* gdbint.texinfo (Releasing GDB): Add the section``Branch Commit
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / doc / gdbint.texinfo
1 \input texinfo @c -*- texinfo -*-
2 @setfilename gdbint.info
3 @include gdb-cfg.texi
4 @dircategory Programming & development tools.
5 @direntry
6 * Gdb-Internals: (gdbint). The GNU debugger's internals.
7 @end direntry
8
9 @ifinfo
10 This file documents the internals of the GNU debugger @value{GDBN}.
11 Copyright 1990,1991,1992,1993,1994,1996,1998,1999,2000,2001,2002
12 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
13 Contributed by Cygnus Solutions. Written by John Gilmore.
14 Second Edition by Stan Shebs.
15
16 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
17 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or
18 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
19 Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being ``A GNU Manual,''
20 and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below.
21
22 (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and modify
23 this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free
24 Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development.''
25 @end ifinfo
26
27 @setchapternewpage off
28 @settitle @value{GDBN} Internals
29
30 @syncodeindex fn cp
31 @syncodeindex vr cp
32
33 @titlepage
34 @title @value{GDBN} Internals
35 @subtitle{A guide to the internals of the GNU debugger}
36 @author John Gilmore
37 @author Cygnus Solutions
38 @author Second Edition:
39 @author Stan Shebs
40 @author Cygnus Solutions
41 @page
42 @tex
43 \def\$#1${{#1}} % Kluge: collect RCS revision info without $...$
44 \xdef\manvers{\$Revision$} % For use in headers, footers too
45 {\parskip=0pt
46 \hfill Cygnus Solutions\par
47 \hfill \manvers\par
48 \hfill \TeX{}info \texinfoversion\par
49 }
50 @end tex
51
52 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
53 Copyright @copyright{} 1990,1991,1992,1993,1994,1996,1998,1999,2000,2001
54 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
55
56 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
57 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or
58 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
59 Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being ``A GNU Manual,''
60 and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below.
61
62 (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and modify
63 this GNU Manual, like GNU software. Copies published by the Free
64 Software Foundation raise funds for GNU development.''
65 @end titlepage
66
67 @contents
68
69 @node Top
70 @c Perhaps this should be the title of the document (but only for info,
71 @c not for TeX). Existing GNU manuals seem inconsistent on this point.
72 @top Scope of this Document
73
74 This document documents the internals of the GNU debugger, @value{GDBN}. It
75 includes description of @value{GDBN}'s key algorithms and operations, as well
76 as the mechanisms that adapt @value{GDBN} to specific hosts and targets.
77
78 @menu
79 * Requirements::
80 * Overall Structure::
81 * Algorithms::
82 * User Interface::
83 * libgdb::
84 * Symbol Handling::
85 * Language Support::
86 * Host Definition::
87 * Target Architecture Definition::
88 * Target Vector Definition::
89 * Native Debugging::
90 * Support Libraries::
91 * Coding::
92 * Porting GDB::
93 * Releasing GDB::
94 * Testsuite::
95 * Hints::
96
97 * GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation
98 * Index::
99 @end menu
100
101 @node Requirements
102
103 @chapter Requirements
104 @cindex requirements for @value{GDBN}
105
106 Before diving into the internals, you should understand the formal
107 requirements and other expectations for @value{GDBN}. Although some
108 of these may seem obvious, there have been proposals for @value{GDBN}
109 that have run counter to these requirements.
110
111 First of all, @value{GDBN} is a debugger. It's not designed to be a
112 front panel for embedded systems. It's not a text editor. It's not a
113 shell. It's not a programming environment.
114
115 @value{GDBN} is an interactive tool. Although a batch mode is
116 available, @value{GDBN}'s primary role is to interact with a human
117 programmer.
118
119 @value{GDBN} should be responsive to the user. A programmer hot on
120 the trail of a nasty bug, and operating under a looming deadline, is
121 going to be very impatient of everything, including the response time
122 to debugger commands.
123
124 @value{GDBN} should be relatively permissive, such as for expressions.
125 While the compiler should be picky (or have the option to be made
126 picky), since source code lives for a long time usually, the
127 programmer doing debugging shouldn't be spending time figuring out to
128 mollify the debugger.
129
130 @value{GDBN} will be called upon to deal with really large programs.
131 Executable sizes of 50 to 100 megabytes occur regularly, and we've
132 heard reports of programs approaching 1 gigabyte in size.
133
134 @value{GDBN} should be able to run everywhere. No other debugger is
135 available for even half as many configurations as @value{GDBN}
136 supports.
137
138
139 @node Overall Structure
140
141 @chapter Overall Structure
142
143 @value{GDBN} consists of three major subsystems: user interface,
144 symbol handling (the @dfn{symbol side}), and target system handling (the
145 @dfn{target side}).
146
147 The user interface consists of several actual interfaces, plus
148 supporting code.
149
150 The symbol side consists of object file readers, debugging info
151 interpreters, symbol table management, source language expression
152 parsing, type and value printing.
153
154 The target side consists of execution control, stack frame analysis, and
155 physical target manipulation.
156
157 The target side/symbol side division is not formal, and there are a
158 number of exceptions. For instance, core file support involves symbolic
159 elements (the basic core file reader is in BFD) and target elements (it
160 supplies the contents of memory and the values of registers). Instead,
161 this division is useful for understanding how the minor subsystems
162 should fit together.
163
164 @section The Symbol Side
165
166 The symbolic side of @value{GDBN} can be thought of as ``everything
167 you can do in @value{GDBN} without having a live program running''.
168 For instance, you can look at the types of variables, and evaluate
169 many kinds of expressions.
170
171 @section The Target Side
172
173 The target side of @value{GDBN} is the ``bits and bytes manipulator''.
174 Although it may make reference to symbolic info here and there, most
175 of the target side will run with only a stripped executable
176 available---or even no executable at all, in remote debugging cases.
177
178 Operations such as disassembly, stack frame crawls, and register
179 display, are able to work with no symbolic info at all. In some cases,
180 such as disassembly, @value{GDBN} will use symbolic info to present addresses
181 relative to symbols rather than as raw numbers, but it will work either
182 way.
183
184 @section Configurations
185
186 @cindex host
187 @cindex target
188 @dfn{Host} refers to attributes of the system where @value{GDBN} runs.
189 @dfn{Target} refers to the system where the program being debugged
190 executes. In most cases they are the same machine, in which case a
191 third type of @dfn{Native} attributes come into play.
192
193 Defines and include files needed to build on the host are host support.
194 Examples are tty support, system defined types, host byte order, host
195 float format.
196
197 Defines and information needed to handle the target format are target
198 dependent. Examples are the stack frame format, instruction set,
199 breakpoint instruction, registers, and how to set up and tear down the stack
200 to call a function.
201
202 Information that is only needed when the host and target are the same,
203 is native dependent. One example is Unix child process support; if the
204 host and target are not the same, doing a fork to start the target
205 process is a bad idea. The various macros needed for finding the
206 registers in the @code{upage}, running @code{ptrace}, and such are all
207 in the native-dependent files.
208
209 Another example of native-dependent code is support for features that
210 are really part of the target environment, but which require
211 @code{#include} files that are only available on the host system. Core
212 file handling and @code{setjmp} handling are two common cases.
213
214 When you want to make @value{GDBN} work ``native'' on a particular machine, you
215 have to include all three kinds of information.
216
217
218 @node Algorithms
219
220 @chapter Algorithms
221 @cindex algorithms
222
223 @value{GDBN} uses a number of debugging-specific algorithms. They are
224 often not very complicated, but get lost in the thicket of special
225 cases and real-world issues. This chapter describes the basic
226 algorithms and mentions some of the specific target definitions that
227 they use.
228
229 @section Frames
230
231 @cindex frame
232 @cindex call stack frame
233 A frame is a construct that @value{GDBN} uses to keep track of calling
234 and called functions.
235
236 @findex create_new_frame
237 @vindex FRAME_FP
238 @code{FRAME_FP} in the machine description has no meaning to the
239 machine-independent part of @value{GDBN}, except that it is used when
240 setting up a new frame from scratch, as follows:
241
242 @example
243 create_new_frame (read_register (FP_REGNUM), read_pc ()));
244 @end example
245
246 @cindex frame pointer register
247 Other than that, all the meaning imparted to @code{FP_REGNUM} is
248 imparted by the machine-dependent code. So, @code{FP_REGNUM} can have
249 any value that is convenient for the code that creates new frames.
250 (@code{create_new_frame} calls @code{INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO} if it is
251 defined; that is where you should use the @code{FP_REGNUM} value, if
252 your frames are nonstandard.)
253
254 @cindex frame chain
255 Given a @value{GDBN} frame, define @code{FRAME_CHAIN} to determine the
256 address of the calling function's frame. This will be used to create
257 a new @value{GDBN} frame struct, and then @code{INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO}
258 and @code{INIT_FRAME_PC} will be called for the new frame.
259
260 @section Breakpoint Handling
261
262 @cindex breakpoints
263 In general, a breakpoint is a user-designated location in the program
264 where the user wants to regain control if program execution ever reaches
265 that location.
266
267 There are two main ways to implement breakpoints; either as ``hardware''
268 breakpoints or as ``software'' breakpoints.
269
270 @cindex hardware breakpoints
271 @cindex program counter
272 Hardware breakpoints are sometimes available as a builtin debugging
273 features with some chips. Typically these work by having dedicated
274 register into which the breakpoint address may be stored. If the PC
275 (shorthand for @dfn{program counter})
276 ever matches a value in a breakpoint registers, the CPU raises an
277 exception and reports it to @value{GDBN}.
278
279 Another possibility is when an emulator is in use; many emulators
280 include circuitry that watches the address lines coming out from the
281 processor, and force it to stop if the address matches a breakpoint's
282 address.
283
284 A third possibility is that the target already has the ability to do
285 breakpoints somehow; for instance, a ROM monitor may do its own
286 software breakpoints. So although these are not literally ``hardware
287 breakpoints'', from @value{GDBN}'s point of view they work the same;
288 @value{GDBN} need not do nothing more than set the breakpoint and wait
289 for something to happen.
290
291 Since they depend on hardware resources, hardware breakpoints may be
292 limited in number; when the user asks for more, @value{GDBN} will
293 start trying to set software breakpoints. (On some architectures,
294 notably the 32-bit x86 platforms, @value{GDBN} cannot always know
295 whether there's enough hardware resources to insert all the hardware
296 breakpoints and watchpoints. On those platforms, @value{GDBN} prints
297 an error message only when the program being debugged is continued.)
298
299 @cindex software breakpoints
300 Software breakpoints require @value{GDBN} to do somewhat more work.
301 The basic theory is that @value{GDBN} will replace a program
302 instruction with a trap, illegal divide, or some other instruction
303 that will cause an exception, and then when it's encountered,
304 @value{GDBN} will take the exception and stop the program. When the
305 user says to continue, @value{GDBN} will restore the original
306 instruction, single-step, re-insert the trap, and continue on.
307
308 Since it literally overwrites the program being tested, the program area
309 must be writable, so this technique won't work on programs in ROM. It
310 can also distort the behavior of programs that examine themselves,
311 although such a situation would be highly unusual.
312
313 Also, the software breakpoint instruction should be the smallest size of
314 instruction, so it doesn't overwrite an instruction that might be a jump
315 target, and cause disaster when the program jumps into the middle of the
316 breakpoint instruction. (Strictly speaking, the breakpoint must be no
317 larger than the smallest interval between instructions that may be jump
318 targets; perhaps there is an architecture where only even-numbered
319 instructions may jumped to.) Note that it's possible for an instruction
320 set not to have any instructions usable for a software breakpoint,
321 although in practice only the ARC has failed to define such an
322 instruction.
323
324 @findex BREAKPOINT
325 The basic definition of the software breakpoint is the macro
326 @code{BREAKPOINT}.
327
328 Basic breakpoint object handling is in @file{breakpoint.c}. However,
329 much of the interesting breakpoint action is in @file{infrun.c}.
330
331 @section Single Stepping
332
333 @section Signal Handling
334
335 @section Thread Handling
336
337 @section Inferior Function Calls
338
339 @section Longjmp Support
340
341 @cindex @code{longjmp} debugging
342 @value{GDBN} has support for figuring out that the target is doing a
343 @code{longjmp} and for stopping at the target of the jump, if we are
344 stepping. This is done with a few specialized internal breakpoints,
345 which are visible in the output of the @samp{maint info breakpoint}
346 command.
347
348 @findex GET_LONGJMP_TARGET
349 To make this work, you need to define a macro called
350 @code{GET_LONGJMP_TARGET}, which will examine the @code{jmp_buf}
351 structure and extract the longjmp target address. Since @code{jmp_buf}
352 is target specific, you will need to define it in the appropriate
353 @file{tm-@var{target}.h} file. Look in @file{tm-sun4os4.h} and
354 @file{sparc-tdep.c} for examples of how to do this.
355
356 @section Watchpoints
357 @cindex watchpoints
358
359 Watchpoints are a special kind of breakpoints (@pxref{Algorithms,
360 breakpoints}) which break when data is accessed rather than when some
361 instruction is executed. When you have data which changes without
362 your knowing what code does that, watchpoints are the silver bullet to
363 hunt down and kill such bugs.
364
365 @cindex hardware watchpoints
366 @cindex software watchpoints
367 Watchpoints can be either hardware-assisted or not; the latter type is
368 known as ``software watchpoints.'' @value{GDBN} always uses
369 hardware-assisted watchpoints if they are available, and falls back on
370 software watchpoints otherwise. Typical situations where @value{GDBN}
371 will use software watchpoints are:
372
373 @itemize @bullet
374 @item
375 The watched memory region is too large for the underlying hardware
376 watchpoint support. For example, each x86 debug register can watch up
377 to 4 bytes of memory, so trying to watch data structures whose size is
378 more than 16 bytes will cause @value{GDBN} to use software
379 watchpoints.
380
381 @item
382 The value of the expression to be watched depends on data held in
383 registers (as opposed to memory).
384
385 @item
386 Too many different watchpoints requested. (On some architectures,
387 this situation is impossible to detect until the debugged program is
388 resumed.) Note that x86 debug registers are used both for hardware
389 breakpoints and for watchpoints, so setting too many hardware
390 breakpoints might cause watchpoint insertion to fail.
391
392 @item
393 No hardware-assisted watchpoints provided by the target
394 implementation.
395 @end itemize
396
397 Software watchpoints are very slow, since @value{GDBN} needs to
398 single-step the program being debugged and test the value of the
399 watched expression(s) after each instruction. The rest of this
400 section is mostly irrelevant for software watchpoints.
401
402 @value{GDBN} uses several macros and primitives to support hardware
403 watchpoints:
404
405 @table @code
406 @findex TARGET_HAS_HARDWARE_WATCHPOINTS
407 @item TARGET_HAS_HARDWARE_WATCHPOINTS
408 If defined, the target supports hardware watchpoints.
409
410 @findex TARGET_CAN_USE_HARDWARE_WATCHPOINT
411 @item TARGET_CAN_USE_HARDWARE_WATCHPOINT (@var{type}, @var{count}, @var{other})
412 Return the number of hardware watchpoints of type @var{type} that are
413 possible to be set. The value is positive if @var{count} watchpoints
414 of this type can be set, zero if setting watchpoints of this type is
415 not supported, and negative if @var{count} is more than the maximum
416 number of watchpoints of type @var{type} that can be set. @var{other}
417 is non-zero if other types of watchpoints are currently enabled (there
418 are architectures which cannot set watchpoints of different types at
419 the same time).
420
421 @findex TARGET_REGION_OK_FOR_HW_WATCHPOINT
422 @item TARGET_REGION_OK_FOR_HW_WATCHPOINT (@var{addr}, @var{len})
423 Return non-zero if hardware watchpoints can be used to watch a region
424 whose address is @var{addr} and whose length in bytes is @var{len}.
425
426 @findex TARGET_REGION_SIZE_OK_FOR_HW_WATCHPOINT
427 @item TARGET_REGION_SIZE_OK_FOR_HW_WATCHPOINT (@var{size})
428 Return non-zero if hardware watchpoints can be used to watch a region
429 whose size is @var{size}. @value{GDBN} only uses this macro as a
430 fall-back, in case @code{TARGET_REGION_OK_FOR_HW_WATCHPOINT} is not
431 defined.
432
433 @findex TARGET_DISABLE_HW_WATCHPOINTS
434 @item TARGET_DISABLE_HW_WATCHPOINTS (@var{pid})
435 Disables watchpoints in the process identified by @var{pid}. This is
436 used, e.g., on HP-UX which provides operations to disable and enable
437 the page-level memory protection that implements hardware watchpoints
438 on that platform.
439
440 @findex TARGET_ENABLE_HW_WATCHPOINTS
441 @item TARGET_ENABLE_HW_WATCHPOINTS (@var{pid})
442 Enables watchpoints in the process identified by @var{pid}. This is
443 used, e.g., on HP-UX which provides operations to disable and enable
444 the page-level memory protection that implements hardware watchpoints
445 on that platform.
446
447 @findex target_insert_watchpoint
448 @findex target_remove_watchpoint
449 @item target_insert_watchpoint (@var{addr}, @var{len}, @var{type})
450 @itemx target_remove_watchpoint (@var{addr}, @var{len}, @var{type})
451 Insert or remove a hardware watchpoint starting at @var{addr}, for
452 @var{len} bytes. @var{type} is the watchpoint type, one of the
453 possible values of the enumerated data type @code{target_hw_bp_type},
454 defined by @file{breakpoint.h} as follows:
455
456 @example
457 enum target_hw_bp_type
458 @{
459 hw_write = 0, /* Common (write) HW watchpoint */
460 hw_read = 1, /* Read HW watchpoint */
461 hw_access = 2, /* Access (read or write) HW watchpoint */
462 hw_execute = 3 /* Execute HW breakpoint */
463 @};
464 @end example
465
466 @noindent
467 These two macros should return 0 for success, non-zero for failure.
468
469 @cindex insert or remove hardware breakpoint
470 @findex target_remove_hw_breakpoint
471 @findex target_insert_hw_breakpoint
472 @item target_remove_hw_breakpoint (@var{addr}, @var{shadow})
473 @itemx target_insert_hw_breakpoint (@var{addr}, @var{shadow})
474 Insert or remove a hardware-assisted breakpoint at address @var{addr}.
475 Returns zero for success, non-zero for failure. @var{shadow} is the
476 real contents of the byte where the breakpoint has been inserted; it
477 is generally not valid when hardware breakpoints are used, but since
478 no other code touches these values, the implementations of the above
479 two macros can use them for their internal purposes.
480
481 @findex target_stopped_data_address
482 @item target_stopped_data_address ()
483 If the inferior has some watchpoint that triggered, return the address
484 associated with that watchpoint. Otherwise, return zero.
485
486 @findex DECR_PC_AFTER_HW_BREAK
487 @item DECR_PC_AFTER_HW_BREAK
488 If defined, @value{GDBN} decrements the program counter by the value
489 of @code{DECR_PC_AFTER_HW_BREAK} after a hardware break-point. This
490 overrides the value of @code{DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK} when a breakpoint
491 that breaks is a hardware-assisted breakpoint.
492
493 @findex HAVE_STEPPABLE_WATCHPOINT
494 @item HAVE_STEPPABLE_WATCHPOINT
495 If defined to a non-zero value, it is not necessary to disable a
496 watchpoint to step over it.
497
498 @findex HAVE_NONSTEPPABLE_WATCHPOINT
499 @item HAVE_NONSTEPPABLE_WATCHPOINT
500 If defined to a non-zero value, @value{GDBN} should disable a
501 watchpoint to step the inferior over it.
502
503 @findex HAVE_CONTINUABLE_WATCHPOINT
504 @item HAVE_CONTINUABLE_WATCHPOINT
505 If defined to a non-zero value, it is possible to continue the
506 inferior after a watchpoint has been hit.
507
508 @findex CANNOT_STEP_HW_WATCHPOINTS
509 @item CANNOT_STEP_HW_WATCHPOINTS
510 If this is defined to a non-zero value, @value{GDBN} will remove all
511 watchpoints before stepping the inferior.
512
513 @findex STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT
514 @item STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT (@var{wait_status})
515 Return non-zero if stopped by a watchpoint. @var{wait_status} is of
516 the type @code{struct target_waitstatus}, defined by @file{target.h}.
517 @end table
518
519 @subsection x86 Watchpoints
520 @cindex x86 debug registers
521 @cindex watchpoints, on x86
522
523 The 32-bit Intel x86 (a.k.a.@: ia32) processors feature special debug
524 registers designed to facilitate debugging. @value{GDBN} provides a
525 generic library of functions that x86-based ports can use to implement
526 support for watchpoints and hardware-assisted breakpoints. This
527 subsection documents the x86 watchpoint facilities in @value{GDBN}.
528
529 To use the generic x86 watchpoint support, a port should do the
530 following:
531
532 @itemize @bullet
533 @findex I386_USE_GENERIC_WATCHPOINTS
534 @item
535 Define the macro @code{I386_USE_GENERIC_WATCHPOINTS} somewhere in the
536 target-dependent headers.
537
538 @item
539 Include the @file{config/i386/nm-i386.h} header file @emph{after}
540 defining @code{I386_USE_GENERIC_WATCHPOINTS}.
541
542 @item
543 Add @file{i386-nat.o} to the value of the Make variable
544 @code{NATDEPFILES} (@pxref{Native Debugging, NATDEPFILES}) or
545 @code{TDEPFILES} (@pxref{Target Architecture Definition, TDEPFILES}).
546
547 @item
548 Provide implementations for the @code{I386_DR_LOW_*} macros described
549 below. Typically, each macro should call a target-specific function
550 which does the real work.
551 @end itemize
552
553 The x86 watchpoint support works by maintaining mirror images of the
554 debug registers. Values are copied between the mirror images and the
555 real debug registers via a set of macros which each target needs to
556 provide:
557
558 @table @code
559 @findex I386_DR_LOW_SET_CONTROL
560 @item I386_DR_LOW_SET_CONTROL (@var{val})
561 Set the Debug Control (DR7) register to the value @var{val}.
562
563 @findex I386_DR_LOW_SET_ADDR
564 @item I386_DR_LOW_SET_ADDR (@var{idx}, @var{addr})
565 Put the address @var{addr} into the debug register number @var{idx}.
566
567 @findex I386_DR_LOW_RESET_ADDR
568 @item I386_DR_LOW_RESET_ADDR (@var{idx})
569 Reset (i.e.@: zero out) the address stored in the debug register
570 number @var{idx}.
571
572 @findex I386_DR_LOW_GET_STATUS
573 @item I386_DR_LOW_GET_STATUS
574 Return the value of the Debug Status (DR6) register. This value is
575 used immediately after it is returned by
576 @code{I386_DR_LOW_GET_STATUS}, so as to support per-thread status
577 register values.
578 @end table
579
580 For each one of the 4 debug registers (whose indices are from 0 to 3)
581 that store addresses, a reference count is maintained by @value{GDBN},
582 to allow sharing of debug registers by several watchpoints. This
583 allows users to define several watchpoints that watch the same
584 expression, but with different conditions and/or commands, without
585 wasting debug registers which are in short supply. @value{GDBN}
586 maintains the reference counts internally, targets don't have to do
587 anything to use this feature.
588
589 The x86 debug registers can each watch a region that is 1, 2, or 4
590 bytes long. The ia32 architecture requires that each watched region
591 be appropriately aligned: 2-byte region on 2-byte boundary, 4-byte
592 region on 4-byte boundary. However, the x86 watchpoint support in
593 @value{GDBN} can watch unaligned regions and regions larger than 4
594 bytes (up to 16 bytes) by allocating several debug registers to watch
595 a single region. This allocation of several registers per a watched
596 region is also done automatically without target code intervention.
597
598 The generic x86 watchpoint support provides the following API for the
599 @value{GDBN}'s application code:
600
601 @table @code
602 @findex i386_region_ok_for_watchpoint
603 @item i386_region_ok_for_watchpoint (@var{addr}, @var{len})
604 The macro @code{TARGET_REGION_OK_FOR_HW_WATCHPOINT} is set to call
605 this function. It counts the number of debug registers required to
606 watch a given region, and returns a non-zero value if that number is
607 less than 4, the number of debug registers available to x86
608 processors.
609
610 @findex i386_stopped_data_address
611 @item i386_stopped_data_address (void)
612 The macros @code{STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT} and
613 @code{target_stopped_data_address} are set to call this function. The
614 argument passed to @code{STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT} is ignored. This
615 function examines the breakpoint condition bits in the DR6 Debug
616 Status register, as returned by the @code{I386_DR_LOW_GET_STATUS}
617 macro, and returns the address associated with the first bit that is
618 set in DR6.
619
620 @findex i386_insert_watchpoint
621 @findex i386_remove_watchpoint
622 @item i386_insert_watchpoint (@var{addr}, @var{len}, @var{type})
623 @itemx i386_remove_watchpoint (@var{addr}, @var{len}, @var{type})
624 Insert or remove a watchpoint. The macros
625 @code{target_insert_watchpoint} and @code{target_remove_watchpoint}
626 are set to call these functions. @code{i386_insert_watchpoint} first
627 looks for a debug register which is already set to watch the same
628 region for the same access types; if found, it just increments the
629 reference count of that debug register, thus implementing debug
630 register sharing between watchpoints. If no such register is found,
631 the function looks for a vacant debug register, sets its mirrored
632 value to @var{addr}, sets the mirrored value of DR7 Debug Control
633 register as appropriate for the @var{len} and @var{type} parameters,
634 and then passes the new values of the debug register and DR7 to the
635 inferior by calling @code{I386_DR_LOW_SET_ADDR} and
636 @code{I386_DR_LOW_SET_CONTROL}. If more than one debug register is
637 required to cover the given region, the above process is repeated for
638 each debug register.
