchpoint_thread;
820
821 /* For hardware watchpoints, the triggered status according to the
822 hardware. */
823 enum watchpoint_triggered watchpoint_triggered;
824
825 /* Whether this watchpoint is exact (see
826 target_exact_watchpoints). */
827 int exact;
828
829 /* The mask address for a masked hardware watchpoint. */
830 CORE_ADDR hw_wp_mask;
831};
832
badd37ce
SDJ
833/* Given a function FUNC (struct breakpoint *B, void *DATA) and
834 USER_DATA, call FUNC for every known breakpoint passing USER_DATA
835 as argument.
836
837 If FUNC returns 1, the loop stops and the current
838 'struct breakpoint' being processed is returned. If FUNC returns
839 zero, the loop continues.
840
841 This function returns either a 'struct breakpoint' pointer or NULL.
842 It was based on BFD's bfd_sections_find_if function. */
843
844extern struct breakpoint *breakpoint_find_if
845 (int (*func) (struct breakpoint *b, void *d), void *user_data);
846
b775012e
LM
847/* Return true if BPT is either a software breakpoint or a hardware
848 breakpoint. */
849
850extern int is_breakpoint (const struct breakpoint *bpt);
851
3a5c3e22
PA
852/* Returns true if BPT is really a watchpoint. */
853
854extern int is_watchpoint (const struct breakpoint *bpt);
d6e956e5 855
d9b3f62e
PA
856/* An instance of this type is used to represent all kinds of
857 tracepoints. It includes a "struct breakpoint" as a kind of base
858 class; users downcast to "struct breakpoint *" when needed. */
859
860struct tracepoint
861{
862 /* The base class. */
863 struct breakpoint base;
864
865 /* Number of times this tracepoint should single-step and collect
866 additional data. */
867 long step_count;
868
869 /* Number of times this tracepoint should be hit before
870 disabling/ending. */
871 int pass_count;
872
873 /* The number of the tracepoint on the target. */
874 int number_on_target;
875
f196051f
SS
876 /* The total space taken by all the trace frames for this
877 tracepoint. */
878 ULONGEST traceframe_usage;
879
d9b3f62e
PA
880 /* The static tracepoint marker id, if known. */
881 char *static_trace_marker_id;
882
883 /* LTTng/UST allow more than one marker with the same ID string,
884 although it unadvised because it confuses tools. When setting
885 static tracepoints by marker ID, this will record the index in
886 the array of markers we found for the given marker ID for which
887 this static tracepoint corresponds. When resetting breakpoints,
888 we will use this index to try to find the same marker again. */
889 int static_trace_marker_id_idx;
890};
891
d6e956e5
VP
892typedef struct breakpoint *breakpoint_p;
893DEF_VEC_P(breakpoint_p);
c906108c 894\f
53a5351d
JM
895/* The following stuff is an abstract data type "bpstat" ("breakpoint
896 status"). This provides the ability to determine whether we have
897 stopped at a breakpoint, and what we should do about it. */
c906108c
SS
898
899typedef struct bpstats *bpstat;
900
198757a8
VP
901/* Clears a chain of bpstat, freeing storage
902 of each. */
a14ed312 903extern void bpstat_clear (bpstat *);
c906108c
SS
904
905/* Return a copy of a bpstat. Like "bs1 = bs2" but all storage that
906 is part of the bpstat is copied as well. */
a14ed312 907extern bpstat bpstat_copy (bpstat);
c906108c 908
6c95b8df 909extern bpstat bpstat_stop_status (struct address_space *aspace,
09ac7c10
TT
910 CORE_ADDR pc, ptid_t ptid,
911 const struct target_waitstatus *ws);
c906108c
SS
912\f
913/* This bpstat_what stuff tells wait_for_inferior what to do with a
628fe4e4
JK
914 breakpoint (a challenging task).
915
916 The enum values order defines priority-like order of the actions.
917 Once you've decided that some action is appropriate, you'll never
918 go back and decide something of a lower priority is better. Each
919 of these actions is mutually exclusive with the others. That
920 means, that if you find yourself adding a new action class here and
921 wanting to tell GDB that you have two simultaneous actions to
922 handle, something is wrong, and you probably don't actually need a
923 new action type.
