new for ptx
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / breakpoint.c
1 /* Everything about breakpoints, for GDB.
2 Copyright 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3
4 This file is part of GDB.
5
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
8 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
9 (at your option) any later version.
10
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.
15
16 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
17 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
18 Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
19
20 #include "defs.h"
21 #include <ctype.h>
22 #include "symtab.h"
23 #include "frame.h"
24 #include "breakpoint.h"
25 #include "gdbtypes.h"
26 #include "expression.h"
27 #include "gdbcore.h"
28 #include "gdbcmd.h"
29 #include "value.h"
30 #include "ctype.h"
31 #include "command.h"
32 #include "inferior.h"
33 #include "thread.h"
34 #include "target.h"
35 #include "language.h"
36 #include <string.h>
37 #include "demangle.h"
38
39 /* local function prototypes */
40
41 static void
42 catch_command_1 PARAMS ((char *, int, int));
43
44 static void
45 enable_delete_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
46
47 static void
48 enable_delete_breakpoint PARAMS ((struct breakpoint *));
49
50 static void
51 enable_once_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
52
53 static void
54 enable_once_breakpoint PARAMS ((struct breakpoint *));
55
56 static void
57 disable_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
58
59 static void
60 disable_breakpoint PARAMS ((struct breakpoint *));
61
62 static void
63 enable_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
64
65 static void
66 enable_breakpoint PARAMS ((struct breakpoint *));
67
68 static void
69 map_breakpoint_numbers PARAMS ((char *, void (*)(struct breakpoint *)));
70
71 static void
72 ignore_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
73
74 static int
75 breakpoint_re_set_one PARAMS ((char *));
76
77 static void
78 delete_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
79
80 static void
81 clear_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
82
83 static void
84 catch_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
85
86 static struct symtabs_and_lines
87 get_catch_sals PARAMS ((int));
88
89 static void
90 watch_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
91
92 static void
93 tbreak_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
94
95 static void
96 break_command_1 PARAMS ((char *, int, int));
97
98 static void
99 mention PARAMS ((struct breakpoint *));
100
101 static struct breakpoint *
102 set_raw_breakpoint PARAMS ((struct symtab_and_line));
103
104 static void
105 check_duplicates PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR));
106
107 static void
108 describe_other_breakpoints PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR));
109
110 static void
111 breakpoints_info PARAMS ((char *, int));
112
113 static void
114 breakpoint_1 PARAMS ((int, int));
115
116 static bpstat
117 bpstat_alloc PARAMS ((struct breakpoint *, bpstat));
118
119 static int
120 breakpoint_cond_eval PARAMS ((char *));
121
122 static void
123 cleanup_executing_breakpoints PARAMS ((int));
124
125 static void
126 commands_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
127
128 static void
129 condition_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
130
131 static int
132 get_number PARAMS ((char **));
133
134 static void
135 set_breakpoint_count PARAMS ((int));
136
137
138 extern int addressprint; /* Print machine addresses? */
139 extern int demangle; /* Print de-mangled symbol names? */
140
141 /* Are we executing breakpoint commands? */
142 static int executing_breakpoint_commands;
143
144 /* Walk the following statement or block through all breakpoints.
145 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE does so even if the statment deletes the current
146 breakpoint. */
147
148 #define ALL_BREAKPOINTS(b) for (b = breakpoint_chain; b; b = b->next)
149
150 #define ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE(b,tmp) \
151 for (b = breakpoint_chain; \
152 b? (tmp=b->next, 1): 0; \
153 b = tmp)
154
155 /* Chain of all breakpoints defined. */
156
157 static struct breakpoint *breakpoint_chain;
158
159 /* Number of last breakpoint made. */
160
161 static int breakpoint_count;
162
163 /* Set breakpoint count to NUM. */
164 static void
165 set_breakpoint_count (num)
166 int num;
167 {
168 breakpoint_count = num;
169 set_internalvar (lookup_internalvar ("bpnum"),
170 value_from_longest (builtin_type_int, (LONGEST) num));
171 }
172
173 /* Default address, symtab and line to put a breakpoint at
174 for "break" command with no arg.
175 if default_breakpoint_valid is zero, the other three are
176 not valid, and "break" with no arg is an error.
177
178 This set by print_stack_frame, which calls set_default_breakpoint. */
179
180 int default_breakpoint_valid;
181 CORE_ADDR default_breakpoint_address;
182 struct symtab *default_breakpoint_symtab;
183 int default_breakpoint_line;
184
185 /* Flag indicating extra verbosity for xgdb. */
186 extern int xgdb_verbose;
187 \f
188 /* *PP is a string denoting a breakpoint. Get the number of the breakpoint.
189 Advance *PP after the string and any trailing whitespace.
190
191 Currently the string can either be a number or "$" followed by the name
192 of a convenience variable. Making it an expression wouldn't work well
193 for map_breakpoint_numbers (e.g. "4 + 5 + 6"). */
194 static int
195 get_number (pp)
196 char **pp;
197 {
198 int retval;
199 char *p = *pp;
200
201 if (p == NULL)
202 /* Empty line means refer to the last breakpoint. */
203 return breakpoint_count;
204 else if (*p == '$')
205 {
206 /* Make a copy of the name, so we can null-terminate it
207 to pass to lookup_internalvar(). */
208 char *varname;
209 char *start = ++p;
210 value_ptr val;
211
212 while (isalnum (*p) || *p == '_')
213 p++;
214 varname = (char *) alloca (p - start + 1);
215 strncpy (varname, start, p - start);
216 varname[p - start] = '\0';
217 val = value_of_internalvar (lookup_internalvar (varname));
218 if (TYPE_CODE (VALUE_TYPE (val)) != TYPE_CODE_INT)
219 error (
220 "Convenience variables used to specify breakpoints must have integer values."
221 );
222 retval = (int) value_as_long (val);
223 }
224 else
225 {
226 if (*p == '-')
227 ++p;
228 while (*p >= '0' && *p <= '9')
229 ++p;
230 if (p == *pp)
231 /* There is no number here. (e.g. "cond a == b"). */
232 error_no_arg ("breakpoint number");
233 retval = atoi (*pp);
234 }
235 if (!(isspace (*p) || *p == '\0'))
236 error ("breakpoint number expected");
237 while (isspace (*p))
238 p++;
239 *pp = p;
240 return retval;
241 }
242 \f
243 /* condition N EXP -- set break condition of breakpoint N to EXP. */
244
245 static void
246 condition_command (arg, from_tty)
247 char *arg;
248 int from_tty;
249 {
250 register struct breakpoint *b;
251 char *p;
252 register int bnum;
253
254 if (arg == 0)
255 error_no_arg ("breakpoint number");
256
257 p = arg;
258 bnum = get_number (&p);
259
260 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
261 if (b->number == bnum)
262 {
263 if (b->cond)
264 {
265 free ((PTR)b->cond);
266 b->cond = 0;
267 }
268 if (b->cond_string != NULL)
269 free ((PTR)b->cond_string);
270
271 if (*p == 0)
272 {
273 b->cond = 0;
274 b->cond_string = NULL;
275 if (from_tty)
276 printf_filtered ("Breakpoint %d now unconditional.\n", bnum);
277 }
278 else
279 {
280 arg = p;
281 /* I don't know if it matters whether this is the string the user
282 typed in or the decompiled expression. */
283 b->cond_string = savestring (arg, strlen (arg));
284 b->cond = parse_exp_1 (&arg, block_for_pc (b->address), 0);
285 if (*arg)
286 error ("Junk at end of expression");
287 }
288 return;
289 }
290
291 error ("No breakpoint number %d.", bnum);
292 }
293
294 /* ARGSUSED */
295 static void
296 commands_command (arg, from_tty)
297 char *arg;
298 int from_tty;
299 {
300 register struct breakpoint *b;
301 char *p;
302 register int bnum;
303 struct command_line *l;
304
305 /* If we allowed this, we would have problems with when to
306 free the storage, if we change the commands currently
307 being read from. */
308
309 if (executing_breakpoint_commands)
310 error ("Can't use the \"commands\" command among a breakpoint's commands.");
311
312 p = arg;
313 bnum = get_number (&p);
314 if (p && *p)
315 error ("Unexpected extra arguments following breakpoint number.");
316
317 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
318 if (b->number == bnum)
319 {
320 if (from_tty && input_from_terminal_p ())
321 printf_filtered ("Type commands for when breakpoint %d is hit, one per line.\n\
322 End with a line saying just \"end\".\n", bnum);
323 l = read_command_lines ();
324 free_command_lines (&b->commands);
325 b->commands = l;
326 return;
327 }
328 error ("No breakpoint number %d.", bnum);
329 }
330 \f
331 extern int memory_breakpoint_size; /* from mem-break.c */
332
333 /* Like target_read_memory() but if breakpoints are inserted, return
334 the shadow contents instead of the breakpoints themselves.
335
336 Read "memory data" from whatever target or inferior we have.
337 Returns zero if successful, errno value if not. EIO is used
338 for address out of bounds. If breakpoints are inserted, returns
339 shadow contents, not the breakpoints themselves. From breakpoint.c. */
340
341 int
342 read_memory_nobpt (memaddr, myaddr, len)
343 CORE_ADDR memaddr;
344 char *myaddr;
345 unsigned len;
346 {
347 int status;
348 struct breakpoint *b;
349
350 if (memory_breakpoint_size < 0)
351 /* No breakpoints on this machine. FIXME: This should be
352 dependent on the debugging target. Probably want
353 target_insert_breakpoint to return a size, saying how many
354 bytes of the shadow contents are used, or perhaps have
355 something like target_xfer_shadow. */
356 return target_read_memory (memaddr, myaddr, len);
357
358 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
359 {
360 if (b->type == bp_watchpoint || !b->inserted)
361 continue;
362 else if (b->address + memory_breakpoint_size <= memaddr)
363 /* The breakpoint is entirely before the chunk of memory
364 we are reading. */
365 continue;
366 else if (b->address >= memaddr + len)
367 /* The breakpoint is entirely after the chunk of memory we
368 are reading. */
369 continue;
370 else
371 {
372 /* Copy the breakpoint from the shadow contents, and recurse
373 for the things before and after. */
374
375 /* Addresses and length of the part of the breakpoint that
376 we need to copy. */
377 CORE_ADDR membpt = b->address;
378 unsigned int bptlen = memory_breakpoint_size;
379 /* Offset within shadow_contents. */
380 int bptoffset = 0;
381
382 if (membpt < memaddr)
383 {
384 /* Only copy the second part of the breakpoint. */
385 bptlen -= memaddr - membpt;
386 bptoffset = memaddr - membpt;
387 membpt = memaddr;
388 }
389
390 if (membpt + bptlen > memaddr + len)
391 {
392 /* Only copy the first part of the breakpoint. */
393 bptlen -= (membpt + bptlen) - (memaddr + len);
394 }
395
396 memcpy (myaddr + membpt - memaddr,
397 b->shadow_contents + bptoffset, bptlen);
398
399 if (membpt > memaddr)
400 {
401 /* Copy the section of memory before the breakpoint. */
402 status = read_memory_nobpt (memaddr, myaddr, membpt - memaddr);
403 if (status != 0)
404 return status;
405 }
406
407 if (membpt + bptlen < memaddr + len)
408 {
409 /* Copy the section of memory after the breakpoint. */
410 status = read_memory_nobpt
411 (membpt + bptlen,
412 myaddr + membpt + bptlen - memaddr,
413 memaddr + len - (membpt + bptlen));
414 if (status != 0)
415 return status;
416 }
417 return 0;
418 }
419 }
420 /* Nothing overlaps. Just call read_memory_noerr. */
421 return target_read_memory (memaddr, myaddr, len);
422 }
423 \f
424 /* insert_breakpoints is used when starting or continuing the program.
425 remove_breakpoints is used when the program stops.
426 Both return zero if successful,
427 or an `errno' value if could not write the inferior. */
428
429 int
430 insert_breakpoints ()
431 {
432 register struct breakpoint *b;
433 int val = 0;
434 int disabled_breaks = 0;
435
436 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
437 if (b->type != bp_watchpoint
438 && b->enable != disabled
439 && ! b->inserted
440 && ! b->duplicate)
441 {
442 val = target_insert_breakpoint(b->address, b->shadow_contents);
443 if (val)
444 {
445 /* Can't set the breakpoint. */
446 #if defined (DISABLE_UNSETTABLE_BREAK)
447 if (DISABLE_UNSETTABLE_BREAK (b->address))
448 {
449 val = 0;
450 b->enable = disabled;
451 if (!disabled_breaks)
452 {
453 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
454 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr,
455 "Cannot insert breakpoint %d:\n", b->number);
456 printf_filtered ("Disabling shared library breakpoints:\n");
457 }
458 disabled_breaks = 1;
459 printf_filtered ("%d ", b->number);
460 }
461 else
462 #endif
463 {
464 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
465 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "Cannot insert breakpoint %d:\n", b->number);
466 #ifdef ONE_PROCESS_WRITETEXT
467 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr,
468 "The same program may be running in another process.\n");
469 #endif
470 memory_error (val, b->address); /* which bombs us out */
471 }
472 }
473 else
474 b->inserted = 1;
475 }
476 if (disabled_breaks)
477 printf_filtered ("\n");
478 return val;
479 }
480
481 int
482 remove_breakpoints ()
483 {
484 register struct breakpoint *b;
485 int val;
486
487 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
488 if (b->type != bp_watchpoint && b->inserted)
489 {
490 val = target_remove_breakpoint(b->address, b->shadow_contents);
491 if (val)
492 return val;
493 b->inserted = 0;
494 }
495
496 return 0;
497 }
498
499 /* Clear the "inserted" flag in all breakpoints. */
500
501 void
502 mark_breakpoints_out ()
503 {
504 register struct breakpoint *b;
505
506 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
507 b->inserted = 0;
508 }
509
510 /* Clear the "inserted" flag in all breakpoints and delete any breakpoints
511 which should go away between runs of the program. */
512
513 void
514 breakpoint_init_inferior ()
515 {
516 register struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
517
518 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
519 {
520 b->inserted = 0;
521
522 /* If the call dummy breakpoint is at the entry point it will
523 cause problems when the inferior is rerun, so we better
524 get rid of it. */
525 if (b->type == bp_call_dummy)
526 delete_breakpoint (b);
527 }
528 }
529
530 /* breakpoint_here_p (PC) returns 1 if an enabled breakpoint exists at PC.