639
640 @code{i386_remove_watchpoint} does the opposite: it resets the address
641 in the mirrored value of the debug register and its read/write and
642 length bits in the mirrored value of DR7, then passes these new
643 values to the inferior via @code{I386_DR_LOW_RESET_ADDR} and
644 @code{I386_DR_LOW_SET_CONTROL}. If a register is shared by several
645 watchpoints, each time a @code{i386_remove_watchpoint} is called, it
646 decrements the reference count, and only calls
647 @code{I386_DR_LOW_RESET_ADDR} and @code{I386_DR_LOW_SET_CONTROL} when
648 the count goes to zero.
649
650 @findex i386_insert_hw_breakpoint
651 @findex i386_remove_hw_breakpoint
652 @item i386_insert_hw_breakpoint (@var{addr}, @var{shadow}
653 @itemx i386_remove_hw_breakpoint (@var{addr}, @var{shadow})
654 These functions insert and remove hardware-assisted breakpoints. The
655 macros @code{target_insert_hw_breakpoint} and
656 @code{target_remove_hw_breakpoint} are set to call these functions.
657 These functions work like @code{i386_insert_watchpoint} and
658 @code{i386_remove_watchpoint}, respectively, except that they set up
659 the debug registers to watch instruction execution, and each
660 hardware-assisted breakpoint always requires exactly one debug
661 register.
662
663 @findex i386_stopped_by_hwbp
664 @item i386_stopped_by_hwbp (void)
665 This function returns non-zero if the inferior has some watchpoint or
666 hardware breakpoint that triggered. It works like
667 @code{i386_stopped_data_address}, except that it doesn't return the
668 address whose watchpoint triggered.
669
670 @findex i386_cleanup_dregs
671 @item i386_cleanup_dregs (void)
672 This function clears all the reference counts, addresses, and control
673 bits in the mirror images of the debug registers. It doesn't affect
674 the actual debug registers in the inferior process.
675 @end table
676
677 @noindent
678 @strong{Notes:}
679 @enumerate 1
680 @item
681 x86 processors support setting watchpoints on I/O reads or writes.
682 However, since no target supports this (as of March 2001), and since
683 @code{enum target_hw_bp_type} doesn't even have an enumeration for I/O
684 watchpoints, this feature is not yet available to @value{GDBN} running
685 on x86.
686
687 @item
688 x86 processors can enable watchpoints locally, for the current task
689 only, or globally, for all the tasks. For each debug register,
690 there's a bit in the DR7 Debug Control register that determines
691 whether the associated address is watched locally or globally. The
692 current implementation of x86 watchpoint support in @value{GDBN}
693 always sets watchpoints to be locally enabled, since global
694 watchpoints might interfere with the underlying OS and are probably
695 unavailable in many platforms.
696 @end enumerate
697
698 @node User Interface
699
700 @chapter User Interface
701
702 @value{GDBN} has several user interfaces. Although the command-line interface
703 is the most common and most familiar, there are others.
704
705 @section Command Interpreter
706
707 @cindex command interpreter
708 @cindex CLI
709 The command interpreter in @value{GDBN} is fairly simple. It is designed to
710 allow for the set of commands to be augmented dynamically, and also
711 has a recursive subcommand capability, where the first argument to
712 a command may itself direct a lookup on a different command list.
713
714 For instance, the @samp{set} command just starts a lookup on the
715 @code{setlist} command list, while @samp{set thread} recurses
716 to the @code{set_thread_cmd_list}.
717
718 @findex add_cmd
719 @findex add_com
720 To add commands in general, use @code{add_cmd}. @code{add_com} adds to
721 the main command list, and should be used for those commands. The usual
722 place to add commands is in the @code{_initialize_@var{xyz}} routines at
723 the ends of most source files.
724
725 @cindex deprecating commands
726 @findex deprecate_cmd
727 Before removing commands from the command set it is a good idea to
728 deprecate them for some time. Use @code{deprecate_cmd} on commands or
729 aliases to set the deprecated flag. @code{deprecate_cmd} takes a
730 @code{struct cmd_list_element} as it's first argument. You can use the
731 return value from @code{add_com} or @code{add_cmd} to deprecate the
732 command immediately after it is created.
733
734 The first time a command is used the user will be warned and offered a
735 replacement (if one exists). Note that the replacement string passed to
736 @code{deprecate_cmd} should be the full name of the command, i.e. the
737 entire string the user should type at the command line.
738
739 @section UI-Independent Output---the @code{ui_out} Functions
740 @c This section is based on the documentation written by Fernando
741 @c Nasser <fnasser@redhat.com>.
742
743 @cindex @code{ui_out} functions
744 The @code{ui_out} functions present an abstraction level for the
745 @value{GDBN} output code. They hide the specifics of different user
746 interfaces supported by @value{GDBN}, and thus free the programmer
747 from the need to write several versions of the same code, one each for
748 every UI, to produce output.
749
750 @subsection Overview and Terminology
751
752 In general, execution of each @value{GDBN} command produces some sort
753 of output, and can even generate an input request.
754
755 Output can be generated for the following purposes:
756
757 @itemize @bullet
758 @item
759 to display a @emph{result} of an operation;
760
761 @item
762 to convey @emph{info} or produce side-effects of a requested
763 operation;
764
765 @item
766 to provide a @emph{notification} of an asynchronous event (including
767 progress indication of a prolonged asynchronous operation);
768
769 @item
770 to display @emph{error messages} (including warnings);
771
772 @item
773 to show @emph{debug data};
774
775 @item
776 to @emph{query} or prompt a user for input (a special case).
777 @end itemize
778
779 @noindent
780 This section mainly concentrates on how to build result output,
781 although some of it also applies to other kinds of output.
782
783 Generation of output that displays the results of an operation
784 involves one or more of the following:
785
786 @itemize @bullet
787 @item
788 output of the actual data
789
790 @item
791 formatting the output as appropriate for console output, to make it
792 easily readable by humans
793
794 @item
795 machine oriented formatting--a more terse formatting to allow for easy
796 parsing by programs which read @value{GDBN}'s output
797
798 @item
799 annotation, whose purpose is to help legacy GUIs to identify interesting
800 parts in the output
801 @end itemize
802
803 The @code{ui_out} routines take care of the first three aspects.
804 Annotations are provided by separate annotation routines. Note that use
805 of annotations for an interface between a GUI and @value{GDBN} is
806 deprecated.
807
808 Output can be in the form of a single item, which we call a @dfn{field};
809 a @dfn{list} consisting of identical fields; a @dfn{tuple} consisting of
810 non-identical fields; or a @dfn{table}, which is a tuple consisting of a
811 header and a body. In a BNF-like form:
812
813 @table @code
814 @item <table> @expansion{}
815 @code{<header> <body>}
816 @item <header> @expansion{}
817 @code{@{ <column> @}}
818 @item <column> @expansion{}
819 @code{<width> <alignment> <title>}
820 @item <body> @expansion{}
821 @code{@{<row>@}}
822 @end table
823
824
825 @subsection General Conventions
826
827 Most @code{ui_out} routines are of type @code{void}, the exceptions are
828 @code{ui_out_stream_new} (which returns a pointer to the newly created
829 object) and the @code{make_cleanup} routines.
830
831 The first parameter is always the @code{ui_out} vector object, a pointer
832 to a @code{struct ui_out}.
833
834 The @var{format} parameter is like in @code{printf} family of functions.
835 When it is present, there must also be a variable list of arguments
836 sufficient used to satisfy the @code{%} specifiers in the supplied
837 format.
838
839 When a character string argument is not used in a @code{ui_out} function
840 call, a @code{NULL} pointer has to be supplied instead.
841
842
843 @subsection Table, Tuple and List Functions
844
845 @cindex list output functions
846 @cindex table output functions
847 @cindex tuple output functions
848 This section introduces @code{ui_out} routines for building lists,
849 tuples and tables. The routines to output the actual data items
850 (fields) are presented in the next section.
851
852 To recap: A @dfn{tuple} is a sequence of @dfn{fields}, each field
853 containing information about an object; a @dfn{list} is a sequence of
854 fields where each field describes an identical object.
855
856 Use the @dfn{table} functions when your output consists of a list of
857 rows (tuples) and the console output should include a heading. Use this
858 even when you are listing just one object but you still want the header.
859
860 @cindex nesting level in @code{ui_out} functions
861 Tables can not be nested. Tuples and lists can be nested up to a
862 maximum of five levels.
863
864 The overall structure of the table output code is something like this:
865
866 @example
867 ui_out_table_begin
868 ui_out_table_header
869 @dots{}
870 ui_out_table_body
871 ui_out_tuple_begin
872 ui_out_field_*
873 @dots{}
874 ui_out_tuple_end
875 @dots{}
876 ui_out_table_end
877 @end example
878
879 Here is the description of table-, tuple- and list-related @code{ui_out}
880 functions:
881
882 @deftypefun void ui_out_table_begin (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, int @var{nbrofcols}, int @var{nr_rows}, const char *@var{tblid})
883 The function @code{ui_out_table_begin} marks the beginning of the output
884 of a table. It should always be called before any other @code{ui_out}
885 function for a given table. @var{nbrofcols} is the number of columns in
886 the table. @var{nr_rows} is the number of rows in the table.
887 @var{tblid} is an optional string identifying the table. The string
888 pointed to by @var{tblid} is copied by the implementation of
889 @code{ui_out_table_begin}, so the application can free the string if it
890 was @code{malloc}ed.
891
892 The companion function @code{ui_out_table_end}, described below, marks
893 the end of the table's output.
894 @end deftypefun
895
896 @deftypefun void ui_out_table_header (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, int @var{width}, enum ui_align @var{alignment}, const char *@var{colhdr})
897 @code{ui_out_table_header} provides the header information for a single
898 table column. You call this function several times, one each for every
899 column of the table, after @code{ui_out_table_begin}, but before
900 @code{ui_out_table_body}.
901
902 The value of @var{width} gives the column width in characters. The
903 value of @var{alignment} is one of @code{left}, @code{center}, and
904 @code{right}, and it specifies how to align the header: left-justify,
905 center, or right-justify it. @var{colhdr} points to a string that
906 specifies the column header; the implementation copies that string, so
907 column header strings in @code{malloc}ed storage can be freed after the
908 call.
909 @end deftypefun
910
911 @deftypefun void ui_out_table_body (struct ui_out *@var{uiout})
912 This function delimits the table header from the table body.
913 @end deftypefun
914
915 @deftypefun void ui_out_table_end (struct ui_out *@var{uiout})
916 This function signals the end of a table's output. It should be called
917 after the table body has been produced by the list and field output
918 functions.
919
920 There should be exactly one call to @code{ui_out_table_end} for each
921 call to @code{ui_out_table_begin}, otherwise the @code{ui_out} functions
922 will signal an internal error.
923 @end deftypefun
924
925 The output of the tuples that represent the table rows must follow the
926 call to @code{ui_out_table_body} and precede the call to
927 @code{ui_out_table_end}. You build a tuple by calling
928 @code{ui_out_tuple_begin} and @code{ui_out_tuple_end}, with suitable
929 calls to functions which actually output fields between them.
930
931 @deftypefun void ui_out_tuple_begin (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, const char *@var{id})
932 This function marks the beginning of a tuple output. @var{id} points
933 to an optional string that identifies the tuple; it is copied by the
934 implementation, and so strings in @code{malloc}ed storage can be freed
935 after the call.
936 @end deftypefun
937
938 @deftypefun void ui_out_tuple_end (struct ui_out *@var{uiout})
939 This function signals an end of a tuple output. There should be exactly
940 one call to @code{ui_out_tuple_end} for each call to
941 @code{ui_out_tuple_begin}, otherwise an internal @value{GDBN} error will
942 be signaled.
943 @end deftypefun
944
945 @deftypefun struct cleanup *make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, const char *@var{id})
946 This function first opens the tuple and then establishes a cleanup
947 (@pxref{Coding, Cleanups}) to close the tuple. It provides a convenient
948 and correct implementation of the non-portable@footnote{The function
949 cast is not portable ISO-C.} code sequence:
950 @smallexample
951 struct cleanup *old_cleanup;
952 ui_out_tuple_begin (uiout, "...");
953 old_cleanup = make_cleanup ((void(*)(void *)) ui_out_tuple_end,
954 uiout);
955 @end smallexample
956 @end deftypefun
957
958 @deftypefun void ui_out_list_begin (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, const char *@var{id})
959 This function marks the beginning of a list output. @var{id} points to
960 an optional string that identifies the list; it is copied by the
961 implementation, and so strings in @code{malloc}ed storage can be freed
962 after the call.
963 @end deftypefun
964
965 @deftypefun void ui_out_list_end (struct ui_out *@var{uiout})
966 This function signals an end of a list output. There should be exactly
967 one call to @code{ui_out_list_end} for each call to
968 @code{ui_out_list_begin}, otherwise an internal @value{GDBN} error will
969 be signaled.
970 @end deftypefun
971
972 @deftypefun struct cleanup *make_cleanup_ui_out_list_begin_end (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, const char *@var{id})
973 Similar to @code{make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end}, this function
974 opens a list and then establishes cleanup (@pxref{Coding, Cleanups})
975 that will close the list.list.
976 @end deftypefun
977
978 @subsection Item Output Functions
979
980 @cindex item output functions
981 @cindex field output functions
982 @cindex data output
983 The functions described below produce output for the actual data
984 items, or fields, which contain information about the object.
985
986 Choose the appropriate function accordingly to your particular needs.
987
988 @deftypefun void ui_out_field_fmt (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, char *@var{fldname}, char *@var{format}, ...)
989 This is the most general output function. It produces the
990 representation of the data in the variable-length argument list
991 according to formatting specifications in @var{format}, a
992 @code{printf}-like format string. The optional argument @var{fldname}
993 supplies the name of the field. The data items themselves are
994 supplied as additional arguments after @var{format}.
995
996 This generic function should be used only when it is not possible to
997 use one of the specialized versions (see below).
998 @end deftypefun
999
1000 @deftypefun void ui_out_field_int (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, const char *@var{fldname}, int @var{value})
1001 This function outputs a value of an @code{int} variable. It uses the
1002 @code{"%d"} output conversion specification. @var{fldname} specifies
1003 the name of the field.
1004 @end deftypefun
1005
1006 @deftypefun void ui_out_field_core_addr (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, const char *@var{fldname}, CORE_ADDR @var{address})
1007 This function outputs an address.
1008 @end deftypefun
1009
1010 @deftypefun void ui_out_field_string (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, const char *@var{fldname}, const char *@var{string})
1011 This function outputs a string using the @code{"%s"} conversion
1012 specification.
1013 @end deftypefun
1014
1015 Sometimes, there's a need to compose your output piece by piece using
1016 functions that operate on a stream, such as @code{value_print} or
1017 @code{fprintf_symbol_filtered}. These functions accept an argument of
1018 the type @code{struct ui_file *}, a pointer to a @code{ui_file} object
1019 used to store the data stream used for the output. When you use one
1020 of these functions, you need a way to pass their results stored in a
1021 @code{ui_file} object to the @code{ui_out} functions. To this end,
1022 you first create a @code{ui_stream} object by calling
1023 @code{ui_out_stream_new}, pass the @code{stream} member of that
1024 @code{ui_stream} object to @code{value_print} and similar functions,
1025 and finally call @code{ui_out_field_stream} to output the field you
1026 constructed. When the @code{ui_stream} object is no longer needed,
1027 you should destroy it and free its memory by calling
1028 @code{ui_out_stream_delete}.
1029
1030 @deftypefun struct ui_stream *ui_out_stream_new (struct ui_out *@var{uiout})
1031 This function creates a new @code{ui_stream} object which uses the
1032 same output methods as the @code{ui_out} object whose pointer is
1033 passed in @var{uiout}. It returns a pointer to the newly created
1034 @code{ui_stream} object.
1035 @end deftypefun
1036
1037 @deftypefun void ui_out_stream_delete (struct ui_stream *@var{streambuf})
1038 This functions destroys a @code{ui_stream} object specified by
1039 @var{streambuf}.
1040 @end deftypefun
1041
1042 @deftypefun void ui_out_field_stream (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, const char *@var{fieldname}, struct ui_stream *@var{streambuf})
1043 This function consumes all the data accumulated in
1044 @code{streambuf->stream} and outputs it like
1045 @code{ui_out_field_string} does. After a call to
1046 @code{ui_out_field_stream}, the accumulated data no longer exists, but
1047 the stream is still valid and may be used for producing more fields.
1048 @end deftypefun
1049
1050 @strong{Important:} If there is any chance that your code could bail
1051 out before completing output generation and reaching the point where
1052 @code{ui_out_stream_delete} is called, it is necessary to set up a
1053 cleanup, to avoid leaking memory and other resources. Here's a
1054 skeleton code to do that:
1055
1056 @smallexample
1057 struct ui_stream *mybuf = ui_out_stream_new (uiout);
1058 struct cleanup *old = make_cleanup (ui_out_stream_delete, mybuf);
1059 ...
1060 do_cleanups (old);
1061 @end smallexample
1062
1063 If the function already has the old cleanup chain set (for other kinds
1064 of cleanups), you just have to add your cleanup to it:
1065
1066 @smallexample
1067 mybuf = ui_out_stream_new (uiout);
1068 make_cleanup (ui_out_stream_delete, mybuf);
1069 @end smallexample
1070
1071 Note that with cleanups in place, you should not call
1072 @code{ui_out_stream_delete} directly, or you would attempt to free the
1073 same buffer twice.
1074
1075 @subsection Utility Output Functions
1076
1077 @deftypefun void ui_out_field_skip (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, const char *@var{fldname})
1078 This function skips a field in a table. Use it if you have to leave
1079 an empty field without disrupting the table alignment. The argument
1080 @var{fldname} specifies a name for the (missing) filed.
1081 @end deftypefun
1082
1083 @deftypefun void ui_out_text (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, const char *@var{string})
1084 This function outputs the text in @var{string} in a way that makes it
1085 easy to be read by humans. For example, the console implementation of
1086 this method filters the text through a built-in pager, to prevent it
1087 from scrolling off the visible portion of the screen.
1088
1089 Use this function for printing relatively long chunks of text around
1090 the actual field data: the text it produces is not aligned according
1091 to the table's format. Use @code{ui_out_field_string} to output a
1092 string field, and use @code{ui_out_message}, described below, to
1093 output short messages.
1094 @end deftypefun
1095
1096 @deftypefun void ui_out_spaces (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, int @var{nspaces})
1097 This function outputs @var{nspaces} spaces. It is handy to align the
1098 text produced by @code{ui_out_text} with the rest of the table or
1099 list.
1100 @end deftypefun
1101
1102 @deftypefun void ui_out_message (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, int @var{verbosity}, const char *@var{format}, ...)
1103 This function produces a formatted message, provided that the current
1104 verbosity level is at least as large as given by @var{verbosity}. The
1105 current verbosity level is specified by the user with the @samp{set
1106 verbositylevel} command.@footnote{As of this writing (April 2001),
1107 setting verbosity level is not yet implemented, and is always returned
1108 as zero. So calling @code{ui_out_message} with a @var{verbosity}
1109 argument more than zero will cause the message to never be printed.}
1110 @end deftypefun
1111
1112 @deftypefun void ui_out_wrap_hint (struct ui_out *@var{uiout}, char *@var{indent})
1113 This function gives the console output filter (a paging filter) a hint
1114 of where to break lines which are too long. Ignored for all other
1115 output consumers. @var{indent}, if non-@code{NULL}, is the string to
1116 be printed to indent the wrapped text on the next line; it must remain
1117 accessible until the next call to @code{ui_out_wrap_hint}, or until an
1118 explicit newline is produced by one of the other functions. If
1119 @var{indent} is @code{NULL}, the wrapped text will not be indented.
1120 @end deftypefun
1121
1122 @deftypefun void ui_out_flush (struct ui_out *@var{uiout})
1123 This function flushes whatever output has been accumulated so far, if
1124 the UI buffers output.
1125 @end deftypefun
1126
1127
1128 @subsection Examples of Use of @code{ui_out} functions
1129
1130 @cindex using @code{ui_out} functions
1131 @cindex @code{ui_out} functions, usage examples
1132 This section gives some practical examples of using the @code{ui_out}
1133 functions to generalize the old console-oriented code in
1134 @value{GDBN}. The examples all come from functions defined on the
1135 @file{breakpoints.c} file.
1136
1137 This example, from the @code{breakpoint_1} function, shows how to
1138 produce a table.
1139
1140 The original code was:
1141
1142 @example
1143 if (!found_a_breakpoint++)
1144 @{
1145 annotate_breakpoints_headers ();
1146
1147 annotate_field (0);
1148 printf_filtered ("Num ");
1149 annotate_field (1);
1150 printf_filtered ("Type ");
1151 annotate_field (2);
1152 printf_filtered ("Disp ");
1153 annotate_field (3);
1154 printf_filtered ("Enb ");
1155 if (addressprint)
1156 @{
1157 annotate_field (4);
1158 printf_filtered ("Address ");
1159 @}
1160 annotate_field (5);
1161 printf_filtered ("What\n");
1162
1163 annotate_breakpoints_table ();
1164 @}
1165 @end example
1166
1167 Here's the new version:
1168
1169 @example
1170 nr_printable_breakpoints = @dots{};
1171
1172 if (addressprint)
1173 ui_out_table_begin (ui, 6, nr_printable_breakpoints, "BreakpointTable");
1174 else
1175 ui_out_table_begin (ui, 5, nr_printable_breakpoints, "BreakpointTable");
1176
1177 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
1178 annotate_breakpoints_headers ();
1179 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
1180 annotate_field (0);
1181 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 3, ui_left, "number", "Num"); /* 1 */
1182 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
1183 annotate_field (1);
1184 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 14, ui_left, "type", "Type"); /* 2 */
1185 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
1186 annotate_field (2);
1187 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 4, ui_left, "disp", "Disp"); /* 3 */
1188 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
1189 annotate_field (3);
1190 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 3, ui_left, "enabled", "Enb"); /* 4 */
1191 if (addressprint)
1192 @{
1193 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
1194 annotate_field (4);
1195 if (TARGET_ADDR_BIT <= 32)
1196 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 10, ui_left, "addr", "Address");/* 5 */
1197 else
1198 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 18, ui_left, "addr", "Address");/* 5 */
1199 @}
1200 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
1201 annotate_field (5);
1202 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 40, ui_noalign, "what", "What"); /* 6 */
1203 ui_out_table_body (uiout);
1204 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
1205 annotate_breakpoints_table ();
1206 @end example
1207
1208 This example, from the @code{print_one_breakpoint} function, shows how
1209 to produce the actual data for the table whose structure was defined
1210 in the above example. The original code was:
1211
1212 @example
1213 annotate_record ();
1214 annotate_field (0);
1215 printf_filtered ("%-3d ", b->number);
1216 annotate_field (1);
1217 if ((int)b->type > (sizeof(bptypes)/sizeof(bptypes[0]))
1218 || ((int) b->type != bptypes[(int) b->type].type))
1219 internal_error ("bptypes table does not describe type #%d.",
1220 (int)b->type);
1221 printf_filtered ("%-14s ", bptypes[(int)b->type].description);
1222 annotate_field (2);
1223 printf_filtered ("%-4s ", bpdisps[(int)b->disposition]);
1224 annotate_field (3);
1225 printf_filtered ("%-3c ", bpenables[(int)b->enable]);
1226 @dots{}
1227 @end example
1228
1229 This is the new version:
1230
1231 @example
1232 annotate_record ();
1233 ui_out_tuple_begin (uiout, "bkpt");
1234 annotate_field (0);
1235 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "number", b->number);
1236 annotate_field (1);
1237 if (((int) b->type > (sizeof (bptypes) / sizeof (bptypes[0])))
1238 || ((int) b->type != bptypes[(int) b->type].type))
1239 internal_error ("bptypes table does not describe type #%d.",
1240 (int) b->type);
1241 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "type", bptypes[(int)b->type].description);
1242 annotate_field (2);
1243 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "disp", bpdisps[(int)b->disposition]);
1244 annotate_field (3);
1245 ui_out_field_fmt (uiout, "enabled", "%c", bpenables[(int)b->enable]);
1246 @dots{}
1247 @end example
1248
1249 This example, also from @code{print_one_breakpoint}, shows how to
1250 produce a complicated output field using the @code{print_expression}
1251 functions which requires a stream to be passed. It also shows how to
1252 automate stream destruction with cleanups. The original code was:
1253
1254 @example
1255 annotate_field (5);
1256 print_expression (b->exp, gdb_stdout);
1257 @end example
1258
1259 The new version is:
1260
1261 @example
1262 struct ui_stream *stb = ui_out_stream_new (uiout);
1263 struct cleanup *old_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_stream_delete (stb);
1264 ...
