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dd7bf85e | 1 | /* Target signal numbers for GDB and the GDB remote protocol. |
6aba47ca | 2 | Copyright 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, |
dc3cf14f | 3 | 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 |
e4d013fc | 4 | Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
dd7bf85e DJ |
5 | |
6 | This file is part of GDB. | |
7 | ||
8 | This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify | |
9 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by | |
1d52ba21 | 10 | the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or |
dd7bf85e DJ |
11 | (at your option) any later version. |
12 | ||
13 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, | |
14 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of | |
15 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the | |
16 | GNU General Public License for more details. | |
17 | ||
18 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License | |
1d52ba21 | 19 | along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ |
dd7bf85e DJ |
20 | |
21 | #ifndef GDB_SIGNALS_H | |
22 | #define GDB_SIGNALS_H | |
23 | ||
24 | /* The numbering of these signals is chosen to match traditional unix | |
25 | signals (insofar as various unices use the same numbers, anyway). | |
26 | It is also the numbering of the GDB remote protocol. Other remote | |
27 | protocols, if they use a different numbering, should make sure to | |
28 | translate appropriately. | |
29 | ||
30 | Since these numbers have actually made it out into other software | |
31 | (stubs, etc.), you mustn't disturb the assigned numbering. If you | |
32 | need to add new signals here, add them to the end of the explicitly | |
1a79372d DJ |
33 | numbered signals, at the comment marker. Add them unconditionally, |
34 | not within any #if or #ifdef. | |
dd7bf85e DJ |
35 | |
36 | This is based strongly on Unix/POSIX signals for several reasons: | |
37 | (1) This set of signals represents a widely-accepted attempt to | |
38 | represent events of this sort in a portable fashion, (2) we want a | |
39 | signal to make it from wait to child_wait to the user intact, (3) many | |
40 | remote protocols use a similar encoding. However, it is | |
41 | recognized that this set of signals has limitations (such as not | |
42 | distinguishing between various kinds of SIGSEGV, or not | |
43 | distinguishing hitting a breakpoint from finishing a single step). | |
44 | So in the future we may get around this either by adding additional | |
45 | signals for breakpoint, single-step, etc., or by adding signal | |
46 | codes; the latter seems more in the spirit of what BSD, System V, | |
47 | etc. are doing to address these issues. */ | |
48 | ||
49 | /* For an explanation of what each signal means, see | |
50 | target_signal_to_string. */ | |
51 | ||
52 | enum target_signal | |
53 | { | |
54 | /* Used some places (e.g. stop_signal) to record the concept that | |
55 | there is no signal. */ | |
56 | TARGET_SIGNAL_0 = 0, | |
57 | TARGET_SIGNAL_FIRST = 0, | |
58 | TARGET_SIGNAL_HUP = 1, | |
59 | TARGET_SIGNAL_INT = 2, | |
60 | TARGET_SIGNAL_QUIT = 3, | |
61 | TARGET_SIGNAL_ILL = 4, | |
62 | TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP = 5, | |
63 | TARGET_SIGNAL_ABRT = 6, | |
64 | TARGET_SIGNAL_EMT = 7, | |
65 | TARGET_SIGNAL_FPE = 8, | |
66 | TARGET_SIGNAL_KILL = 9, | |
67 | TARGET_SIGNAL_BUS = 10, | |
68 | TARGET_SIGNAL_SEGV = 11, | |
69 | TARGET_SIGNAL_SYS = 12, | |
70 | TARGET_SIGNAL_PIPE = 13, | |
71 | TARGET_SIGNAL_ALRM = 14, | |
72 | TARGET_SIGNAL_TERM = 15, | |
73 | TARGET_SIGNAL_URG = 16, | |
74 | TARGET_SIGNAL_STOP = 17, | |
75 | TARGET_SIGNAL_TSTP = 18, | |
76 | TARGET_SIGNAL_CONT = 19, | |
77 | TARGET_SIGNAL_CHLD = 20, | |
78 | TARGET_SIGNAL_TTIN = 21, | |
79 | TARGET_SIGNAL_TTOU = 22, | |
80 | TARGET_SIGNAL_IO = 23, | |
81 | TARGET_SIGNAL_XCPU = 24, | |
82 | TARGET_SIGNAL_XFSZ = 25, | |
83 | TARGET_SIGNAL_VTALRM = 26, | |
84 | TARGET_SIGNAL_PROF = 27, | |
85 | TARGET_SIGNAL_WINCH = 28, | |
86 | TARGET_SIGNAL_LOST = 29, | |
87 | TARGET_SIGNAL_USR1 = 30, | |
88 | TARGET_SIGNAL_USR2 = 31, | |
89 | TARGET_SIGNAL_PWR = 32, | |
90 | /* Similar to SIGIO. Perhaps they should have the same number. */ | |
91 | TARGET_SIGNAL_POLL = 33, | |
92 | TARGET_SIGNAL_WIND = 34, | |
93 | TARGET_SIGNAL_PHONE = 35, | |
94 | TARGET_SIGNAL_WAITING = 36, | |
95 | TARGET_SIGNAL_LWP = 37, | |
96 | TARGET_SIGNAL_DANGER = 38, | |
97 | TARGET_SIGNAL_GRANT = 39, | |
98 | TARGET_SIGNAL_RETRACT = 40, | |
99 | TARGET_SIGNAL_MSG = 41, | |
100 | TARGET_SIGNAL_SOUND = 42, | |
101 | TARGET_SIGNAL_SAK = 43, | |
102 | TARGET_SIGNAL_PRIO = 44, | |
103 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_33 = 45, | |
104 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_34 = 46, | |
105 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_35 = 47, | |
106 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_36 = 48, | |
107 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_37 = 49, | |
108 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_38 = 50, | |
109 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_39 = 51, | |
110 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_40 = 52, | |
111 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_41 = 53, | |
112 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_42 = 54, | |
113 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_43 = 55, | |
114 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_44 = 56, | |
115 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_45 = 57, | |
116 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_46 = 58, | |
117 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_47 = 59, | |
118 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_48 = 60, | |
119 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_49 = 61, | |
120 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_50 = 62, | |
121 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_51 = 63, | |
122 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_52 = 64, | |
123 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_53 = 65, | |
124 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_54 = 66, | |
125 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_55 = 67, | |
126 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_56 = 68, | |