531 When continuing from a location with a breakpoint,
532 we actually single step once before calling insert_breakpoints. */
533
534 int
535 breakpoint_here_p (pc)
536 CORE_ADDR pc;
537 {
538 register struct breakpoint *b;
539
540 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
541 if (b->enable != disabled && b->address == pc)
542 return 1;
543
544 return 0;
545 }
546
547 /* Return nonzero if FRAME is a dummy frame. We can't use PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY
548 because figuring out the saved SP would take too much time, at least using
549 get_saved_register on the 68k. This means that for this function to
550 work right a port must use the bp_call_dummy breakpoint. */
551
552 int
553 frame_in_dummy (frame)
554 FRAME frame;
555 {
556 struct breakpoint *b;
557
558 #ifdef CALL_DUMMY
559 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
560 {
561 static unsigned LONGEST dummy[] = CALL_DUMMY;
562
563 if (b->type == bp_call_dummy
564 && b->frame == frame->frame
565
566 /* We need to check the PC as well as the frame on the sparc,
567 for signals.exp in the testsuite. */
568 && (frame->pc
569 >= (b->address
570 - sizeof (dummy) / sizeof (LONGEST) * REGISTER_SIZE))
571 && frame->pc <= b->address)
572 return 1;
573 }
574 #endif /* CALL_DUMMY */
575 return 0;
576 }
577
578 /* breakpoint_match_thread (PC, PID) returns true if the breakpoint at PC
579 is valid for process/thread PID. */
580
581 int
582 breakpoint_thread_match (pc, pid)
583 CORE_ADDR pc;
584 int pid;
585 {
586 struct breakpoint *b;
587 int thread;
588
589 thread = pid_to_thread_id (pid);
590
591 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
592 if (b->enable != disabled
593 && b->address == pc
594 && (b->thread == -1 || b->thread == thread))
595 return 1;
596
597 return 0;
598 }
599
600 \f
601 /* bpstat stuff. External routines' interfaces are documented
602 in breakpoint.h. */
603
604 /* Clear a bpstat so that it says we are not at any breakpoint.
605 Also free any storage that is part of a bpstat. */
606
607 void
608 bpstat_clear (bsp)
609 bpstat *bsp;
610 {
611 bpstat p;
612 bpstat q;
613
614 if (bsp == 0)
615 return;
616 p = *bsp;
617 while (p != NULL)
618 {
619 q = p->next;
620 if (p->old_val != NULL)
621 value_free (p->old_val);
622 free ((PTR)p);
623 p = q;
624 }
625 *bsp = NULL;
626 }
627
628 /* Return a copy of a bpstat. Like "bs1 = bs2" but all storage that
629 is part of the bpstat is copied as well. */
630
631 bpstat
632 bpstat_copy (bs)
633 bpstat bs;
634 {
635 bpstat p = NULL;
636 bpstat tmp;
637 bpstat retval = NULL;
638
639 if (bs == NULL)
640 return bs;
641
642 for (; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
643 {
644 tmp = (bpstat) xmalloc (sizeof (*tmp));
645 memcpy (tmp, bs, sizeof (*tmp));
646 if (p == NULL)
647 /* This is the first thing in the chain. */
648 retval = tmp;
649 else
650 p->next = tmp;
651 p = tmp;
652 }
653 p->next = NULL;
654 return retval;
655 }
656
657 /* Find the bpstat associated with this breakpoint */
658
659 bpstat
660 bpstat_find_breakpoint(bsp, breakpoint)
661 bpstat bsp;
662 struct breakpoint *breakpoint;
663 {
664 if (bsp == NULL) return NULL;
665
666 for (;bsp != NULL; bsp = bsp->next) {
667 if (bsp->breakpoint_at == breakpoint) return bsp;
668 }
669 return NULL;
670 }
671
672 /* Return the breakpoint number of the first breakpoint we are stopped
673 at. *BSP upon return is a bpstat which points to the remaining
674 breakpoints stopped at (but which is not guaranteed to be good for
675 anything but further calls to bpstat_num).
676 Return 0 if passed a bpstat which does not indicate any breakpoints. */
677
678 int
679 bpstat_num (bsp)
680 bpstat *bsp;
681 {
682 struct breakpoint *b;
683
684 if ((*bsp) == NULL)
685 return 0; /* No more breakpoint values */
686 else
687 {
688 b = (*bsp)->breakpoint_at;
689 *bsp = (*bsp)->next;
690 if (b == NULL)
691 return -1; /* breakpoint that's been deleted since */
692 else
693 return b->number; /* We have its number */
694 }
695 }
696
697 /* Modify BS so that the actions will not be performed. */
698
699 void
700 bpstat_clear_actions (bs)
701 bpstat bs;
702 {
703 for (; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
704 {
705 bs->commands = NULL;
706 if (bs->old_val != NULL)
707 {
708 value_free (bs->old_val);
709 bs->old_val = NULL;
710 }
711 }
712 }
713
714 /* Stub for cleaning up our state if we error-out of a breakpoint command */
715 /* ARGSUSED */
716 static void
717 cleanup_executing_breakpoints (ignore)
718 int ignore;
719 {
720 executing_breakpoint_commands = 0;
721 }
722
723 /* Execute all the commands associated with all the breakpoints at this
724 location. Any of these commands could cause the process to proceed
725 beyond this point, etc. We look out for such changes by checking
726 the global "breakpoint_proceeded" after each command. */
727
728 void
729 bpstat_do_actions (bsp)
730 bpstat *bsp;
731 {
732 bpstat bs;
733 struct cleanup *old_chain;
734
735 executing_breakpoint_commands = 1;
736 old_chain = make_cleanup (cleanup_executing_breakpoints, 0);
737
738 top:
739 bs = *bsp;
740
741 breakpoint_proceeded = 0;
742 for (; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
743 {
744 while (bs->commands)
745 {
746 char *line = bs->commands->line;
747 bs->commands = bs->commands->next;
748 execute_command (line, 0);
749 /* If the inferior is proceeded by the command, bomb out now.
750 The bpstat chain has been blown away by wait_for_inferior.
751 But since execution has stopped again, there is a new bpstat
752 to look at, so start over. */
753 if (breakpoint_proceeded)
754 goto top;
755 }
756 }
757
758 executing_breakpoint_commands = 0;
759 discard_cleanups (old_chain);
760 }
761
762 /* This is the normal print_it function for a bpstat. In the future,
763 much of this logic could (should?) be moved to bpstat_stop_status,
764 by having it set different print_it functions. */
765
766 static int
767 print_it_normal (bs)
768 bpstat bs;
769 {
770 /* bs->breakpoint_at can be NULL if it was a momentary breakpoint
771 which has since been deleted. */
772 if (bs->breakpoint_at == NULL
773 || (bs->breakpoint_at->type != bp_breakpoint
774 && bs->breakpoint_at->type != bp_watchpoint))
775 return 0;
776
777 if (bs->breakpoint_at->type == bp_breakpoint)
778 {
779 /* I think the user probably only wants to see one breakpoint
780 number, not all of them. */
781 printf_filtered ("\nBreakpoint %d, ", bs->breakpoint_at->number);
782 return 0;
783 }
784
785 if (bs->old_val != NULL)
786 {
787 printf_filtered ("\nWatchpoint %d, ", bs->breakpoint_at->number);
788 print_expression (bs->breakpoint_at->exp, gdb_stdout);
789 printf_filtered ("\nOld value = ");
790 value_print (bs->old_val, gdb_stdout, 0, Val_pretty_default);
791 printf_filtered ("\nNew value = ");
792 value_print (bs->breakpoint_at->val, gdb_stdout, 0,
793 Val_pretty_default);
794 printf_filtered ("\n");
795 value_free (bs->old_val);
796 bs->old_val = NULL;
797 return 0;
798 }
799 /* We can't deal with it. Maybe another member of the bpstat chain can. */
800 return -1;
801 }
802
803 /* Print a message indicating what happened. Returns nonzero to
804 say that only the source line should be printed after this (zero
805 return means print the frame as well as the source line). */
806 /* Currently we always return zero. */
807 int
808 bpstat_print (bs)
809 bpstat bs;
810 {
811 int val;
812
813 if (bs == NULL)
814 return 0;
815
816 val = (*bs->print_it) (bs);
817 if (val >= 0)
818 return val;
819
820 /* Maybe another breakpoint in the chain caused us to stop.
821 (Currently all watchpoints go on the bpstat whether hit or
822 not. That probably could (should) be changed, provided care is taken
823 with respect to bpstat_explains_signal). */
824 if (bs->next)
825 return bpstat_print (bs->next);
826
827 /* We reached the end of the chain without printing anything. */
828 return 0;
829 }
830
831 /* Evaluate the expression EXP and return 1 if value is zero.
832 This is used inside a catch_errors to evaluate the breakpoint condition.
833 The argument is a "struct expression *" that has been cast to char * to
834 make it pass through catch_errors. */
835
836 static int
837 breakpoint_cond_eval (exp)
838 char *exp;
839 {
840 return !value_true (evaluate_expression ((struct expression *)exp));
841 }
842
843 /* Allocate a new bpstat and chain it to the current one. */
844
845 static bpstat
846 bpstat_alloc (b, cbs)
847 register struct breakpoint *b;
848 bpstat cbs; /* Current "bs" value */
849 {
850 bpstat bs;
851
852 bs = (bpstat) xmalloc (sizeof (*bs));
853 cbs->next = bs;
854 bs->breakpoint_at = b;
855 /* If the condition is false, etc., don't do the commands. */
856 bs->commands = NULL;
857 bs->old_val = NULL;
858 bs->print_it = print_it_normal;
859 return bs;
860 }
861 \f
862 /* Return the frame which we can use to evaluate the expression
863 whose valid block is valid_block, or NULL if not in scope.
864
865 This whole concept is probably not the way to do things (it is incredibly
866 slow being the main reason, not to mention fragile (e.g. the sparc
867 frame pointer being fetched as 0 bug causes it to stop)). Instead,
868 introduce a version of "struct frame" which survives over calls to the
869 inferior, but which is better than FRAME_ADDR in the sense that it lets
870 us evaluate expressions relative to that frame (on some machines, it
871 can just be a FRAME_ADDR). Save one of those instead of (or in addition
872 to) the exp_valid_block, and then use it to evaluate the watchpoint
873 expression, with no need to do all this backtracing every time.
874
875 Or better yet, what if it just copied the struct frame and its next
876 frame? Off the top of my head, I would think that would work
877 because things like (a29k) rsize and msize, or (sparc) bottom just
878 depend on the frame, and aren't going to be different just because
879 the inferior has done something. Trying to recalculate them
880 strikes me as a lot of work, possibly even impossible. Saving the
881 next frame is needed at least on a29k, where get_saved_register
882 uses fi->next->saved_msp. For figuring out whether that frame is
883 still on the stack, I guess this needs to be machine-specific (e.g.
884 a29k) but I think
885
886 read_fp () INNER_THAN watchpoint_frame->frame
887
888 would generally work.
889
890 Of course the scope of the expression could be less than a whole
891 function; perhaps if the innermost frame is the one which the
892 watchpoint is relative to (another machine-specific thing, usually
893
894 FRAMELESS_FUNCTION_INVOCATION (get_current_frame(), fromleaf)
895 read_fp () == wp_frame->frame
896 && !fromleaf
897
898 ), *then* it could do a
899
900 contained_in (get_current_block (), wp->exp_valid_block).
901
902 */
903
904 FRAME
905 within_scope (valid_block)
906 struct block *valid_block;
907 {
908 FRAME fr = get_current_frame ();
909 struct frame_info *fi = get_frame_info (fr);
910 CORE_ADDR func_start;
911
912 /* If caller_pc_valid is true, we are stepping through
913 a function prologue, which is bounded by callee_func_start
914 (inclusive) and callee_prologue_end (exclusive).
915 caller_pc is the pc of the caller.
916
917 Yes, this is hairy. */
918 static int caller_pc_valid = 0;
919 static CORE_ADDR caller_pc;
920 static CORE_ADDR callee_func_start;
921 static CORE_ADDR callee_prologue_end;
922
923 find_pc_partial_function (fi->pc, (PTR)NULL, &func_start, (CORE_ADDR *)NULL);
924 func_start += FUNCTION_START_OFFSET;
925 if (fi->pc == func_start)
926 {
927 /* We just called a function. The only other case I
928 can think of where the pc would equal the pc of the
929 start of a function is a frameless function (i.e.