1265 annotate_field (5);
1266 print_expression (b->exp, stb->stream);
1267 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "what", local_stream);
1268 @end example
1269
1270 This example, also from @code{print_one_breakpoint}, shows how to use
1271 @code{ui_out_text} and @code{ui_out_field_string}. The original code
1272 was:
1273
1274 @example
1275 annotate_field (5);
1276 if (b->dll_pathname == NULL)
1277 printf_filtered ("<any library> ");
1278 else
1279 printf_filtered ("library \"%s\" ", b->dll_pathname);
1280 @end example
1281
1282 It became:
1283
1284 @example
1285 annotate_field (5);
1286 if (b->dll_pathname == NULL)
1287 @{
1288 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", "<any library>");
1289 ui_out_spaces (uiout, 1);
1290 @}
1291 else
1292 @{
1293 ui_out_text (uiout, "library \"");
1294 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", b->dll_pathname);
1295 ui_out_text (uiout, "\" ");
1296 @}
1297 @end example
1298
1299 The following example from @code{print_one_breakpoint} shows how to
1300 use @code{ui_out_field_int} and @code{ui_out_spaces}. The original
1301 code was:
1302
1303 @example
1304 annotate_field (5);
1305 if (b->forked_inferior_pid != 0)
1306 printf_filtered ("process %d ", b->forked_inferior_pid);
1307 @end example
1308
1309 It became:
1310
1311 @example
1312 annotate_field (5);
1313 if (b->forked_inferior_pid != 0)
1314 @{
1315 ui_out_text (uiout, "process ");
1316 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "what", b->forked_inferior_pid);
1317 ui_out_spaces (uiout, 1);
1318 @}
1319 @end example
1320
1321 Here's an example of using @code{ui_out_field_string}. The original
1322 code was:
1323
1324 @example
1325 annotate_field (5);
1326 if (b->exec_pathname != NULL)
1327 printf_filtered ("program \"%s\" ", b->exec_pathname);
1328 @end example
1329
1330 It became:
1331
1332 @example
1333 annotate_field (5);
1334 if (b->exec_pathname != NULL)
1335 @{
1336 ui_out_text (uiout, "program \"");
1337 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", b->exec_pathname);
1338 ui_out_text (uiout, "\" ");
1339 @}
1340 @end example
1341
1342 Finally, here's an example of printing an address. The original code:
1343
1344 @example
1345 annotate_field (4);
1346 printf_filtered ("%s ",
1347 local_hex_string_custom ((unsigned long) b->address, "08l"));
1348 @end example
1349
1350 It became:
1351
1352 @example
1353 annotate_field (4);
1354 ui_out_field_core_addr (uiout, "Address", b->address);
1355 @end example
1356
1357
1358 @section Console Printing
1359
1360 @section TUI
1361
1362 @node libgdb
1363
1364 @chapter libgdb
1365
1366 @section libgdb 1.0
1367 @cindex @code{libgdb}
1368 @code{libgdb} 1.0 was an abortive project of years ago. The theory was
1369 to provide an API to @value{GDBN}'s functionality.
1370
1371 @section libgdb 2.0
1372 @cindex @code{libgdb}
1373 @code{libgdb} 2.0 is an ongoing effort to update @value{GDBN} so that is
1374 better able to support graphical and other environments.
1375
1376 Since @code{libgdb} development is on-going, its architecture is still
1377 evolving. The following components have so far been identified:
1378
1379 @itemize @bullet
1380 @item
1381 Observer - @file{gdb-events.h}.
1382 @item
1383 Builder - @file{ui-out.h}
1384 @item
1385 Event Loop - @file{event-loop.h}
1386 @item
1387 Library - @file{gdb.h}
1388 @end itemize
1389
1390 The model that ties these components together is described below.
1391
1392 @section The @code{libgdb} Model
1393
1394 A client of @code{libgdb} interacts with the library in two ways.
1395
1396 @itemize @bullet
1397 @item
1398 As an observer (using @file{gdb-events}) receiving notifications from
1399 @code{libgdb} of any internal state changes (break point changes, run
1400 state, etc).
1401 @item
1402 As a client querying @code{libgdb} (using the @file{ui-out} builder) to
1403 obtain various status values from @value{GDBN}.
1404 @end itemize
1405
1406 Since @code{libgdb} could have multiple clients (e.g. a GUI supporting
1407 the existing @value{GDBN} CLI), those clients must co-operate when
1408 controlling @code{libgdb}. In particular, a client must ensure that
1409 @code{libgdb} is idle (i.e. no other client is using @code{libgdb})
1410 before responding to a @file{gdb-event} by making a query.
1411
1412 @section CLI support
1413
1414 At present @value{GDBN}'s CLI is very much entangled in with the core of
1415 @code{libgdb}. Consequently, a client wishing to include the CLI in
1416 their interface needs to carefully co-ordinate its own and the CLI's
1417 requirements.
1418
1419 It is suggested that the client set @code{libgdb} up to be bi-modal
1420 (alternate between CLI and client query modes). The notes below sketch
1421 out the theory:
1422
1423 @itemize @bullet
1424 @item
1425 The client registers itself as an observer of @code{libgdb}.
1426 @item
1427 The client create and install @code{cli-out} builder using its own
1428 versions of the @code{ui-file} @code{gdb_stderr}, @code{gdb_stdtarg} and
1429 @code{gdb_stdout} streams.
1430 @item
1431 The client creates a separate custom @code{ui-out} builder that is only
1432 used while making direct queries to @code{libgdb}.
1433 @end itemize
1434
1435 When the client receives input intended for the CLI, it simply passes it
1436 along. Since the @code{cli-out} builder is installed by default, all
1437 the CLI output in response to that command is routed (pronounced rooted)
1438 through to the client controlled @code{gdb_stdout} et.@: al.@: streams.
1439 At the same time, the client is kept abreast of internal changes by
1440 virtue of being a @code{libgdb} observer.
1441
1442 The only restriction on the client is that it must wait until
1443 @code{libgdb} becomes idle before initiating any queries (using the
1444 client's custom builder).
1445
1446 @section @code{libgdb} components
1447
1448 @subheading Observer - @file{gdb-events.h}
1449 @file{gdb-events} provides the client with a very raw mechanism that can
1450 be used to implement an observer. At present it only allows for one
1451 observer and that observer must, internally, handle the need to delay
1452 the processing of any event notifications until after @code{libgdb} has
1453 finished the current command.
1454
1455 @subheading Builder - @file{ui-out.h}
1456 @file{ui-out} provides the infrastructure necessary for a client to
1457 create a builder. That builder is then passed down to @code{libgdb}
1458 when doing any queries.
1459
1460 @subheading Event Loop - @file{event-loop.h}
1461 @c There could be an entire section on the event-loop
1462 @file{event-loop}, currently non-re-entrant, provides a simple event
1463 loop. A client would need to either plug its self into this loop or,
1464 implement a new event-loop that GDB would use.
1465
1466 The event-loop will eventually be made re-entrant. This is so that
1467 @value{GDB} can better handle the problem of some commands blocking
1468 instead of returning.
1469
1470 @subheading Library - @file{gdb.h}
1471 @file{libgdb} is the most obvious component of this system. It provides
1472 the query interface. Each function is parameterized by a @code{ui-out}
1473 builder. The result of the query is constructed using that builder
1474 before the query function returns.
1475
1476 @node Symbol Handling
1477
1478 @chapter Symbol Handling
1479
1480 Symbols are a key part of @value{GDBN}'s operation. Symbols include variables,
1481 functions, and types.
1482
1483 @section Symbol Reading
1484
1485 @cindex symbol reading
1486 @cindex reading of symbols
1487 @cindex symbol files
1488 @value{GDBN} reads symbols from @dfn{symbol files}. The usual symbol
1489 file is the file containing the program which @value{GDBN} is
1490 debugging. @value{GDBN} can be directed to use a different file for
1491 symbols (with the @samp{symbol-file} command), and it can also read
1492 more symbols via the @samp{add-file} and @samp{load} commands, or while
1493 reading symbols from shared libraries.
1494
1495 @findex find_sym_fns
1496 Symbol files are initially opened by code in @file{symfile.c} using
1497 the BFD library (@pxref{Support Libraries}). BFD identifies the type
1498 of the file by examining its header. @code{find_sym_fns} then uses
1499 this identification to locate a set of symbol-reading functions.
1500
1501 @findex add_symtab_fns
1502 @cindex @code{sym_fns} structure
1503 @cindex adding a symbol-reading module
1504 Symbol-reading modules identify themselves to @value{GDBN} by calling
1505 @code{add_symtab_fns} during their module initialization. The argument
1506 to @code{add_symtab_fns} is a @code{struct sym_fns} which contains the
1507 name (or name prefix) of the symbol format, the length of the prefix,
1508 and pointers to four functions. These functions are called at various
1509 times to process symbol files whose identification matches the specified
1510 prefix.
1511
1512 The functions supplied by each module are:
1513
1514 @table @code
1515 @item @var{xyz}_symfile_init(struct sym_fns *sf)
1516
1517 @cindex secondary symbol file
1518 Called from @code{symbol_file_add} when we are about to read a new
1519 symbol file. This function should clean up any internal state (possibly
1520 resulting from half-read previous files, for example) and prepare to
1521 read a new symbol file. Note that the symbol file which we are reading
1522 might be a new ``main'' symbol file, or might be a secondary symbol file
1523 whose symbols are being added to the existing symbol table.
1524
1525 The argument to @code{@var{xyz}_symfile_init} is a newly allocated
1526 @code{struct sym_fns} whose @code{bfd} field contains the BFD for the
1527 new symbol file being read. Its @code{private} field has been zeroed,
1528 and can be modified as desired. Typically, a struct of private
1529 information will be @code{malloc}'d, and a pointer to it will be placed
1530 in the @code{private} field.
1531
1532 There is no result from @code{@var{xyz}_symfile_init}, but it can call
1533 @code{error} if it detects an unavoidable problem.
1534
1535 @item @var{xyz}_new_init()
1536
1537 Called from @code{symbol_file_add} when discarding existing symbols.
1538 This function needs only handle the symbol-reading module's internal
1539 state; the symbol table data structures visible to the rest of
1540 @value{GDBN} will be discarded by @code{symbol_file_add}. It has no
1541 arguments and no result. It may be called after
1542 @code{@var{xyz}_symfile_init}, if a new symbol table is being read, or
1543 may be called alone if all symbols are simply being discarded.
1544
1545 @item @var{xyz}_symfile_read(struct sym_fns *sf, CORE_ADDR addr, int mainline)
1546
1547 Called from @code{symbol_file_add} to actually read the symbols from a
1548 symbol-file into a set of psymtabs or symtabs.
1549
1550 @code{sf} points to the @code{struct sym_fns} originally passed to
1551 @code{@var{xyz}_sym_init} for possible initialization. @code{addr} is
1552 the offset between the file's specified start address and its true
1553 address in memory. @code{mainline} is 1 if this is the main symbol
1554 table being read, and 0 if a secondary symbol file (e.g. shared library
1555 or dynamically loaded file) is being read.@refill
1556 @end table
1557
1558 In addition, if a symbol-reading module creates psymtabs when
1559 @var{xyz}_symfile_read is called, these psymtabs will contain a pointer
1560 to a function @code{@var{xyz}_psymtab_to_symtab}, which can be called
1561 from any point in the @value{GDBN} symbol-handling code.
1562
1563 @table @code
1564 @item @var{xyz}_psymtab_to_symtab (struct partial_symtab *pst)
1565
1566 Called from @code{psymtab_to_symtab} (or the @code{PSYMTAB_TO_SYMTAB} macro) if
1567 the psymtab has not already been read in and had its @code{pst->symtab}
1568 pointer set. The argument is the psymtab to be fleshed-out into a
1569 symtab. Upon return, @code{pst->readin} should have been set to 1, and
1570 @code{pst->symtab} should contain a pointer to the new corresponding symtab, or
1571 zero if there were no symbols in that part of the symbol file.
1572 @end table
1573
1574 @section Partial Symbol Tables
1575
1576 @value{GDBN} has three types of symbol tables:
1577
1578 @itemize @bullet
1579 @cindex full symbol table
1580 @cindex symtabs
1581 @item
1582 Full symbol tables (@dfn{symtabs}). These contain the main
1583 information about symbols and addresses.
1584
1585 @cindex psymtabs
1586 @item
1587 Partial symbol tables (@dfn{psymtabs}). These contain enough
1588 information to know when to read the corresponding part of the full
1589 symbol table.
1590
1591 @cindex minimal symbol table
1592 @cindex minsymtabs
1593 @item
1594 Minimal symbol tables (@dfn{msymtabs}). These contain information
1595 gleaned from non-debugging symbols.
1596 @end itemize
1597
1598 @cindex partial symbol table
1599 This section describes partial symbol tables.
1600
1601 A psymtab is constructed by doing a very quick pass over an executable
1602 file's debugging information. Small amounts of information are
1603 extracted---enough to identify which parts of the symbol table will
1604 need to be re-read and fully digested later, when the user needs the
1605 information. The speed of this pass causes @value{GDBN} to start up very
1606 quickly. Later, as the detailed rereading occurs, it occurs in small
1607 pieces, at various times, and the delay therefrom is mostly invisible to
1608 the user.
1609 @c (@xref{Symbol Reading}.)
1610
1611 The symbols that show up in a file's psymtab should be, roughly, those
1612 visible to the debugger's user when the program is not running code from
1613 that file. These include external symbols and types, static symbols and
1614 types, and @code{enum} values declared at file scope.
1615
1616 The psymtab also contains the range of instruction addresses that the
1617 full symbol table would represent.
1618
1619 @cindex finding a symbol
1620 @cindex symbol lookup
1621 The idea is that there are only two ways for the user (or much of the
1622 code in the debugger) to reference a symbol:
1623
1624 @itemize @bullet
1625 @findex find_pc_function
1626 @findex find_pc_line
1627 @item
1628 By its address (e.g. execution stops at some address which is inside a
1629 function in this file). The address will be noticed to be in the
1630 range of this psymtab, and the full symtab will be read in.
1631 @code{find_pc_function}, @code{find_pc_line}, and other
1632 @code{find_pc_@dots{}} functions handle this.
1633
1634 @cindex lookup_symbol
1635 @item
1636 By its name
1637 (e.g. the user asks to print a variable, or set a breakpoint on a
1638 function). Global names and file-scope names will be found in the
1639 psymtab, which will cause the symtab to be pulled in. Local names will
1640 have to be qualified by a global name, or a file-scope name, in which
1641 case we will have already read in the symtab as we evaluated the
1642 qualifier. Or, a local symbol can be referenced when we are ``in'' a
1643 local scope, in which case the first case applies. @code{lookup_symbol}
1644 does most of the work here.
1645 @end itemize
1646
1647 The only reason that psymtabs exist is to cause a symtab to be read in
1648 at the right moment. Any symbol that can be elided from a psymtab,
1649 while still causing that to happen, should not appear in it. Since
1650 psymtabs don't have the idea of scope, you can't put local symbols in
1651 them anyway. Psymtabs don't have the idea of the type of a symbol,
1652 either, so types need not appear, unless they will be referenced by
1653 name.
1654
1655 It is a bug for @value{GDBN} to behave one way when only a psymtab has
1656 been read, and another way if the corresponding symtab has been read
1657 in. Such bugs are typically caused by a psymtab that does not contain
1658 all the visible symbols, or which has the wrong instruction address
1659 ranges.
1660
1661 The psymtab for a particular section of a symbol file (objfile) could be
1662 thrown away after the symtab has been read in. The symtab should always
1663 be searched before the psymtab, so the psymtab will never be used (in a
1664 bug-free environment). Currently, psymtabs are allocated on an obstack,
1665 and all the psymbols themselves are allocated in a pair of large arrays
1666 on an obstack, so there is little to be gained by trying to free them
1667 unless you want to do a lot more work.
1668
1669 @section Types
1670
1671 @unnumberedsubsec Fundamental Types (e.g., @code{FT_VOID}, @code{FT_BOOLEAN}).
1672
1673 @cindex fundamental types
1674 These are the fundamental types that @value{GDBN} uses internally. Fundamental
1675 types from the various debugging formats (stabs, ELF, etc) are mapped
1676 into one of these. They are basically a union of all fundamental types
1677 that @value{GDBN} knows about for all the languages that @value{GDBN}
1678 knows about.
1679
1680 @unnumberedsubsec Type Codes (e.g., @code{TYPE_CODE_PTR}, @code{TYPE_CODE_ARRAY}).
1681
1682 @cindex type codes
1683 Each time @value{GDBN} builds an internal type, it marks it with one
1684 of these types. The type may be a fundamental type, such as
1685 @code{TYPE_CODE_INT}, or a derived type, such as @code{TYPE_CODE_PTR}
1686 which is a pointer to another type. Typically, several @code{FT_*}
1687 types map to one @code{TYPE_CODE_*} type, and are distinguished by
1688 other members of the type struct, such as whether the type is signed
1689 or unsigned, and how many bits it uses.
1690
1691 @unnumberedsubsec Builtin Types (e.g., @code{builtin_type_void}, @code{builtin_type_char}).
1692
1693 These are instances of type structs that roughly correspond to
1694 fundamental types and are created as global types for @value{GDBN} to
1695 use for various ugly historical reasons. We eventually want to
1696 eliminate these. Note for example that @code{builtin_type_int}
1697 initialized in @file{gdbtypes.c} is basically the same as a
1698 @code{TYPE_CODE_INT} type that is initialized in @file{c-lang.c} for
1699 an @code{FT_INTEGER} fundamental type. The difference is that the
1700 @code{builtin_type} is not associated with any particular objfile, and
1701 only one instance exists, while @file{c-lang.c} builds as many
1702 @code{TYPE_CODE_INT} types as needed, with each one associated with
1703 some particular objfile.
1704
1705 @section Object File Formats
1706 @cindex object file formats
1707
1708 @subsection a.out
1709
1710 @cindex @code{a.out} format
1711 The @code{a.out} format is the original file format for Unix. It
1712 consists of three sections: @code{text}, @code{data}, and @code{bss},
1713 which are for program code, initialized data, and uninitialized data,
1714 respectively.
1715
1716 The @code{a.out} format is so simple that it doesn't have any reserved
1717 place for debugging information. (Hey, the original Unix hackers used
1718 @samp{adb}, which is a machine-language debugger!) The only debugging
1719 format for @code{a.out} is stabs, which is encoded as a set of normal
1720 symbols with distinctive attributes.
1721
1722 The basic @code{a.out} reader is in @file{dbxread.c}.
1723
1724 @subsection COFF
1725
1726 @cindex COFF format
1727 The COFF format was introduced with System V Release 3 (SVR3) Unix.
1728 COFF files may have multiple sections, each prefixed by a header. The
1729 number of sections is limited.
1730
1731 The COFF specification includes support for debugging. Although this
1732 was a step forward, the debugging information was woefully limited. For
1733 instance, it was not possible to represent code that came from an
1734 included file.
1735
1736 The COFF reader is in @file{coffread.c}.
1737
1738 @subsection ECOFF
1739
1740 @cindex ECOFF format
1741 ECOFF is an extended COFF originally introduced for Mips and Alpha
1742 workstations.
1743
1744 The basic ECOFF reader is in @file{mipsread.c}.
1745
1746 @subsection XCOFF
1747
1748 @cindex XCOFF format
1749 The IBM RS/6000 running AIX uses an object file format called XCOFF.
1750 The COFF sections, symbols, and line numbers are used, but debugging
1751 symbols are @code{dbx}-style stabs whose strings are located in the
1752 @code{.debug} section (rather than the string table). For more
1753 information, see @ref{Top,,,stabs,The Stabs Debugging Format}.
1754
1755 The shared library scheme has a clean interface for figuring out what
1756 shared libraries are in use, but the catch is that everything which
1757 refers to addresses (symbol tables and breakpoints at least) needs to be
1758 relocated for both shared libraries and the main executable. At least
1759 using the standard mechanism this can only be done once the program has
1760 been run (or the core file has been read).
1761
1762 @subsection PE
1763
1764 @cindex PE-COFF format
1765 Windows 95 and NT use the PE (@dfn{Portable Executable}) format for their
1766 executables. PE is basically COFF with additional headers.
1767
1768 While BFD includes special PE support, @value{GDBN} needs only the basic
1769 COFF reader.
1770
1771 @subsection ELF
1772
1773 @cindex ELF format
1774 The ELF format came with System V Release 4 (SVR4) Unix. ELF is similar
1775 to COFF in being organized into a number of sections, but it removes
1776 many of COFF's limitations.
1777
1778 The basic ELF reader is in @file{elfread.c}.
1779
1780 @subsection SOM
1781
1782 @cindex SOM format
1783 SOM is HP's object file and debug format (not to be confused with IBM's
1784 SOM, which is a cross-language ABI).
1785
1786 The SOM reader is in @file{hpread.c}.
1787
1788 @subsection Other File Formats
1789
1790 @cindex Netware Loadable Module format
1791 Other file formats that have been supported by @value{GDBN} include Netware
1792 Loadable Modules (@file{nlmread.c}).
1793
1794 @section Debugging File Formats
1795
1796 This section describes characteristics of debugging information that
1797 are independent of the object file format.
1798
1799 @subsection stabs
1800
1801 @cindex stabs debugging info
1802 @code{stabs} started out as special symbols within the @code{a.out}
1803 format. Since then, it has been encapsulated into other file
1804 formats, such as COFF and ELF.
1805
1806 While @file{dbxread.c} does some of the basic stab processing,
1807 including for encapsulated versions, @file{stabsread.c} does
1808 the real work.
1809
1810 @subsection COFF
1811
1812 @cindex COFF debugging info
1813 The basic COFF definition includes debugging information. The level
1814 of support is minimal and non-extensible, and is not often used.
1815
1816 @subsection Mips debug (Third Eye)
1817
1818 @cindex ECOFF debugging info
1819 ECOFF includes a definition of a special debug format.
1820
1821 The file @file{mdebugread.c} implements reading for this format.
1822
1823 @subsection DWARF 1
1824
1825 @cindex DWARF 1 debugging info
1826 DWARF 1 is a debugging format that was originally designed to be
1827 used with ELF in SVR4 systems.
1828
1829 @c CHILL_PRODUCER
1830 @c GCC_PRODUCER
1831 @c GPLUS_PRODUCER
1832 @c LCC_PRODUCER
1833 @c If defined, these are the producer strings in a DWARF 1 file. All of
1834 @c these have reasonable defaults already.
1835
1836 The DWARF 1 reader is in @file{dwarfread.c}.
1837
1838 @subsection DWARF 2
1839
1840 @cindex DWARF 2 debugging info
1841 DWARF 2 is an improved but incompatible version of DWARF 1.
1842
1843 The DWARF 2 reader is in @file{dwarf2read.c}.
1844
1845 @subsection SOM
1846
1847 @cindex SOM debugging info
1848 Like COFF, the SOM definition includes debugging information.
1849
1850 @section Adding a New Symbol Reader to @value{GDBN}
1851
1852 @cindex adding debugging info reader
1853 If you are using an existing object file format (@code{a.out}, COFF, ELF, etc),
1854 there is probably little to be done.
1855
1856 If you need to add a new object file format, you must first add it to
1857 BFD. This is beyond the scope of this document.
1858
1859 You must then arrange for the BFD code to provide access to the
1860 debugging symbols. Generally @value{GDBN} will have to call swapping routines
1861 from BFD and a few other BFD internal routines to locate the debugging
1862 information. As much as possible, @value{GDBN} should not depend on the BFD
1863 internal data structures.
1864
1865 For some targets (e.g., COFF), there is a special transfer vector used
1866 to call swapping routines, since the external data structures on various
1867 platforms have different sizes and layouts. Specialized routines that
1868 will only ever be implemented by one object file format may be called
1869 directly. This interface should be described in a file
1870 @file{bfd/lib@var{xyz}.h}, which is included by @value{GDBN}.
1871
1872
1873 @node Language Support
1874
1875 @chapter Language Support
1876
1877 @cindex language support
1878 @value{GDBN}'s language support is mainly driven by the symbol reader,
1879 although it is possible for the user to set the source language
1880 manually.
1881
1882 @value{GDBN} chooses the source language by looking at the extension
1883 of the file recorded in the debug info; @file{.c} means C, @file{.f}
1884 means Fortran, etc. It may also use a special-purpose language
1885 identifier if the debug format supports it, like with DWARF.
1886
1887 @section Adding a Source Language to @value{GDBN}
1888
1889 @cindex adding source language
1890 To add other languages to @value{GDBN}'s expression parser, follow the
1891 following steps:
1892
1893 @table @emph
1894 @item Create the expression parser.
1895
1896 @cindex expression parser
1897 This should reside in a file @file{@var{lang}-exp.y}. Routines for
1898 building parsed expressions into a @code{union exp_element} list are in
1899 @file{parse.c}.
1900
1901 @cindex language parser
1902 Since we can't depend upon everyone having Bison, and YACC produces
1903 parsers that define a bunch of global names, the following lines
1904 @strong{must} be included at the top of the YACC parser, to prevent the
1905 various parsers from defining the same global names:
1906
1907 @example
1908 #define yyparse @var{lang}_parse
1909 #define yylex @var{lang}_lex
1910 #define yyerror @var{lang}_error
1911 #define yylval @var{lang}_lval
1912 #define yychar @var{lang}_char
1913 #define yydebug @var{lang}_debug
1914 #define yypact @var{lang}_pact
1915 #define yyr1 @var{lang}_r1
1916 #define yyr2 @var{lang}_r2
1917 #define yydef @var{lang}_def
1918 #define yychk @var{lang}_chk
1919 #define yypgo @var{lang}_pgo
1920 #define yyact @var{lang}_act
1921 #define yyexca @var{lang}_exca
1922 #define yyerrflag @var{lang}_errflag
1923 #define yynerrs @var{lang}_nerrs
1924 @end example
1925
1926 At the bottom of your parser, define a @code{struct language_defn} and
1927 initialize it with the right values for your language. Define an
1928 @code{initialize_@var{lang}} routine and have it call
1929 @samp{add_language(@var{lang}_language_defn)} to tell the rest of @value{GDBN}
1930 that your language exists. You'll need some other supporting variables
1931 and functions, which will be used via pointers from your
1932 @code{@var{lang}_language_defn}. See the declaration of @code{struct
1933 language_defn} in @file{language.h}, and the other @file{*-exp.y} files,
1934 for more information.