924
925 Note that a step resume breakpoint overrides another breakpoint of
926 signal handling (see comment in wait_for_inferior at where we set
927 the step_resume breakpoint). */
c906108c 928
c5aa993b
JM
929enum bpstat_what_main_action
930 {
931 /* Perform various other tests; that is, this bpstat does not
932 say to perform any action (e.g. failed watchpoint and nothing
933 else). */
934 BPSTAT_WHAT_KEEP_CHECKING,
935
c5aa993b 936 /* Remove breakpoints, single step once, then put them back in and
0e2de366
MS
937 go back to what we were doing. It's possible that this should
938 be removed from the main_action and put into a separate field,
939 to more cleanly handle
940 BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME_SINGLE. */
c5aa993b
JM
941 BPSTAT_WHAT_SINGLE,
942
943 /* Set longjmp_resume breakpoint, remove all other breakpoints,
0e2de366
MS
944 and continue. The "remove all other breakpoints" part is
945 required if we are also stepping over another breakpoint as
946 well as doing the longjmp handling. */
c5aa993b
JM
947 BPSTAT_WHAT_SET_LONGJMP_RESUME,
948
949 /* Clear longjmp_resume breakpoint, then handle as
950 BPSTAT_WHAT_KEEP_CHECKING. */
951 BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME,
952
2c03e5be
PA
953 /* Clear step resume breakpoint, and keep checking. */
954 BPSTAT_WHAT_STEP_RESUME,
955
628fe4e4
JK
956 /* Rather than distinguish between noisy and silent stops here, it
957 might be cleaner to have bpstat_print make that decision (also
958 taking into account stop_print_frame and source_only). But the
0e2de366
MS
959 implications are a bit scary (interaction with auto-displays,
960 etc.), so I won't try it. */
c5aa993b 961
628fe4e4
JK
962 /* Stop silently. */
963 BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_SILENT,
c5aa993b 964
628fe4e4
JK
965 /* Stop and print. */
966 BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_NOISY,
4efc6507 967
2c03e5be
PA
968 /* Clear step resume breakpoint, and keep checking. High-priority
969 step-resume breakpoints are used when even if there's a user
970 breakpoint at the current PC when we set the step-resume
971 breakpoint, we don't want to re-handle any breakpoint other
972 than the step-resume when it's hit; instead we want to move
973 past the breakpoint. This is used in the case of skipping
974 signal handlers. */
975 BPSTAT_WHAT_HP_STEP_RESUME,
c5aa993b
JM
976 };
977
aa7d318d
TT
978/* An enum indicating the kind of "stack dummy" stop. This is a bit
979 of a misnomer because only one kind of truly a stack dummy. */
980enum stop_stack_kind
981 {
982 /* We didn't stop at a stack dummy breakpoint. */
983 STOP_NONE = 0,
984
985 /* Stopped at a stack dummy. */
986 STOP_STACK_DUMMY,
987
988 /* Stopped at std::terminate. */
989 STOP_STD_TERMINATE
990 };
991
c5aa993b
JM
992struct bpstat_what
993 {
994 enum bpstat_what_main_action main_action;
995
0e2de366
MS
996 /* Did we hit a call dummy breakpoint? This only goes with a
997 main_action of BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_SILENT or
998 BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_NOISY (the concept of continuing from a call
999 dummy without popping the frame is not a useful one). */
aa7d318d 1000 enum stop_stack_kind call_dummy;
186c406b
TT
1001
1002 /* Used for BPSTAT_WHAT_SET_LONGJMP_RESUME and
1003 BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME. True if we are handling a
1004 longjmp, false if we are handling an exception. */
1005 int is_longjmp;
c5aa993b 1006 };
c906108c
SS
1007
1008/* Tell what to do about this bpstat. */
a14ed312 1009struct bpstat_what bpstat_what (bpstat);
243a9253
PA
1010
1011/* Run breakpoint event callbacks associated with the breakpoints that
1012 triggered. */
1013extern void bpstat_run_callbacks (bpstat bs_head);
1014
0e2de366 1015/* Find the bpstat associated with a breakpoint. NULL otherwise. */
a14ed312 1016bpstat bpstat_find_breakpoint (bpstat, struct breakpoint *);
c906108c 1017
47591c29
PA
1018/* Nonzero if a signal that we got in target_wait() was due to
1019 circumstances explained by the bpstat; the signal is therefore not
1020 random. */
1021extern int bpstat_explains_signal (bpstat, enum gdb_signal);
c906108c 1022
67822962
PA
1023/* Nonzero is this bpstat causes a stop. */
1024extern int bpstat_causes_stop (bpstat);
1025
c906108c
SS
1026/* Nonzero if we should step constantly (e.g. watchpoints on machines
1027 without hardware support). This isn't related to a specific bpstat,
1028 just to things like whether watchpoints are set. */
a14ed312 1029extern int bpstat_should_step (void);
c906108c 1030
c906108c
SS
1031/* Print a message indicating what happened. Returns nonzero to
1032 say that only the source line should be printed after this (zero
1033 return means print the frame as well as the source line). */
36dfb11c 1034extern enum print_stop_action bpstat_print (bpstat, int);
c906108c 1035
0e2de366
MS
1036/* Put in *NUM the breakpoint number of the first breakpoint we are
1037 stopped at. *BSP upon return is a bpstat which points to the
1038 remaining breakpoints stopped at (but which is not guaranteed to be
1039 good for anything but further calls to bpstat_num).