930 no prologue) where we branch back to the start
931 of the function. In that case, SKIP_PROLOGUE won't
932 find one, and we'll clear caller_pc_valid a few lines
933 down. */
934 caller_pc_valid = 1;
935 caller_pc = SAVED_PC_AFTER_CALL (fr);
936 callee_func_start = func_start;
937 SKIP_PROLOGUE (func_start);
938 callee_prologue_end = func_start;
939 }
940 if (caller_pc_valid)
941 {
942 if (fi->pc < callee_func_start
943 || fi->pc >= callee_prologue_end)
944 caller_pc_valid = 0;
945 }
946
947 if (contained_in (block_for_pc (caller_pc_valid
948 ? caller_pc
949 : fi->pc),
950 valid_block))
951 {
952 return fr;
953 }
954 fr = get_prev_frame (fr);
955
956 /* If any active frame is in the exp_valid_block, then it's
957 OK. Note that this might not be the same invocation of
958 the exp_valid_block that we were watching a little while
959 ago, or the same one as when the watchpoint was set (e.g.
960 we are watching a local variable in a recursive function.
961 When we return from a recursive invocation, then we are
962 suddenly watching a different instance of the variable).
963
964 At least for now I am going to consider this a feature. */
965 for (; fr != NULL; fr = get_prev_frame (fr))
966 {
967 fi = get_frame_info (fr);
968 if (contained_in (block_for_pc (fi->pc),
969 valid_block))
970 {
971 return fr;
972 }
973 }
974 return NULL;
975 }
976
977 /* Possible return values for watchpoint_check (this can't be an enum
978 because of check_errors). */
979 /* The watchpoint has been disabled. */
980 #define WP_DISABLED 1
981 /* The value has changed. */
982 #define WP_VALUE_CHANGED 2
983 /* The value has not changed. */
984 #define WP_VALUE_NOT_CHANGED 3
985
986 /* Check watchpoint condition. */
987 static int
988 watchpoint_check (p)
989 char *p;
990 {
991 bpstat bs = (bpstat) p;
992 FRAME fr;
993
994 int within_current_scope;
995 if (bs->breakpoint_at->exp_valid_block == NULL)
996 within_current_scope = 1;
997 else
998 {
999 fr = within_scope (bs->breakpoint_at->exp_valid_block);
1000 within_current_scope = fr != NULL;
1001 if (within_current_scope)
1002 /* If we end up stopping, the current frame will get selected
1003 in normal_stop. So this call to select_frame won't affect
1004 the user. */
1005 select_frame (fr, -1);
1006 }
1007
1008 if (within_current_scope)
1009 {
1010 /* We use value_{,free_to_}mark because it could be a
1011 *long* time before we return to the command level and
1012 call free_all_values. We can't call free_all_values because
1013 we might be in the middle of evaluating a function call. */
1014
1015 value_ptr mark = value_mark ();
1016 value_ptr new_val = evaluate_expression (bs->breakpoint_at->exp);
1017 if (!value_equal (bs->breakpoint_at->val, new_val))
1018 {
1019 release_value (new_val);
1020 value_free_to_mark (mark);
1021 bs->old_val = bs->breakpoint_at->val;
1022 bs->breakpoint_at->val = new_val;
1023 /* We will stop here */
1024 return WP_VALUE_CHANGED;
1025 }
1026 else
1027 {
1028 /* Nothing changed, don't do anything. */
1029 value_free_to_mark (mark);
1030 /* We won't stop here */
1031 return WP_VALUE_NOT_CHANGED;
1032 }
1033 }
1034 else
1035 {
1036 /* This seems like the only logical thing to do because
1037 if we temporarily ignored the watchpoint, then when
1038 we reenter the block in which it is valid it contains
1039 garbage (in the case of a function, it may have two
1040 garbage values, one before and one after the prologue).
1041 So we can't even detect the first assignment to it and
1042 watch after that (since the garbage may or may not equal
1043 the first value assigned). */
1044 bs->breakpoint_at->enable = disabled;
1045 printf_filtered ("\
1046 Watchpoint %d disabled because the program has left the block in\n\
1047 which its expression is valid.\n", bs->breakpoint_at->number);
1048 return WP_DISABLED;
1049 }
1050 }
1051
1052 /* This is used when everything which needs to be printed has
1053 already been printed. But we still want to print the frame. */
1054 static int
1055 print_it_done (bs)
1056 bpstat bs;
1057 {
1058 return 0;
1059 }
1060
1061 /* This is used when nothing should be printed for this bpstat entry. */
1062
1063 static int
1064 print_it_noop (bs)
1065 bpstat bs;
1066 {
1067 return -1;
1068 }
1069
1070 /* Get a bpstat associated with having just stopped at address *PC
1071 and frame address FRAME_ADDRESS. Update *PC to point at the
1072 breakpoint (if we hit a breakpoint). NOT_A_BREAKPOINT is nonzero
1073 if this is known to not be a real breakpoint (it could still be a
1074 watchpoint, though). */
1075
1076 /* Determine whether we stopped at a breakpoint, etc, or whether we
1077 don't understand this stop. Result is a chain of bpstat's such that:
1078
1079 if we don't understand the stop, the result is a null pointer.
1080
1081 if we understand why we stopped, the result is not null.
1082
1083 Each element of the chain refers to a particular breakpoint or
1084 watchpoint at which we have stopped. (We may have stopped for
1085 several reasons concurrently.)
1086
1087 Each element of the chain has valid next, breakpoint_at,
1088 commands, FIXME??? fields.
1089
1090 */
1091
1092 bpstat
1093 bpstat_stop_status (pc, frame_address, not_a_breakpoint)
1094 CORE_ADDR *pc;
1095 FRAME_ADDR frame_address;
1096 int not_a_breakpoint;
1097 {
1098 register struct breakpoint *b;
1099 CORE_ADDR bp_addr;
1100 #if DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK != 0 || defined (SHIFT_INST_REGS)
1101 /* True if we've hit a breakpoint (as opposed to a watchpoint). */
1102 int real_breakpoint = 0;
1103 #endif
1104 /* Root of the chain of bpstat's */
1105 struct bpstat root_bs[1];
1106 /* Pointer to the last thing in the chain currently. */
1107 bpstat bs = root_bs;
1108
1109 /* Get the address where the breakpoint would have been. */
1110 bp_addr = *pc - DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK;
1111
1112 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
1113 {
1114 if (b->enable == disabled)
1115 continue;
1116
1117 if (b->type != bp_watchpoint && b->address != bp_addr)
1118 continue;
1119
1120 if (b->type != bp_watchpoint && not_a_breakpoint)
1121 continue;
1122
1123 /* Come here if it's a watchpoint, or if the break address matches */
1124
1125 bs = bpstat_alloc (b, bs); /* Alloc a bpstat to explain stop */
1126
1127 bs->stop = 1;
1128 bs->print = 1;
1129
1130 if (b->type == bp_watchpoint)
1131 {
1132 static char message1[] =
1133 "Error evaluating expression for watchpoint %d\n";
1134 char message[sizeof (message1) + 30 /* slop */];
1135 sprintf (message, message1, b->number);
1136 switch (catch_errors (watchpoint_check, (char *) bs, message,
1137 RETURN_MASK_ALL))
1138 {
1139 case WP_DISABLED:
1140 /* We've already printed what needs to be printed. */
1141 bs->print_it = print_it_done;
1142 /* Stop. */
1143 break;
1144 case WP_VALUE_CHANGED:
1145 /* Stop. */
1146 break;
1147 case WP_VALUE_NOT_CHANGED:
1148 /* Don't stop. */
1149 bs->print_it = print_it_noop;
1150 bs->stop = 0;
1151 continue;
1152 default:
1153 /* Can't happen. */
1154 /* FALLTHROUGH */
1155 case 0:
1156 /* Error from catch_errors. */
1157 b->enable = disabled;
1158 printf_filtered ("Watchpoint %d disabled.\n", b->number);
1159 /* We've already printed what needs to be printed. */
1160 bs->print_it = print_it_done;
1161 /* Stop. */
1162 break;
1163 }
1164 }
1165 #if DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK != 0 || defined (SHIFT_INST_REGS)
1166 else
1167 real_breakpoint = 1;
1168 #endif
1169
1170 if (b->frame && b->frame != frame_address)
1171 bs->stop = 0;
1172 else
1173 {
1174 int value_is_zero = 0;
1175
1176 if (b->cond)
1177 {
1178 /* Need to select the frame, with all that implies
1179 so that the conditions will have the right context. */
1180 select_frame (get_current_frame (), 0);
1181 value_is_zero
1182 = catch_errors (breakpoint_cond_eval, (char *)(b->cond),
1183 "Error in testing breakpoint condition:\n",
1184 RETURN_MASK_ALL);
1185 /* FIXME-someday, should give breakpoint # */
1186 free_all_values ();
1187 }
1188 if (b->cond && value_is_zero)
1189 {
1190 bs->stop = 0;
1191 }
1192 else if (b->ignore_count > 0)
1193 {
1194 b->ignore_count--;
1195 bs->stop = 0;
1196 }
1197 else
1198 {
1199 /* We will stop here */
1200 if (b->disposition == disable)
1201 b->enable = disabled;
1202 bs->commands = b->commands;
1203 if (b->silent)
1204 bs->print = 0;
1205 if (bs->commands && STREQ ("silent", bs->commands->line))
1206 {
1207 bs->commands = bs->commands->next;
1208 bs->print = 0;
1209 }
1210 }
1211 }
1212 /* Print nothing for this entry if we dont stop or if we dont print. */
1213 if (bs->stop == 0 || bs->print == 0)
1214 bs->print_it = print_it_noop;
1215 }
1216
1217 bs->next = NULL; /* Terminate the chain */
1218 bs = root_bs->next; /* Re-grab the head of the chain */
1219 #if DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK != 0 || defined (SHIFT_INST_REGS)
1220 if (bs)
1221 {
1222 if (real_breakpoint)
1223 {
1224 *pc = bp_addr;
1225 #if defined (SHIFT_INST_REGS)
1226 SHIFT_INST_REGS();
1227 #else /* No SHIFT_INST_REGS. */
1228 write_pc (bp_addr);
1229 #endif /* No SHIFT_INST_REGS. */
1230 }
1231 }
1232 #endif /* DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK != 0. */
1233 return bs;
1234 }
1235 \f
1236 /* Tell what to do about this bpstat. */
1237 struct bpstat_what
1238 bpstat_what (bs)
1239 bpstat bs;
1240 {
1241 /* Classify each bpstat as one of the following. */
1242 enum class {
1243 /* This bpstat element has no effect on the main_action. */
1244 no_effect = 0,
1245
1246 /* There was a watchpoint, stop but don't print. */
1247 wp_silent,
1248
1249 /* There was a watchpoint, stop and print. */
1250 wp_noisy,
1251
1252 /* There was a breakpoint but we're not stopping. */
1253 bp_nostop,
1254
1255 /* There was a breakpoint, stop but don't print. */
1256 bp_silent,
1257
1258 /* There was a breakpoint, stop and print. */
1259 bp_noisy,
1260
1261 /* We hit the longjmp breakpoint. */
1262 long_jump,
1263
1264 /* We hit the longjmp_resume breakpoint. */
1265 long_resume,
1266
1267 /* We hit the step_resume breakpoint. */
1268 step_resume,
1269
1270 /* We hit the through_sigtramp breakpoint. */
1271 through_sig,
1272
1273 /* This is just used to count how many enums there are. */
1274 class_last
1275 };
1276
1277 /* Here is the table which drives this routine. So that we can
1278 format it pretty, we define some abbreviations for the
1279 enum bpstat_what codes. */
1280 #define keep_c BPSTAT_WHAT_KEEP_CHECKING
1281 #define stop_s BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_SILENT
1282 #define stop_n BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_NOISY
1283 #define single BPSTAT_WHAT_SINGLE
1284 #define setlr BPSTAT_WHAT_SET_LONGJMP_RESUME
1285 #define clrlr BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME
1286 #define clrlrs BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME_SINGLE
1287 #define sr BPSTAT_WHAT_STEP_RESUME
1288 #define ts BPSTAT_WHAT_THROUGH_SIGTRAMP
1289
1290 /* "Can't happen." Might want to print an error message.