1935
1936 @item Add any evaluation routines, if necessary
1937
1938 @cindex expression evaluation routines
1939 @findex evaluate_subexp
1940 @findex prefixify_subexp
1941 @findex length_of_subexp
1942 If you need new opcodes (that represent the operations of the language),
1943 add them to the enumerated type in @file{expression.h}. Add support
1944 code for these operations in the @code{evaluate_subexp} function
1945 defined in the file @file{eval.c}. Add cases
1946 for new opcodes in two functions from @file{parse.c}:
1947 @code{prefixify_subexp} and @code{length_of_subexp}. These compute
1948 the number of @code{exp_element}s that a given operation takes up.
1949
1950 @item Update some existing code
1951
1952 Add an enumerated identifier for your language to the enumerated type
1953 @code{enum language} in @file{defs.h}.
1954
1955 Update the routines in @file{language.c} so your language is included.
1956 These routines include type predicates and such, which (in some cases)
1957 are language dependent. If your language does not appear in the switch
1958 statement, an error is reported.
1959
1960 @vindex current_language
1961 Also included in @file{language.c} is the code that updates the variable
1962 @code{current_language}, and the routines that translate the
1963 @code{language_@var{lang}} enumerated identifier into a printable
1964 string.
1965
1966 @findex _initialize_language
1967 Update the function @code{_initialize_language} to include your
1968 language. This function picks the default language upon startup, so is
1969 dependent upon which languages that @value{GDBN} is built for.
1970
1971 @findex allocate_symtab
1972 Update @code{allocate_symtab} in @file{symfile.c} and/or symbol-reading
1973 code so that the language of each symtab (source file) is set properly.
1974 This is used to determine the language to use at each stack frame level.
1975 Currently, the language is set based upon the extension of the source
1976 file. If the language can be better inferred from the symbol
1977 information, please set the language of the symtab in the symbol-reading
1978 code.
1979
1980 @findex print_subexp
1981 @findex op_print_tab
1982 Add helper code to @code{print_subexp} (in @file{expprint.c}) to handle any new
1983 expression opcodes you have added to @file{expression.h}. Also, add the
1984 printed representations of your operators to @code{op_print_tab}.
1985
1986 @item Add a place of call
1987
1988 @findex parse_exp_1
1989 Add a call to @code{@var{lang}_parse()} and @code{@var{lang}_error} in
1990 @code{parse_exp_1} (defined in @file{parse.c}).
1991
1992 @item Use macros to trim code
1993
1994 @cindex trimming language-dependent code
1995 The user has the option of building @value{GDBN} for some or all of the
1996 languages. If the user decides to build @value{GDBN} for the language
1997 @var{lang}, then every file dependent on @file{language.h} will have the
1998 macro @code{_LANG_@var{lang}} defined in it. Use @code{#ifdef}s to
1999 leave out large routines that the user won't need if he or she is not
2000 using your language.
2001
2002 Note that you do not need to do this in your YACC parser, since if @value{GDBN}
2003 is not build for @var{lang}, then @file{@var{lang}-exp.tab.o} (the
2004 compiled form of your parser) is not linked into @value{GDBN} at all.
2005
2006 See the file @file{configure.in} for how @value{GDBN} is configured
2007 for different languages.
2008
2009 @item Edit @file{Makefile.in}
2010
2011 Add dependencies in @file{Makefile.in}. Make sure you update the macro
2012 variables such as @code{HFILES} and @code{OBJS}, otherwise your code may
2013 not get linked in, or, worse yet, it may not get @code{tar}red into the
2014 distribution!
2015 @end table
2016
2017
2018 @node Host Definition
2019
2020 @chapter Host Definition
2021
2022 With the advent of Autoconf, it's rarely necessary to have host
2023 definition machinery anymore. The following information is provided,
2024 mainly, as an historical reference.
2025
2026 @section Adding a New Host
2027
2028 @cindex adding a new host
2029 @cindex host, adding
2030 @value{GDBN}'s host configuration support normally happens via Autoconf.
2031 New host-specific definitions should not be needed. Older hosts
2032 @value{GDBN} still use the host-specific definitions and files listed
2033 below, but these mostly exist for historical reasons, and will
2034 eventually disappear.
2035
2036 @table @file
2037 @item gdb/config/@var{arch}/@var{xyz}.mh
2038 This file once contained both host and native configuration information
2039 (@pxref{Native Debugging}) for the machine @var{xyz}. The host
2040 configuration information is now handed by Autoconf.
2041
2042 Host configuration information included a definition of
2043 @code{XM_FILE=xm-@var{xyz}.h} and possibly definitions for @code{CC},
2044 @code{SYSV_DEFINE}, @code{XM_CFLAGS}, @code{XM_ADD_FILES},
2045 @code{XM_CLIBS}, @code{XM_CDEPS}, etc.; see @file{Makefile.in}.
2046
2047 New host only configurations do not need this file.
2048
2049 @item gdb/config/@var{arch}/xm-@var{xyz}.h
2050 This file once contained definitions and includes required when hosting
2051 gdb on machine @var{xyz}. Those definitions and includes are now
2052 handled by Autoconf.
2053
2054 New host and native configurations do not need this file.
2055
2056 @emph{Maintainer's note: Some hosts continue to use the @file{xm-xyz.h}
2057 file to define the macros @var{HOST_FLOAT_FORMAT},
2058 @var{HOST_DOUBLE_FORMAT} and @var{HOST_LONG_DOUBLE_FORMAT}. That code
2059 also needs to be replaced with either an Autoconf or run-time test.}
2060
2061 @end table
2062
2063 @subheading Generic Host Support Files
2064
2065 @cindex generic host support
2066 There are some ``generic'' versions of routines that can be used by
2067 various systems. These can be customized in various ways by macros
2068 defined in your @file{xm-@var{xyz}.h} file. If these routines work for
2069 the @var{xyz} host, you can just include the generic file's name (with
2070 @samp{.o}, not @samp{.c}) in @code{XDEPFILES}.
2071
2072 Otherwise, if your machine needs custom support routines, you will need
2073 to write routines that perform the same functions as the generic file.
2074 Put them into @code{@var{xyz}-xdep.c}, and put @code{@var{xyz}-xdep.o}
2075 into @code{XDEPFILES}.
2076
2077 @table @file
2078 @cindex remote debugging support
2079 @cindex serial line support
2080 @item ser-unix.c
2081 This contains serial line support for Unix systems. This is always
2082 included, via the makefile variable @code{SER_HARDWIRE}; override this
2083 variable in the @file{.mh} file to avoid it.
2084
2085 @item ser-go32.c
2086 This contains serial line support for 32-bit programs running under DOS,
2087 using the DJGPP (a.k.a.@: GO32) execution environment.
2088
2089 @cindex TCP remote support
2090 @item ser-tcp.c
2091 This contains generic TCP support using sockets.
2092 @end table
2093
2094 @section Host Conditionals
2095
2096 When @value{GDBN} is configured and compiled, various macros are
2097 defined or left undefined, to control compilation based on the
2098 attributes of the host system. These macros and their meanings (or if
2099 the meaning is not documented here, then one of the source files where
2100 they are used is indicated) are:
2101
2102 @ftable @code
2103 @item @value{GDBN}INIT_FILENAME
2104 The default name of @value{GDBN}'s initialization file (normally
2105 @file{.gdbinit}).
2106
2107 @item NO_STD_REGS
2108 This macro is deprecated.
2109
2110 @item NO_SYS_FILE
2111 Define this if your system does not have a @code{<sys/file.h>}.
2112
2113 @item SIGWINCH_HANDLER
2114 If your host defines @code{SIGWINCH}, you can define this to be the name
2115 of a function to be called if @code{SIGWINCH} is received.
2116
2117 @item SIGWINCH_HANDLER_BODY
2118 Define this to expand into code that will define the function named by
2119 the expansion of @code{SIGWINCH_HANDLER}.
2120
2121 @item ALIGN_STACK_ON_STARTUP
2122 @cindex stack alignment
2123 Define this if your system is of a sort that will crash in
2124 @code{tgetent} if the stack happens not to be longword-aligned when
2125 @code{main} is called. This is a rare situation, but is known to occur
2126 on several different types of systems.
2127
2128 @item CRLF_SOURCE_FILES
2129 @cindex DOS text files
2130 Define this if host files use @code{\r\n} rather than @code{\n} as a
2131 line terminator. This will cause source file listings to omit @code{\r}
2132 characters when printing and it will allow @code{\r\n} line endings of files
2133 which are ``sourced'' by gdb. It must be possible to open files in binary
2134 mode using @code{O_BINARY} or, for fopen, @code{"rb"}.
2135
2136 @item DEFAULT_PROMPT
2137 @cindex prompt
2138 The default value of the prompt string (normally @code{"(gdb) "}).
2139
2140 @item DEV_TTY
2141 @cindex terminal device
2142 The name of the generic TTY device, defaults to @code{"/dev/tty"}.
2143
2144 @item FCLOSE_PROVIDED
2145 Define this if the system declares @code{fclose} in the headers included
2146 in @code{defs.h}. This isn't needed unless your compiler is unusually
2147 anal.
2148
2149 @item FOPEN_RB
2150 Define this if binary files are opened the same way as text files.
2151
2152 @item GETENV_PROVIDED
2153 Define this if the system declares @code{getenv} in its headers included
2154 in @code{defs.h}. This isn't needed unless your compiler is unusually
2155 anal.
2156
2157 @item HAVE_MMAP
2158 @findex mmap
2159 In some cases, use the system call @code{mmap} for reading symbol
2160 tables. For some machines this allows for sharing and quick updates.
2161
2162 @item HAVE_TERMIO
2163 Define this if the host system has @code{termio.h}.
2164
2165 @item INT_MAX
2166 @itemx INT_MIN
2167 @itemx LONG_MAX
2168 @itemx UINT_MAX
2169 @itemx ULONG_MAX
2170 Values for host-side constants.
2171
2172 @item ISATTY
2173 Substitute for isatty, if not available.
2174
2175 @item LONGEST
2176 This is the longest integer type available on the host. If not defined,
2177 it will default to @code{long long} or @code{long}, depending on
2178 @code{CC_HAS_LONG_LONG}.
2179
2180 @item CC_HAS_LONG_LONG
2181 @cindex @code{long long} data type
2182 Define this if the host C compiler supports @code{long long}. This is set
2183 by the @code{configure} script.
2184
2185 @item PRINTF_HAS_LONG_LONG
2186 Define this if the host can handle printing of long long integers via
2187 the printf format conversion specifier @code{ll}. This is set by the
2188 @code{configure} script.
2189
2190 @item HAVE_LONG_DOUBLE
2191 Define this if the host C compiler supports @code{long double}. This is
2192 set by the @code{configure} script.
2193
2194 @item PRINTF_HAS_LONG_DOUBLE
2195 Define this if the host can handle printing of long double float-point
2196 numbers via the printf format conversion specifier @code{Lg}. This is
2197 set by the @code{configure} script.
2198
2199 @item SCANF_HAS_LONG_DOUBLE
2200 Define this if the host can handle the parsing of long double
2201 float-point numbers via the scanf format conversion specifier
2202 @code{Lg}. This is set by the @code{configure} script.
2203
2204 @item LSEEK_NOT_LINEAR
2205 Define this if @code{lseek (n)} does not necessarily move to byte number
2206 @code{n} in the file. This is only used when reading source files. It
2207 is normally faster to define @code{CRLF_SOURCE_FILES} when possible.
2208
2209 @item L_SET
2210 This macro is used as the argument to @code{lseek} (or, most commonly,
2211 @code{bfd_seek}). FIXME, should be replaced by SEEK_SET instead,
2212 which is the POSIX equivalent.
2213
2214 @item MMAP_BASE_ADDRESS
2215 When using HAVE_MMAP, the first mapping should go at this address.
2216
2217 @item MMAP_INCREMENT
2218 when using HAVE_MMAP, this is the increment between mappings.
2219
2220 @item NORETURN
2221 If defined, this should be one or more tokens, such as @code{volatile},
2222 that can be used in both the declaration and definition of functions to
2223 indicate that they never return. The default is already set correctly
2224 if compiling with GCC. This will almost never need to be defined.
2225
2226 @item ATTR_NORETURN
2227 If defined, this should be one or more tokens, such as
2228 @code{__attribute__ ((noreturn))}, that can be used in the declarations
2229 of functions to indicate that they never return. The default is already
2230 set correctly if compiling with GCC. This will almost never need to be
2231 defined.
2232
2233 @item USE_GENERIC_DUMMY_FRAMES
2234 @cindex generic dummy frames
2235 Define this to 1 if the target is using the generic inferior function
2236 call code. See @code{blockframe.c} for more information.
2237
2238 @item USE_MMALLOC
2239 @findex mmalloc
2240 @value{GDBN} will use the @code{mmalloc} library for memory allocation
2241 for symbol reading if this symbol is defined. Be careful defining it
2242 since there are systems on which @code{mmalloc} does not work for some
2243 reason. One example is the DECstation, where its RPC library can't
2244 cope with our redefinition of @code{malloc} to call @code{mmalloc}.
2245 When defining @code{USE_MMALLOC}, you will also have to set
2246 @code{MMALLOC} in the Makefile, to point to the @code{mmalloc} library. This
2247 define is set when you configure with @samp{--with-mmalloc}.
2248
2249 @item NO_MMCHECK
2250 @findex mmcheck
2251 Define this if you are using @code{mmalloc}, but don't want the overhead
2252 of checking the heap with @code{mmcheck}. Note that on some systems,
2253 the C runtime makes calls to @code{malloc} prior to calling @code{main}, and if
2254 @code{free} is ever called with these pointers after calling
2255 @code{mmcheck} to enable checking, a memory corruption abort is certain
2256 to occur. These systems can still use @code{mmalloc}, but must define
2257 @code{NO_MMCHECK}.
2258
2259 @item MMCHECK_FORCE
2260 Define this to 1 if the C runtime allocates memory prior to
2261 @code{mmcheck} being called, but that memory is never freed so we don't
2262 have to worry about it triggering a memory corruption abort. The
2263 default is 0, which means that @code{mmcheck} will only install the heap
2264 checking functions if there has not yet been any memory allocation
2265 calls, and if it fails to install the functions, @value{GDBN} will issue a
2266 warning. This is currently defined if you configure using
2267 @samp{--with-mmalloc}.
2268
2269 @item NO_SIGINTERRUPT
2270 @findex siginterrupt
2271 Define this to indicate that @code{siginterrupt} is not available.
2272
2273 @item SEEK_CUR
2274 @itemx SEEK_SET
2275 Define these to appropriate value for the system @code{lseek}, if not already
2276 defined.
2277
2278 @item STOP_SIGNAL
2279 This is the signal for stopping @value{GDBN}. Defaults to
2280 @code{SIGTSTP}. (Only redefined for the Convex.)
2281
2282 @item USE_O_NOCTTY
2283 Define this if the interior's tty should be opened with the @code{O_NOCTTY}
2284 flag. (FIXME: This should be a native-only flag, but @file{inflow.c} is
2285 always linked in.)
2286
2287 @item USG
2288 Means that System V (prior to SVR4) include files are in use. (FIXME:
2289 This symbol is abused in @file{infrun.c}, @file{regex.c},
2290 @file{remote-nindy.c}, and @file{utils.c} for other things, at the
2291 moment.)
2292
2293 @item lint
2294 Define this to help placate @code{lint} in some situations.
2295
2296 @item volatile
2297 Define this to override the defaults of @code{__volatile__} or
2298 @code{/**/}.
2299 @end ftable
2300
2301
2302 @node Target Architecture Definition
2303
2304 @chapter Target Architecture Definition
2305
2306 @cindex target architecture definition
2307 @value{GDBN}'s target architecture defines what sort of
2308 machine-language programs @value{GDBN} can work with, and how it works
2309 with them.
2310
2311 The target architecture object is implemented as the C structure
2312 @code{struct gdbarch *}. The structure, and its methods, are generated
2313 using the Bourne shell script @file{gdbarch.sh}.
2314
2315 @section Registers and Memory
2316
2317 @value{GDBN}'s model of the target machine is rather simple.
2318 @value{GDBN} assumes the machine includes a bank of registers and a
2319 block of memory. Each register may have a different size.
2320
2321 @value{GDBN} does not have a magical way to match up with the
2322 compiler's idea of which registers are which; however, it is critical
2323 that they do match up accurately. The only way to make this work is
2324 to get accurate information about the order that the compiler uses,
2325 and to reflect that in the @code{REGISTER_NAME} and related macros.
2326
2327 @value{GDBN} can handle big-endian, little-endian, and bi-endian architectures.
2328
2329 @section Pointers Are Not Always Addresses
2330 @cindex pointer representation
2331 @cindex address representation
2332 @cindex word-addressed machines
2333 @cindex separate data and code address spaces
2334 @cindex spaces, separate data and code address
2335 @cindex address spaces, separate data and code
2336 @cindex code pointers, word-addressed
2337 @cindex converting between pointers and addresses
2338 @cindex D10V addresses
2339
2340 On almost all 32-bit architectures, the representation of a pointer is
2341 indistinguishable from the representation of some fixed-length number
2342 whose value is the byte address of the object pointed to. On such
2343 machines, the words ``pointer'' and ``address'' can be used interchangeably.
2344 However, architectures with smaller word sizes are often cramped for
2345 address space, so they may choose a pointer representation that breaks this
2346 identity, and allows a larger code address space.
2347
2348 For example, the Mitsubishi D10V is a 16-bit VLIW processor whose
2349 instructions are 32 bits long@footnote{Some D10V instructions are
2350 actually pairs of 16-bit sub-instructions. However, since you can't
2351 jump into the middle of such a pair, code addresses can only refer to
2352 full 32 bit instructions, which is what matters in this explanation.}.
2353 If the D10V used ordinary byte addresses to refer to code locations,
2354 then the processor would only be able to address 64kb of instructions.
2355 However, since instructions must be aligned on four-byte boundaries, the
2356 low two bits of any valid instruction's byte address are always
2357 zero---byte addresses waste two bits. So instead of byte addresses,
2358 the D10V uses word addresses---byte addresses shifted right two bits---to
2359 refer to code. Thus, the D10V can use 16-bit words to address 256kb of
2360 code space.
2361
2362 However, this means that code pointers and data pointers have different
2363 forms on the D10V. The 16-bit word @code{0xC020} refers to byte address
2364 @code{0xC020} when used as a data address, but refers to byte address
2365 @code{0x30080} when used as a code address.
2366
2367 (The D10V also uses separate code and data address spaces, which also
2368 affects the correspondence between pointers and addresses, but we're
2369 going to ignore that here; this example is already too long.)
2370
2371 To cope with architectures like this---the D10V is not the only
2372 one!---@value{GDBN} tries to distinguish between @dfn{addresses}, which are
2373 byte numbers, and @dfn{pointers}, which are the target's representation
2374 of an address of a particular type of data. In the example above,
2375 @code{0xC020} is the pointer, which refers to one of the addresses
2376 @code{0xC020} or @code{0x30080}, depending on the type imposed upon it.
2377 @value{GDBN} provides functions for turning a pointer into an address
2378 and vice versa, in the appropriate way for the current architecture.
2379
2380 Unfortunately, since addresses and pointers are identical on almost all
2381 processors, this distinction tends to bit-rot pretty quickly. Thus,
2382 each time you port @value{GDBN} to an architecture which does
2383 distinguish between pointers and addresses, you'll probably need to
2384 clean up some architecture-independent code.
2385
2386 Here are functions which convert between pointers and addresses:
2387
2388 @deftypefun CORE_ADDR extract_typed_address (void *@var{buf}, struct type *@var{type})
2389 Treat the bytes at @var{buf} as a pointer or reference of type
2390 @var{type}, and return the address it represents, in a manner
2391 appropriate for the current architecture. This yields an address
2392 @value{GDBN} can use to read target memory, disassemble, etc. Note that
2393 @var{buf} refers to a buffer in @value{GDBN}'s memory, not the
2394 inferior's.
2395
2396 For example, if the current architecture is the Intel x86, this function
2397 extracts a little-endian integer of the appropriate length from
2398 @var{buf} and returns it. However, if the current architecture is the
2399 D10V, this function will return a 16-bit integer extracted from
2400 @var{buf}, multiplied by four if @var{type} is a pointer to a function.
2401
2402 If @var{type} is not a pointer or reference type, then this function
2403 will signal an internal error.
2404 @end deftypefun
2405
2406 @deftypefun CORE_ADDR store_typed_address (void *@var{buf}, struct type *@var{type}, CORE_ADDR @var{addr})
2407 Store the address @var{addr} in @var{buf}, in the proper format for a
2408 pointer of type @var{type} in the current architecture. Note that
2409 @var{buf} refers to a buffer in @value{GDBN}'s memory, not the
2410 inferior's.
2411
2412 For example, if the current architecture is the Intel x86, this function
2413 stores @var{addr} unmodified as a little-endian integer of the
2414 appropriate length in @var{buf}. However, if the current architecture
2415 is the D10V, this function divides @var{addr} by four if @var{type} is
2416 a pointer to a function, and then stores it in @var{buf}.
2417
2418 If @var{type} is not a pointer or reference type, then this function
2419 will signal an internal error.
2420 @end deftypefun
2421
2422 @deftypefun CORE_ADDR value_as_address (struct value *@var{val})
2423 Assuming that @var{val} is a pointer, return the address it represents,
2424 as appropriate for the current architecture.
2425
2426 This function actually works on integral values, as well as pointers.
2427 For pointers, it performs architecture-specific conversions as
2428 described above for @code{extract_typed_address}.
2429 @end deftypefun
2430
2431 @deftypefun CORE_ADDR value_from_pointer (struct type *@var{type}, CORE_ADDR @var{addr})
2432 Create and return a value representing a pointer of type @var{type} to
2433 the address @var{addr}, as appropriate for the current architecture.
2434 This function performs architecture-specific conversions as described
2435 above for @code{store_typed_address}.
2436 @end deftypefun
2437
2438
2439 @value{GDBN} also provides functions that do the same tasks, but assume
2440 that pointers are simply byte addresses; they aren't sensitive to the
2441 current architecture, beyond knowing the appropriate endianness.
2442
2443 @deftypefun CORE_ADDR extract_address (void *@var{addr}, int len)
2444 Extract a @var{len}-byte number from @var{addr} in the appropriate
2445 endianness for the current architecture, and return it. Note that
2446 @var{addr} refers to @value{GDBN}'s memory, not the inferior's.
2447
2448 This function should only be used in architecture-specific code; it
2449 doesn't have enough information to turn bits into a true address in the
2450 appropriate way for the current architecture. If you can, use
2451 @code{extract_typed_address} instead.
2452 @end deftypefun
2453
2454 @deftypefun void store_address (void *@var{addr}, int @var{len}, LONGEST @var{val})
2455 Store @var{val} at @var{addr} as a @var{len}-byte integer, in the
2456 appropriate endianness for the current architecture. Note that
2457 @var{addr} refers to a buffer in @value{GDBN}'s memory, not the
2458 inferior's.
2459
2460 This function should only be used in architecture-specific code; it
2461 doesn't have enough information to turn a true address into bits in the
2462 appropriate way for the current architecture. If you can, use
2463 @code{store_typed_address} instead.
2464 @end deftypefun
2465
2466
2467 Here are some macros which architectures can define to indicate the
2468 relationship between pointers and addresses. These have default
2469 definitions, appropriate for architectures on which all pointers are
2470 simple unsigned byte addresses.
2471
2472 @deftypefn {Target Macro} CORE_ADDR POINTER_TO_ADDRESS (struct type *@var{type}, char *@var{buf})
2473 Assume that @var{buf} holds a pointer of type @var{type}, in the
2474 appropriate format for the current architecture. Return the byte
2475 address the pointer refers to.
2476
2477 This function may safely assume that @var{type} is either a pointer or a
2478 C@t{++} reference type.
2479 @end deftypefn
2480
2481 @deftypefn {Target Macro} void ADDRESS_TO_POINTER (struct type *@var{type}, char *@var{buf}, CORE_ADDR @var{addr})
2482 Store in @var{buf} a pointer of type @var{type} representing the address
2483 @var{addr}, in the appropriate format for the current architecture.
2484
2485 This function may safely assume that @var{type} is either a pointer or a
2486 C@t{++} reference type.
2487 @end deftypefn
2488
2489
2490 @section Using Different Register and Memory Data Representations
2491 @cindex raw representation
2492 @cindex virtual representation
2493 @cindex representations, raw and virtual
2494 @cindex register data formats, converting
2495 @cindex @code{struct value}, converting register contents to
2496
2497 @emph{Maintainer's note: The way GDB manipulates registers is undergoing
2498 significant change. Many of the macros and functions refered to in the
2499 sections below are likely to be made obsolete. See the file @file{TODO}
2500 for more up-to-date information.}
2501
2502 Some architectures use one representation for a value when it lives in a
2503 register, but use a different representation when it lives in memory.
2504 In @value{GDBN}'s terminology, the @dfn{raw} representation is the one used in
2505 the target registers, and the @dfn{virtual} representation is the one
2506 used in memory, and within @value{GDBN} @code{struct value} objects.
2507
2508 For almost all data types on almost all architectures, the virtual and
2509 raw representations are identical, and no special handling is needed.
2510 However, they do occasionally differ. For example:
2511
2512 @itemize @bullet
2513 @item
2514 The x86 architecture supports an 80-bit @code{long double} type. However, when
2515 we store those values in memory, they occupy twelve bytes: the
2516 floating-point number occupies the first ten, and the final two bytes
2517 are unused. This keeps the values aligned on four-byte boundaries,
2518 allowing more efficient access. Thus, the x86 80-bit floating-point
2519 type is the raw representation, and the twelve-byte loosely-packed
2520 arrangement is the virtual representation.