1040
8671a17b
PA
1041 Return 0 if passed a bpstat which does not indicate any breakpoints.
1042 Return -1 if stopped at a breakpoint that has been deleted since
1043 we set it.
1044 Return 1 otherwise. */
1045extern int bpstat_num (bpstat *, int *);
c906108c 1046
347bddb7
PA
1047/* Perform actions associated with the stopped inferior. Actually, we
1048 just use this for breakpoint commands. Perhaps other actions will
1049 go here later, but this is executed at a late time (from the
1050 command loop). */
1051extern void bpstat_do_actions (void);
c906108c 1052
e93ca019
JK
1053/* Modify all entries of STOP_BPSTAT of INFERIOR_PTID so that the actions will
1054 not be performed. */
1055extern void bpstat_clear_actions (void);
c906108c 1056
c906108c 1057/* Implementation: */
e514a9d6 1058
0e2de366
MS
1059/* Values used to tell the printing routine how to behave for this
1060 bpstat. */
e514a9d6
JM
1061enum bp_print_how
1062 {
1063 /* This is used when we want to do a normal printing of the reason
0e2de366
MS
1064 for stopping. The output will depend on the type of eventpoint
1065 we are dealing with. This is the default value, most commonly
1066 used. */
e514a9d6 1067 print_it_normal,
0e2de366
MS
1068 /* This is used when nothing should be printed for this bpstat
1069 entry. */
e514a9d6
JM
1070 print_it_noop,
1071 /* This is used when everything which needs to be printed has
1072 already been printed. But we still want to print the frame. */
1073 print_it_done
1074 };
1075
c906108c 1076struct bpstats
c5aa993b 1077 {
f431efe5
PA
1078 /* Linked list because there can be more than one breakpoint at
1079 the same place, and a bpstat reflects the fact that all have
1080 been hit. */
c5aa993b 1081 bpstat next;
f431efe5
PA
1082
1083 /* Location that caused the stop. Locations are refcounted, so
1084 this will never be NULL. Note that this location may end up
1085 detached from a breakpoint, but that does not necessary mean
1086 that the struct breakpoint is gone. E.g., consider a
1087 watchpoint with a condition that involves an inferior function
1088 call. Watchpoint locations are recreated often (on resumes,
1089 hence on infcalls too). Between creating the bpstat and after
1090 evaluating the watchpoint condition, this location may hence
1091 end up detached from its original owner watchpoint, even though
1092 the watchpoint is still listed. If it's condition evaluates as
1093 true, we still want this location to cause a stop, and we will
1094 still need to know which watchpoint it was originally attached.
1095 What this means is that we should not (in most cases) follow
1096 the `bpstat->bp_location->owner' link, but instead use the
1097 `breakpoint_at' field below. */
1098 struct bp_location *bp_location_at;
1099
1100 /* Breakpoint that caused the stop. This is nullified if the
1101 breakpoint ends up being deleted. See comments on
1102 `bp_location_at' above for why do we need this field instead of
1103 following the location's owner. */
1104 struct breakpoint *breakpoint_at;
1105
9add0f1b
TT
1106 /* The associated command list. */
1107 struct counted_command_line *commands;
f431efe5 1108
c5aa993b 1109 /* Old value associated with a watchpoint. */
278cd55f 1110 struct value *old_val;
c5aa993b
JM
1111
1112 /* Nonzero if this breakpoint tells us to print the frame. */
1113 char print;
1114
1115 /* Nonzero if this breakpoint tells us to stop. */
1116 char stop;
1117
e514a9d6
JM
1118 /* Tell bpstat_print and print_bp_stop_message how to print stuff
1119 associated with this element of the bpstat chain. */
1120 enum bp_print_how print_it;
c5aa993b 1121 };
c906108c
SS
1122
1123enum inf_context
c5aa993b
JM
1124 {
1125 inf_starting,
1126 inf_running,
6ca15a4b
PA
1127 inf_exited,
1128 inf_execd
c5aa993b 1129 };
c2c6d25f
JM
1130
1131/* The possible return values for breakpoint_here_p.