1291 abort() is not out of the question, but chances are GDB is just
1292 a bit confused, not unusable. */
1293 #define err BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_NOISY
1294
1295 /* Given an old action and a class, come up with a new action. */
1296 /* One interesting property of this table is that wp_silent is the same
1297 as bp_silent and wp_noisy is the same as bp_noisy. That is because
1298 after stopping, the check for whether to step over a breakpoint
1299 (BPSTAT_WHAT_SINGLE type stuff) is handled in proceed() without
1300 reference to how we stopped. We retain separate wp_silent and bp_silent
1301 codes in case we want to change that someday. */
1302
1303 /* step_resume entries: a step resume breakpoint overrides another
1304 breakpoint of signal handling (see comment in wait_for_inferior
1305 at first IN_SIGTRAMP where we set the step_resume breakpoint). */
1306 /* We handle the through_sigtramp_breakpoint the same way; having both
1307 one of those and a step_resume_breakpoint is probably very rare (?). */
1308
1309 static const enum bpstat_what_main_action
1310 table[(int)class_last][(int)BPSTAT_WHAT_LAST] =
1311 {
1312 /* old action */
1313 /* keep_c stop_s stop_n single setlr clrlr clrlrs sr ts
1314 */
1315 /*no_effect*/ {keep_c,stop_s,stop_n,single, setlr , clrlr , clrlrs, sr, ts},
1316 /*wp_silent*/ {stop_s,stop_s,stop_n,stop_s, stop_s, stop_s, stop_s, sr, ts},
1317 /*wp_noisy*/ {stop_n,stop_n,stop_n,stop_n, stop_n, stop_n, stop_n, sr, ts},
1318 /*bp_nostop*/ {single,stop_s,stop_n,single, setlr , clrlrs, clrlrs, sr, ts},
1319 /*bp_silent*/ {stop_s,stop_s,stop_n,stop_s, stop_s, stop_s, stop_s, sr, ts},
1320 /*bp_noisy*/ {stop_n,stop_n,stop_n,stop_n, stop_n, stop_n, stop_n, sr, ts},
1321 /*long_jump*/ {setlr ,stop_s,stop_n,setlr , err , err , err , sr, ts},
1322 /*long_resume*/ {clrlr ,stop_s,stop_n,clrlrs, err , err , err , sr, ts},
1323 /*step_resume*/ {sr ,sr ,sr ,sr , sr , sr , sr , sr, ts},
1324 /*through_sig*/ {ts ,ts ,ts ,ts , ts , ts , ts , ts, ts}
1325 };
1326 #undef keep_c
1327 #undef stop_s
1328 #undef stop_n
1329 #undef single
1330 #undef setlr
1331 #undef clrlr
1332 #undef clrlrs
1333 #undef err
1334 #undef sr
1335 #undef ts
1336 enum bpstat_what_main_action current_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_KEEP_CHECKING;
1337 struct bpstat_what retval;
1338
1339 retval.call_dummy = 0;
1340 for (; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
1341 {
1342 enum class bs_class = no_effect;
1343 if (bs->breakpoint_at == NULL)
1344 /* I suspect this can happen if it was a momentary breakpoint
1345 which has since been deleted. */
1346 continue;
1347 switch (bs->breakpoint_at->type)
1348 {
1349 case bp_breakpoint:
1350 case bp_until:
1351 case bp_finish:
1352 if (bs->stop)
1353 {
1354 if (bs->print)
1355 bs_class = bp_noisy;
1356 else
1357 bs_class = bp_silent;
1358 }
1359 else
1360 bs_class = bp_nostop;
1361 break;
1362 case bp_watchpoint:
1363 if (bs->stop)
1364 {
1365 if (bs->print)
1366 bs_class = wp_noisy;
1367 else
1368 bs_class = wp_silent;
1369 }
1370 else
1371 /* There was a watchpoint, but we're not stopping. This requires
1372 no further action. */
1373 bs_class = no_effect;
1374 break;
1375 case bp_longjmp:
1376 bs_class = long_jump;
1377 break;
1378 case bp_longjmp_resume:
1379 bs_class = long_resume;
1380 break;
1381 case bp_step_resume:
1382 if (bs->stop)
1383 {
1384 bs_class = step_resume;
1385 }
1386 else
1387 /* It is for the wrong frame. */
1388 bs_class = bp_nostop;
1389 break;
1390 case bp_through_sigtramp:
1391 bs_class = through_sig;
1392 break;
1393 case bp_call_dummy:
1394 /* Make sure the action is stop (silent or noisy), so infrun.c
1395 pops the dummy frame. */
1396 bs_class = bp_silent;
1397 retval.call_dummy = 1;
1398 break;
1399 }
1400 current_action = table[(int)bs_class][(int)current_action];
1401 }
1402 retval.main_action = current_action;
1403 return retval;
1404 }
1405
1406 /* Nonzero if we should step constantly (e.g. watchpoints on machines
1407 without hardware support). This isn't related to a specific bpstat,
1408 just to things like whether watchpoints are set. */
1409
1410 int
1411 bpstat_should_step ()
1412 {
1413 struct breakpoint *b;
1414 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
1415 if (b->enable == enabled && b->type == bp_watchpoint)
1416 return 1;
1417 return 0;
1418 }
1419 \f
1420 /* Print information on breakpoint number BNUM, or -1 if all.
1421 If WATCHPOINTS is zero, process only breakpoints; if WATCHPOINTS
1422 is nonzero, process only watchpoints. */
1423
1424 static void
1425 breakpoint_1 (bnum, allflag)
1426 int bnum;
1427 int allflag;
1428 {
1429 register struct breakpoint *b;
1430 register struct command_line *l;
1431 register struct symbol *sym;
1432 CORE_ADDR last_addr = (CORE_ADDR)-1;
1433 int found_a_breakpoint = 0;
1434 static char *bptypes[] = {"breakpoint", "until", "finish", "watchpoint",
1435 "longjmp", "longjmp resume", "step resume",
1436 "call dummy" };
1437 static char *bpdisps[] = {"del", "dis", "keep"};
1438 static char bpenables[] = "ny";
1439 char wrap_indent[80];
1440
1441 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
1442 if (bnum == -1
1443 || bnum == b->number)
1444 {
1445 /* We only print out user settable breakpoints unless the allflag is set. */
1446 if (!allflag
1447 && b->type != bp_breakpoint
1448 && b->type != bp_watchpoint)
1449 continue;
1450
1451 if (!found_a_breakpoint++)
1452 printf_filtered ("Num Type Disp Enb %sWhat\n",
1453 addressprint ? "Address " : "");
1454
1455 printf_filtered ("%-3d %-14s %-4s %-3c ",
1456 b->number,
1457 bptypes[(int)b->type],
1458 bpdisps[(int)b->disposition],
1459 bpenables[(int)b->enable]);
1460 strcpy (wrap_indent, " ");
1461 if (addressprint)
1462 strcat (wrap_indent, " ");
1463 switch (b->type)
1464 {
1465 case bp_watchpoint:
1466 print_expression (b->exp, gdb_stdout);
1467 break;
1468
1469 case bp_breakpoint:
1470 case bp_until:
1471 case bp_finish:
1472 case bp_longjmp:
1473 case bp_longjmp_resume:
1474 case bp_step_resume:
1475 case bp_through_sigtramp:
1476 case bp_call_dummy:
1477 if (addressprint)
1478 printf_filtered ("%s ", local_hex_string_custom ((unsigned long) b->address, "08l"));
1479
1480 last_addr = b->address;
1481 if (b->source_file)
1482 {
1483 sym = find_pc_function (b->address);
1484 if (sym)
1485 {
1486 fputs_filtered ("in ", gdb_stdout);
1487 fputs_filtered (SYMBOL_SOURCE_NAME (sym), gdb_stdout);
1488 wrap_here (wrap_indent);
1489 fputs_filtered (" at ", gdb_stdout);
1490 }
1491 fputs_filtered (b->source_file, gdb_stdout);
1492 printf_filtered (":%d", b->line_number);
1493 }
1494 else
1495 print_address_symbolic (b->address, gdb_stdout, demangle, " ");
1496 break;
1497 }
1498
1499 printf_filtered ("\n");
1500
1501 if (b->frame)
1502 {
1503 printf_filtered ("\tstop only in stack frame at ");
1504 print_address_numeric (b->frame, gdb_stdout);
1505 printf_filtered ("\n");
1506 }
1507 if (b->cond)
1508 {
1509 printf_filtered ("\tstop only if ");
1510 print_expression (b->cond, gdb_stdout);
1511 printf_filtered ("\n");
1512 }
1513 if (b->ignore_count)
1514 printf_filtered ("\tignore next %d hits\n", b->ignore_count);
1515 if ((l = b->commands))
1516 while (l)
1517 {
1518 fputs_filtered ("\t", gdb_stdout);
1519 fputs_filtered (l->line, gdb_stdout);
1520 fputs_filtered ("\n", gdb_stdout);
1521 l = l->next;
1522 }
1523 }
1524
1525 if (!found_a_breakpoint)
1526 {
1527 if (bnum == -1)
1528 printf_filtered ("No breakpoints or watchpoints.\n");
1529 else
1530 printf_filtered ("No breakpoint or watchpoint number %d.\n", bnum);
1531 }
1532 else
1533 /* Compare against (CORE_ADDR)-1 in case some compiler decides
1534 that a comparison of an unsigned with -1 is always false. */
1535 if (last_addr != (CORE_ADDR)-1)
1536 set_next_address (last_addr);
1537 }
1538
1539 /* ARGSUSED */
1540 static void
1541 breakpoints_info (bnum_exp, from_tty)
1542 char *bnum_exp;
1543 int from_tty;
1544 {
1545 int bnum = -1;
1546
1547 if (bnum_exp)
1548 bnum = parse_and_eval_address (bnum_exp);
1549
1550 breakpoint_1 (bnum, 0);
1551 }
1552
1553 #if MAINTENANCE_CMDS
1554
1555 /* ARGSUSED */
1556 static void
1557 maintenance_info_breakpoints (bnum_exp, from_tty)
1558 char *bnum_exp;
1559 int from_tty;
1560 {
1561 int bnum = -1;
1562
1563 if (bnum_exp)
1564 bnum = parse_and_eval_address (bnum_exp);
1565
1566 breakpoint_1 (bnum, 1);
1567 }
1568
1569 #endif
1570
1571 /* Print a message describing any breakpoints set at PC. */
1572
1573 static void
1574 describe_other_breakpoints (pc)
1575 register CORE_ADDR pc;
1576 {
1577 register int others = 0;
1578 register struct breakpoint *b;
1579
1580 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
1581 if (b->address == pc)
1582 others++;
1583 if (others > 0)
1584 {
1585 printf_filtered ("Note: breakpoint%s ", (others > 1) ? "s" : "");
1586 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
1587 if (b->address == pc)
1588 {
1589 others--;
1590 printf_filtered
1591 ("%d%s%s ",
1592 b->number,
1593 (b->enable == disabled) ? " (disabled)" : "",
1594 (others > 1) ? "," : ((others == 1) ? " and" : ""));
1595 }
1596 printf_filtered ("also set at pc ");
1597 print_address_numeric (pc, gdb_stdout);
1598 printf_filtered (".\n");
1599 }
1600 }
1601 \f
1602 /* Set the default place to put a breakpoint
1603 for the `break' command with no arguments. */
1604
1605 void
1606 set_default_breakpoint (valid, addr, symtab, line)
1607 int valid;
1608 CORE_ADDR addr;
1609 struct symtab *symtab;
1610 int line;
1611 {
1612 default_breakpoint_valid = valid;
1613 default_breakpoint_address = addr;
1614 default_breakpoint_symtab = symtab;
1615 default_breakpoint_line = line;
1616 }
1617
1618 /* Rescan breakpoints at address ADDRESS,
1619 marking the first one as "first" and any others as "duplicates".
1620 This is so that the bpt instruction is only inserted once. */
1621
1622 static void
1623 check_duplicates (address)
1624 CORE_ADDR address;
1625 {
1626 register struct breakpoint *b;
1627 register int count = 0;
1628
1629 if (address == 0) /* Watchpoints are uninteresting */
1630 return;
1631
1632 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
1633 if (b->enable != disabled && b->address == address)
1634 {
1635 count++;
1636 b->duplicate = count > 1;
1637 }
1638 }
1639
1640 /* Low level routine to set a breakpoint.
1641 Takes as args the three things that every breakpoint must have.
1642 Returns the breakpoint object so caller can set other things.
1643 Does not set the breakpoint number!
1644 Does not print anything.
1645
1646 ==> This routine should not be called if there is a chance of later
1647 error(); otherwise it leaves a bogus breakpoint on the chain. Validate
1648 your arguments BEFORE calling this routine! */
1649
1650 static struct breakpoint *
1651 set_raw_breakpoint (sal)
1652 struct symtab_and_line sal;
1653 {
1654 register struct breakpoint *b, *b1;
1655
1656 b = (struct breakpoint *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct breakpoint));
1657 memset (b, 0, sizeof (*b));
1658 b->address = sal.pc;
1659 if (sal.symtab == NULL)
1660 b->source_file = NULL;
1661 else
1662 b->source_file = savestring (sal.symtab->filename,
1663 strlen (sal.symtab->filename));
1664 b->thread = -1;
1665 b->line_number = sal.line;
1666 b->enable = enabled;
1667 b->next = 0;
1668 b->silent = 0;
1669 b->ignore_count = 0;
1670 b->commands = NULL;
1671 b->frame = 0;
1672
1673 /* Add this breakpoint to the end of the chain
1674 so that a list of breakpoints will come out in order
1675 of increasing numbers. */
1676
1677 b1 = breakpoint_chain;
1678 if (b1 == 0)
1679 breakpoint_chain = b;
1680 else
1681 {
1682 while (b1->next)
1683 b1 = b1->next;
1684 b1->next = b;
1685 }
1686
1687 check_duplicates (sal.pc);
1688
1689 return b;
1690 }
1691
1692 static void
1693 create_longjmp_breakpoint(func_name)
1694 char *func_name;
1695 {
1696 struct symtab_and_line sal;
1697 struct breakpoint *b;
1698 static int internal_breakpoint_number = -1;
1699
1700 if (func_name != NULL)
1701 {
1702 struct minimal_symbol *m;
1703
1704 m = lookup_minimal_symbol(func_name, (struct objfile *)NULL);
1705 if (m)
1706 sal.pc = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (m);
1707 else
1708 return;
1709 }
1710 else
1711 sal.pc = 0;
1712
1713 sal.symtab = NULL;
1714 sal.line = 0;
1715
1716 b = set_raw_breakpoint(sal);
1717 if (!b) return;
1718
1719 b->type = func_name != NULL ? bp_longjmp : bp_longjmp_resume;
1720 b->disposition = donttouch;
1721 b->enable = disabled;
1722 b->silent = 1;
1723 if (func_name)
1724 b->addr_string = strsave(func_name);
1725 b->number = internal_breakpoint_number--;
1726 }
1727
1728 /* Call this routine when stepping and nexting to enable a breakpoint if we do
1729 a longjmp(). When we hit that breakpoint, call
1730 set_longjmp_resume_breakpoint() to figure out where we are going. */
1731
1732 void
1733 enable_longjmp_breakpoint()
1734 {
1735 register struct breakpoint *b;
1736
1737 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
1738 if (b->type == bp_longjmp)
1739 {
1740 b->enable = enabled;
1741 check_duplicates (b->address);
1742 }
1743 }
1744
1745 void
1746 disable_longjmp_breakpoint()
1747 {
1748 register struct breakpoint *b;
1749
1750 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
1751 if ( b->type == bp_longjmp
1752 || b->type == bp_longjmp_resume)
1753 {
1754 b->enable = disabled;
1755 check_duplicates (b->address);
1756 }
1757 }
1758
1759 /* Call this after hitting the longjmp() breakpoint. Use this to set a new
1760 breakpoint at the target of the jmp_buf.
