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b5a0ac70 | 1 | /* Definitions used by the GDB event loop. |
ecd75fc8 | 2 | Copyright (C) 1999-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
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3 | Written by Elena Zannoni <ezannoni@cygnus.com> of Cygnus Solutions. |
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 | |
a9762ec7 | 9 | the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or |
b5a0ac70 SS |
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 | |
a9762ec7 | 18 | along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ |
b5a0ac70 | 19 | |
371d5dec | 20 | /* An event loop listens for events from multiple event sources. When |
b5a0ac70 | 21 | an event arrives, it is queued and processed by calling the |
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22 | appropriate event handler. The event loop then continues to listen |
23 | for more events. An event loop completes when there are no event | |
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24 | sources to listen on. External event sources can be plugged into |
25 | the loop. | |
26 | ||
50d01748 | 27 | There are 4 main components: |
371d5dec | 28 | - a list of file descriptors to be monitored, GDB_NOTIFIER. |
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29 | - a list of asynchronous event sources to be monitored, |
30 | ASYNC_EVENT_HANDLER_LIST. | |
371d5dec | 31 | - a list of events that have occurred, EVENT_QUEUE. |
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32 | - a list of signal handling functions, SIGHANDLER_LIST. |
33 | ||
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34 | GDB_NOTIFIER keeps track of the file descriptor based event |
35 | sources. ASYNC_EVENT_HANDLER_LIST keeps track of asynchronous | |
36 | event sources that are signalled by some component of gdb, usually | |
37 | a target_ops instance. Event sources for gdb are currently the UI | |
38 | and the target. Gdb communicates with the command line user | |
39 | interface via the readline library and usually communicates with | |
40 | remote targets via a serial port. Serial ports are represented in | |
41 | GDB as file descriptors and select/poll calls. For native targets | |
42 | instead, the communication varies across operating system debug | |
43 | APIs, but usually consists of calls to ptrace and waits (via | |
44 | signals) or calls to poll/select (via file descriptors). In the | |
45 | current gdb, the code handling events related to the target resides | |
46 | in wait_for_inferior for synchronous targets; or, for asynchronous | |
47 | capable targets, by having the target register either a target | |
48 | controlled file descriptor and/or an asynchronous event source in | |
49 | the event loop, with the fetch_inferior_event function as the event | |
50 | callback. In both the synchronous and asynchronous cases, usually | |
51 | the target event is collected through the target_wait interface. | |
52 | The target is free to install other event sources in the event loop | |
53 | if it so requires. | |
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54 | |
55 | EVENT_QUEUE keeps track of the events that have happened during the | |
56 | last iteration of the event loop, and need to be processed. An | |
57 | event is represented by a procedure to be invoked in order to | |
58 | process the event. The queue is scanned head to tail. If the | |
59 | event of interest is a change of state in a file descriptor, then a | |
60 | call to poll or select will be made to detect it. | |
61 | ||
62 | If the events generate signals, they are also queued by special | |
63 | functions that are invoked through traditional signal handlers. | |
64 | The actions to be taken is response to such events will be executed | |
65 | when the SIGHANDLER_LIST is scanned, the next time through the | |
371d5dec | 66 | infinite loop. |
b5a0ac70 | 67 | |
371d5dec | 68 | Corollary tasks are the creation and deletion of event sources. */ |
b5a0ac70 | 69 | |
97bb9d91 | 70 | typedef void *gdb_client_data; |
c2c6d25f | 71 | struct async_signal_handler; |
50d01748 | 72 | struct async_event_handler; |
2acceee2 | 73 | typedef void (handler_func) (int, gdb_client_data); |
c2c6d25f | 74 | typedef void (sig_handler_func) (gdb_client_data); |
50d01748 | 75 | typedef void (async_event_handler_func) (gdb_client_data); |
c2c6d25f | 76 | typedef void (timer_handler_func) (gdb_client_data); |
b5a0ac70 | 77 | |
085dd6e6 | 78 | /* Exported functions from event-loop.c */ |
0f71a2f6 | 79 | |
843b20dc | 80 | extern void initialize_event_loop (void); |
c2c6d25f | 81 | extern void start_event_loop (void); |
e0dd0826 | 82 | extern int gdb_do_one_event (void); |
c2c6d25f | 83 | extern void delete_file_handler (int fd); |
371d5dec MS |
84 | extern void add_file_handler (int fd, handler_func *proc, |
85 | gdb_client_data client_data); | |
6426a772 | 86 | extern struct async_signal_handler * |
371d5dec MS |
87 | create_async_signal_handler (sig_handler_func *proc, |
88 | gdb_client_data client_data); | |
3e43a32a | 89 | extern void delete_async_signal_handler (struct async_signal_handler **); |
371d5dec MS |
90 | extern int create_timer (int milliseconds, |
91 | timer_handler_func *proc, | |
92 | gdb_client_data client_data); | |
c2c6d25f | 93 | extern void delete_timer (int id); |
b803fb0f DJ |
94 | |
95 | /* Call the handler from HANDLER immediately. This function | |
96 | runs signal handlers when returning to the event loop would be too | |
97 | slow. Do not call this directly; use gdb_call_async_signal_handler, | |
98 | below, with IMMEDIATE_P == 1. */ | |
99 | void call_async_signal_handler (struct async_signal_handler *handler); | |
100 | ||
101 | /* Call the handler from HANDLER the next time through the event loop. | |
102 | Do not call this directly; use gdb_call_async_signal_handler, | |
103 | below, with IMMEDIATE_P == 0. */ | |
104 | void mark_async_signal_handler (struct async_signal_handler *handler); | |
105 | ||
106 | /* Wrapper for the body of signal handlers. Call this function from | |
107 | any SIGINT handler which needs to access GDB data structures or | |
108 | escape via longjmp. If IMMEDIATE_P is set, this triggers either | |
109 | immediately (for POSIX platforms), or from gdb_select (for | |
110 | MinGW). If IMMEDIATE_P is clear, the handler will run the next | |
111 | time we return to the event loop and any current select calls | |
112 | will be interrupted. */ | |
113 | ||
114 | void gdb_call_async_signal_handler (struct async_signal_handler *handler, | |
115 | int immediate_p); | |
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116 | |
117 | /* Create and register an asynchronous event source in the event loop, | |
118 | and set PROC as its callback. CLIENT_DATA is passed as argument to | |
119 | PROC upon its invocation. Returns a pointer to an opaque structure | |
120 | used to mark as ready and to later delete this event source from | |
121 | the event loop. */ | |
122 | extern struct async_event_handler * | |
123 | create_async_event_handler (async_event_handler_func *proc, | |
124 | gdb_client_data client_data); | |
125 | ||
126 | /* Remove the event source pointed by HANDLER_PTR created by | |
127 | CREATE_ASYNC_EVENT_HANDLER from the event loop, and release it. */ | |
128 | extern void | |
129 | delete_async_event_handler (struct async_event_handler **handler_ptr); | |
130 | ||
131 | /* Call the handler from HANDLER the next time through the event | |
132 | loop. */ | |
133 | extern void mark_async_event_handler (struct async_event_handler *handler); |