1132 We guarantee that zero always means "no breakpoint here". */
1133enum breakpoint_here
1134 {
1135 no_breakpoint_here = 0,
1136 ordinary_breakpoint_here,
1137 permanent_breakpoint_here
1138 };
c906108c 1139\f
c5aa993b 1140
c906108c
SS
1141/* Prototypes for breakpoint-related functions. */
1142
1cf4d951
PA
1143/* Return 1 if there's a program/permanent breakpoint planted in
1144 memory at ADDRESS, return 0 otherwise. */
1145
1146extern int program_breakpoint_here_p (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR address);
1147
0e2de366
MS
1148extern enum breakpoint_here breakpoint_here_p (struct address_space *,
1149 CORE_ADDR);
c906108c 1150
d35ae833
PA
1151/* Return true if an enabled breakpoint exists in the range defined by
1152 ADDR and LEN, in ASPACE. */
1153extern int breakpoint_in_range_p (struct address_space *aspace,
1154 CORE_ADDR addr, ULONGEST len);
1155
6c95b8df 1156extern int moribund_breakpoint_here_p (struct address_space *, CORE_ADDR);
1c5cfe86 1157
6c95b8df 1158extern int breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *, CORE_ADDR);
c906108c 1159
0e2de366
MS
1160extern int regular_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *,
1161 CORE_ADDR);
c36b740a 1162
0e2de366
MS
1163extern int software_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *,
1164 CORE_ADDR);
4fa8626c 1165
9c02b525
PA
1166/* Return non-zero iff there is a hardware breakpoint inserted at
1167 PC. */
1168extern int hardware_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *,
1169 CORE_ADDR);
1170
34b7e8a6
PA
1171/* Check whether any location of BP is inserted at PC. */
1172
1173extern int breakpoint_has_location_inserted_here (struct breakpoint *bp,
1174 struct address_space *aspace,
1175 CORE_ADDR pc);
1176
2adfaa28
PA
1177extern int single_step_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *,
1178 CORE_ADDR);
1179
9093389c
PA
1180/* Returns true if there's a hardware watchpoint or access watchpoint
1181 inserted in the range defined by ADDR and LEN. */
1182extern int hardware_watchpoint_inserted_in_range (struct address_space *,
1183 CORE_ADDR addr,
1184 ULONGEST len);
1185
31e77af2
PA
1186/* Returns true if {ASPACE1,ADDR1} and {ASPACE2,ADDR2} represent the
1187 same breakpoint location. In most targets, this can only be true
1188 if ASPACE1 matches ASPACE2. On targets that have global
1189 breakpoints, the address space doesn't really matter. */
1190
1191extern int breakpoint_address_match (struct address_space *aspace1,
1192 CORE_ADDR addr1,
1193 struct address_space *aspace2,
1194 CORE_ADDR addr2);
1195
ae66c1fc 1196extern void until_break_command (char *, int, int);
c906108c 1197
28010a5d
PA
1198/* Initialize a struct bp_location. */
1199
1200extern void init_bp_location (struct bp_location *loc,
1201 const struct bp_location_ops *ops,
1202 struct breakpoint *owner);
1203
0e30163f 1204extern void update_breakpoint_locations (struct breakpoint *b,
c2f4122d 1205 struct program_space *filter_pspace,
f1310107
TJB
1206 struct symtabs_and_lines sals,
1207 struct symtabs_and_lines sals_end);
0e30163f 1208
a14ed312 1209extern void breakpoint_re_set (void);
69de3c6a 1210
a14ed312 1211extern void breakpoint_re_set_thread (struct breakpoint *);
c906108c 1212
c906108c 1213extern struct breakpoint *set_momentary_breakpoint
a6d9a66e 1214 (struct gdbarch *, struct symtab_and_line, struct frame_id, enum bptype);
c906108c 1215
611c83ae 1216extern struct breakpoint *set_momentary_breakpoint_at_pc
a6d9a66e 1217 (struct gdbarch *, CORE_ADDR pc, enum bptype type);
611c83ae 1218
e58b0e63
PA
1219extern struct breakpoint *clone_momentary_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *bpkt);
1220
a14ed312 1221extern void set_ignore_count (int, int, int);
c906108c 1222
a14ed312 1223extern void breakpoint_init_inferior (enum inf_context);
c906108c 1224
4d6140d9
AC
1225extern struct cleanup *make_cleanup_delete_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *);
1226
a14ed312 1227extern void delete_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *);
c906108c 1228
a14ed312 1229extern void breakpoint_auto_delete (bpstat);
c906108c 1230
20388dd6
YQ
1231typedef void (*walk_bp_location_callback) (struct bp_location *, void *);
1232
1233extern void iterate_over_bp_locations (walk_bp_location_callback);
1234
5cea2a26
PA
1235/* Return the chain of command lines to execute when this breakpoint
1236 is hit. */
1237extern struct command_line *breakpoint_commands (struct breakpoint *b);
1238
956a9fb9
JB
1239/* Return a string image of DISP. The string is static, and thus should
1240 NOT be deallocated after use. */
1241const char *bpdisp_text (enum bpdisp disp);
1242
a14ed312 1243extern void break_command (char *, int);
c906108c 1244
a14ed312
KB
1245extern void hbreak_command_wrapper (char *, int);
1246extern void thbreak_command_wrapper (char *, int);