1761
1762 FIXME - This ought to be done by setting a temporary breakpoint that gets
1763 deleted automatically...
1764 */
1765
1766 void
1767 set_longjmp_resume_breakpoint(pc, frame)
1768 CORE_ADDR pc;
1769 FRAME frame;
1770 {
1771 register struct breakpoint *b;
1772
1773 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
1774 if (b->type == bp_longjmp_resume)
1775 {
1776 b->address = pc;
1777 b->enable = enabled;
1778 if (frame != NULL)
1779 b->frame = FRAME_FP(frame);
1780 else
1781 b->frame = 0;
1782 check_duplicates (b->address);
1783 return;
1784 }
1785 }
1786
1787 /* Set a breakpoint that will evaporate an end of command
1788 at address specified by SAL.
1789 Restrict it to frame FRAME if FRAME is nonzero. */
1790
1791 struct breakpoint *
1792 set_momentary_breakpoint (sal, frame, type)
1793 struct symtab_and_line sal;
1794 FRAME frame;
1795 enum bptype type;
1796 {
1797 register struct breakpoint *b;
1798 b = set_raw_breakpoint (sal);
1799 b->type = type;
1800 b->enable = enabled;
1801 b->disposition = donttouch;
1802 b->frame = (frame ? FRAME_FP (frame) : 0);
1803 return b;
1804 }
1805
1806 #if 0
1807 void
1808 clear_momentary_breakpoints ()
1809 {
1810 register struct breakpoint *b;
1811 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
1812 if (b->disposition == delete)
1813 {
1814 delete_breakpoint (b);
1815 break;
1816 }
1817 }
1818 #endif
1819 \f
1820 /* Tell the user we have just set a breakpoint B. */
1821 static void
1822 mention (b)
1823 struct breakpoint *b;
1824 {
1825 switch (b->type)
1826 {
1827 case bp_watchpoint:
1828 printf_filtered ("Watchpoint %d: ", b->number);
1829 print_expression (b->exp, gdb_stdout);
1830 break;
1831 case bp_breakpoint:
1832 printf_filtered ("Breakpoint %d at ", b->number);
1833 print_address_numeric (b->address, gdb_stdout);
1834 if (b->source_file)
1835 printf_filtered (": file %s, line %d.",
1836 b->source_file, b->line_number);
1837 break;
1838 case bp_until:
1839 case bp_finish:
1840 case bp_longjmp:
1841 case bp_longjmp_resume:
1842 case bp_step_resume:
1843 case bp_through_sigtramp:
1844 case bp_call_dummy:
1845 break;
1846 }
1847 printf_filtered ("\n");
1848 }
1849
1850 #if 0
1851 /* Nobody calls this currently. */
1852 /* Set a breakpoint from a symtab and line.
1853 If TEMPFLAG is nonzero, it is a temporary breakpoint.
1854 ADDR_STRING is a malloc'd string holding the name of where we are
1855 setting the breakpoint. This is used later to re-set it after the
1856 program is relinked and symbols are reloaded.
1857 Print the same confirmation messages that the breakpoint command prints. */
1858
1859 void
1860 set_breakpoint (s, line, tempflag, addr_string)
1861 struct symtab *s;
1862 int line;
1863 int tempflag;
1864 char *addr_string;
1865 {
1866 register struct breakpoint *b;
1867 struct symtab_and_line sal;
1868
1869 sal.symtab = s;
1870 sal.line = line;
1871 sal.pc = 0;
1872 resolve_sal_pc (&sal); /* Might error out */
1873 describe_other_breakpoints (sal.pc);
1874
1875 b = set_raw_breakpoint (sal);
1876 set_breakpoint_count (breakpoint_count + 1);
1877 b->number = breakpoint_count;
1878 b->type = bp_breakpoint;
1879 b->cond = 0;
1880 b->addr_string = addr_string;
1881 b->enable = enabled;
1882 b->disposition = tempflag ? delete : donttouch;
1883
1884 mention (b);
1885 }
1886 #endif /* 0 */
1887 \f
1888 /* Set a breakpoint according to ARG (function, linenum or *address)
1889 and make it temporary if TEMPFLAG is nonzero. */
1890
1891 static void
1892 break_command_1 (arg, tempflag, from_tty)
1893 char *arg;
1894 int tempflag, from_tty;
1895 {
1896 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
1897 struct symtab_and_line sal;
1898 register struct expression *cond = 0;
1899 register struct breakpoint *b;
1900
1901 /* Pointers in arg to the start, and one past the end, of the condition. */
1902 char *cond_start = NULL;
1903 char *cond_end = NULL;
1904 /* Pointers in arg to the start, and one past the end,
1905 of the address part. */
1906 char *addr_start = NULL;
1907 char *addr_end = NULL;
1908 struct cleanup *old_chain;
1909 struct cleanup *canonical_strings_chain = NULL;
1910 char **canonical = (char **)NULL;
1911 int i;
1912 int thread;
1913
1914 sals.sals = NULL;
1915 sals.nelts = 0;
1916
1917 sal.line = sal.pc = sal.end = 0;
1918 sal.symtab = 0;
1919
1920 /* If no arg given, or if first arg is 'if ', use the default breakpoint. */
1921
1922 if (!arg || (arg[0] == 'i' && arg[1] == 'f'
1923 && (arg[2] == ' ' || arg[2] == '\t')))
1924 {
1925 if (default_breakpoint_valid)
1926 {
1927 sals.sals = (struct symtab_and_line *)
1928 xmalloc (sizeof (struct symtab_and_line));
1929 sal.pc = default_breakpoint_address;
1930 sal.line = default_breakpoint_line;
1931 sal.symtab = default_breakpoint_symtab;
1932 sals.sals[0] = sal;
1933 sals.nelts = 1;
1934 }
1935 else
1936 error ("No default breakpoint address now.");
1937 }
1938 else
1939 {
1940 addr_start = arg;
1941
1942 /* Force almost all breakpoints to be in terms of the
1943 current_source_symtab (which is decode_line_1's default). This
1944 should produce the results we want almost all of the time while
1945 leaving default_breakpoint_* alone. */
1946 if (default_breakpoint_valid
1947 && (!current_source_symtab
1948 || (arg && (*arg == '+' || *arg == '-'))))
1949 sals = decode_line_1 (&arg, 1, default_breakpoint_symtab,
1950 default_breakpoint_line, &canonical);
1951 else
1952 sals = decode_line_1 (&arg, 1, (struct symtab *)NULL, 0, &canonical);
1953
1954 addr_end = arg;
1955 }
1956
1957 if (! sals.nelts)
1958 return;
1959
1960 /* Make sure that all storage allocated in decode_line_1 gets freed in case
1961 the following `for' loop errors out. */
1962 old_chain = make_cleanup (free, sals.sals);
1963 if (canonical != (char **)NULL)
1964 {
1965 make_cleanup (free, canonical);
1966 canonical_strings_chain = make_cleanup (null_cleanup, 0);
1967 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; i++)
1968 {
1969 if (canonical[i] != NULL)
1970 make_cleanup (free, canonical[i]);
1971 }
1972 }
1973
1974 thread = -1; /* No specific thread yet */
1975
1976 /* Resolve all line numbers to PC's, and verify that conditions
1977 can be parsed, before setting any breakpoints. */
1978 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; i++)
1979 {
1980 char *tok, *end_tok;
1981 int toklen;
1982
1983 resolve_sal_pc (&sals.sals[i]);
1984
1985 tok = arg;
1986
1987 while (tok && *tok)
1988 {
1989 while (*tok == ' ' || *tok == '\t')
1990 tok++;
1991
1992 end_tok = tok;
1993
1994 while (*end_tok != ' ' && *end_tok != '\t' && *end_tok != '\000')
1995 end_tok++;
1996
1997 toklen = end_tok - tok;
1998
1999 if (toklen >= 1 && strncmp (tok, "if", toklen) == 0)
2000 {
2001 tok = cond_start = end_tok + 1;
2002 cond = parse_exp_1 (&tok, block_for_pc (sals.sals[i].pc), 0);
2003 cond_end = tok;
2004 }
2005 else if (toklen >= 1 && strncmp (tok, "thread", toklen) == 0)
2006 {
2007 char *tmptok;
2008
2009 tok = end_tok + 1;
2010 tmptok = tok;
2011 thread = strtol (tok, &tok, 0);
2012 if (tok == tmptok)
2013 error ("Junk after thread keyword.");
2014 if (!valid_thread_id (thread))
2015 error ("Unknown thread %d\n", thread);
2016 }
2017 else
2018 error ("Junk at end of arguments.");
2019 }
2020 }
2021
2022 /* Remove the canonical strings from the cleanup, they are needed below. */
2023 if (canonical != (char **)NULL)
2024 discard_cleanups (canonical_strings_chain);
2025
2026 /* Now set all the breakpoints. */
2027 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; i++)
2028 {
2029 sal = sals.sals[i];
2030
2031 if (from_tty)
2032 describe_other_breakpoints (sal.pc);
2033
2034 b = set_raw_breakpoint (sal);
2035 set_breakpoint_count (breakpoint_count + 1);
2036 b->number = breakpoint_count;
2037 b->type = bp_breakpoint;
2038 b->cond = cond;
2039 b->thread = thread;
2040
2041 /* If a canonical line spec is needed use that instead of the
2042 command string. */
2043 if (canonical != (char **)NULL && canonical[i] != NULL)
2044 b->addr_string = canonical[i];
2045 else if (addr_start)
2046 b->addr_string = savestring (addr_start, addr_end - addr_start);
2047 if (cond_start)
2048 b->cond_string = savestring (cond_start, cond_end - cond_start);
2049
2050 b->enable = enabled;
2051 b->disposition = tempflag ? delete : donttouch;
2052
2053 mention (b);
2054 }
2055
2056 if (sals.nelts > 1)
2057 {
2058 printf_filtered ("Multiple breakpoints were set.\n");
2059 printf_filtered ("Use the \"delete\" command to delete unwanted breakpoints.\n");
2060 }
2061 do_cleanups (old_chain);
2062 }
2063
2064 /* Helper function for break_command_1 and disassemble_command. */
2065
2066 void
2067 resolve_sal_pc (sal)
2068 struct symtab_and_line *sal;
2069 {
2070 CORE_ADDR pc;
2071
2072 if (sal->pc == 0 && sal->symtab != 0)
2073 {
2074 pc = find_line_pc (sal->symtab, sal->line);
2075 if (pc == 0)
2076 error ("No line %d in file \"%s\".",
2077 sal->line, sal->symtab->filename);
2078 sal->pc = pc;
2079 }
2080 }
2081
2082 void
2083 break_command (arg, from_tty)
2084 char *arg;
2085 int from_tty;
2086 {
2087 break_command_1 (arg, 0, from_tty);
2088 }
2089
2090 static void
2091 tbreak_command (arg, from_tty)
2092 char *arg;
2093 int from_tty;
2094 {
2095 break_command_1 (arg, 1, from_tty);
2096 }
2097
2098 /* ARGSUSED */
2099 static void
2100 watch_command (arg, from_tty)
2101 char *arg;
2102 int from_tty;
2103 {
2104 struct breakpoint *b;
2105 struct symtab_and_line sal;
2106 struct expression *exp;
2107 struct block *exp_valid_block;
2108 struct value *val;
2109
2110 sal.pc = 0;
2111 sal.symtab = NULL;
2112 sal.line = 0;
2113
2114 /* Parse arguments. */
2115 innermost_block = NULL;
2116 exp = parse_expression (arg);
2117 exp_valid_block = innermost_block;
2118 val = evaluate_expression (exp);
2119 release_value (val);
2120 if (VALUE_LAZY (val))
2121 value_fetch_lazy (val);
2122
2123 /* Now set up the breakpoint. */
2124 b = set_raw_breakpoint (sal);
2125 set_breakpoint_count (breakpoint_count + 1);
2126 b->number = breakpoint_count;
2127 b->type = bp_watchpoint;
2128 b->disposition = donttouch;
2129 b->exp = exp;
2130 b->exp_valid_block = exp_valid_block;
2131 b->val = val;
2132 b->cond = 0;
2133 b->cond_string = NULL;
2134 b->exp_string = savestring (arg, strlen (arg));
2135 mention (b);
2136 }
2137 \f
2138 /*
2139 * Helper routine for the until_command routine in infcmd.c. Here
2140 * because it uses the mechanisms of breakpoints.