2521
2522 @item
2523 Some 64-bit MIPS targets present 32-bit registers to @value{GDBN} as 64-bit
2524 registers, with garbage in their upper bits. @value{GDBN} ignores the top 32
2525 bits. Thus, the 64-bit form, with garbage in the upper 32 bits, is the
2526 raw representation, and the trimmed 32-bit representation is the
2527 virtual representation.
2528 @end itemize
2529
2530 In general, the raw representation is determined by the architecture, or
2531 @value{GDBN}'s interface to the architecture, while the virtual representation
2532 can be chosen for @value{GDBN}'s convenience. @value{GDBN}'s register file,
2533 @code{registers}, holds the register contents in raw format, and the
2534 @value{GDBN} remote protocol transmits register values in raw format.
2535
2536 Your architecture may define the following macros to request
2537 conversions between the raw and virtual format:
2538
2539 @deftypefn {Target Macro} int REGISTER_CONVERTIBLE (int @var{reg})
2540 Return non-zero if register number @var{reg}'s value needs different raw
2541 and virtual formats.
2542
2543 You should not use @code{REGISTER_CONVERT_TO_VIRTUAL} for a register
2544 unless this macro returns a non-zero value for that register.
2545 @end deftypefn
2546
2547 @deftypefn {Target Macro} int REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (int @var{reg})
2548 The size of register number @var{reg}'s raw value. This is the number
2549 of bytes the register will occupy in @code{registers}, or in a @value{GDBN}
2550 remote protocol packet.
2551 @end deftypefn
2552
2553 @deftypefn {Target Macro} int REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE (int @var{reg})
2554 The size of register number @var{reg}'s value, in its virtual format.
2555 This is the size a @code{struct value}'s buffer will have, holding that
2556 register's value.
2557 @end deftypefn
2558
2559 @deftypefn {Target Macro} struct type *REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (int @var{reg})
2560 This is the type of the virtual representation of register number
2561 @var{reg}. Note that there is no need for a macro giving a type for the
2562 register's raw form; once the register's value has been obtained, @value{GDBN}
2563 always uses the virtual form.
2564 @end deftypefn
2565
2566 @deftypefn {Target Macro} void REGISTER_CONVERT_TO_VIRTUAL (int @var{reg}, struct type *@var{type}, char *@var{from}, char *@var{to})
2567 Convert the value of register number @var{reg} to @var{type}, which
2568 should always be @code{REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (@var{reg})}. The buffer
2569 at @var{from} holds the register's value in raw format; the macro should
2570 convert the value to virtual format, and place it at @var{to}.
2571
2572 Note that @code{REGISTER_CONVERT_TO_VIRTUAL} and
2573 @code{REGISTER_CONVERT_TO_RAW} take their @var{reg} and @var{type}
2574 arguments in different orders.
2575
2576 You should only use @code{REGISTER_CONVERT_TO_VIRTUAL} with registers
2577 for which the @code{REGISTER_CONVERTIBLE} macro returns a non-zero
2578 value.
2579 @end deftypefn
2580
2581 @deftypefn {Target Macro} void REGISTER_CONVERT_TO_RAW (struct type *@var{type}, int @var{reg}, char *@var{from}, char *@var{to})
2582 Convert the value of register number @var{reg} to @var{type}, which
2583 should always be @code{REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (@var{reg})}. The buffer
2584 at @var{from} holds the register's value in raw format; the macro should
2585 convert the value to virtual format, and place it at @var{to}.
2586
2587 Note that REGISTER_CONVERT_TO_VIRTUAL and REGISTER_CONVERT_TO_RAW take
2588 their @var{reg} and @var{type} arguments in different orders.
2589 @end deftypefn
2590
2591
2592 @section Frame Interpretation
2593
2594 @section Inferior Call Setup
2595
2596 @section Compiler Characteristics
2597
2598 @section Target Conditionals
2599
2600 This section describes the macros that you can use to define the target
2601 machine.
2602
2603 @table @code
2604
2605 @item ADDITIONAL_OPTIONS
2606 @itemx ADDITIONAL_OPTION_CASES
2607 @itemx ADDITIONAL_OPTION_HANDLER
2608 @itemx ADDITIONAL_OPTION_HELP
2609 @findex ADDITIONAL_OPTION_HELP
2610 @findex ADDITIONAL_OPTION_HANDLER
2611 @findex ADDITIONAL_OPTION_CASES
2612 @findex ADDITIONAL_OPTIONS
2613 These are a set of macros that allow the addition of additional command
2614 line options to @value{GDBN}. They are currently used only for the unsupported
2615 i960 Nindy target, and should not be used in any other configuration.
2616
2617 @item ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (addr)
2618 @findex ADDR_BITS_REMOVE
2619 If a raw machine instruction address includes any bits that are not
2620 really part of the address, then define this macro to expand into an
2621 expression that zeroes those bits in @var{addr}. This is only used for
2622 addresses of instructions, and even then not in all contexts.
2623
2624 For example, the two low-order bits of the PC on the Hewlett-Packard PA
2625 2.0 architecture contain the privilege level of the corresponding
2626 instruction. Since instructions must always be aligned on four-byte
2627 boundaries, the processor masks out these bits to generate the actual
2628 address of the instruction. ADDR_BITS_REMOVE should filter out these
2629 bits with an expression such as @code{((addr) & ~3)}.
2630
2631 @item ADDRESS_TO_POINTER (@var{type}, @var{buf}, @var{addr})
2632 @findex ADDRESS_TO_POINTER
2633 Store in @var{buf} a pointer of type @var{type} representing the address
2634 @var{addr}, in the appropriate format for the current architecture.
2635 This macro may safely assume that @var{type} is either a pointer or a
2636 C@t{++} reference type.
2637 @xref{Target Architecture Definition, , Pointers Are Not Always Addresses}.
2638
2639 @item BEFORE_MAIN_LOOP_HOOK
2640 @findex BEFORE_MAIN_LOOP_HOOK
2641 Define this to expand into any code that you want to execute before the
2642 main loop starts. Although this is not, strictly speaking, a target
2643 conditional, that is how it is currently being used. Note that if a
2644 configuration were to define it one way for a host and a different way
2645 for the target, @value{GDBN} will probably not compile, let alone run
2646 correctly. This macro is currently used only for the unsupported i960 Nindy
2647 target, and should not be used in any other configuration.
2648
2649 @item BELIEVE_PCC_PROMOTION
2650 @findex BELIEVE_PCC_PROMOTION
2651 Define if the compiler promotes a @code{short} or @code{char}
2652 parameter to an @code{int}, but still reports the parameter as its
2653 original type, rather than the promoted type.
2654
2655 @item BELIEVE_PCC_PROMOTION_TYPE
2656 @findex BELIEVE_PCC_PROMOTION_TYPE
2657 Define this if @value{GDBN} should believe the type of a @code{short}
2658 argument when compiled by @code{pcc}, but look within a full int space to get
2659 its value. Only defined for Sun-3 at present.
2660
2661 @item BITS_BIG_ENDIAN
2662 @findex BITS_BIG_ENDIAN
2663 Define this if the numbering of bits in the targets does @strong{not} match the
2664 endianness of the target byte order. A value of 1 means that the bits
2665 are numbered in a big-endian bit order, 0 means little-endian.
2666
2667 @item BREAKPOINT
2668 @findex BREAKPOINT
2669 This is the character array initializer for the bit pattern to put into
2670 memory where a breakpoint is set. Although it's common to use a trap
2671 instruction for a breakpoint, it's not required; for instance, the bit
2672 pattern could be an invalid instruction. The breakpoint must be no
2673 longer than the shortest instruction of the architecture.
2674
2675 @code{BREAKPOINT} has been deprecated in favor of
2676 @code{BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC}.
2677
2678 @item BIG_BREAKPOINT
2679 @itemx LITTLE_BREAKPOINT
2680 @findex LITTLE_BREAKPOINT
2681 @findex BIG_BREAKPOINT
2682 Similar to BREAKPOINT, but used for bi-endian targets.
2683
2684 @code{BIG_BREAKPOINT} and @code{LITTLE_BREAKPOINT} have been deprecated in
2685 favor of @code{BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC}.
2686
2687 @item REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
2688 @itemx LITTLE_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
2689 @itemx BIG_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
2690 @findex BIG_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
2691 @findex LITTLE_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
2692 @findex REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
2693 Similar to BREAKPOINT, but used for remote targets.
2694
2695 @code{BIG_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT} and @code{LITTLE_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT} have been
2696 deprecated in favor of @code{BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC}.
2697
2698 @item BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC (@var{pcptr}, @var{lenptr})
2699 @findex BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC
2700 Use the program counter to determine the contents and size of a
2701 breakpoint instruction. It returns a pointer to a string of bytes
2702 that encode a breakpoint instruction, stores the length of the string
2703 to *@var{lenptr}, and adjusts pc (if necessary) to point to the actual
2704 memory location where the breakpoint should be inserted.
2705
2706 Although it is common to use a trap instruction for a breakpoint, it's
2707 not required; for instance, the bit pattern could be an invalid
2708 instruction. The breakpoint must be no longer than the shortest
2709 instruction of the architecture.
2710
2711 Replaces all the other @var{BREAKPOINT} macros.
2712
2713 @item MEMORY_INSERT_BREAKPOINT (@var{addr}, @var{contents_cache})
2714 @itemx MEMORY_REMOVE_BREAKPOINT (@var{addr}, @var{contents_cache})
2715 @findex MEMORY_REMOVE_BREAKPOINT
2716 @findex MEMORY_INSERT_BREAKPOINT
2717 Insert or remove memory based breakpoints. Reasonable defaults
2718 (@code{default_memory_insert_breakpoint} and
2719 @code{default_memory_remove_breakpoint} respectively) have been
2720 provided so that it is not necessary to define these for most
2721 architectures. Architectures which may want to define
2722 @code{MEMORY_INSERT_BREAKPOINT} and @code{MEMORY_REMOVE_BREAKPOINT} will
2723 likely have instructions that are oddly sized or are not stored in a
2724 conventional manner.
2725
2726 It may also be desirable (from an efficiency standpoint) to define
2727 custom breakpoint insertion and removal routines if
2728 @code{BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC} needs to read the target's memory for some
2729 reason.
2730
2731 @item CALL_DUMMY_P
2732 @findex CALL_DUMMY_P
2733 A C expression that is non-zero when the target supports inferior function
2734 calls.
2735
2736 @item CALL_DUMMY_WORDS
2737 @findex CALL_DUMMY_WORDS
2738 Pointer to an array of @code{LONGEST} words of data containing
2739 host-byte-ordered @code{REGISTER_BYTES} sized values that partially
2740 specify the sequence of instructions needed for an inferior function
2741 call.
2742
2743 Should be deprecated in favor of a macro that uses target-byte-ordered
2744 data.
2745
2746 @item SIZEOF_CALL_DUMMY_WORDS
2747 @findex SIZEOF_CALL_DUMMY_WORDS
2748 The size of @code{CALL_DUMMY_WORDS}. When @code{CALL_DUMMY_P} this must
2749 return a positive value. See also @code{CALL_DUMMY_LENGTH}.
2750
2751 @item CALL_DUMMY
2752 @findex CALL_DUMMY
2753 A static initializer for @code{CALL_DUMMY_WORDS}. Deprecated.
2754
2755 @item CALL_DUMMY_LOCATION
2756 @findex CALL_DUMMY_LOCATION
2757 See the file @file{inferior.h}.
2758
2759 @item CALL_DUMMY_STACK_ADJUST
2760 @findex CALL_DUMMY_STACK_ADJUST
2761 Stack adjustment needed when performing an inferior function call.
2762
2763 Should be deprecated in favor of something like @code{STACK_ALIGN}.
2764
2765 @item CALL_DUMMY_STACK_ADJUST_P
2766 @findex CALL_DUMMY_STACK_ADJUST_P
2767 Predicate for use of @code{CALL_DUMMY_STACK_ADJUST}.
2768
2769 Should be deprecated in favor of something like @code{STACK_ALIGN}.
2770
2771 @item CANNOT_FETCH_REGISTER (@var{regno})
2772 @findex CANNOT_FETCH_REGISTER
2773 A C expression that should be nonzero if @var{regno} cannot be fetched
2774 from an inferior process. This is only relevant if
2775 @code{FETCH_INFERIOR_REGISTERS} is not defined.
2776
2777 @item CANNOT_STORE_REGISTER (@var{regno})
2778 @findex CANNOT_STORE_REGISTER
2779 A C expression that should be nonzero if @var{regno} should not be
2780 written to the target. This is often the case for program counters,
2781 status words, and other special registers. If this is not defined,
2782 @value{GDBN} will assume that all registers may be written.
2783
2784 @item DO_DEFERRED_STORES
2785 @itemx CLEAR_DEFERRED_STORES
2786 @findex CLEAR_DEFERRED_STORES
2787 @findex DO_DEFERRED_STORES
2788 Define this to execute any deferred stores of registers into the inferior,
2789 and to cancel any deferred stores.
2790
2791 Currently only implemented correctly for native Sparc configurations?
2792
2793 @item COERCE_FLOAT_TO_DOUBLE (@var{formal}, @var{actual})
2794 @findex COERCE_FLOAT_TO_DOUBLE
2795 @cindex promotion to @code{double}
2796 @cindex @code{float} arguments
2797 @cindex prototyped functions, passing arguments to
2798 @cindex passing arguments to prototyped functions
2799 Return non-zero if GDB should promote @code{float} values to
2800 @code{double} when calling a non-prototyped function. The argument
2801 @var{actual} is the type of the value we want to pass to the function.
2802 The argument @var{formal} is the type of this argument, as it appears in
2803 the function's definition. Note that @var{formal} may be zero if we
2804 have no debugging information for the function, or if we're passing more
2805 arguments than are officially declared (for example, varargs). This
2806 macro is never invoked if the function definitely has a prototype.
2807
2808 How you should pass arguments to a function depends on whether it was
2809 defined in K&R style or prototype style. If you define a function using
2810 the K&R syntax that takes a @code{float} argument, then callers must
2811 pass that argument as a @code{double}. If you define the function using
2812 the prototype syntax, then you must pass the argument as a @code{float},
2813 with no promotion.
2814
2815 Unfortunately, on certain older platforms, the debug info doesn't
2816 indicate reliably how each function was defined. A function type's
2817 @code{TYPE_FLAG_PROTOTYPED} flag may be unset, even if the function was
2818 defined in prototype style. When calling a function whose
2819 @code{TYPE_FLAG_PROTOTYPED} flag is unset, GDB consults the
2820 @code{COERCE_FLOAT_TO_DOUBLE} macro to decide what to do.
2821
2822 @findex standard_coerce_float_to_double
2823 For modern targets, it is proper to assume that, if the prototype flag
2824 is unset, that can be trusted: @code{float} arguments should be promoted
2825 to @code{double}. You should use the function
2826 @code{standard_coerce_float_to_double} to get this behavior.
2827
2828 @findex default_coerce_float_to_double
2829 For some older targets, if the prototype flag is unset, that doesn't
2830 tell us anything. So we guess that, if we don't have a type for the
2831 formal parameter (@i{i.e.}, the first argument to
2832 @code{COERCE_FLOAT_TO_DOUBLE} is null), then we should promote it;
2833 otherwise, we should leave it alone. The function
2834 @code{default_coerce_float_to_double} provides this behavior; it is the
2835 default value, for compatibility with older configurations.
2836
2837 @item CPLUS_MARKER
2838 @findex CPLUS_MARKERz
2839 Define this to expand into the character that G@t{++} uses to distinguish
2840 compiler-generated identifiers from programmer-specified identifiers.
2841 By default, this expands into @code{'$'}. Most System V targets should
2842 define this to @code{'.'}.
2843
2844 @item DBX_PARM_SYMBOL_CLASS
2845 @findex DBX_PARM_SYMBOL_CLASS
2846 Hook for the @code{SYMBOL_CLASS} of a parameter when decoding DBX symbol
2847 information. In the i960, parameters can be stored as locals or as
2848 args, depending on the type of the debug record.
2849
2850 @item DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK
2851 @findex DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK
2852 Define this to be the amount by which to decrement the PC after the
2853 program encounters a breakpoint. This is often the number of bytes in
2854 @code{BREAKPOINT}, though not always. For most targets this value will be 0.
2855
2856 @item DECR_PC_AFTER_HW_BREAK
2857 @findex DECR_PC_AFTER_HW_BREAK
2858 Similarly, for hardware breakpoints.
2859
2860 @item DISABLE_UNSETTABLE_BREAK (@var{addr})
2861 @findex DISABLE_UNSETTABLE_BREAK
2862 If defined, this should evaluate to 1 if @var{addr} is in a shared
2863 library in which breakpoints cannot be set and so should be disabled.
2864
2865 @item DO_REGISTERS_INFO
2866 @findex DO_REGISTERS_INFO
2867 If defined, use this to print the value of a register or all registers.
2868
2869 @item PRINT_FLOAT_INFO()
2870 #findex PRINT_FLOAT_INFO
2871 If defined, then the @samp{info float} command will print information about
2872 the processor's floating point unit.
2873
2874 @item DWARF_REG_TO_REGNUM
2875 @findex DWARF_REG_TO_REGNUM
2876 Convert DWARF register number into @value{GDBN} regnum. If not defined,
2877 no conversion will be performed.
2878
2879 @item DWARF2_REG_TO_REGNUM
2880 @findex DWARF2_REG_TO_REGNUM
2881 Convert DWARF2 register number into @value{GDBN} regnum. If not
2882 defined, no conversion will be performed.
2883
2884 @item ECOFF_REG_TO_REGNUM
2885 @findex ECOFF_REG_TO_REGNUM
2886 Convert ECOFF register number into @value{GDBN} regnum. If not defined,
2887 no conversion will be performed.
2888
2889 @item END_OF_TEXT_DEFAULT
2890 @findex END_OF_TEXT_DEFAULT
2891 This is an expression that should designate the end of the text section.
2892 @c (? FIXME ?)
2893
2894 @item EXTRACT_RETURN_VALUE(@var{type}, @var{regbuf}, @var{valbuf})
2895 @findex EXTRACT_RETURN_VALUE
2896 Define this to extract a function's return value of type @var{type} from
2897 the raw register state @var{regbuf} and copy that, in virtual format,
2898 into @var{valbuf}.
2899
2900 @item EXTRACT_STRUCT_VALUE_ADDRESS(@var{regbuf})
2901 @findex EXTRACT_STRUCT_VALUE_ADDRESS
2902 When defined, extract from the array @var{regbuf} (containing the raw
2903 register state) the @code{CORE_ADDR} at which a function should return
2904 its structure value.
2905
2906 If not defined, @code{EXTRACT_RETURN_VALUE} is used.
2907
2908 @item EXTRACT_STRUCT_VALUE_ADDRESS_P()
2909 @findex EXTRACT_STRUCT_VALUE_ADDRESS_P
2910 Predicate for @code{EXTRACT_STRUCT_VALUE_ADDRESS}.
2911
2912 @item FLOAT_INFO
2913 @findex FLOAT_INFO
2914 Deprecated in favor of @code{PRINT_FLOAT_INFO}.
2915
2916 @item FP_REGNUM
2917 @findex FP_REGNUM
2918 If the virtual frame pointer is kept in a register, then define this
2919 macro to be the number (greater than or equal to zero) of that register.
2920
2921 This should only need to be defined if @code{TARGET_READ_FP} and
2922 @code{TARGET_WRITE_FP} are not defined.
2923
2924 @item FRAMELESS_FUNCTION_INVOCATION(@var{fi})
2925 @findex FRAMELESS_FUNCTION_INVOCATION
2926 Define this to an expression that returns 1 if the function invocation
2927 represented by @var{fi} does not have a stack frame associated with it.
2928 Otherwise return 0.
2929
2930 @item FRAME_ARGS_ADDRESS_CORRECT
2931 @findex FRAME_ARGS_ADDRESS_CORRECT
2932 See @file{stack.c}.
2933
2934 @item FRAME_CHAIN(@var{frame})
2935 @findex FRAME_CHAIN
2936 Given @var{frame}, return a pointer to the calling frame.
2937
2938 @item FRAME_CHAIN_COMBINE(@var{chain}, @var{frame})
2939 @findex FRAME_CHAIN_COMBINE
2940 Define this to take the frame chain pointer and the frame's nominal
2941 address and produce the nominal address of the caller's frame.
2942 Presently only defined for HP PA.
2943
2944 @item FRAME_CHAIN_VALID(@var{chain}, @var{thisframe})
2945 @findex FRAME_CHAIN_VALID
2946 Define this to be an expression that returns zero if the given frame is
2947 an outermost frame, with no caller, and nonzero otherwise. Several
2948 common definitions are available:
2949
2950 @itemize @bullet
2951 @item
2952 @code{file_frame_chain_valid} is nonzero if the chain pointer is nonzero
2953 and given frame's PC is not inside the startup file (such as
2954 @file{crt0.o}).
2955
2956 @item
2957 @code{func_frame_chain_valid} is nonzero if the chain
2958 pointer is nonzero and the given frame's PC is not in @code{main} or a
2959 known entry point function (such as @code{_start}).
2960
2961 @item
2962 @code{generic_file_frame_chain_valid} and
2963 @code{generic_func_frame_chain_valid} are equivalent implementations for
2964 targets using generic dummy frames.
2965 @end itemize
2966
2967 @item FRAME_INIT_SAVED_REGS(@var{frame})
2968 @findex FRAME_INIT_SAVED_REGS
2969 See @file{frame.h}. Determines the address of all registers in the
2970 current stack frame storing each in @code{frame->saved_regs}. Space for
2971 @code{frame->saved_regs} shall be allocated by
2972 @code{FRAME_INIT_SAVED_REGS} using either
2973 @code{frame_saved_regs_zalloc} or @code{frame_obstack_alloc}.
2974
2975 @code{FRAME_FIND_SAVED_REGS} and @code{EXTRA_FRAME_INFO} are deprecated.
2976
2977 @item FRAME_NUM_ARGS (@var{fi})
2978 @findex FRAME_NUM_ARGS
2979 For the frame described by @var{fi} return the number of arguments that
2980 are being passed. If the number of arguments is not known, return
2981 @code{-1}.
2982
2983 @item FRAME_SAVED_PC(@var{frame})
2984 @findex FRAME_SAVED_PC
2985 Given @var{frame}, return the pc saved there. This is the return
2986 address.
2987
2988 @item FUNCTION_EPILOGUE_SIZE
2989 @findex FUNCTION_EPILOGUE_SIZE
2990 For some COFF targets, the @code{x_sym.x_misc.x_fsize} field of the
2991 function end symbol is 0. For such targets, you must define
2992 @code{FUNCTION_EPILOGUE_SIZE} to expand into the standard size of a
2993 function's epilogue.
2994
2995 @item FUNCTION_START_OFFSET
2996 @findex FUNCTION_START_OFFSET
2997 An integer, giving the offset in bytes from a function's address (as
2998 used in the values of symbols, function pointers, etc.), and the
2999 function's first genuine instruction.
3000
3001 This is zero on almost all machines: the function's address is usually
3002 the address of its first instruction. However, on the VAX, for example,
3003 each function starts with two bytes containing a bitmask indicating
3004 which registers to save upon entry to the function. The VAX @code{call}
3005 instructions check this value, and save the appropriate registers
3006 automatically. Thus, since the offset from the function's address to
3007 its first instruction is two bytes, @code{FUNCTION_START_OFFSET} would
3008 be 2 on the VAX.
3009
3010 @item GCC_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL
3011 @itemx GCC2_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL
3012 @findex GCC2_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL
3013 @findex GCC_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL
3014 If defined, these are the names of the symbols that @value{GDBN} will
3015 look for to detect that GCC compiled the file. The default symbols
3016 are @code{gcc_compiled.} and @code{gcc2_compiled.},
3017 respectively. (Currently only defined for the Delta 68.)
3018
3019 @item @value{GDBN}_MULTI_ARCH
3020 @findex @value{GDBN}_MULTI_ARCH
3021 If defined and non-zero, enables support for multiple architectures
3022 within @value{GDBN}.
3023
3024 This support can be enabled at two levels. At level one, only
3025 definitions for previously undefined macros are provided; at level two,
3026 a multi-arch definition of all architecture dependent macros will be
3027 defined.
3028
3029 @item @value{GDBN}_TARGET_IS_HPPA
3030 @findex @value{GDBN}_TARGET_IS_HPPA
3031 This determines whether horrible kludge code in @file{dbxread.c} and
3032 @file{partial-stab.h} is used to mangle multiple-symbol-table files from
3033 HPPA's. This should all be ripped out, and a scheme like @file{elfread.c}
3034 used instead.
3035
3036 @item GET_LONGJMP_TARGET
3037 @findex GET_LONGJMP_TARGET
3038 For most machines, this is a target-dependent parameter. On the
3039 DECstation and the Iris, this is a native-dependent parameter, since
3040 the header file @file{setjmp.h} is needed to define it.
3041
3042 This macro determines the target PC address that @code{longjmp} will jump to,
3043 assuming that we have just stopped at a @code{longjmp} breakpoint. It takes a
3044 @code{CORE_ADDR *} as argument, and stores the target PC value through this
3045 pointer. It examines the current state of the machine as needed.
3046
3047 @item GET_SAVED_REGISTER
3048 @findex GET_SAVED_REGISTER
3049 @findex get_saved_register
3050 Define this if you need to supply your own definition for the function
3051 @code{get_saved_register}.