1247extern void rbreak_command_wrapper (char *, int);
84f4c1fe
PM
1248extern void watch_command_wrapper (char *, int, int);
1249extern void awatch_command_wrapper (char *, int, int);
1250extern void rwatch_command_wrapper (char *, int, int);
a14ed312 1251extern void tbreak_command (char *, int);
c906108c 1252
ab04a2af 1253extern struct breakpoint_ops base_breakpoint_ops;
348d480f 1254extern struct breakpoint_ops bkpt_breakpoint_ops;
19ca11c5 1255extern struct breakpoint_ops tracepoint_breakpoint_ops;
c5867ab6 1256extern struct breakpoint_ops dprintf_breakpoint_ops;
348d480f 1257
2060206e 1258extern void initialize_breakpoint_ops (void);
348d480f 1259
9ac4176b
PA
1260/* Arguments to pass as context to some catch command handlers. */
1261#define CATCH_PERMANENT ((void *) (uintptr_t) 0)
1262#define CATCH_TEMPORARY ((void *) (uintptr_t) 1)
1263
1264/* Like add_cmd, but add the command to both the "catch" and "tcatch"
1265 lists, and pass some additional user data to the command
1266 function. */
1267
1268extern void
1269 add_catch_command (char *name, char *docstring,
82ae6c8d 1270 cmd_sfunc_ftype *sfunc,
625e8578 1271 completer_ftype *completer,
9ac4176b
PA
1272 void *user_data_catch,
1273 void *user_data_tcatch);
1274
28010a5d 1275/* Initialize a breakpoint struct for Ada exception catchpoints. */
9ac4176b
PA
1276
1277extern void
28010a5d
PA
1278 init_ada_exception_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *b,
1279 struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
1280 struct symtab_and_line sal,
1281 char *addr_string,
c0a91b2b 1282 const struct breakpoint_ops *ops,
28010a5d 1283 int tempflag,
349774ef 1284 int enabled,
28010a5d
PA
1285 int from_tty);
1286
ab04a2af
TT
1287extern void init_catchpoint (struct breakpoint *b,
1288 struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int tempflag,
1289 char *cond_string,
1290 const struct breakpoint_ops *ops);
1291
28010a5d 1292/* Add breakpoint B on the breakpoint list, and notify the user, the
3a5c3e22
PA
1293 target and breakpoint_created observers of its existence. If
1294 INTERNAL is non-zero, the breakpoint number will be allocated from
3ea46bff
YQ
1295 the internal breakpoint count. If UPDATE_GLL is non-zero,
1296 update_global_location_list will be called. */
28010a5d 1297
3ea46bff
YQ
1298extern void install_breakpoint (int internal, struct breakpoint *b,
1299 int update_gll);
9ac4176b 1300
44f238bb
PA
1301/* Flags that can be passed down to create_breakpoint, etc., to affect
1302 breakpoint creation in several ways. */
1303
1304enum breakpoint_create_flags
1305 {
1306 /* We're adding a breakpoint to our tables that is already
1307 inserted in the target. */
1308 CREATE_BREAKPOINT_FLAGS_INSERTED = 1 << 0
1309 };
1310
f00aae0f
KS
1311/* Set a breakpoint. This function is shared between CLI and MI functions
1312 for setting a breakpoint at LOCATION.
1313
1314 This function has two major modes of operations, selected by the
1315 PARSE_EXTRA parameter.
1316
1317 If PARSE_EXTRA is zero, LOCATION is just the breakpoint's location,
1318 with condition, thread, and extra string specified by the COND_STRING,
1319 THREAD, and EXTRA_STRING parameters.
1320
1321 If PARSE_EXTRA is non-zero, this function will attempt to extract
1322 the condition, thread, and extra string from EXTRA_STRING, ignoring
1323 the similarly named parameters.
1324
1325 If INTERNAL is non-zero, the breakpoint number will be allocated
1326 from the internal breakpoint count.
1327
1328 Returns true if any breakpoint was created; false otherwise. */
1329
1330extern int create_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
1331 const struct event_location *location,
8cdf0e15 1332 char *cond_string, int thread,
e7e0cddf 1333 char *extra_string,
f00aae0f 1334 int parse_extra,
0fb4aa4b 1335 int tempflag, enum bptype wanted_type,
8cdf0e15
VP
1336 int ignore_count,
1337 enum auto_boolean pending_break_support,
c0a91b2b 1338 const struct breakpoint_ops *ops,
8cdf0e15 1339 int from_tty,
84f4c1fe 1340 int enabled,
44f238bb 1341 int internal, unsigned flags);
98deb0da 1342
e236ba44 1343extern void insert_breakpoints (void);
c906108c 1344
a14ed312 1345extern int remove_breakpoints (void);
c906108c 1346
6c95b8df
PA
1347extern int remove_breakpoints_pid (int pid);
1348
c906108c
SS
1349/* This function can be used to physically insert eventpoints from the
1350 specified traced inferior process, without modifying the breakpoint
0e2de366
MS
1351 package's state. This can be useful for those targets which
1352 support following the processes of a fork() or vfork() system call,
1353 when both of the resulting two processes are to be followed. */
a14ed312 1354extern int reattach_breakpoints (int);
c906108c
SS
1355
1356/* This function can be used to update the breakpoint package's state
1357 after an exec() system call has been executed.