2141 */
2142 /* ARGSUSED */
2143 void
2144 until_break_command (arg, from_tty)
2145 char *arg;
2146 int from_tty;
2147 {
2148 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
2149 struct symtab_and_line sal;
2150 FRAME prev_frame = get_prev_frame (selected_frame);
2151 struct breakpoint *breakpoint;
2152 struct cleanup *old_chain;
2153
2154 clear_proceed_status ();
2155
2156 /* Set a breakpoint where the user wants it and at return from
2157 this function */
2158
2159 if (default_breakpoint_valid)
2160 sals = decode_line_1 (&arg, 1, default_breakpoint_symtab,
2161 default_breakpoint_line, (char ***)NULL);
2162 else
2163 sals = decode_line_1 (&arg, 1, (struct symtab *)NULL, 0, (char ***)NULL);
2164
2165 if (sals.nelts != 1)
2166 error ("Couldn't get information on specified line.");
2167
2168 sal = sals.sals[0];
2169 free ((PTR)sals.sals); /* malloc'd, so freed */
2170
2171 if (*arg)
2172 error ("Junk at end of arguments.");
2173
2174 resolve_sal_pc (&sal);
2175
2176 breakpoint = set_momentary_breakpoint (sal, selected_frame, bp_until);
2177
2178 old_chain = make_cleanup(delete_breakpoint, breakpoint);
2179
2180 /* Keep within the current frame */
2181
2182 if (prev_frame)
2183 {
2184 struct frame_info *fi;
2185
2186 fi = get_frame_info (prev_frame);
2187 sal = find_pc_line (fi->pc, 0);
2188 sal.pc = fi->pc;
2189 breakpoint = set_momentary_breakpoint (sal, prev_frame, bp_until);
2190 make_cleanup(delete_breakpoint, breakpoint);
2191 }
2192
2193 proceed (-1, TARGET_SIGNAL_DEFAULT, 0);
2194 do_cleanups(old_chain);
2195 }
2196 \f
2197 #if 0
2198 /* These aren't used; I don't konw what they were for. */
2199 /* Set a breakpoint at the catch clause for NAME. */
2200 static int
2201 catch_breakpoint (name)
2202 char *name;
2203 {
2204 }
2205
2206 static int
2207 disable_catch_breakpoint ()
2208 {
2209 }
2210
2211 static int
2212 delete_catch_breakpoint ()
2213 {
2214 }
2215
2216 static int
2217 enable_catch_breakpoint ()
2218 {
2219 }
2220 #endif /* 0 */
2221
2222 struct sal_chain
2223 {
2224 struct sal_chain *next;
2225 struct symtab_and_line sal;
2226 };
2227
2228 #if 0
2229 /* This isn't used; I don't know what it was for. */
2230 /* For each catch clause identified in ARGS, run FUNCTION
2231 with that clause as an argument. */
2232 static struct symtabs_and_lines
2233 map_catch_names (args, function)
2234 char *args;
2235 int (*function)();
2236 {
2237 register char *p = args;
2238 register char *p1;
2239 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
2240 #if 0
2241 struct sal_chain *sal_chain = 0;
2242 #endif
2243
2244 if (p == 0)
2245 error_no_arg ("one or more catch names");
2246
2247 sals.nelts = 0;
2248 sals.sals = NULL;
2249
2250 while (*p)
2251 {
2252 p1 = p;
2253 /* Don't swallow conditional part. */
2254 if (p1[0] == 'i' && p1[1] == 'f'
2255 && (p1[2] == ' ' || p1[2] == '\t'))
2256 break;
2257
2258 if (isalpha (*p1))
2259 {
2260 p1++;
2261 while (isalnum (*p1) || *p1 == '_' || *p1 == '$')
2262 p1++;
2263 }
2264
2265 if (*p1 && *p1 != ' ' && *p1 != '\t')
2266 error ("Arguments must be catch names.");
2267
2268 *p1 = 0;
2269 #if 0
2270 if (function (p))
2271 {
2272 struct sal_chain *next
2273 = (struct sal_chain *)alloca (sizeof (struct sal_chain));
2274 next->next = sal_chain;
2275 next->sal = get_catch_sal (p);
2276 sal_chain = next;
2277 goto win;
2278 }
2279 #endif
2280 printf_unfiltered ("No catch clause for exception %s.\n", p);
2281 #if 0
2282 win:
2283 #endif
2284 p = p1;
2285 while (*p == ' ' || *p == '\t') p++;
2286 }
2287 }
2288 #endif /* 0 */
2289
2290 /* This shares a lot of code with `print_frame_label_vars' from stack.c. */
2291
2292 static struct symtabs_and_lines
2293 get_catch_sals (this_level_only)
2294 int this_level_only;
2295 {
2296 register struct blockvector *bl;
2297 register struct block *block;
2298 int index, have_default = 0;
2299 struct frame_info *fi;
2300 CORE_ADDR pc;
2301 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
2302 struct sal_chain *sal_chain = 0;
2303 char *blocks_searched;
2304
2305 /* Not sure whether an error message is always the correct response,
2306 but it's better than a core dump. */
2307 if (selected_frame == NULL)
2308 error ("No selected frame.");
2309 block = get_frame_block (selected_frame);
2310 fi = get_frame_info (selected_frame);
2311 pc = fi->pc;
2312
2313 sals.nelts = 0;
2314 sals.sals = NULL;
2315
2316 if (block == 0)
2317 error ("No symbol table info available.\n");
2318
2319 bl = blockvector_for_pc (BLOCK_END (block) - 4, &index);
2320 blocks_searched = (char *) alloca (BLOCKVECTOR_NBLOCKS (bl) * sizeof (char));
2321 memset (blocks_searched, 0, BLOCKVECTOR_NBLOCKS (bl) * sizeof (char));
2322
2323 while (block != 0)
2324 {
2325 CORE_ADDR end = BLOCK_END (block) - 4;
2326 int last_index;
2327
2328 if (bl != blockvector_for_pc (end, &index))
2329 error ("blockvector blotch");
2330 if (BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK (bl, index) != block)
2331 error ("blockvector botch");
2332 last_index = BLOCKVECTOR_NBLOCKS (bl);
2333 index += 1;
2334
2335 /* Don't print out blocks that have gone by. */
2336 while (index < last_index
2337 && BLOCK_END (BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK (bl, index)) < pc)
2338 index++;
2339
2340 while (index < last_index
2341 && BLOCK_END (BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK (bl, index)) < end)
2342 {
2343 if (blocks_searched[index] == 0)
2344 {
2345 struct block *b = BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK (bl, index);
2346 int nsyms;
2347 register int i;
2348 register struct symbol *sym;
2349
2350 nsyms = BLOCK_NSYMS (b);
2351
2352 for (i = 0; i < nsyms; i++)
2353 {
2354 sym = BLOCK_SYM (b, i);
2355 if (STREQ (SYMBOL_NAME (sym), "default"))
2356 {
2357 if (have_default)
2358 continue;
2359 have_default = 1;
2360 }
2361 if (SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) == LOC_LABEL)
2362 {
2363 struct sal_chain *next = (struct sal_chain *)
2364 alloca (sizeof (struct sal_chain));
2365 next->next = sal_chain;
2366 next->sal = find_pc_line (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (sym), 0);
2367 sal_chain = next;
2368 }
2369 }
2370 blocks_searched[index] = 1;
2371 }
2372 index++;
2373 }
2374 if (have_default)
2375 break;
2376 if (sal_chain && this_level_only)
2377 break;
2378
2379 /* After handling the function's top-level block, stop.
2380 Don't continue to its superblock, the block of
2381 per-file symbols. */
2382 if (BLOCK_FUNCTION (block))
2383 break;
2384 block = BLOCK_SUPERBLOCK (block);
2385 }
2386
2387 if (sal_chain)
2388 {
2389 struct sal_chain *tmp_chain;
2390
2391 /* Count the number of entries. */
2392 for (index = 0, tmp_chain = sal_chain; tmp_chain;
2393 tmp_chain = tmp_chain->next)
2394 index++;
2395
2396 sals.nelts = index;
2397 sals.sals = (struct symtab_and_line *)
2398 xmalloc (index * sizeof (struct symtab_and_line));
2399 for (index = 0; sal_chain; sal_chain = sal_chain->next, index++)
2400 sals.sals[index] = sal_chain->sal;
2401 }
2402
2403 return sals;
2404 }
2405
2406 /* Commands to deal with catching exceptions. */
2407
2408 static void
2409 catch_command_1 (arg, tempflag, from_tty)
2410 char *arg;
2411 int tempflag;
2412 int from_tty;
2413 {
2414 /* First, translate ARG into something we can deal with in terms
2415 of breakpoints. */
2416
2417 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
2418 struct symtab_and_line sal;
2419 register struct expression *cond = 0;
2420 register struct breakpoint *b;
2421 char *save_arg;
2422 int i;
2423
2424 sal.line = sal.pc = sal.end = 0;
2425 sal.symtab = 0;
2426
2427 /* If no arg given, or if first arg is 'if ', all active catch clauses
2428 are breakpointed. */
2429
2430 if (!arg || (arg[0] == 'i' && arg[1] == 'f'
2431 && (arg[2] == ' ' || arg[2] == '\t')))
2432 {
2433 /* Grab all active catch clauses. */
2434 sals = get_catch_sals (0);
2435 }
2436 else
2437 {
2438 /* Grab selected catch clauses. */
2439 error ("catch NAME not implemented");
2440 #if 0
2441 /* This isn't used; I don't know what it was for. */
2442 sals = map_catch_names (arg, catch_breakpoint);
2443 #endif
2444 }
2445
2446 if (! sals.nelts)
2447 return;
2448
2449 save_arg = arg;
2450 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; i++)
2451 {
2452 resolve_sal_pc (&sals.sals[i]);
2453
2454 while (arg && *arg)
2455 {
2456 if (arg[0] == 'i' && arg[1] == 'f'
2457 && (arg[2] == ' ' || arg[2] == '\t'))
2458 cond = parse_exp_1 ((arg += 2, &arg),
2459 block_for_pc (sals.sals[i].pc), 0);
2460 else
2461 error ("Junk at end of arguments.");
2462 }
2463 arg = save_arg;
2464 }
2465
2466 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; i++)
2467 {
2468 sal = sals.sals[i];
2469
2470 if (from_tty)
2471 describe_other_breakpoints (sal.pc);
2472
2473 b = set_raw_breakpoint (sal);
2474 set_breakpoint_count (breakpoint_count + 1);
2475 b->number = breakpoint_count;
2476 b->type = bp_breakpoint;
2477 b->cond = cond;
2478 b->enable = enabled;
2479 b->disposition = tempflag ? delete : donttouch;
2480
2481 mention (b);
2482 }
2483
2484 if (sals.nelts > 1)
2485 {
2486 printf_unfiltered ("Multiple breakpoints were set.\n");
2487 printf_unfiltered ("Use the \"delete\" command to delete unwanted breakpoints.\n");
2488 }
2489 free ((PTR)sals.sals);
2490 }
2491
2492 #if 0
2493 /* These aren't used; I don't know what they were for. */
2494 /* Disable breakpoints on all catch clauses described in ARGS. */
2495 static void
2496 disable_catch (args)
2497 char *args;
2498 {
2499 /* Map the disable command to catch clauses described in ARGS. */
2500 }
2501
2502 /* Enable breakpoints on all catch clauses described in ARGS. */
2503 static void
2504 enable_catch (args)
2505 char *args;
2506 {
2507 /* Map the disable command to catch clauses described in ARGS. */
2508 }
2509
2510 /* Delete breakpoints on all catch clauses in the active scope. */
2511 static void
2512 delete_catch (args)
2513 char *args;
2514 {
2515 /* Map the delete command to catch clauses described in ARGS. */
2516 }
2517 #endif /* 0 */
2518
2519 static void
2520 catch_command (arg, from_tty)
2521 char *arg;
2522 int from_tty;
2523 {
2524 catch_command_1 (arg, 0, from_tty);
2525 }
2526 \f
2527 static void
2528 clear_command (arg, from_tty)
2529 char *arg;
2530 int from_tty;
2531 {
2532 register struct breakpoint *b, *b1;
2533 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
2534 struct symtab_and_line sal;
2535 register struct breakpoint *found;
2536 int i;
2537
2538 if (arg)
2539 {
2540 sals = decode_line_spec (arg, 1);
2541 }
2542 else
2543 {
2544 sals.sals = (struct symtab_and_line *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct symtab_and_line));
2545 sal.line = default_breakpoint_line;
2546 sal.symtab = default_breakpoint_symtab;
2547 sal.pc = 0;
2548 if (sal.symtab == 0)
2549 error ("No source file specified.");
2550
2551 sals.sals[0] = sal;
2552 sals.nelts = 1;
2553 }
2554
2555 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; i++)
2556 {
2557 /* If exact pc given, clear bpts at that pc.
2558 But if sal.pc is zero, clear all bpts on specified line. */
2559 sal = sals.sals[i];
2560 found = (struct breakpoint *) 0;
2561 while (breakpoint_chain
2562 && (sal.pc
2563 ? breakpoint_chain->address == sal.pc
2564 : (breakpoint_chain->source_file != NULL
2565 && sal.symtab != NULL
2566 && STREQ (breakpoint_chain->source_file,
2567 sal.symtab->filename)
2568 && breakpoint_chain->line_number == sal.line)))
2569 {
2570 b1 = breakpoint_chain;
2571 breakpoint_chain = b1->next;
2572 b1->next = found;
2573 found = b1;
2574 }
2575
2576 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
2577 while (b->next
2578 && b->next->type != bp_watchpoint
2579 && (sal.pc
2580 ? b->next->address == sal.pc
2581 : (b->next->source_file != NULL
2582 && sal.symtab != NULL
2583 && STREQ (b->next->source_file, sal.symtab->filename)
2584 && b->next->line_number == sal.line)))
2585 {
2586 b1 = b->next;
2587 b->next = b1->next;
2588 b1->next = found;
2589 found = b1;
2590 }
2591
2592 if (found == 0)
2593 {
2594 if (arg)
2595 error ("No breakpoint at %s.", arg);
2596 else
2597 error ("No breakpoint at this line.");
2598 }
2599
2600 if (found->next) from_tty = 1; /* Always report if deleted more than one */
2601 if (from_tty) printf_unfiltered ("Deleted breakpoint%s ", found->next ? "s" : "");
2602 while (found)
2603 {
2604 if (from_tty) printf_unfiltered ("%d ", found->number);
2605 b1 = found->next;
2606 delete_breakpoint (found);
2607 found = b1;
2608 }
2609 if (from_tty) putchar_unfiltered ('\n');
2610 }
2611 free ((PTR)sals.sals);
2612 }
2613 \f
2614 /* Delete breakpoint in BS if they are `delete' breakpoints.