3052
3053 @item HAVE_REGISTER_WINDOWS
3054 @findex HAVE_REGISTER_WINDOWS
3055 Define this if the target has register windows.
3056
3057 @item REGISTER_IN_WINDOW_P (@var{regnum})
3058 @findex REGISTER_IN_WINDOW_P
3059 Define this to be an expression that is 1 if the given register is in
3060 the window.
3061
3062 @item IBM6000_TARGET
3063 @findex IBM6000_TARGET
3064 Shows that we are configured for an IBM RS/6000 target. This
3065 conditional should be eliminated (FIXME) and replaced by
3066 feature-specific macros. It was introduced in a haste and we are
3067 repenting at leisure.
3068
3069 @item I386_USE_GENERIC_WATCHPOINTS
3070 An x86-based target can define this to use the generic x86 watchpoint
3071 support; see @ref{Algorithms, I386_USE_GENERIC_WATCHPOINTS}.
3072
3073 @item SYMBOLS_CAN_START_WITH_DOLLAR
3074 @findex SYMBOLS_CAN_START_WITH_DOLLAR
3075 Some systems have routines whose names start with @samp{$}. Giving this
3076 macro a non-zero value tells @value{GDBN}'s expression parser to check for such
3077 routines when parsing tokens that begin with @samp{$}.
3078
3079 On HP-UX, certain system routines (millicode) have names beginning with
3080 @samp{$} or @samp{$$}. For example, @code{$$dyncall} is a millicode
3081 routine that handles inter-space procedure calls on PA-RISC.
3082
3083 @item INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO (@var{fromleaf}, @var{frame})
3084 @findex INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO
3085 If additional information about the frame is required this should be
3086 stored in @code{frame->extra_info}. Space for @code{frame->extra_info}
3087 is allocated using @code{frame_obstack_alloc}.
3088
3089 @item INIT_FRAME_PC (@var{fromleaf}, @var{prev})
3090 @findex INIT_FRAME_PC
3091 This is a C statement that sets the pc of the frame pointed to by
3092 @var{prev}. [By default...]
3093
3094 @item INNER_THAN (@var{lhs}, @var{rhs})
3095 @findex INNER_THAN
3096 Returns non-zero if stack address @var{lhs} is inner than (nearer to the
3097 stack top) stack address @var{rhs}. Define this as @code{lhs < rhs} if
3098 the target's stack grows downward in memory, or @code{lhs > rsh} if the
3099 stack grows upward.
3100
3101 @item gdbarch_in_function_epilogue_p (@var{gdbarch}, @var{pc})
3102 @findex gdbarch_in_function_epilogue_p
3103 Returns non-zero if the given @var{pc} is in the epilogue of a function.
3104 The epilogue of a function is defined as the part of a function where
3105 the stack frame of the function already has been destroyed up to the
3106 final `return from function call' instruction.
3107
3108 @item IN_SIGTRAMP (@var{pc}, @var{name})
3109 @findex IN_SIGTRAMP
3110 Define this to return non-zero if the given @var{pc} and/or @var{name}
3111 indicates that the current function is a @code{sigtramp}.
3112
3113 @item SIGTRAMP_START (@var{pc})
3114 @findex SIGTRAMP_START
3115 @itemx SIGTRAMP_END (@var{pc})
3116 @findex SIGTRAMP_END
3117 Define these to be the start and end address of the @code{sigtramp} for the
3118 given @var{pc}. On machines where the address is just a compile time
3119 constant, the macro expansion will typically just ignore the supplied
3120 @var{pc}.
3121
3122 @item IN_SOLIB_CALL_TRAMPOLINE (@var{pc}, @var{name})
3123 @findex IN_SOLIB_CALL_TRAMPOLINE
3124 Define this to evaluate to nonzero if the program is stopped in the
3125 trampoline that connects to a shared library.
3126
3127 @item IN_SOLIB_RETURN_TRAMPOLINE (@var{pc}, @var{name})
3128 @findex IN_SOLIB_RETURN_TRAMPOLINE
3129 Define this to evaluate to nonzero if the program is stopped in the
3130 trampoline that returns from a shared library.
3131
3132 @item IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE (@var{pc})
3133 @findex IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE
3134 Define this to evaluate to nonzero if the program is stopped in the
3135 dynamic linker.
3136
3137 @item SKIP_SOLIB_RESOLVER (@var{pc})
3138 @findex SKIP_SOLIB_RESOLVER
3139 Define this to evaluate to the (nonzero) address at which execution
3140 should continue to get past the dynamic linker's symbol resolution
3141 function. A zero value indicates that it is not important or necessary
3142 to set a breakpoint to get through the dynamic linker and that single
3143 stepping will suffice.
3144
3145 @item INTEGER_TO_ADDRESS (@var{type}, @var{buf})
3146 @findex INTEGER_TO_ADDRESS
3147 @cindex converting integers to addresses
3148 Define this when the architecture needs to handle non-pointer to address
3149 conversions specially. Converts that value to an address according to
3150 the current architectures conventions.
3151
3152 @emph{Pragmatics: When the user copies a well defined expression from
3153 their source code and passes it, as a parameter, to @value{GDBN}'s
3154 @code{print} command, they should get the same value as would have been
3155 computed by the target program. Any deviation from this rule can cause
3156 major confusion and annoyance, and needs to be justified carefully. In
3157 other words, @value{GDBN} doesn't really have the freedom to do these
3158 conversions in clever and useful ways. It has, however, been pointed
3159 out that users aren't complaining about how @value{GDBN} casts integers
3160 to pointers; they are complaining that they can't take an address from a
3161 disassembly listing and give it to @code{x/i}. Adding an architecture
3162 method like @code{INTEGER_TO_ADDRESS} certainly makes it possible for
3163 @value{GDBN} to ``get it right'' in all circumstances.}
3164
3165 @xref{Target Architecture Definition, , Pointers Are Not Always
3166 Addresses}.
3167
3168 @item IS_TRAPPED_INTERNALVAR (@var{name})
3169 @findex IS_TRAPPED_INTERNALVAR
3170 This is an ugly hook to allow the specification of special actions that
3171 should occur as a side-effect of setting the value of a variable
3172 internal to @value{GDBN}. Currently only used by the h8500. Note that this
3173 could be either a host or target conditional.
3174
3175 @item NEED_TEXT_START_END
3176 @findex NEED_TEXT_START_END
3177 Define this if @value{GDBN} should determine the start and end addresses of the
3178 text section. (Seems dubious.)
3179
3180 @item NO_HIF_SUPPORT
3181 @findex NO_HIF_SUPPORT
3182 (Specific to the a29k.)
3183
3184 @item POINTER_TO_ADDRESS (@var{type}, @var{buf})
3185 @findex POINTER_TO_ADDRESS
3186 Assume that @var{buf} holds a pointer of type @var{type}, in the
3187 appropriate format for the current architecture. Return the byte
3188 address the pointer refers to.
3189 @xref{Target Architecture Definition, , Pointers Are Not Always Addresses}.
3190
3191 @item REGISTER_CONVERTIBLE (@var{reg})
3192 @findex REGISTER_CONVERTIBLE
3193 Return non-zero if @var{reg} uses different raw and virtual formats.
3194 @xref{Target Architecture Definition, , Using Different Register and Memory Data Representations}.
3195
3196 @item REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (@var{reg})
3197 @findex REGISTER_RAW_SIZE
3198 Return the raw size of @var{reg}.
3199 @xref{Target Architecture Definition, , Using Different Register and Memory Data Representations}.
3200
3201 @item REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE (@var{reg})
3202 @findex REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE
3203 Return the virtual size of @var{reg}.
3204 @xref{Target Architecture Definition, , Using Different Register and Memory Data Representations}.
3205
3206 @item REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (@var{reg})
3207 @findex REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE
3208 Return the virtual type of @var{reg}.
3209 @xref{Target Architecture Definition, , Using Different Register and Memory Data Representations}.
3210
3211 @item REGISTER_CONVERT_TO_VIRTUAL(@var{reg}, @var{type}, @var{from}, @var{to})
3212 @findex REGISTER_CONVERT_TO_VIRTUAL
3213 Convert the value of register @var{reg} from its raw form to its virtual
3214 form.
3215 @xref{Target Architecture Definition, , Using Different Register and Memory Data Representations}.
3216
3217 @item REGISTER_CONVERT_TO_RAW(@var{type}, @var{reg}, @var{from}, @var{to})
3218 @findex REGISTER_CONVERT_TO_RAW
3219 Convert the value of register @var{reg} from its virtual form to its raw
3220 form.
3221 @xref{Target Architecture Definition, , Using Different Register and Memory Data Representations}.
3222
3223 @item RETURN_VALUE_ON_STACK(@var{type})
3224 @findex RETURN_VALUE_ON_STACK
3225 @cindex returning structures by value
3226 @cindex structures, returning by value
3227
3228 Return non-zero if values of type TYPE are returned on the stack, using
3229 the ``struct convention'' (i.e., the caller provides a pointer to a
3230 buffer in which the callee should store the return value). This
3231 controls how the @samp{finish} command finds a function's return value,
3232 and whether an inferior function call reserves space on the stack for
3233 the return value.
3234
3235 The full logic @value{GDBN} uses here is kind of odd.
3236
3237 @itemize @bullet
3238 @item
3239 If the type being returned by value is not a structure, union, or array,
3240 and @code{RETURN_VALUE_ON_STACK} returns zero, then @value{GDBN}
3241 concludes the value is not returned using the struct convention.
3242
3243 @item
3244 Otherwise, @value{GDBN} calls @code{USE_STRUCT_CONVENTION} (see below).
3245 If that returns non-zero, @value{GDBN} assumes the struct convention is
3246 in use.
3247 @end itemize
3248
3249 In other words, to indicate that a given type is returned by value using
3250 the struct convention, that type must be either a struct, union, array,
3251 or something @code{RETURN_VALUE_ON_STACK} likes, @emph{and} something
3252 that @code{USE_STRUCT_CONVENTION} likes.
3253
3254 Note that, in C and C@t{++}, arrays are never returned by value. In those
3255 languages, these predicates will always see a pointer type, never an
3256 array type. All the references above to arrays being returned by value
3257 apply only to other languages.
3258
3259 @item SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP_P()
3260 @findex SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP_P
3261 Define this as 1 if the target does not have a hardware single-step
3262 mechanism. The macro @code{SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP} must also be defined.
3263
3264 @item SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP(@var{signal}, @var{insert_breapoints_p})
3265 @findex SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP
3266 A function that inserts or removes (depending on
3267 @var{insert_breapoints_p}) breakpoints at each possible destinations of
3268 the next instruction. See @file{sparc-tdep.c} and @file{rs6000-tdep.c}
3269 for examples.
3270
3271 @item SOFUN_ADDRESS_MAYBE_MISSING
3272 @findex SOFUN_ADDRESS_MAYBE_MISSING
3273 Somebody clever observed that, the more actual addresses you have in the
3274 debug information, the more time the linker has to spend relocating
3275 them. So whenever there's some other way the debugger could find the
3276 address it needs, you should omit it from the debug info, to make
3277 linking faster.
3278
3279 @code{SOFUN_ADDRESS_MAYBE_MISSING} indicates that a particular set of
3280 hacks of this sort are in use, affecting @code{N_SO} and @code{N_FUN}
3281 entries in stabs-format debugging information. @code{N_SO} stabs mark
3282 the beginning and ending addresses of compilation units in the text
3283 segment. @code{N_FUN} stabs mark the starts and ends of functions.
3284
3285 @code{SOFUN_ADDRESS_MAYBE_MISSING} means two things:
3286
3287 @itemize @bullet
3288 @item
3289 @code{N_FUN} stabs have an address of zero. Instead, you should find the
3290 addresses where the function starts by taking the function name from
3291 the stab, and then looking that up in the minsyms (the
3292 linker/assembler symbol table). In other words, the stab has the
3293 name, and the linker/assembler symbol table is the only place that carries
3294 the address.
3295
3296 @item
3297 @code{N_SO} stabs have an address of zero, too. You just look at the
3298 @code{N_FUN} stabs that appear before and after the @code{N_SO} stab,
3299 and guess the starting and ending addresses of the compilation unit from
3300 them.
3301 @end itemize
3302
3303 @item PCC_SOL_BROKEN
3304 @findex PCC_SOL_BROKEN
3305 (Used only in the Convex target.)
3306
3307 @item PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY
3308 @findex PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY
3309 See @file{inferior.h}.
3310
3311 @item PC_LOAD_SEGMENT
3312 @findex PC_LOAD_SEGMENT
3313 If defined, print information about the load segment for the program
3314 counter. (Defined only for the RS/6000.)
3315
3316 @item PC_REGNUM
3317 @findex PC_REGNUM
3318 If the program counter is kept in a register, then define this macro to
3319 be the number (greater than or equal to zero) of that register.
3320
3321 This should only need to be defined if @code{TARGET_READ_PC} and
3322 @code{TARGET_WRITE_PC} are not defined.
3323
3324 @item NPC_REGNUM
3325 @findex NPC_REGNUM
3326 The number of the ``next program counter'' register, if defined.
3327
3328 @item NNPC_REGNUM
3329 @findex NNPC_REGNUM
3330 The number of the ``next next program counter'' register, if defined.
3331 Currently, this is only defined for the Motorola 88K.
3332
3333 @item PARM_BOUNDARY
3334 @findex PARM_BOUNDARY
3335 If non-zero, round arguments to a boundary of this many bits before
3336 pushing them on the stack.
3337
3338 @item PRINT_REGISTER_HOOK (@var{regno})
3339 @findex PRINT_REGISTER_HOOK
3340 If defined, this must be a function that prints the contents of the
3341 given register to standard output.
3342
3343 @item PRINT_TYPELESS_INTEGER
3344 @findex PRINT_TYPELESS_INTEGER
3345 This is an obscure substitute for @code{print_longest} that seems to
3346 have been defined for the Convex target.
3347
3348 @item PROCESS_LINENUMBER_HOOK
3349 @findex PROCESS_LINENUMBER_HOOK
3350 A hook defined for XCOFF reading.
3351
3352 @item PROLOGUE_FIRSTLINE_OVERLAP
3353 @findex PROLOGUE_FIRSTLINE_OVERLAP
3354 (Only used in unsupported Convex configuration.)
3355
3356 @item PS_REGNUM
3357 @findex PS_REGNUM
3358 If defined, this is the number of the processor status register. (This
3359 definition is only used in generic code when parsing "$ps".)
3360
3361 @item POP_FRAME
3362 @findex POP_FRAME
3363 @findex call_function_by_hand
3364 @findex return_command
3365 Used in @samp{call_function_by_hand} to remove an artificial stack
3366 frame and in @samp{return_command} to remove a real stack frame.
3367
3368 @item PUSH_ARGUMENTS (@var{nargs}, @var{args}, @var{sp}, @var{struct_return}, @var{struct_addr})
3369 @findex PUSH_ARGUMENTS
3370 Define this to push arguments onto the stack for inferior function
3371 call. Returns the updated stack pointer value.
3372
3373 @item PUSH_DUMMY_FRAME
3374 @findex PUSH_DUMMY_FRAME
3375 Used in @samp{call_function_by_hand} to create an artificial stack frame.
3376
3377 @item REGISTER_BYTES
3378 @findex REGISTER_BYTES
3379 The total amount of space needed to store @value{GDBN}'s copy of the machine's
3380 register state.
3381
3382 @item REGISTER_NAME(@var{i})
3383 @findex REGISTER_NAME
3384 Return the name of register @var{i} as a string. May return @code{NULL}
3385 or @code{NUL} to indicate that register @var{i} is not valid.
3386
3387 @item REGISTER_NAMES
3388 @findex REGISTER_NAMES
3389 Deprecated in favor of @code{REGISTER_NAME}.
3390
3391 @item REG_STRUCT_HAS_ADDR (@var{gcc_p}, @var{type})
3392 @findex REG_STRUCT_HAS_ADDR
3393 Define this to return 1 if the given type will be passed by pointer
3394 rather than directly.
3395
3396 @item SAVE_DUMMY_FRAME_TOS (@var{sp})
3397 @findex SAVE_DUMMY_FRAME_TOS
3398 Used in @samp{call_function_by_hand} to notify the target dependent code
3399 of the top-of-stack value that will be passed to the the inferior code.
3400 This is the value of the @code{SP} after both the dummy frame and space
3401 for parameters/results have been allocated on the stack.
3402
3403 @item SDB_REG_TO_REGNUM
3404 @findex SDB_REG_TO_REGNUM
3405 Define this to convert sdb register numbers into @value{GDBN} regnums. If not
3406 defined, no conversion will be done.
3407
3408 @item SHIFT_INST_REGS
3409 @findex SHIFT_INST_REGS
3410 (Only used for m88k targets.)
3411
3412 @item SKIP_PERMANENT_BREAKPOINT
3413 @findex SKIP_PERMANENT_BREAKPOINT
3414 Advance the inferior's PC past a permanent breakpoint. @value{GDBN} normally
3415 steps over a breakpoint by removing it, stepping one instruction, and
3416 re-inserting the breakpoint. However, permanent breakpoints are
3417 hardwired into the inferior, and can't be removed, so this strategy
3418 doesn't work. Calling @code{SKIP_PERMANENT_BREAKPOINT} adjusts the processor's
3419 state so that execution will resume just after the breakpoint. This
3420 macro does the right thing even when the breakpoint is in the delay slot
3421 of a branch or jump.
3422
3423 @item SKIP_PROLOGUE (@var{pc})
3424 @findex SKIP_PROLOGUE
3425 A C expression that returns the address of the ``real'' code beyond the
3426 function entry prologue found at @var{pc}.
3427
3428 @item SKIP_PROLOGUE_FRAMELESS_P
3429 @findex SKIP_PROLOGUE_FRAMELESS_P
3430 A C expression that should behave similarly, but that can stop as soon
3431 as the function is known to have a frame. If not defined,
3432 @code{SKIP_PROLOGUE} will be used instead.
3433
3434 @item SKIP_TRAMPOLINE_CODE (@var{pc})
3435 @findex SKIP_TRAMPOLINE_CODE
3436 If the target machine has trampoline code that sits between callers and
3437 the functions being called, then define this macro to return a new PC
3438 that is at the start of the real function.
3439
3440 @item SP_REGNUM
3441 @findex SP_REGNUM
3442 If the stack-pointer is kept in a register, then define this macro to be
3443 the number (greater than or equal to zero) of that register.
3444
3445 This should only need to be defined if @code{TARGET_WRITE_SP} and
3446 @code{TARGET_WRITE_SP} are not defined.
3447
3448 @item STAB_REG_TO_REGNUM
3449 @findex STAB_REG_TO_REGNUM
3450 Define this to convert stab register numbers (as gotten from `r'
3451 declarations) into @value{GDBN} regnums. If not defined, no conversion will be
3452 done.
3453
3454 @item STACK_ALIGN (@var{addr})
3455 @findex STACK_ALIGN
3456 Define this to adjust the address to the alignment required for the
3457 processor's stack.
3458
3459 @item STEP_SKIPS_DELAY (@var{addr})
3460 @findex STEP_SKIPS_DELAY
3461 Define this to return true if the address is of an instruction with a
3462 delay slot. If a breakpoint has been placed in the instruction's delay
3463 slot, @value{GDBN} will single-step over that instruction before resuming
3464 normally. Currently only defined for the Mips.
3465
3466 @item STORE_RETURN_VALUE (@var{type}, @var{valbuf})
3467 @findex STORE_RETURN_VALUE
3468 A C expression that stores a function return value of type @var{type},
3469 where @var{valbuf} is the address of the value to be stored.
3470
3471 @item SUN_FIXED_LBRAC_BUG
3472 @findex SUN_FIXED_LBRAC_BUG
3473 (Used only for Sun-3 and Sun-4 targets.)
3474
3475 @item SYMBOL_RELOADING_DEFAULT
3476 @findex SYMBOL_RELOADING_DEFAULT
3477 The default value of the ``symbol-reloading'' variable. (Never defined in
3478 current sources.)
3479
3480 @item TARGET_CHAR_BIT
3481 @findex TARGET_CHAR_BIT
3482 Number of bits in a char; defaults to 8.
3483
3484 @item TARGET_CHAR_SIGNED
3485 @findex TARGET_CHAR_SIGNED
3486 Non-zero if @code{char} is normally signed on this architecture; zero if
3487 it should be unsigned.
3488
3489 The ISO C standard requires the compiler to treat @code{char} as
3490 equivalent to either @code{signed char} or @code{unsigned char}; any
3491 character in the standard execution set is supposed to be positive.
3492 Most compilers treat @code{char} as signed, but @code{char} is unsigned
3493 on the IBM S/390, RS6000, and PowerPC targets.
3494
3495 @item TARGET_COMPLEX_BIT
3496 @findex TARGET_COMPLEX_BIT
3497 Number of bits in a complex number; defaults to @code{2 * TARGET_FLOAT_BIT}.
3498
3499 At present this macro is not used.
3500
3501 @item TARGET_DOUBLE_BIT
3502 @findex TARGET_DOUBLE_BIT
3503 Number of bits in a double float; defaults to @code{8 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT}.
3504
3505 @item TARGET_DOUBLE_COMPLEX_BIT
3506 @findex TARGET_DOUBLE_COMPLEX_BIT
3507 Number of bits in a double complex; defaults to @code{2 * TARGET_DOUBLE_BIT}.
3508
3509 At present this macro is not used.
3510
3511 @item TARGET_FLOAT_BIT
3512 @findex TARGET_FLOAT_BIT
3513 Number of bits in a float; defaults to @code{4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT}.
3514
3515 @item TARGET_INT_BIT
3516 @findex TARGET_INT_BIT
3517 Number of bits in an integer; defaults to @code{4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT}.
3518
3519 @item TARGET_LONG_BIT
3520 @findex TARGET_LONG_BIT
3521 Number of bits in a long integer; defaults to @code{4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT}.
3522
3523 @item TARGET_LONG_DOUBLE_BIT
3524 @findex TARGET_LONG_DOUBLE_BIT
3525 Number of bits in a long double float;
3526 defaults to @code{2 * TARGET_DOUBLE_BIT}.
3527
3528 @item TARGET_LONG_LONG_BIT
3529 @findex TARGET_LONG_LONG_BIT
3530 Number of bits in a long long integer; defaults to @code{2 * TARGET_LONG_BIT}.
3531
3532 @item TARGET_PTR_BIT
3533 @findex TARGET_PTR_BIT
3534 Number of bits in a pointer; defaults to @code{TARGET_INT_BIT}.
3535
3536 @item TARGET_SHORT_BIT
3537 @findex TARGET_SHORT_BIT
3538 Number of bits in a short integer; defaults to @code{2 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT}.
3539
3540 @item TARGET_READ_PC
3541 @findex TARGET_READ_PC
3542 @itemx TARGET_WRITE_PC (@var{val}, @var{pid})
3543 @findex TARGET_WRITE_PC
3544 @itemx TARGET_READ_SP
3545 @findex TARGET_READ_SP
3546 @itemx TARGET_WRITE_SP
3547 @findex TARGET_WRITE_SP
3548 @itemx TARGET_READ_FP
3549 @findex TARGET_READ_FP
3550 @itemx TARGET_WRITE_FP
3551 @findex TARGET_WRITE_FP
3552 @findex read_pc
3553 @findex write_pc
3554 @findex read_sp
3555 @findex write_sp
3556 @findex read_fp
3557 @findex write_fp
3558 These change the behavior of @code{read_pc}, @code{write_pc},
3559 @code{read_sp}, @code{write_sp}, @code{read_fp} and @code{write_fp}.
3560 For most targets, these may be left undefined. @value{GDBN} will call the read
3561 and write register functions with the relevant @code{_REGNUM} argument.
3562
3563 These macros are useful when a target keeps one of these registers in a
3564 hard to get at place; for example, part in a segment register and part
3565 in an ordinary register.
3566
3567 @item TARGET_VIRTUAL_FRAME_POINTER(@var{pc}, @var{regp}, @var{offsetp})
3568 @findex TARGET_VIRTUAL_FRAME_POINTER
3569 Returns a @code{(register, offset)} pair representing the virtual
3570 frame pointer in use at the code address @var{pc}. If virtual
3571 frame pointers are not used, a default definition simply returns
3572 @code{FP_REGNUM}, with an offset of zero.
3573
3574 @item TARGET_HAS_HARDWARE_WATCHPOINTS
3575 If non-zero, the target has support for hardware-assisted
3576 watchpoints. @xref{Algorithms, watchpoints}, for more details and
3577 other related macros.
3578
3579 @item TARGET_PRINT_INSN (@var{addr}, @var{info})
3580 @findex TARGET_PRINT_INSN
3581 This is the function used by @value{GDBN} to print an assembly
3582 instruction. It prints the instruction at address @var{addr} in
3583 debugged memory and returns the length of the instruction, in bytes. If
3584 a target doesn't define its own printing routine, it defaults to an
3585 accessor function for the global pointer @code{tm_print_insn}. This
3586 usually points to a function in the @code{opcodes} library (@pxref{Support
3587 Libraries, ,Opcodes}). @var{info} is a structure (of type
3588 @code{disassemble_info}) defined in @file{include/dis-asm.h} used to
3589 pass information to the instruction decoding routine.
3590
3591 @item USE_STRUCT_CONVENTION (@var{gcc_p}, @var{type})
3592 @findex USE_STRUCT_CONVENTION
3593 If defined, this must be an expression that is nonzero if a value of the
3594 given @var{type} being returned from a function must have space
3595 allocated for it on the stack. @var{gcc_p} is true if the function
3596 being considered is known to have been compiled by GCC; this is helpful
3597 for systems where GCC is known to use different calling convention than
3598 other compilers.