1358
1359 This function causes the following:
1360
c5aa993b
JM
1361 - All eventpoints are marked "not inserted".
1362 - All eventpoints with a symbolic address are reset such that
1363 the symbolic address must be reevaluated before the eventpoints
1364 can be reinserted.
1365 - The solib breakpoints are explicitly removed from the breakpoint
1366 list.
1367 - A step-resume breakpoint, if any, is explicitly removed from the
1368 breakpoint list.
1369 - All eventpoints without a symbolic address are removed from the
0e2de366 1370 breakpoint list. */
a14ed312 1371extern void update_breakpoints_after_exec (void);
c906108c
SS
1372
1373/* This function can be used to physically remove hardware breakpoints
1374 and watchpoints from the specified traced inferior process, without
1375 modifying the breakpoint package's state. This can be useful for
1376 those targets which support following the processes of a fork() or
1377 vfork() system call, when one of the resulting two processes is to
1378 be detached and allowed to run free.
c5aa993b 1379
c906108c 1380 It is an error to use this function on the process whose id is
39f77062 1381 inferior_ptid. */
d80ee84f 1382extern int detach_breakpoints (ptid_t ptid);
c5aa993b 1383
6c95b8df
PA
1384/* This function is called when program space PSPACE is about to be
1385 deleted. It takes care of updating breakpoints to not reference
1386 this PSPACE anymore. */
1387extern void breakpoint_program_space_exit (struct program_space *pspace);
1388
186c406b
TT
1389extern void set_longjmp_breakpoint (struct thread_info *tp,
1390 struct frame_id frame);
611c83ae
PA
1391extern void delete_longjmp_breakpoint (int thread);
1392
f59f708a
PA
1393/* Mark all longjmp breakpoints from THREAD for later deletion. */
1394extern void delete_longjmp_breakpoint_at_next_stop (int thread);
1395
e2e4d78b 1396extern struct breakpoint *set_longjmp_breakpoint_for_call_dummy (void);
b67a2c6f 1397extern void check_longjmp_breakpoint_for_call_dummy (struct thread_info *tp);
e2e4d78b 1398
1900040c
MS
1399extern void enable_overlay_breakpoints (void);
1400extern void disable_overlay_breakpoints (void);
c906108c 1401
aa7d318d
TT
1402extern void set_std_terminate_breakpoint (void);
1403extern void delete_std_terminate_breakpoint (void);
1404
c906108c
SS
1405/* These functions respectively disable or reenable all currently
1406 enabled watchpoints. When disabled, the watchpoints are marked
64b9b334 1407 call_disabled. When re-enabled, they are marked enabled.
c906108c 1408
04714b91 1409 The intended client of these functions is call_function_by_hand.
c906108c
SS
1410
1411 The inferior must be stopped, and all breakpoints removed, when
1412 these functions are used.
1413
1414 The need for these functions is that on some targets (e.g., HP-UX),
1415 gdb is unable to unwind through the dummy frame that is pushed as
1416 part of the implementation of a call command. Watchpoints can
1417 cause the inferior to stop in places where this frame is visible,
1418 and that can cause execution control to become very confused.
1419
7e73cedf 1420 Note that if a user sets breakpoints in an interactively called
64b9b334 1421 function, the call_disabled watchpoints will have been re-enabled
c906108c
SS
1422 when the first such breakpoint is reached. However, on targets
1423 that are unable to unwind through the call dummy frame, watches
1424 of stack-based storage may then be deleted, because gdb will
1425 believe that their watched storage is out of scope. (Sigh.) */
a14ed312 1426extern void disable_watchpoints_before_interactive_call_start (void);
c906108c 1427
a14ed312 1428extern void enable_watchpoints_after_interactive_call_stop (void);
c906108c 1429
8bea4e01
UW
1430/* These functions disable and re-enable all breakpoints during
1431 inferior startup. They are intended to be called from solib
1432 code where necessary. This is needed on platforms where the
1433 main executable is relocated at some point during startup
1434 processing, making breakpoint addresses invalid.