127 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_57 = 69, | |
128 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_58 = 70, | |
129 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_59 = 71, | |
130 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_60 = 72, | |
131 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_61 = 73, | |
132 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_62 = 74, | |
133 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_63 = 75, | |
134 | ||
135 | /* Used internally by Solaris threads. See signal(5) on Solaris. */ | |
136 | TARGET_SIGNAL_CANCEL = 76, | |
137 | ||
138 | /* Yes, this pains me, too. But LynxOS didn't have SIG32, and now | |
139 | GNU/Linux does, and we can't disturb the numbering, since it's | |
140 | part of the remote protocol. Note that in some GDB's | |
141 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_32 is number 76. */ | |
142 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_32, | |
143 | /* Yet another pain, IRIX 6 has SIG64. */ | |
144 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_64, | |
145 | /* Yet another pain, GNU/Linux MIPS might go up to 128. */ | |
146 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_65, | |
147 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_66, | |
148 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_67, | |
149 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_68, | |
150 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_69, | |
151 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_70, | |
152 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_71, | |
153 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_72, | |
154 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_73, | |
155 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_74, | |
156 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_75, | |
157 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_76, | |
158 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_77, | |
159 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_78, | |
160 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_79, | |
161 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_80, | |
162 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_81, | |
163 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_82, | |
164 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_83, | |
165 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_84, | |
166 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_85, | |
167 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_86, | |
168 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_87, | |
169 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_88, | |
170 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_89, | |
171 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_90, | |
172 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_91, | |
173 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_92, | |
174 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_93, | |
175 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_94, | |
176 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_95, | |
177 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_96, | |
178 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_97, | |
179 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_98, | |
180 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_99, | |
181 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_100, | |
182 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_101, | |
183 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_102, | |
184 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_103, | |
185 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_104, | |
186 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_105, | |
187 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_106, | |
188 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_107, | |
189 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_108, | |
190 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_109, | |
191 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_110, | |
192 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_111, | |
193 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_112, | |
194 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_113, | |
195 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_114, | |
196 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_115, | |
197 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_116, | |
198 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_117, | |
199 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_118, | |
200 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_119, | |
201 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_120, | |
202 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_121, | |
203 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_122, | |
204 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_123, | |
205 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_124, | |
206 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_125, | |
207 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_126, | |
208 | TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_127, | |
209 | ||
dd7bf85e DJ |
210 | TARGET_SIGNAL_INFO, |
211 | ||
212 | /* Some signal we don't know about. */ | |
213 | TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN, | |
214 | ||
215 | /* Use whatever signal we use when one is not specifically specified | |
216 | (for passing to proceed and so on). */ | |
217 | TARGET_SIGNAL_DEFAULT, | |
218 | ||
1a79372d DJ |
219 | /* Mach exceptions. In versions of GDB before 5.2, these were just before |
220 | TARGET_SIGNAL_INFO if you were compiling on a Mach host (and missing | |
221 | otherwise). */ | |
222 | TARGET_EXC_BAD_ACCESS, | |
223 | TARGET_EXC_BAD_INSTRUCTION, | |
224 | TARGET_EXC_ARITHMETIC, | |
225 | TARGET_EXC_EMULATION, | |
226 | TARGET_EXC_SOFTWARE, | |
227 | TARGET_EXC_BREAKPOINT, | |
228 | ||
229 | /* If you are adding a new signal, add it just above this comment. */ | |
230 | ||
dd7bf85e DJ |
231 | /* Last and unused enum value, for sizing arrays, etc. */ |
232 | TARGET_SIGNAL_LAST | |
233 | }; | |
234 | ||
235 | #endif /* #ifndef GDB_SIGNALS_H */ |