3599
3600 @item VARIABLES_INSIDE_BLOCK (@var{desc}, @var{gcc_p})
3601 @findex VARIABLES_INSIDE_BLOCK
3602 For dbx-style debugging information, if the compiler puts variable
3603 declarations inside LBRAC/RBRAC blocks, this should be defined to be
3604 nonzero. @var{desc} is the value of @code{n_desc} from the
3605 @code{N_RBRAC} symbol, and @var{gcc_p} is true if @value{GDBN} has noticed the
3606 presence of either the @code{GCC_COMPILED_SYMBOL} or the
3607 @code{GCC2_COMPILED_SYMBOL}. By default, this is 0.
3608
3609 @item OS9K_VARIABLES_INSIDE_BLOCK (@var{desc}, @var{gcc_p})
3610 @findex OS9K_VARIABLES_INSIDE_BLOCK
3611 Similarly, for OS/9000. Defaults to 1.
3612 @end table
3613
3614 Motorola M68K target conditionals.
3615
3616 @ftable @code
3617 @item BPT_VECTOR
3618 Define this to be the 4-bit location of the breakpoint trap vector. If
3619 not defined, it will default to @code{0xf}.
3620
3621 @item REMOTE_BPT_VECTOR
3622 Defaults to @code{1}.
3623 @end ftable
3624
3625 @section Adding a New Target
3626
3627 @cindex adding a target
3628 The following files add a target to @value{GDBN}:
3629
3630 @table @file
3631 @vindex TDEPFILES
3632 @item gdb/config/@var{arch}/@var{ttt}.mt
3633 Contains a Makefile fragment specific to this target. Specifies what
3634 object files are needed for target @var{ttt}, by defining
3635 @samp{TDEPFILES=@dots{}} and @samp{TDEPLIBS=@dots{}}. Also specifies
3636 the header file which describes @var{ttt}, by defining @samp{TM_FILE=
3637 tm-@var{ttt}.h}.
3638
3639 You can also define @samp{TM_CFLAGS}, @samp{TM_CLIBS}, @samp{TM_CDEPS},
3640 but these are now deprecated, replaced by autoconf, and may go away in
3641 future versions of @value{GDBN}.
3642
3643 @item gdb/@var{ttt}-tdep.c
3644 Contains any miscellaneous code required for this target machine. On
3645 some machines it doesn't exist at all. Sometimes the macros in
3646 @file{tm-@var{ttt}.h} become very complicated, so they are implemented
3647 as functions here instead, and the macro is simply defined to call the
3648 function. This is vastly preferable, since it is easier to understand
3649 and debug.
3650
3651 @item gdb/@var{arch}-tdep.c
3652 @itemx gdb/@var{arch}-tdep.h
3653 This often exists to describe the basic layout of the target machine's
3654 processor chip (registers, stack, etc.). If used, it is included by
3655 @file{@var{ttt}-tdep.h}. It can be shared among many targets that use
3656 the same processor.
3657
3658 @item gdb/config/@var{arch}/tm-@var{ttt}.h
3659 (@file{tm.h} is a link to this file, created by @code{configure}). Contains
3660 macro definitions about the target machine's registers, stack frame
3661 format and instructions.
3662
3663 New targets do not need this file and should not create it.
3664
3665 @item gdb/config/@var{arch}/tm-@var{arch}.h
3666 This often exists to describe the basic layout of the target machine's
3667 processor chip (registers, stack, etc.). If used, it is included by
3668 @file{tm-@var{ttt}.h}. It can be shared among many targets that use the
3669 same processor.
3670
3671 New targets do not need this file and should not create it.
3672
3673 @end table
3674
3675 If you are adding a new operating system for an existing CPU chip, add a
3676 @file{config/tm-@var{os}.h} file that describes the operating system
3677 facilities that are unusual (extra symbol table info; the breakpoint
3678 instruction needed; etc.). Then write a @file{@var{arch}/tm-@var{os}.h}
3679 that just @code{#include}s @file{tm-@var{arch}.h} and
3680 @file{config/tm-@var{os}.h}.
3681
3682
3683 @node Target Vector Definition
3684
3685 @chapter Target Vector Definition
3686 @cindex target vector
3687
3688 The target vector defines the interface between @value{GDBN}'s
3689 abstract handling of target systems, and the nitty-gritty code that
3690 actually exercises control over a process or a serial port.
3691 @value{GDBN} includes some 30-40 different target vectors; however,
3692 each configuration of @value{GDBN} includes only a few of them.
3693
3694 @section File Targets
3695
3696 Both executables and core files have target vectors.
3697
3698 @section Standard Protocol and Remote Stubs
3699
3700 @value{GDBN}'s file @file{remote.c} talks a serial protocol to code
3701 that runs in the target system. @value{GDBN} provides several sample
3702 @dfn{stubs} that can be integrated into target programs or operating
3703 systems for this purpose; they are named @file{*-stub.c}.
3704
3705 The @value{GDBN} user's manual describes how to put such a stub into
3706 your target code. What follows is a discussion of integrating the
3707 SPARC stub into a complicated operating system (rather than a simple
3708 program), by Stu Grossman, the author of this stub.
3709
3710 The trap handling code in the stub assumes the following upon entry to
3711 @code{trap_low}:
3712
3713 @enumerate
3714 @item
3715 %l1 and %l2 contain pc and npc respectively at the time of the trap;
3716
3717 @item
3718 traps are disabled;
3719
3720 @item
3721 you are in the correct trap window.
3722 @end enumerate
3723
3724 As long as your trap handler can guarantee those conditions, then there
3725 is no reason why you shouldn't be able to ``share'' traps with the stub.
3726 The stub has no requirement that it be jumped to directly from the
3727 hardware trap vector. That is why it calls @code{exceptionHandler()},
3728 which is provided by the external environment. For instance, this could
3729 set up the hardware traps to actually execute code which calls the stub
3730 first, and then transfers to its own trap handler.
3731
3732 For the most point, there probably won't be much of an issue with
3733 ``sharing'' traps, as the traps we use are usually not used by the kernel,
3734 and often indicate unrecoverable error conditions. Anyway, this is all
3735 controlled by a table, and is trivial to modify. The most important
3736 trap for us is for @code{ta 1}. Without that, we can't single step or
3737 do breakpoints. Everything else is unnecessary for the proper operation
3738 of the debugger/stub.
3739
3740 From reading the stub, it's probably not obvious how breakpoints work.
3741 They are simply done by deposit/examine operations from @value{GDBN}.
3742
3743 @section ROM Monitor Interface
3744
3745 @section Custom Protocols
3746
3747 @section Transport Layer
3748
3749 @section Builtin Simulator
3750
3751
3752 @node Native Debugging
3753
3754 @chapter Native Debugging
3755 @cindex native debugging
3756
3757 Several files control @value{GDBN}'s configuration for native support:
3758
3759 @table @file
3760 @vindex NATDEPFILES
3761 @item gdb/config/@var{arch}/@var{xyz}.mh
3762 Specifies Makefile fragments needed by a @emph{native} configuration on
3763 machine @var{xyz}. In particular, this lists the required
3764 native-dependent object files, by defining @samp{NATDEPFILES=@dots{}}.
3765 Also specifies the header file which describes native support on
3766 @var{xyz}, by defining @samp{NAT_FILE= nm-@var{xyz}.h}. You can also
3767 define @samp{NAT_CFLAGS}, @samp{NAT_ADD_FILES}, @samp{NAT_CLIBS},
3768 @samp{NAT_CDEPS}, etc.; see @file{Makefile.in}.
3769
3770 @emph{Maintainer's note: The @file{.mh} suffix is because this file
3771 originally contained @file{Makefile} fragments for hosting @value{GDBN}
3772 on machine @var{xyz}. While the file is no longer used for this
3773 purpose, the @file{.mh} suffix remains. Perhaps someone will
3774 eventually rename these fragments so that they have a @file{.mn}
3775 suffix.}
3776
3777 @item gdb/config/@var{arch}/nm-@var{xyz}.h
3778 (@file{nm.h} is a link to this file, created by @code{configure}). Contains C
3779 macro definitions describing the native system environment, such as
3780 child process control and core file support.
3781
3782 @item gdb/@var{xyz}-nat.c
3783 Contains any miscellaneous C code required for this native support of
3784 this machine. On some machines it doesn't exist at all.
3785 @end table
3786
3787 There are some ``generic'' versions of routines that can be used by
3788 various systems. These can be customized in various ways by macros
3789 defined in your @file{nm-@var{xyz}.h} file. If these routines work for
3790 the @var{xyz} host, you can just include the generic file's name (with
3791 @samp{.o}, not @samp{.c}) in @code{NATDEPFILES}.
3792
3793 Otherwise, if your machine needs custom support routines, you will need
3794 to write routines that perform the same functions as the generic file.
3795 Put them into @file{@var{xyz}-nat.c}, and put @file{@var{xyz}-nat.o}
3796 into @code{NATDEPFILES}.
3797
3798 @table @file
3799 @item inftarg.c
3800 This contains the @emph{target_ops vector} that supports Unix child
3801 processes on systems which use ptrace and wait to control the child.
3802
3803 @item procfs.c
3804 This contains the @emph{target_ops vector} that supports Unix child
3805 processes on systems which use /proc to control the child.
3806
3807 @item fork-child.c
3808 This does the low-level grunge that uses Unix system calls to do a ``fork
3809 and exec'' to start up a child process.
3810
3811 @item infptrace.c
3812 This is the low level interface to inferior processes for systems using
3813 the Unix @code{ptrace} call in a vanilla way.
3814 @end table
3815
3816 @section Native core file Support
3817 @cindex native core files
3818
3819 @table @file
3820 @findex fetch_core_registers
3821 @item core-aout.c::fetch_core_registers()
3822 Support for reading registers out of a core file. This routine calls
3823 @code{register_addr()}, see below. Now that BFD is used to read core
3824 files, virtually all machines should use @code{core-aout.c}, and should
3825 just provide @code{fetch_core_registers} in @code{@var{xyz}-nat.c} (or
3826 @code{REGISTER_U_ADDR} in @code{nm-@var{xyz}.h}).
3827
3828 @item core-aout.c::register_addr()
3829 If your @code{nm-@var{xyz}.h} file defines the macro
3830 @code{REGISTER_U_ADDR(addr, blockend, regno)}, it should be defined to
3831 set @code{addr} to the offset within the @samp{user} struct of @value{GDBN}
3832 register number @code{regno}. @code{blockend} is the offset within the
3833 ``upage'' of @code{u.u_ar0}. If @code{REGISTER_U_ADDR} is defined,
3834 @file{core-aout.c} will define the @code{register_addr()} function and
3835 use the macro in it. If you do not define @code{REGISTER_U_ADDR}, but
3836 you are using the standard @code{fetch_core_registers()}, you will need
3837 to define your own version of @code{register_addr()}, put it into your
3838 @code{@var{xyz}-nat.c} file, and be sure @code{@var{xyz}-nat.o} is in
3839 the @code{NATDEPFILES} list. If you have your own
3840 @code{fetch_core_registers()}, you may not need a separate
3841 @code{register_addr()}. Many custom @code{fetch_core_registers()}
3842 implementations simply locate the registers themselves.@refill
3843 @end table
3844
3845 When making @value{GDBN} run native on a new operating system, to make it
3846 possible to debug core files, you will need to either write specific
3847 code for parsing your OS's core files, or customize
3848 @file{bfd/trad-core.c}. First, use whatever @code{#include} files your
3849 machine uses to define the struct of registers that is accessible
3850 (possibly in the u-area) in a core file (rather than
3851 @file{machine/reg.h}), and an include file that defines whatever header
3852 exists on a core file (e.g. the u-area or a @code{struct core}). Then
3853 modify @code{trad_unix_core_file_p} to use these values to set up the
3854 section information for the data segment, stack segment, any other
3855 segments in the core file (perhaps shared library contents or control
3856 information), ``registers'' segment, and if there are two discontiguous
3857 sets of registers (e.g. integer and float), the ``reg2'' segment. This
3858 section information basically delimits areas in the core file in a
3859 standard way, which the section-reading routines in BFD know how to seek
3860 around in.
3861
3862 Then back in @value{GDBN}, you need a matching routine called
3863 @code{fetch_core_registers}. If you can use the generic one, it's in
3864 @file{core-aout.c}; if not, it's in your @file{@var{xyz}-nat.c} file.
3865 It will be passed a char pointer to the entire ``registers'' segment,
3866 its length, and a zero; or a char pointer to the entire ``regs2''
3867 segment, its length, and a 2. The routine should suck out the supplied
3868 register values and install them into @value{GDBN}'s ``registers'' array.
3869
3870 If your system uses @file{/proc} to control processes, and uses ELF
3871 format core files, then you may be able to use the same routines for
3872 reading the registers out of processes and out of core files.
3873
3874 @section ptrace
3875
3876 @section /proc
3877
3878 @section win32
3879
3880 @section shared libraries
3881
3882 @section Native Conditionals
3883 @cindex native conditionals
3884
3885 When @value{GDBN} is configured and compiled, various macros are
3886 defined or left undefined, to control compilation when the host and
3887 target systems are the same. These macros should be defined (or left
3888 undefined) in @file{nm-@var{system}.h}.
3889
3890 @table @code
3891 @item ATTACH_DETACH
3892 @findex ATTACH_DETACH
3893 If defined, then @value{GDBN} will include support for the @code{attach} and
3894 @code{detach} commands.
3895
3896 @item CHILD_PREPARE_TO_STORE
3897 @findex CHILD_PREPARE_TO_STORE
3898 If the machine stores all registers at once in the child process, then
3899 define this to ensure that all values are correct. This usually entails
3900 a read from the child.
3901
3902 [Note that this is incorrectly defined in @file{xm-@var{system}.h} files
3903 currently.]
3904
3905 @item FETCH_INFERIOR_REGISTERS
3906 @findex FETCH_INFERIOR_REGISTERS
3907 Define this if the native-dependent code will provide its own routines
3908 @code{fetch_inferior_registers} and @code{store_inferior_registers} in
3909 @file{@var{host}-nat.c}. If this symbol is @emph{not} defined, and
3910 @file{infptrace.c} is included in this configuration, the default
3911 routines in @file{infptrace.c} are used for these functions.
3912
3913 @item FILES_INFO_HOOK
3914 @findex FILES_INFO_HOOK
3915 (Only defined for Convex.)
3916
3917 @item FP0_REGNUM
3918 @findex FP0_REGNUM
3919 This macro is normally defined to be the number of the first floating
3920 point register, if the machine has such registers. As such, it would
3921 appear only in target-specific code. However, @file{/proc} support uses this
3922 to decide whether floats are in use on this target.
3923
3924 @item GET_LONGJMP_TARGET
3925 @findex GET_LONGJMP_TARGET
3926 For most machines, this is a target-dependent parameter. On the
3927 DECstation and the Iris, this is a native-dependent parameter, since
3928 @file{setjmp.h} is needed to define it.
3929
3930 This macro determines the target PC address that @code{longjmp} will jump to,
3931 assuming that we have just stopped at a longjmp breakpoint. It takes a
3932 @code{CORE_ADDR *} as argument, and stores the target PC value through this
3933 pointer. It examines the current state of the machine as needed.
3934
3935 @item I386_USE_GENERIC_WATCHPOINTS
3936 An x86-based machine can define this to use the generic x86 watchpoint
3937 support; see @ref{Algorithms, I386_USE_GENERIC_WATCHPOINTS}.
3938
3939 @item KERNEL_U_ADDR
3940 @findex KERNEL_U_ADDR
3941 Define this to the address of the @code{u} structure (the ``user
3942 struct'', also known as the ``u-page'') in kernel virtual memory. @value{GDBN}
3943 needs to know this so that it can subtract this address from absolute
3944 addresses in the upage, that are obtained via ptrace or from core files.
3945 On systems that don't need this value, set it to zero.
3946
3947 @item KERNEL_U_ADDR_BSD
3948 @findex KERNEL_U_ADDR_BSD
3949 Define this to cause @value{GDBN} to determine the address of @code{u} at
3950 runtime, by using Berkeley-style @code{nlist} on the kernel's image in
3951 the root directory.
3952
3953 @item KERNEL_U_ADDR_HPUX
3954 @findex KERNEL_U_ADDR_HPUX
3955 Define this to cause @value{GDBN} to determine the address of @code{u} at
3956 runtime, by using HP-style @code{nlist} on the kernel's image in the
3957 root directory.
3958
3959 @item ONE_PROCESS_WRITETEXT
3960 @findex ONE_PROCESS_WRITETEXT
3961 Define this to be able to, when a breakpoint insertion fails, warn the
3962 user that another process may be running with the same executable.
3963
3964 @item PREPARE_TO_PROCEED (@var{select_it})
3965 @findex PREPARE_TO_PROCEED
3966 This (ugly) macro allows a native configuration to customize the way the
3967 @code{proceed} function in @file{infrun.c} deals with switching between
3968 threads.
3969
3970 In a multi-threaded task we may select another thread and then continue
3971 or step. But if the old thread was stopped at a breakpoint, it will
3972 immediately cause another breakpoint stop without any execution (i.e. it
3973 will report a breakpoint hit incorrectly). So @value{GDBN} must step over it
3974 first.
3975
3976 If defined, @code{PREPARE_TO_PROCEED} should check the current thread
3977 against the thread that reported the most recent event. If a step-over
3978 is required, it returns TRUE. If @var{select_it} is non-zero, it should
3979 reselect the old thread.
3980
3981 @item PROC_NAME_FMT
3982 @findex PROC_NAME_FMT
3983 Defines the format for the name of a @file{/proc} device. Should be
3984 defined in @file{nm.h} @emph{only} in order to override the default
3985 definition in @file{procfs.c}.
3986
3987 @item PTRACE_FP_BUG
3988 @findex PTRACE_FP_BUG
3989 See @file{mach386-xdep.c}.
3990
3991 @item PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE
3992 @findex PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE
3993 The type of the third argument to the @code{ptrace} system call, if it
3994 exists and is different from @code{int}.
3995
3996 @item REGISTER_U_ADDR
3997 @findex REGISTER_U_ADDR
3998 Defines the offset of the registers in the ``u area''.
3999
4000 @item SHELL_COMMAND_CONCAT
4001 @findex SHELL_COMMAND_CONCAT
4002 If defined, is a string to prefix on the shell command used to start the
4003 inferior.
4004
4005 @item SHELL_FILE
4006 @findex SHELL_FILE
4007 If defined, this is the name of the shell to use to run the inferior.
4008 Defaults to @code{"/bin/sh"}.
4009
4010 @item SOLIB_ADD (@var{filename}, @var{from_tty}, @var{targ}, @var{readsyms})
4011 @findex SOLIB_ADD
4012 Define this to expand into an expression that will cause the symbols in
4013 @var{filename} to be added to @value{GDBN}'s symbol table. If
4014 @var{readsyms} is zero symbols are not read but any necessary low level
4015 processing for @var{filename} is still done.
4016
4017 @item SOLIB_CREATE_INFERIOR_HOOK
4018 @findex SOLIB_CREATE_INFERIOR_HOOK
4019 Define this to expand into any shared-library-relocation code that you
4020 want to be run just after the child process has been forked.
4021
4022 @item START_INFERIOR_TRAPS_EXPECTED
4023 @findex START_INFERIOR_TRAPS_EXPECTED
4024 When starting an inferior, @value{GDBN} normally expects to trap
4025 twice; once when
4026 the shell execs, and once when the program itself execs. If the actual
4027 number of traps is something other than 2, then define this macro to
4028 expand into the number expected.
4029
4030 @item SVR4_SHARED_LIBS
4031 @findex SVR4_SHARED_LIBS
4032 Define this to indicate that SVR4-style shared libraries are in use.
4033
4034 @item USE_PROC_FS
4035 @findex USE_PROC_FS
4036 This determines whether small routines in @file{*-tdep.c}, which
4037 translate register values between @value{GDBN}'s internal
4038 representation and the @file{/proc} representation, are compiled.
4039
4040 @item U_REGS_OFFSET
4041 @findex U_REGS_OFFSET
4042 This is the offset of the registers in the upage. It need only be
4043 defined if the generic ptrace register access routines in
4044 @file{infptrace.c} are being used (that is, @file{infptrace.c} is
4045 configured in, and @code{FETCH_INFERIOR_REGISTERS} is not defined). If
4046 the default value from @file{infptrace.c} is good enough, leave it
4047 undefined.
4048
4049 The default value means that u.u_ar0 @emph{points to} the location of
4050 the registers. I'm guessing that @code{#define U_REGS_OFFSET 0} means
4051 that @code{u.u_ar0} @emph{is} the location of the registers.
4052
4053 @item CLEAR_SOLIB
4054 @findex CLEAR_SOLIB
4055 See @file{objfiles.c}.
4056
4057 @item DEBUG_PTRACE
4058 @findex DEBUG_PTRACE
4059 Define this to debug @code{ptrace} calls.
4060 @end table
4061
4062
4063 @node Support Libraries
4064
4065 @chapter Support Libraries
4066
4067 @section BFD
4068 @cindex BFD library
4069
4070 BFD provides support for @value{GDBN} in several ways:
4071
4072 @table @emph
4073 @item identifying executable and core files
4074 BFD will identify a variety of file types, including a.out, coff, and
4075 several variants thereof, as well as several kinds of core files.
4076
4077 @item access to sections of files
4078 BFD parses the file headers to determine the names, virtual addresses,
4079 sizes, and file locations of all the various named sections in files
4080 (such as the text section or the data section). @value{GDBN} simply
4081 calls BFD to read or write section @var{x} at byte offset @var{y} for
4082 length @var{z}.
4083
4084 @item specialized core file support
4085 BFD provides routines to determine the failing command name stored in a
4086 core file, the signal with which the program failed, and whether a core
4087 file matches (i.e.@: could be a core dump of) a particular executable
4088 file.
4089
4090 @item locating the symbol information
4091 @value{GDBN} uses an internal interface of BFD to determine where to find the
4092 symbol information in an executable file or symbol-file. @value{GDBN} itself
4093 handles the reading of symbols, since BFD does not ``understand'' debug
4094 symbols, but @value{GDBN} uses BFD's cached information to find the symbols,
4095 string table, etc.
4096 @end table
4097
4098 @section opcodes
4099 @cindex opcodes library
4100
4101 The opcodes library provides @value{GDBN}'s disassembler. (It's a separate
4102 library because it's also used in binutils, for @file{objdump}).
4103
4104 @section readline
4105
4106 @section mmalloc
4107
4108 @section libiberty
4109
4110 @section gnu-regex
4111 @cindex regular expressions library
4112
4113 Regex conditionals.
4114
4115 @table @code
4116 @item C_ALLOCA
4117
4118 @item NFAILURES
4119
4120 @item RE_NREGS
4121
4122 @item SIGN_EXTEND_CHAR
4123
4124 @item SWITCH_ENUM_BUG
4125
4126 @item SYNTAX_TABLE
4127
4128 @item Sword
4129
4130 @item sparc
4131 @end table
4132
4133 @section include
4134
4135 @node Coding
4136
4137 @chapter Coding
4138
4139 This chapter covers topics that are lower-level than the major
4140 algorithms of @value{GDBN}.
4141
4142 @section Cleanups
4143 @cindex cleanups
4144
4145 Cleanups are a structured way to deal with things that need to be done
4146 later.
4147
4148 When your code does something (e.g., @code{xmalloc} some memory, or
4149 @code{open} a file) that needs to be undone later (e.g., @code{xfree}
4150 the memory or @code{close} the file), it can make a cleanup. The
4151 cleanup will be done at some future point: when the command is finished
4152 and control returns to the top level; when an error occurs and the stack
4153 is unwound; or when your code decides it's time to explicitly perform
4154 cleanups. Alternatively you can elect to discard the cleanups you
4155 created.
4156
4157 Syntax:
4158
4159 @table @code
4160 @item struct cleanup *@var{old_chain};
4161 Declare a variable which will hold a cleanup chain handle.
4162
4163 @findex make_cleanup
4164 @item @var{old_chain} = make_cleanup (@var{function}, @var{arg});
4165 Make a cleanup which will cause @var{function} to be called with
4166 @var{arg} (a @code{char *}) later. The result, @var{old_chain}, is a
4167 handle that can later be passed to @code{do_cleanups} or
4168 @code{discard_cleanups}. Unless you are going to call
4169 @code{do_cleanups} or @code{discard_cleanups}, you can ignore the result
4170 from @code{make_cleanup}.
4171
4172 @findex do_cleanups
4173 @item do_cleanups (@var{old_chain});
4174 Do all cleanups added to the chain since the corresponding
4175 @code{make_cleanup} call was made.
4176
4177 @findex discard_cleanups
4178 @item discard_cleanups (@var{old_chain});
4179 Same as @code{do_cleanups} except that it just removes the cleanups from
4180 the chain and does not call the specified functions.
4181 @end table
4182
4183 Cleanups are implemented as a chain. The handle returned by
4184 @code{make_cleanups} includes the cleanup passed to the call and any
4185 later cleanups appended to the chain (but not yet discarded or
4186 performed). E.g.:
4187
4188 @example
4189 make_cleanup (a, 0);
4190 @{
4191 struct cleanup *old = make_cleanup (b, 0);
4192 make_cleanup (c, 0)
4193 ...
4194 do_cleanups (old);
4195 @}
4196 @end example
4197
4198 @noindent
4199 will call @code{c()} and @code{b()} but will not call @code{a()}. The
4200 cleanup that calls @code{a()} will remain in the cleanup chain, and will
4201 be done later unless otherwise discarded.@refill
4202
4203 Your function should explicitly do or discard the cleanups it creates.
4204 Failing to do this leads to non-deterministic behavior since the caller
4205 will arbitrarily do or discard your functions cleanups. This need leads
4206 to two common cleanup styles.