1435
1436 If additional breakpoints are created after the routine
1437 disable_breakpoints_before_startup but before the routine
1438 enable_breakpoints_after_startup was called, they will also
1439 be marked as disabled. */
1440extern void disable_breakpoints_before_startup (void);
1441extern void enable_breakpoints_after_startup (void);
1442
40c03ae8 1443/* For script interpreters that need to define breakpoint commands
0e2de366
MS
1444 after they've already read the commands into a struct
1445 command_line. */
40c03ae8
EZ
1446extern enum command_control_type commands_from_control_command
1447 (char *arg, struct command_line *cmd);
c5aa993b 1448
a14ed312 1449extern void clear_breakpoint_hit_counts (void);
c906108c 1450
48cb2d85
VP
1451extern struct breakpoint *get_breakpoint (int num);
1452
0e2de366
MS
1453/* The following are for displays, which aren't really breakpoints,
1454 but here is as good a place as any for them. */
c906108c 1455
a14ed312 1456extern void disable_current_display (void);
c906108c 1457
a14ed312 1458extern void do_displays (void);
c906108c 1459
a14ed312 1460extern void disable_display (int);
c906108c 1461
a14ed312 1462extern void clear_displays (void);
c906108c 1463
a14ed312 1464extern void disable_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *);
c906108c 1465
a14ed312 1466extern void enable_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *);
c906108c 1467
48cb2d85
VP
1468extern void breakpoint_set_commands (struct breakpoint *b,
1469 struct command_line *commands);
1470
45a43567
TT
1471extern void breakpoint_set_silent (struct breakpoint *b, int silent);
1472
1473extern void breakpoint_set_thread (struct breakpoint *b, int thread);
1474
1475extern void breakpoint_set_task (struct breakpoint *b, int task);
1476
25b22b0a
PA
1477/* Clear the "inserted" flag in all breakpoints. */
1478extern void mark_breakpoints_out (void);
1479
4efc6507
DE
1480extern struct breakpoint *create_jit_event_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *,
1481 CORE_ADDR);
1482
a6d9a66e
UW
1483extern struct breakpoint *create_solib_event_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *,
1484 CORE_ADDR);
c906108c 1485
f37f681c
PA
1486/* Create an solib event breakpoint at ADDRESS in the current program
1487 space, and immediately try to insert it. Returns a pointer to the
1488 breakpoint on success. Deletes the new breakpoint and returns NULL
1489 if inserting the breakpoint fails. */
1490extern struct breakpoint *create_and_insert_solib_event_breakpoint
1491 (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR address);
1492
a6d9a66e
UW
1493extern struct breakpoint *create_thread_event_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *,
1494 CORE_ADDR);
c4093a6a 1495
03673fc7
PP
1496extern void remove_jit_event_breakpoints (void);
1497
a14ed312 1498extern void remove_solib_event_breakpoints (void);
c906108c 1499
f37f681c
PA
1500/* Mark solib event breakpoints of the current program space with
1501 delete at next stop disposition. */
1502extern void remove_solib_event_breakpoints_at_next_stop (void);
1503
cb851954 1504extern void disable_breakpoints_in_shlibs (void);
c906108c 1505
0e2de366 1506/* This function returns TRUE if ep is a catchpoint. */
c326b90e 1507extern int is_catchpoint (struct breakpoint *);
c5aa993b 1508
91985142
MG
1509/* Shared helper function (MI and CLI) for creating and installing
1510 a shared object event catchpoint. */
1511extern void add_solib_catchpoint (char *arg, int is_load, int is_temp,
1512 int enabled);
1513
c2c6d25f 1514/* Enable breakpoints and delete when hit. Called with ARG == NULL
0e2de366 1515 deletes all breakpoints. */
c2c6d25f
JM
1516extern void delete_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
1517
7c16b83e
PA
1518/* Create and insert a new software single step breakpoint for the
1519 current thread. May be called multiple times; each time will add a
1520 new location to the set of potential addresses the next instruction
1521 is at. */
6c95b8df 1522extern void insert_single_step_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *,
0e2de366
MS
1523 struct address_space *,
1524 CORE_ADDR);
d983da9c
DJ
1525/* Check if any hardware watchpoints have triggered, according to the
1526 target. */
1527int watchpoints_triggered (struct target_waitstatus *);
1528
f0ba3972
PA
1529/* Helper for transparent breakpoint hiding for memory read and write
1530 routines.
1531
1532 Update one of READBUF or WRITEBUF with either the shadows
1533 (READBUF), or the breakpoint instructions (WRITEBUF) of inserted
1534 breakpoints at the memory range defined by MEMADDR and extending
1535 for LEN bytes. If writing, then WRITEBUF is a copy of WRITEBUF_ORG
1536 on entry.*/
1537extern void breakpoint_xfer_memory (gdb_byte *readbuf, gdb_byte *writebuf,
1538 const gdb_byte *writebuf_org,
1539 ULONGEST memaddr, LONGEST len);
8defab1a 1540
b57bacec
PA
1541/* Return true if breakpoints should be inserted now. That'll be the
1542 case if either:
1543
1544 - the target has global breakpoints.