2615 This is called after any breakpoint is hit, or after errors. */
2616
2617 void
2618 breakpoint_auto_delete (bs)
2619 bpstat bs;
2620 {
2621 for (; bs; bs = bs->next)
2622 if (bs->breakpoint_at && bs->breakpoint_at->disposition == delete
2623 && bs->stop)
2624 delete_breakpoint (bs->breakpoint_at);
2625 }
2626
2627 /* Delete a breakpoint and clean up all traces of it in the data structures. */
2628
2629 void
2630 delete_breakpoint (bpt)
2631 struct breakpoint *bpt;
2632 {
2633 register struct breakpoint *b;
2634 register bpstat bs;
2635
2636 if (bpt->inserted)
2637 target_remove_breakpoint(bpt->address, bpt->shadow_contents);
2638
2639 if (breakpoint_chain == bpt)
2640 breakpoint_chain = bpt->next;
2641
2642 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
2643 if (b->next == bpt)
2644 {
2645 b->next = bpt->next;
2646 break;
2647 }
2648
2649 check_duplicates (bpt->address);
2650 /* If this breakpoint was inserted, and there is another breakpoint
2651 at the same address, we need to insert the other breakpoint. */
2652 if (bpt->inserted)
2653 {
2654 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
2655 if (b->address == bpt->address
2656 && !b->duplicate
2657 && b->enable != disabled)
2658 {
2659 int val;
2660 val = target_insert_breakpoint (b->address, b->shadow_contents);
2661 if (val != 0)
2662 {
2663 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
2664 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "Cannot insert breakpoint %d:\n", b->number);
2665 memory_error (val, b->address); /* which bombs us out */
2666 }
2667 else
2668 b->inserted = 1;
2669 }
2670 }
2671
2672 free_command_lines (&bpt->commands);
2673 if (bpt->cond)
2674 free (bpt->cond);
2675 if (bpt->cond_string != NULL)
2676 free (bpt->cond_string);
2677 if (bpt->addr_string != NULL)
2678 free (bpt->addr_string);
2679 if (bpt->exp_string != NULL)
2680 free (bpt->exp_string);
2681 if (bpt->source_file != NULL)
2682 free (bpt->source_file);
2683
2684 if (xgdb_verbose && bpt->type == bp_breakpoint)
2685 {
2686 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
2687 printf_unfiltered ("breakpoint #%d deleted\n", bpt->number);
2688 }
2689
2690 /* Be sure no bpstat's are pointing at it after it's been freed. */
2691 /* FIXME, how can we find all bpstat's?
2692 We just check stop_bpstat for now. */
2693 for (bs = stop_bpstat; bs; bs = bs->next)
2694 if (bs->breakpoint_at == bpt)
2695 bs->breakpoint_at = NULL;
2696 free ((PTR)bpt);
2697 }
2698
2699 static void
2700 delete_command (arg, from_tty)
2701 char *arg;
2702 int from_tty;
2703 {
2704
2705 if (arg == 0)
2706 {
2707 /* Ask user only if there are some breakpoints to delete. */
2708 if (!from_tty
2709 || (breakpoint_chain && query ("Delete all breakpoints? ", 0, 0)))
2710 {
2711 /* No arg; clear all breakpoints. */
2712 while (breakpoint_chain)
2713 delete_breakpoint (breakpoint_chain);
2714 }
2715 }
2716 else
2717 map_breakpoint_numbers (arg, delete_breakpoint);
2718 }
2719
2720 /* Reset a breakpoint given it's struct breakpoint * BINT.
2721 The value we return ends up being the return value from catch_errors.
2722 Unused in this case. */
2723
2724 static int
2725 breakpoint_re_set_one (bint)
2726 char *bint;
2727 {
2728 struct breakpoint *b = (struct breakpoint *)bint; /* get past catch_errs */
2729 int i;
2730 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
2731 char *s;
2732 enum enable save_enable;
2733
2734 switch (b->type)
2735 {
2736 case bp_breakpoint:
2737 if (b->addr_string == NULL)
2738 {
2739 /* Anything without a string can't be re-set. */
2740 delete_breakpoint (b);
2741 return 0;
2742 }
2743 /* In case we have a problem, disable this breakpoint. We'll restore
2744 its status if we succeed. */
2745 save_enable = b->enable;
2746 b->enable = disabled;
2747
2748 s = b->addr_string;
2749 sals = decode_line_1 (&s, 1, (struct symtab *)NULL, 0, (char ***)NULL);
2750 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; i++)
2751 {
2752 resolve_sal_pc (&sals.sals[i]);
2753
2754 /* Reparse conditions, they might contain references to the
2755 old symtab. */
2756 if (b->cond_string != NULL)
2757 {
2758 s = b->cond_string;
2759 if (b->cond)
2760 free ((PTR)b->cond);
2761 b->cond = parse_exp_1 (&s, block_for_pc (sals.sals[i].pc), 0);
2762 }
2763
2764 /* We need to re-set the breakpoint if the address changes...*/
2765 if (b->address != sals.sals[i].pc
2766 /* ...or new and old breakpoints both have source files, and
2767 the source file name or the line number changes... */
2768 || (b->source_file != NULL
2769 && sals.sals[i].symtab != NULL
2770 && (!STREQ (b->source_file, sals.sals[i].symtab->filename)
2771 || b->line_number != sals.sals[i].line)
2772 )
2773 /* ...or we switch between having a source file and not having
2774 one. */
2775 || ((b->source_file == NULL) != (sals.sals[i].symtab == NULL))
2776 )
2777 {
2778 if (b->source_file != NULL)
2779 free (b->source_file);
2780 if (sals.sals[i].symtab == NULL)
2781 b->source_file = NULL;
2782 else
2783 b->source_file =
2784 savestring (sals.sals[i].symtab->filename,
2785 strlen (sals.sals[i].symtab->filename));
2786 b->line_number = sals.sals[i].line;
2787 b->address = sals.sals[i].pc;
2788
2789 check_duplicates (b->address);
2790
2791 mention (b);
2792 }
2793 b->enable = save_enable; /* Restore it, this worked. */
2794 }
2795 free ((PTR)sals.sals);
2796 break;
2797
2798 case bp_watchpoint:
2799 innermost_block = NULL;
2800 /* The issue arises of what context to evaluate this in. The same
2801 one as when it was set, but what does that mean when symbols have
2802 been re-read? We could save the filename and functionname, but
2803 if the context is more local than that, the best we could do would
2804 be something like how many levels deep and which index at that
2805 particular level, but that's going to be less stable than filenames
2806 or functionnames. */
2807 /* So for now, just use a global context. */
2808 b->exp = parse_expression (b->exp_string);
2809 b->exp_valid_block = innermost_block;
2810 b->val = evaluate_expression (b->exp);
2811 release_value (b->val);
2812 if (VALUE_LAZY (b->val))
2813 value_fetch_lazy (b->val);
2814
2815 if (b->cond_string != NULL)
2816 {
2817 s = b->cond_string;
2818 b->cond = parse_exp_1 (&s, (struct block *)0, 0);
2819 }
2820 if (b->enable == enabled)
2821 mention (b);
2822 break;
2823
2824 default:
2825 printf_filtered ("Deleting unknown breakpoint type %d\n", b->type);
2826 /* fall through */
2827 case bp_until:
2828 case bp_finish:
2829 case bp_longjmp:
2830 case bp_longjmp_resume:
2831 case bp_call_dummy:
2832 delete_breakpoint (b);
2833 break;
2834 }
2835
2836 return 0;
2837 }
2838
2839 /* Re-set all breakpoints after symbols have been re-loaded. */
2840 void
2841 breakpoint_re_set ()
2842 {
2843 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
2844 static char message1[] = "Error in re-setting breakpoint %d:\n";
2845 char message[sizeof (message1) + 30 /* slop */];
2846
2847 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
2848 {
2849 sprintf (message, message1, b->number); /* Format possible error msg */
2850 catch_errors (breakpoint_re_set_one, (char *) b, message,
2851 RETURN_MASK_ALL);
2852 }
2853
2854 create_longjmp_breakpoint("longjmp");
2855 create_longjmp_breakpoint("_longjmp");
2856 create_longjmp_breakpoint("siglongjmp");
2857 create_longjmp_breakpoint(NULL);
2858
2859 #if 0
2860 /* Took this out (temporaliy at least), since it produces an extra
2861 blank line at startup. This messes up the gdbtests. -PB */
2862 /* Blank line to finish off all those mention() messages we just printed. */
2863 printf_filtered ("\n");
2864 #endif
2865 }
2866 \f
2867 /* Set ignore-count of breakpoint number BPTNUM to COUNT.
2868 If from_tty is nonzero, it prints a message to that effect,
2869 which ends with a period (no newline). */
2870
2871 void
2872 set_ignore_count (bptnum, count, from_tty)
2873 int bptnum, count, from_tty;
2874 {
2875 register struct breakpoint *b;
2876
2877 if (count < 0)
2878 count = 0;
2879
2880 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
2881 if (b->number == bptnum)
2882 {
2883 b->ignore_count = count;
2884 if (!from_tty)
2885 return;
2886 else if (count == 0)
2887 printf_filtered ("Will stop next time breakpoint %d is reached.",
2888 bptnum);
2889 else if (count == 1)
2890 printf_filtered ("Will ignore next crossing of breakpoint %d.",
2891 bptnum);
2892 else
2893 printf_filtered ("Will ignore next %d crossings of breakpoint %d.",
2894 count, bptnum);
2895 return;
2896 }
2897
2898 error ("No breakpoint number %d.", bptnum);
2899 }
2900
2901 /* Clear the ignore counts of all breakpoints. */
2902 void
2903 breakpoint_clear_ignore_counts ()
2904 {
2905 struct breakpoint *b;
2906
2907 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
2908 b->ignore_count = 0;
2909 }
2910
2911 /* Command to set ignore-count of breakpoint N to COUNT. */
2912
2913 static void
2914 ignore_command (args, from_tty)
2915 char *args;
2916 int from_tty;
2917 {
2918 char *p = args;
2919 register int num;
2920
2921 if (p == 0)
2922 error_no_arg ("a breakpoint number");
2923
2924 num = get_number (&p);
2925
2926 if (*p == 0)
2927 error ("Second argument (specified ignore-count) is missing.");
2928
2929 set_ignore_count (num,
2930 longest_to_int (value_as_long (parse_and_eval (p))),
2931 from_tty);
2932 printf_filtered ("\n");
2933 }
2934 \f
2935 /* Call FUNCTION on each of the breakpoints
2936 whose numbers are given in ARGS. */
2937
2938 static void
2939 map_breakpoint_numbers (args, function)
2940 char *args;
2941 void (*function) PARAMS ((struct breakpoint *));
2942 {
2943 register char *p = args;
2944 char *p1;
2945 register int num;
2946 register struct breakpoint *b;
2947
2948 if (p == 0)
2949 error_no_arg ("one or more breakpoint numbers");
2950
2951 while (*p)
2952 {
2953 p1 = p;
2954
2955 num = get_number (&p1);
2956
2957 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
2958 if (b->number == num)
2959 {
2960 function (b);
2961 goto win;
2962 }
2963 printf_unfiltered ("No breakpoint number %d.\n", num);
2964 win:
2965 p = p1;
2966 }
2967 }
2968
2969 static void
2970 enable_breakpoint (bpt)
2971 struct breakpoint *bpt;
2972 {
2973 FRAME save_selected_frame = NULL;
2974 int save_selected_frame_level = -1;
2975
2976 bpt->enable = enabled;
2977
2978 if (xgdb_verbose && bpt->type == bp_breakpoint)
2979 printf_unfiltered ("breakpoint #%d enabled\n", bpt->number);
2980
2981 check_duplicates (bpt->address);
2982 if (bpt->type == bp_watchpoint)
2983 {
2984 if (bpt->exp_valid_block != NULL)
2985 {
2986 FRAME fr = within_scope (bpt->exp_valid_block);
2987 if (fr == NULL)
2988 {
2989 printf_filtered ("\
2990 Cannot enable watchpoint %d because the block in which its expression\n\
2991 is valid is not currently in scope.\n", bpt->number);
2992 bpt->enable = disabled;
2993 return;
2994 }
2995 save_selected_frame = selected_frame;
2996 save_selected_frame_level = selected_frame_level;
2997 select_frame (fr, -1);
2998 }
2999
3000 value_free (bpt->val);
3001
3002 bpt->val = evaluate_expression (bpt->exp);
3003 release_value (bpt->val);
3004 if (VALUE_LAZY (bpt->val))
3005 value_fetch_lazy (bpt->val);
3006
3007 if (save_selected_frame_level >= 0)
3008 select_frame (save_selected_frame, save_selected_frame_level);
3009 }
3010 }
3011
3012 /* ARGSUSED */
3013 static void
3014 enable_command (args, from_tty)
3015 char *args;
3016 int from_tty;
3017 {
3018 struct breakpoint *bpt;
3019 if (args == 0)
3020 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bpt)
3021 switch (bpt->type)
3022 {
3023 case bp_breakpoint:
3024 case bp_watchpoint:
3025 enable_breakpoint (bpt);
3026 default:
3027 continue;
3028 }
3029 else
3030 map_breakpoint_numbers (args, enable_breakpoint);
3031 }
3032
3033 static void
3034 disable_breakpoint (bpt)
3035 struct breakpoint *bpt;
3036 {
3037 bpt->enable = disabled;
3038
3039 if (xgdb_verbose && bpt->type == bp_breakpoint)
3040 printf_filtered ("breakpoint #%d disabled\n", bpt->number);
3041
3042 check_duplicates (bpt->address);
3043 }
3044
3045 /* ARGSUSED */
3046 static void
3047 disable_command (args, from_tty)
3048 char *args;
3049 int from_tty;
3050 {
3051 register struct breakpoint *bpt;
3052 if (args == 0)
3053 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bpt)
3054 switch (bpt->type)
3055 {
3056 case bp_breakpoint:
3057 case bp_watchpoint:
3058 disable_breakpoint (bpt);
3059 default:
3060 continue;
3061 }
3062 else
3063 map_breakpoint_numbers (args, disable_breakpoint);
3064 }
3065
3066 static void
3067 enable_once_breakpoint (bpt)
3068 struct breakpoint *bpt;
3069 {
3070 bpt->enable = enabled;
3071 bpt->disposition = disable;
3072
3073 check_duplicates (bpt->address);
3074 }
3075
3076 /* ARGSUSED */
3077 static void
3078 enable_once_command (args, from_tty)
3079 char *args;
3080 int from_tty;
3081 {
3082 map_breakpoint_numbers (args, enable_once_breakpoint);
3083 }
3084
3085 static void
3086 enable_delete_breakpoint (bpt)
3087 struct breakpoint *bpt;
3088 {
3089 bpt->enable = enabled;
3090 bpt->disposition = delete;
3091
3092 check_duplicates (bpt->address);
3093 }
3094
3095 /* ARGSUSED */
3096 static void
3097 enable_delete_command (args, from_tty)
3098 char *args;
3099 int from_tty;
3100 {
3101 map_breakpoint_numbers (args, enable_delete_breakpoint);
3102 }
3103 \f
3104 /*
3105 * Use default_breakpoint_'s, or nothing if they aren't valid.