1545
1546 - "breakpoint always-inserted" is on, and the target has
1547 execution.
1548
1549 - threads are executing.
1550*/
a25a5a45 1551extern int breakpoints_should_be_inserted_now (void);
74960c60 1552
20874c92
VP
1553/* Called each time new event from target is processed.
1554 Retires previously deleted breakpoint locations that
1555 in our opinion won't ever trigger. */
1556extern void breakpoint_retire_moribund (void);
1557
adc36818 1558/* Set break condition of breakpoint B to EXP. */
7a26bd4d 1559extern void set_breakpoint_condition (struct breakpoint *b, const char *exp,
adc36818
PM
1560 int from_tty);
1561
a96d9b2e
SDJ
1562/* Checks if we are catching syscalls or not.
1563 Returns 0 if not, greater than 0 if we are. */
1564extern int catch_syscall_enabled (void);
1565
1566/* Checks if we are catching syscalls with the specific
1567 syscall_number. Used for "filtering" the catchpoints.
1568 Returns 0 if not, greater than 0 if we are. */
1569extern int catching_syscall_number (int syscall_number);
1570
1042e4c0 1571/* Return a tracepoint with the given number if found. */
d9b3f62e 1572extern struct tracepoint *get_tracepoint (int num);
1042e4c0 1573
d9b3f62e 1574extern struct tracepoint *get_tracepoint_by_number_on_target (int num);
d5551862 1575
1042e4c0 1576/* Find a tracepoint by parsing a number in the supplied string. */
d9b3f62e 1577extern struct tracepoint *
197f0a60 1578 get_tracepoint_by_number (char **arg,
5fa1d40e 1579 struct get_number_or_range_state *state);
1042e4c0
SS
1580
1581/* Return a vector of all tracepoints currently defined. The vector
1582 is newly allocated; the caller should free when done with it. */
1583extern VEC(breakpoint_p) *all_tracepoints (void);
1584
d77f58be 1585extern int is_tracepoint (const struct breakpoint *b);
a7bdde9e 1586
0fb4aa4b
PA
1587/* Return a vector of all static tracepoints defined at ADDR. The
1588 vector is newly allocated; the caller should free when done with
1589 it. */
1590extern VEC(breakpoint_p) *static_tracepoints_here (CORE_ADDR addr);
1591
a7bdde9e
VP
1592/* Function that can be passed to read_command_line to validate
1593 that each command is suitable for tracepoint command list. */
1594extern void check_tracepoint_command (char *line, void *closure);
1595
95a42b64
TT
1596/* Call at the start and end of an "rbreak" command to register
1597 breakpoint numbers for a later "commands" command. */
1598extern void start_rbreak_breakpoints (void);
1599extern void end_rbreak_breakpoints (void);
1600
84f4c1fe
PM
1601/* Breakpoint iterator function.
1602
1603 Calls a callback function once for each breakpoint, so long as the
1604 callback function returns false. If the callback function returns
1605 true, the iteration will end and the current breakpoint will be
1606 returned. This can be useful for implementing a search for a
1607 breakpoint with arbitrary attributes, or for applying an operation
1608 to every breakpoint. */
1609extern struct breakpoint *iterate_over_breakpoints (int (*) (struct breakpoint *,
1610 void *), void *);
1611
0574c78f
GB
1612/* Nonzero if the specified PC cannot be a location where functions
1613 have been inlined. */
1614
1615extern int pc_at_non_inline_function (struct address_space *aspace,
09ac7c10
TT
1616 CORE_ADDR pc,
1617 const struct target_waitstatus *ws);
0574c78f 1618
09d682a4
TT
1619extern int user_breakpoint_p (struct breakpoint *);
1620
1bfeeb0f
JL
1621/* Attempt to determine architecture of location identified by SAL. */
1622extern struct gdbarch *get_sal_arch (struct symtab_and_line sal);
1623
2f202fde
JK
1624extern void breakpoint_free_objfile (struct objfile *objfile);
1625
916703c0
TT
1626extern char *ep_parse_optional_if_clause (char **arg);
1627
f303dbd6
PA
1628/* Print the "Thread ID hit" part of "Thread ID hit Breakpoint N" to
1629 UIOUT iff debugging multiple threads. */
1630extern void maybe_print_thread_hit_breakpoint (struct ui_out *uiout);
1631
c906108c 1632#endif /* !defined (BREAKPOINT_H) */
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