3106 */
3107 struct symtabs_and_lines
3108 decode_line_spec_1 (string, funfirstline)
3109 char *string;
3110 int funfirstline;
3111 {
3112 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
3113 if (string == 0)
3114 error ("Empty line specification.");
3115 if (default_breakpoint_valid)
3116 sals = decode_line_1 (&string, funfirstline,
3117 default_breakpoint_symtab, default_breakpoint_line,
3118 (char ***)NULL);
3119 else
3120 sals = decode_line_1 (&string, funfirstline,
3121 (struct symtab *)NULL, 0, (char ***)NULL);
3122 if (*string)
3123 error ("Junk at end of line specification: %s", string);
3124 return sals;
3125 }
3126 \f
3127 void
3128 _initialize_breakpoint ()
3129 {
3130 breakpoint_chain = 0;
3131 /* Don't bother to call set_breakpoint_count. $bpnum isn't useful
3132 before a breakpoint is set. */
3133 breakpoint_count = 0;
3134
3135 add_com ("ignore", class_breakpoint, ignore_command,
3136 "Set ignore-count of breakpoint number N to COUNT.");
3137
3138 add_com ("commands", class_breakpoint, commands_command,
3139 "Set commands to be executed when a breakpoint is hit.\n\
3140 Give breakpoint number as argument after \"commands\".\n\
3141 With no argument, the targeted breakpoint is the last one set.\n\
3142 The commands themselves follow starting on the next line.\n\
3143 Type a line containing \"end\" to indicate the end of them.\n\
3144 Give \"silent\" as the first line to make the breakpoint silent;\n\
3145 then no output is printed when it is hit, except what the commands print.");
3146
3147 add_com ("condition", class_breakpoint, condition_command,
3148 "Specify breakpoint number N to break only if COND is true.\n\
3149 N is an integer; COND is an expression to be evaluated whenever\n\
3150 breakpoint N is reached. ");
3151
3152 add_com ("tbreak", class_breakpoint, tbreak_command,
3153 "Set a temporary breakpoint. Args like \"break\" command.\n\
3154 Like \"break\" except the breakpoint is only temporary,\n\
3155 so it will be deleted when hit. Equivalent to \"break\" followed\n\
3156 by using \"enable delete\" on the breakpoint number.");
3157
3158 add_prefix_cmd ("enable", class_breakpoint, enable_command,
3159 "Enable some breakpoints.\n\
3160 Give breakpoint numbers (separated by spaces) as arguments.\n\
3161 With no subcommand, breakpoints are enabled until you command otherwise.\n\
3162 This is used to cancel the effect of the \"disable\" command.\n\
3163 With a subcommand you can enable temporarily.",
3164 &enablelist, "enable ", 1, &cmdlist);
3165
3166 add_abbrev_prefix_cmd ("breakpoints", class_breakpoint, enable_command,
3167 "Enable some breakpoints.\n\
3168 Give breakpoint numbers (separated by spaces) as arguments.\n\
3169 This is used to cancel the effect of the \"disable\" command.\n\
3170 May be abbreviated to simply \"enable\".\n",
3171 &enablebreaklist, "enable breakpoints ", 1, &enablelist);
3172
3173 add_cmd ("once", no_class, enable_once_command,
3174 "Enable breakpoints for one hit. Give breakpoint numbers.\n\
3175 If a breakpoint is hit while enabled in this fashion, it becomes disabled.\n\
3176 See the \"tbreak\" command which sets a breakpoint and enables it once.",
3177 &enablebreaklist);
3178
3179 add_cmd ("delete", no_class, enable_delete_command,
3180 "Enable breakpoints and delete when hit. Give breakpoint numbers.\n\
3181 If a breakpoint is hit while enabled in this fashion, it is deleted.",
3182 &enablebreaklist);
3183
3184 add_cmd ("delete", no_class, enable_delete_command,
3185 "Enable breakpoints and delete when hit. Give breakpoint numbers.\n\
3186 If a breakpoint is hit while enabled in this fashion, it is deleted.",
3187 &enablelist);
3188
3189 add_cmd ("once", no_class, enable_once_command,
3190 "Enable breakpoints for one hit. Give breakpoint numbers.\n\
3191 If a breakpoint is hit while enabled in this fashion, it becomes disabled.\n\
3192 See the \"tbreak\" command which sets a breakpoint and enables it once.",
3193 &enablelist);
3194
3195 add_prefix_cmd ("disable", class_breakpoint, disable_command,
3196 "Disable some breakpoints.\n\
3197 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
3198 To disable all breakpoints, give no argument.\n\
3199 A disabled breakpoint is not forgotten, but has no effect until reenabled.",
3200 &disablelist, "disable ", 1, &cmdlist);
3201 add_com_alias ("dis", "disable", class_breakpoint, 1);
3202 add_com_alias ("disa", "disable", class_breakpoint, 1);
3203
3204 add_cmd ("breakpoints", class_alias, disable_command,
3205 "Disable some breakpoints.\n\
3206 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
3207 To disable all breakpoints, give no argument.\n\
3208 A disabled breakpoint is not forgotten, but has no effect until reenabled.\n\
3209 This command may be abbreviated \"disable\".",
3210 &disablelist);
3211
3212 add_prefix_cmd ("delete", class_breakpoint, delete_command,
3213 "Delete some breakpoints or auto-display expressions.\n\
3214 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
3215 To delete all breakpoints, give no argument.\n\
3216 \n\
3217 Also a prefix command for deletion of other GDB objects.\n\
3218 The \"unset\" command is also an alias for \"delete\".",
3219 &deletelist, "delete ", 1, &cmdlist);
3220 add_com_alias ("d", "delete", class_breakpoint, 1);
3221
3222 add_cmd ("breakpoints", class_alias, delete_command,
3223 "Delete some breakpoints or auto-display expressions.\n\
3224 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
3225 To delete all breakpoints, give no argument.\n\
3226 This command may be abbreviated \"delete\".",
3227 &deletelist);
3228
3229 add_com ("clear", class_breakpoint, clear_command,
3230 "Clear breakpoint at specified line or function.\n\
3231 Argument may be line number, function name, or \"*\" and an address.\n\
3232 If line number is specified, all breakpoints in that line are cleared.\n\
3233 If function is specified, breakpoints at beginning of function are cleared.\n\
3234 If an address is specified, breakpoints at that address are cleared.\n\n\
3235 With no argument, clears all breakpoints in the line that the selected frame\n\
3236 is executing in.\n\
3237 \n\
3238 See also the \"delete\" command which clears breakpoints by number.");
3239
3240 add_com ("break", class_breakpoint, break_command,
3241 "Set breakpoint at specified line or function.\n\
3242 Argument may be line number, function name, or \"*\" and an address.\n\
3243 If line number is specified, break at start of code for that line.\n\
3244 If function is specified, break at start of code for that function.\n\
3245 If an address is specified, break at that exact address.\n\
3246 With no arg, uses current execution address of selected stack frame.\n\
3247 This is useful for breaking on return to a stack frame.\n\
3248 \n\
3249 Multiple breakpoints at one place are permitted, and useful if conditional.\n\
3250 \n\
3251 Do \"help breakpoints\" for info on other commands dealing with breakpoints.");
3252 add_com_alias ("b", "break", class_run, 1);
3253 add_com_alias ("br", "break", class_run, 1);
3254 add_com_alias ("bre", "break", class_run, 1);
3255 add_com_alias ("brea", "break", class_run, 1);
3256
3257 add_info ("breakpoints", breakpoints_info,
3258 "Status of user-settable breakpoints, or breakpoint number NUMBER.\n\
3259 The \"Type\" column indicates one of:\n\
3260 \tbreakpoint - normal breakpoint\n\
3261 \twatchpoint - watchpoint\n\
3262 The \"Disp\" column contains one of \"keep\", \"del\", or \"dis\" to indicate\n\
3263 the disposition of the breakpoint after it gets hit. \"dis\" means that the\n\
3264 breakpoint will be disabled. The \"Address\" and \"What\" columns indicate the\n\
3265 address and file/line number respectively.\n\n\
3266 Convenience variable \"$_\" and default examine address for \"x\"\n\
3267 are set to the address of the last breakpoint listed.\n\n\
3268 Convenience variable \"$bpnum\" contains the number of the last\n\
3269 breakpoint set.");
3270
3271 #if MAINTENANCE_CMDS
3272
3273 add_cmd ("breakpoints", class_maintenance, maintenance_info_breakpoints,
3274 "Status of all breakpoints, or breakpoint number NUMBER.\n\
3275 The \"Type\" column indicates one of:\n\
3276 \tbreakpoint - normal breakpoint\n\
3277 \twatchpoint - watchpoint\n\
3278 \tlongjmp - internal breakpoint used to step through longjmp()\n\
3279 \tlongjmp resume - internal breakpoint at the target of longjmp()\n\
3280 \tuntil - internal breakpoint used by the \"until\" command\n\
3281 \tfinish - internal breakpoint used by the \"finish\" command\n\
3282 The \"Disp\" column contains one of \"keep\", \"del\", or \"dis\" to indicate\n\
3283 the disposition of the breakpoint after it gets hit. \"dis\" means that the\n\
3284 breakpoint will be disabled. The \"Address\" and \"What\" columns indicate the\n\
3285 address and file/line number respectively.\n\n\
3286 Convenience variable \"$_\" and default examine address for \"x\"\n\
3287 are set to the address of the last breakpoint listed.\n\n\
3288 Convenience variable \"$bpnum\" contains the number of the last\n\
3289 breakpoint set.",
3290 &maintenanceinfolist);
3291
3292 #endif /* MAINTENANCE_CMDS */
3293
3294 add_com ("catch", class_breakpoint, catch_command,
3295 "Set breakpoints to catch exceptions that are raised.\n\
3296 Argument may be a single exception to catch, multiple exceptions\n\
3297 to catch, or the default exception \"default\". If no arguments\n\
3298 are given, breakpoints are set at all exception handlers catch clauses\n\
3299 within the current scope.\n\
3300 \n\
3301 A condition specified for the catch applies to all breakpoints set\n\
3302 with this command\n\
3303 \n\
3304 Do \"help breakpoints\" for info on other commands dealing with breakpoints.");
3305
3306 add_com ("watch", class_breakpoint, watch_command,
3307 "Set a watchpoint for an expression.\n\
3308 A watchpoint stops execution of your program whenever the value of\n\
3309 an expression changes.");
3310
3311 add_info ("watchpoints", breakpoints_info,
3312 "Synonym for ``info breakpoints''.");
3313 }
3314
3315 /* OK, when we call objfile_relocate, we need to relocate breakpoints
3316 too. breakpoint_re_set is not a good choice--for example, if
3317 addr_string contains just a line number without a file name the
3318 breakpoint might get set in a different file. In general, there is
3319 no need to go all the way back to the user's string (though this might
3320 work if some effort were made to canonicalize it), since symtabs and
3321 everything except addresses are still valid.
3322
3323 Probably the best way to solve this is to have each breakpoint save
3324 the objfile and the section number that was used to set it (if set
3325 by "*addr", probably it is best to use find_pc_line to get a symtab
3326 and use the objfile and block_line_section for that symtab). Then
3327 objfile_relocate can call fixup_breakpoints with the objfile and
3328 the new_offsets, and it can relocate only the appropriate breakpoints. */
3329
3330 #ifdef IBM6000_TARGET
3331 /* But for now, just kludge it based on the concept that before an
3332 objfile is relocated the breakpoint is below 0x10000000, and afterwards
3333 it is higher, so that way we only relocate each breakpoint once. */
3334
3335 void
3336 fixup_breakpoints (low, high, delta)
3337 CORE_ADDR low;
3338 CORE_ADDR high;
3339 CORE_ADDR delta;
3340 {
3341 struct breakpoint *b;
3342
3343 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
3344 {
3345 if (b->address >= low && b->address <= high)
3346 b->address += delta;
3347 }
3348 }
3349 #endif
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