4207
4208 The first style is try/finally. Before it exits, your code-block calls
4209 @code{do_cleanups} with the old cleanup chain and thus ensures that your
4210 code-block's cleanups are always performed. For instance, the following
4211 code-segment avoids a memory leak problem (even when @code{error} is
4212 called and a forced stack unwind occurs) by ensuring that the
4213 @code{xfree} will always be called:
4214
4215 @example
4216 struct cleanup *old = make_cleanup (null_cleanup, 0);
4217 data = xmalloc (sizeof blah);
4218 make_cleanup (xfree, data);
4219 ... blah blah ...
4220 do_cleanups (old);
4221 @end example
4222
4223 The second style is try/except. Before it exits, your code-block calls
4224 @code{discard_cleanups} with the old cleanup chain and thus ensures that
4225 any created cleanups are not performed. For instance, the following
4226 code segment, ensures that the file will be closed but only if there is
4227 an error:
4228
4229 @example
4230 FILE *file = fopen ("afile", "r");
4231 struct cleanup *old = make_cleanup (close_file, file);
4232 ... blah blah ...
4233 discard_cleanups (old);
4234 return file;
4235 @end example
4236
4237 Some functions, e.g. @code{fputs_filtered()} or @code{error()}, specify
4238 that they ``should not be called when cleanups are not in place''. This
4239 means that any actions you need to reverse in the case of an error or
4240 interruption must be on the cleanup chain before you call these
4241 functions, since they might never return to your code (they
4242 @samp{longjmp} instead).
4243
4244 @section Wrapping Output Lines
4245 @cindex line wrap in output
4246
4247 @findex wrap_here
4248 Output that goes through @code{printf_filtered} or @code{fputs_filtered}
4249 or @code{fputs_demangled} needs only to have calls to @code{wrap_here}
4250 added in places that would be good breaking points. The utility
4251 routines will take care of actually wrapping if the line width is
4252 exceeded.
4253
4254 The argument to @code{wrap_here} is an indentation string which is
4255 printed @emph{only} if the line breaks there. This argument is saved
4256 away and used later. It must remain valid until the next call to
4257 @code{wrap_here} or until a newline has been printed through the
4258 @code{*_filtered} functions. Don't pass in a local variable and then
4259 return!
4260
4261 It is usually best to call @code{wrap_here} after printing a comma or
4262 space. If you call it before printing a space, make sure that your
4263 indentation properly accounts for the leading space that will print if
4264 the line wraps there.
4265
4266 Any function or set of functions that produce filtered output must
4267 finish by printing a newline, to flush the wrap buffer, before switching
4268 to unfiltered (@code{printf}) output. Symbol reading routines that
4269 print warnings are a good example.
4270
4271 @section @value{GDBN} Coding Standards
4272 @cindex coding standards
4273
4274 @value{GDBN} follows the GNU coding standards, as described in
4275 @file{etc/standards.texi}. This file is also available for anonymous
4276 FTP from GNU archive sites. @value{GDBN} takes a strict interpretation
4277 of the standard; in general, when the GNU standard recommends a practice
4278 but does not require it, @value{GDBN} requires it.
4279
4280 @value{GDBN} follows an additional set of coding standards specific to
4281 @value{GDBN}, as described in the following sections.
4282
4283
4284 @subsection ISO-C
4285
4286 @value{GDBN} assumes an ISO-C compliant compiler.
4287
4288 @value{GDBN} does not assume an ISO-C or POSIX compliant C library.
4289
4290
4291 @subsection Memory Management
4292
4293 @value{GDBN} does not use the functions @code{malloc}, @code{realloc},
4294 @code{calloc}, @code{free} and @code{asprintf}.
4295
4296 @value{GDBN} uses the functions @code{xmalloc}, @code{xrealloc} and
4297 @code{xcalloc} when allocating memory. Unlike @code{malloc} et.al.@:
4298 these functions do not return when the memory pool is empty. Instead,
4299 they unwind the stack using cleanups. These functions return
4300 @code{NULL} when requested to allocate a chunk of memory of size zero.
4301
4302 @emph{Pragmatics: By using these functions, the need to check every
4303 memory allocation is removed. These functions provide portable
4304 behavior.}
4305
4306 @value{GDBN} does not use the function @code{free}.
4307
4308 @value{GDBN} uses the function @code{xfree} to return memory to the
4309 memory pool. Consistent with ISO-C, this function ignores a request to
4310 free a @code{NULL} pointer.
4311
4312 @emph{Pragmatics: On some systems @code{free} fails when passed a
4313 @code{NULL} pointer.}
4314
4315 @value{GDBN} can use the non-portable function @code{alloca} for the
4316 allocation of small temporary values (such as strings).
4317
4318 @emph{Pragmatics: This function is very non-portable. Some systems
4319 restrict the memory being allocated to no more than a few kilobytes.}
4320
4321 @value{GDBN} uses the string function @code{xstrdup} and the print
4322 function @code{xasprintf}.
4323
4324 @emph{Pragmatics: @code{asprintf} and @code{strdup} can fail. Print
4325 functions such as @code{sprintf} are very prone to buffer overflow
4326 errors.}
4327
4328
4329 @subsection Compiler Warnings
4330 @cindex compiler warnings
4331
4332 With few exceptions, developers should include the configuration option
4333 @samp{--enable-gdb-build-warnings=,-Werror} when building @value{GDBN}.
4334 The exceptions are listed in the file @file{gdb/MAINTAINERS}.
4335
4336 This option causes @value{GDBN} (when built using GCC) to be compiled
4337 with a carefully selected list of compiler warning flags. Any warnings
4338 from those flags being treated as errors.
4339
4340 The current list of warning flags includes:
4341
4342 @table @samp
4343 @item -Wimplicit
4344 Since @value{GDBN} coding standard requires all functions to be declared
4345 using a prototype, the flag has the side effect of ensuring that
4346 prototyped functions are always visible with out resorting to
4347 @samp{-Wstrict-prototypes}.
4348
4349 @item -Wreturn-type
4350 Such code often appears to work except on instruction set architectures
4351 that use register windows.
4352
4353 @item -Wcomment
4354
4355 @item -Wtrigraphs
4356
4357 @item -Wformat
4358 Since @value{GDBN} uses the @code{format printf} attribute on all
4359 @code{printf} like functions this checks not just @code{printf} calls
4360 but also calls to functions such as @code{fprintf_unfiltered}.
4361
4362 @item -Wparentheses
4363 This warning includes uses of the assignment operator within an
4364 @code{if} statement.
4365
4366 @item -Wpointer-arith
4367
4368 @item -Wuninitialized
4369 @end table
4370
4371 @emph{Pragmatics: Due to the way that @value{GDBN} is implemented most
4372 functions have unused parameters. Consequently the warning
4373 @samp{-Wunused-parameter} is precluded from the list. The macro
4374 @code{ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED} is not used as it leads to false negatives ---
4375 it is not an error to have @code{ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED} on a parameter that
4376 is being used. The options @samp{-Wall} and @samp{-Wunused} are also
4377 precluded because they both include @samp{-Wunused-parameter}.}
4378
4379 @emph{Pragmatics: @value{GDBN} has not simply accepted the warnings
4380 enabled by @samp{-Wall -Werror -W...}. Instead it is selecting warnings
4381 when and where their benefits can be demonstrated.}
4382
4383 @subsection Formatting
4384
4385 @cindex source code formatting
4386 The standard GNU recommendations for formatting must be followed
4387 strictly.
4388
4389 A function declaration should not have its name in column zero. A
4390 function definition should have its name in column zero.
4391
4392 @example
4393 /* Declaration */
4394 static void foo (void);
4395 /* Definition */
4396 void
4397 foo (void)
4398 @{
4399 @}
4400 @end example
4401
4402 @emph{Pragmatics: This simplifies scripting. Function definitions can
4403 be found using @samp{^function-name}.}
4404
4405 There must be a space between a function or macro name and the opening
4406 parenthesis of its argument list (except for macro definitions, as
4407 required by C). There must not be a space after an open paren/bracket
4408 or before a close paren/bracket.
4409
4410 While additional whitespace is generally helpful for reading, do not use
4411 more than one blank line to separate blocks, and avoid adding whitespace
4412 after the end of a program line (as of 1/99, some 600 lines had
4413 whitespace after the semicolon). Excess whitespace causes difficulties
4414 for @code{diff} and @code{patch} utilities.
4415
4416 Pointers are declared using the traditional K&R C style:
4417
4418 @example
4419 void *foo;
4420 @end example
4421
4422 @noindent
4423 and not:
4424
4425 @example
4426 void * foo;
4427 void* foo;
4428 @end example
4429
4430 @subsection Comments
4431
4432 @cindex comment formatting
4433 The standard GNU requirements on comments must be followed strictly.
4434
4435 Block comments must appear in the following form, with no @code{/*}- or
4436 @code{*/}-only lines, and no leading @code{*}:
4437
4438 @example
4439 /* Wait for control to return from inferior to debugger. If inferior
4440 gets a signal, we may decide to start it up again instead of
4441 returning. That is why there is a loop in this function. When
4442 this function actually returns it means the inferior should be left
4443 stopped and @value{GDBN} should read more commands. */
4444 @end example
4445
4446 (Note that this format is encouraged by Emacs; tabbing for a multi-line
4447 comment works correctly, and @kbd{M-q} fills the block consistently.)
4448
4449 Put a blank line between the block comments preceding function or
4450 variable definitions, and the definition itself.
4451
4452 In general, put function-body comments on lines by themselves, rather
4453 than trying to fit them into the 20 characters left at the end of a
4454 line, since either the comment or the code will inevitably get longer
4455 than will fit, and then somebody will have to move it anyhow.
4456
4457 @subsection C Usage
4458
4459 @cindex C data types
4460 Code must not depend on the sizes of C data types, the format of the
4461 host's floating point numbers, the alignment of anything, or the order
4462 of evaluation of expressions.
4463
4464 @cindex function usage
4465 Use functions freely. There are only a handful of compute-bound areas
4466 in @value{GDBN} that might be affected by the overhead of a function
4467 call, mainly in symbol reading. Most of @value{GDBN}'s performance is
4468 limited by the target interface (whether serial line or system call).
4469
4470 However, use functions with moderation. A thousand one-line functions
4471 are just as hard to understand as a single thousand-line function.
4472
4473 @emph{Macros are bad, M'kay.}
4474 (But if you have to use a macro, make sure that the macro arguments are
4475 protected with parentheses.)
4476
4477 @cindex types
4478
4479 Declarations like @samp{struct foo *} should be used in preference to
4480 declarations like @samp{typedef struct foo @{ @dots{} @} *foo_ptr}.
4481
4482
4483 @subsection Function Prototypes
4484 @cindex function prototypes
4485
4486 Prototypes must be used when both @emph{declaring} and @emph{defining}
4487 a function. Prototypes for @value{GDBN} functions must include both the
4488 argument type and name, with the name matching that used in the actual
4489 function definition.
4490
4491 All external functions should have a declaration in a header file that
4492 callers include, except for @code{_initialize_*} functions, which must
4493 be external so that @file{init.c} construction works, but shouldn't be
4494 visible to random source files.
4495
4496 Where a source file needs a forward declaration of a static function,
4497 that declaration must appear in a block near the top of the source file.
4498
4499
4500 @subsection Internal Error Recovery
4501
4502 During its execution, @value{GDBN} can encounter two types of errors.
4503 User errors and internal errors. User errors include not only a user
4504 entering an incorrect command but also problems arising from corrupt
4505 object files and system errors when interacting with the target.
4506 Internal errors include situations where @value{GDBN} has detected, at
4507 run time, a corrupt or erroneous situation.
4508
4509 When reporting an internal error, @value{GDBN} uses
4510 @code{internal_error} and @code{gdb_assert}.
4511
4512 @value{GDBN} must not call @code{abort} or @code{assert}.
4513
4514 @emph{Pragmatics: There is no @code{internal_warning} function. Either
4515 the code detected a user error, recovered from it and issued a
4516 @code{warning} or the code failed to correctly recover from the user
4517 error and issued an @code{internal_error}.}
4518
4519 @subsection File Names
4520
4521 Any file used when building the core of @value{GDBN} must be in lower
4522 case. Any file used when building the core of @value{GDBN} must be 8.3
4523 unique. These requirements apply to both source and generated files.
4524
4525 @emph{Pragmatics: The core of @value{GDBN} must be buildable on many
4526 platforms including DJGPP and MacOS/HFS. Every time an unfriendly file
4527 is introduced to the build process both @file{Makefile.in} and
4528 @file{configure.in} need to be modified accordingly. Compare the
4529 convoluted conversion process needed to transform @file{COPYING} into
4530 @file{copying.c} with the conversion needed to transform
4531 @file{version.in} into @file{version.c}.}
4532
4533 Any file non 8.3 compliant file (that is not used when building the core
4534 of @value{GDBN}) must be added to @file{gdb/config/djgpp/fnchange.lst}.
4535
4536 @emph{Pragmatics: This is clearly a compromise.}
4537
4538 When @value{GDBN} has a local version of a system header file (ex
4539 @file{string.h}) the file name based on the POSIX header prefixed with
4540 @file{gdb_} (@file{gdb_string.h}).
4541
4542 For other files @samp{-} is used as the separator.
4543
4544
4545 @subsection Include Files
4546
4547 All @file{.c} files should include @file{defs.h} first.
4548
4549 All @file{.c} files should explicitly include the headers for any
4550 declarations they refer to. They should not rely on files being
4551 included indirectly.
4552
4553 With the exception of the global definitions supplied by @file{defs.h},
4554 a header file should explicitly include the header declaring any
4555 @code{typedefs} et.al.@: it refers to.
4556
4557 @code{extern} declarations should never appear in @code{.c} files.
4558
4559 All include files should be wrapped in:
4560
4561 @example
4562 #ifndef INCLUDE_FILE_NAME_H
4563 #define INCLUDE_FILE_NAME_H
4564 header body
4565 #endif
4566 @end example
4567
4568
4569 @subsection Clean Design and Portable Implementation
4570
4571 @cindex design
4572 In addition to getting the syntax right, there's the little question of
4573 semantics. Some things are done in certain ways in @value{GDBN} because long
4574 experience has shown that the more obvious ways caused various kinds of
4575 trouble.
4576
4577 @cindex assumptions about targets
4578 You can't assume the byte order of anything that comes from a target
4579 (including @var{value}s, object files, and instructions). Such things
4580 must be byte-swapped using @code{SWAP_TARGET_AND_HOST} in
4581 @value{GDBN}, or one of the swap routines defined in @file{bfd.h},
4582 such as @code{bfd_get_32}.
4583
4584 You can't assume that you know what interface is being used to talk to
4585 the target system. All references to the target must go through the
4586 current @code{target_ops} vector.
4587
4588 You can't assume that the host and target machines are the same machine
4589 (except in the ``native'' support modules). In particular, you can't
4590 assume that the target machine's header files will be available on the
4591 host machine. Target code must bring along its own header files --
4592 written from scratch or explicitly donated by their owner, to avoid
4593 copyright problems.
4594
4595 @cindex portability
4596 Insertion of new @code{#ifdef}'s will be frowned upon. It's much better
4597 to write the code portably than to conditionalize it for various
4598 systems.
4599
4600 @cindex system dependencies
4601 New @code{#ifdef}'s which test for specific compilers or manufacturers
4602 or operating systems are unacceptable. All @code{#ifdef}'s should test
4603 for features. The information about which configurations contain which
4604 features should be segregated into the configuration files. Experience
4605 has proven far too often that a feature unique to one particular system
4606 often creeps into other systems; and that a conditional based on some
4607 predefined macro for your current system will become worthless over
4608 time, as new versions of your system come out that behave differently
4609 with regard to this feature.
4610
4611 Adding code that handles specific architectures, operating systems,
4612 target interfaces, or hosts, is not acceptable in generic code.
4613
4614 @cindex portable file name handling
4615 @cindex file names, portability
4616 One particularly notorious area where system dependencies tend to
4617 creep in is handling of file names. The mainline @value{GDBN} code
4618 assumes Posix semantics of file names: absolute file names begin with
4619 a forward slash @file{/}, slashes are used to separate leading
4620 directories, case-sensitive file names. These assumptions are not
4621 necessarily true on non-Posix systems such as MS-Windows. To avoid
4622 system-dependent code where you need to take apart or construct a file
4623 name, use the following portable macros:
4624
4625 @table @code
4626 @findex HAVE_DOS_BASED_FILE_SYSTEM
4627 @item HAVE_DOS_BASED_FILE_SYSTEM
4628 This preprocessing symbol is defined to a non-zero value on hosts
4629 whose filesystems belong to the MS-DOS/MS-Windows family. Use this
4630 symbol to write conditional code which should only be compiled for
4631 such hosts.
4632
4633 @findex IS_DIR_SEPARATOR
4634 @item IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (@var{c}
4635 Evaluates to a non-zero value if @var{c} is a directory separator
4636 character. On Unix and GNU/Linux systems, only a slash @file{/} is
4637 such a character, but on Windows, both @file{/} and @file{\} will
4638 pass.
4639
4640 @findex IS_ABSOLUTE_PATH
4641 @item IS_ABSOLUTE_PATH (@var{file})
4642 Evaluates to a non-zero value if @var{file} is an absolute file name.
4643 For Unix and GNU/Linux hosts, a name which begins with a slash
4644 @file{/} is absolute. On DOS and Windows, @file{d:/foo} and
4645 @file{x:\bar} are also absolute file names.
4646
4647 @findex FILENAME_CMP
4648 @item FILENAME_CMP (@var{f1}, @var{f2})
4649 Calls a function which compares file names @var{f1} and @var{f2} as
4650 appropriate for the underlying host filesystem. For Posix systems,
4651 this simply calls @code{strcmp}; on case-insensitive filesystems it
4652 will call @code{strcasecmp} instead.
4653
4654 @findex DIRNAME_SEPARATOR
4655 @item DIRNAME_SEPARATOR
4656 Evaluates to a character which separates directories in
4657 @code{PATH}-style lists, typically held in environment variables.
4658 This character is @samp{:} on Unix, @samp{;} on DOS and Windows.
4659
4660 @findex SLASH_STRING
4661 @item SLASH_STRING
4662 This evaluates to a constant string you should use to produce an
4663 absolute filename from leading directories and the file's basename.
4664 @code{SLASH_STRING} is @code{"/"} on most systems, but might be
4665 @code{"\\"} for some Windows-based ports.
4666 @end table
4667
4668 In addition to using these macros, be sure to use portable library
4669 functions whenever possible. For example, to extract a directory or a
4670 basename part from a file name, use the @code{dirname} and
4671 @code{basename} library functions (available in @code{libiberty} for
4672 platforms which don't provide them), instead of searching for a slash
4673 with @code{strrchr}.
4674
4675 Another way to generalize @value{GDBN} along a particular interface is with an
4676 attribute struct. For example, @value{GDBN} has been generalized to handle
4677 multiple kinds of remote interfaces---not by @code{#ifdef}s everywhere, but
4678 by defining the @code{target_ops} structure and having a current target (as
4679 well as a stack of targets below it, for memory references). Whenever
4680 something needs to be done that depends on which remote interface we are
4681 using, a flag in the current target_ops structure is tested (e.g.,
4682 @code{target_has_stack}), or a function is called through a pointer in the
4683 current target_ops structure. In this way, when a new remote interface
4684 is added, only one module needs to be touched---the one that actually
4685 implements the new remote interface. Other examples of
4686 attribute-structs are BFD access to multiple kinds of object file
4687 formats, or @value{GDBN}'s access to multiple source languages.
4688
4689 Please avoid duplicating code. For example, in @value{GDBN} 3.x all
4690 the code interfacing between @code{ptrace} and the rest of
4691 @value{GDBN} was duplicated in @file{*-dep.c}, and so changing
4692 something was very painful. In @value{GDBN} 4.x, these have all been
4693 consolidated into @file{infptrace.c}. @file{infptrace.c} can deal
4694 with variations between systems the same way any system-independent
4695 file would (hooks, @code{#if defined}, etc.), and machines which are
4696 radically different don't need to use @file{infptrace.c} at all.
4697
4698 All debugging code must be controllable using the @samp{set debug
4699 @var{module}} command. Do not use @code{printf} to print trace
4700 messages. Use @code{fprintf_unfiltered(gdb_stdlog, ...}. Do not use
4701 @code{#ifdef DEBUG}.
4702
4703
4704 @node Porting GDB
4705
4706 @chapter Porting @value{GDBN}
4707 @cindex porting to new machines
4708
4709 Most of the work in making @value{GDBN} compile on a new machine is in
4710 specifying the configuration of the machine. This is done in a
4711 dizzying variety of header files and configuration scripts, which we
4712 hope to make more sensible soon. Let's say your new host is called an
4713 @var{xyz} (e.g., @samp{sun4}), and its full three-part configuration
4714 name is @code{@var{arch}-@var{xvend}-@var{xos}} (e.g.,
4715 @samp{sparc-sun-sunos4}). In particular:
4716
4717 @itemize @bullet
4718 @item
4719 In the top level directory, edit @file{config.sub} and add @var{arch},
4720 @var{xvend}, and @var{xos} to the lists of supported architectures,
4721 vendors, and operating systems near the bottom of the file. Also, add
4722 @var{xyz} as an alias that maps to
4723 @code{@var{arch}-@var{xvend}-@var{xos}}. You can test your changes by
4724 running
4725
4726 @example
4727 ./config.sub @var{xyz}
4728 @end example
4729
4730 @noindent
4731 and
4732
4733 @example
4734 ./config.sub @code{@var{arch}-@var{xvend}-@var{xos}}
4735 @end example
4736
4737 @noindent
4738 which should both respond with @code{@var{arch}-@var{xvend}-@var{xos}}
4739 and no error messages.
4740
4741 @noindent
4742 You need to port BFD, if that hasn't been done already. Porting BFD is
4743 beyond the scope of this manual.
4744
4745 @item
4746 To configure @value{GDBN} itself, edit @file{gdb/configure.host} to recognize
4747 your system and set @code{gdb_host} to @var{xyz}, and (unless your
4748 desired target is already available) also edit @file{gdb/configure.tgt},
4749 setting @code{gdb_target} to something appropriate (for instance,
4750 @var{xyz}).
4751
4752 @emph{Maintainer's note: Work in progress. The file
4753 @file{gdb/configure.host} originally needed to be modified when either a
4754 new native target or a new host machine was being added to @value{GDBN}.
4755 Recent changes have removed this requirement. The file now only needs
4756 to be modified when adding a new native configuration. This will likely
4757 changed again in the future.}
4758
4759 @item
4760 Finally, you'll need to specify and define @value{GDBN}'s host-, native-, and
4761 target-dependent @file{.h} and @file{.c} files used for your
4762 configuration.
4763 @end itemize
4764
4765 @section Configuring @value{GDBN} for Release
4766
4767 @cindex preparing a release
4768 @cindex making a distribution tarball
4769 From the top level directory (containing @file{gdb}, @file{bfd},
4770 @file{libiberty}, and so on):
4771
4772 @example
4773 make -f Makefile.in gdb.tar.gz
4774 @end example
4775
4776 @noindent
4777 This will properly configure, clean, rebuild any files that are
4778 distributed pre-built (e.g. @file{c-exp.tab.c} or @file{refcard.ps}),
4779 and will then make a tarfile. (If the top level directory has already
4780 been configured, you can just do @code{make gdb.tar.gz} instead.)
4781
4782 This procedure requires:
4783
4784 @itemize @bullet
4785
4786 @item
4787 symbolic links;
4788
4789 @item
4790 @code{makeinfo} (texinfo2 level);
4791
4792 @item
4793 @TeX{};
4794
4795 @item
4796 @code{dvips};
4797
4798 @item
4799 @code{yacc} or @code{bison}.
4800 @end itemize
4801
4802 @noindent
4803 @dots{} and the usual slew of utilities (@code{sed}, @code{tar}, etc.).
4804
4805 @subheading TEMPORARY RELEASE PROCEDURE FOR DOCUMENTATION
4806
4807 @file{gdb.texinfo} is currently marked up using the texinfo-2 macros,
4808 which are not yet a default for anything (but we have to start using
4809 them sometime).
4810
4811 For making paper, the only thing this implies is the right generation of
4812 @file{texinfo.tex} needs to be included in the distribution.
4813
4814 For making info files, however, rather than duplicating the texinfo2
4815 distribution, generate @file{gdb-all.texinfo} locally, and include the
4816 files @file{gdb.info*} in the distribution. Note the plural;
4817 @code{makeinfo} will split the document into one overall file and five
4818 or so included files.
4819
4820 @node Releasing GDB
4821
4822 @chapter Releasing @value{GDBN}
4823 @cindex making a new release of gdb
4824
4825 @section Branch Commit Policy
4826
4827 The branch commit policy is pretty slack. @value{GDBN} releases 5.0,
4828 5.1 and 5.2 all used the below:
4829
4830 @itemize @bullet
4831 @item
4832 The @file{gdb/MAINTAINERS} file still holds.
4833 @item
4834 Don't fix something on the branch unless/until it is also fixed in the
4835 trunk. If this isn't possible, mentioning it in the @file{gdb/PROBLEMS}
4836 file is better than committing a hack
4837 @item
4838 When considering a patch for the branch, suggested criteria include:
4839 Does it fix a build? Does it fix the sequence @kbd{break main; run}
4840 when debugging a static binary?
4841 @item
4842 The further a change is from the core of @value{GDBN}, the less likely
4843 the change will worry anyone (e.g., target specific code).
4844 @item
4845 Only post a proposal to change the core of @value{GDBN} after you've
4846 sent individual bribes to all the people listed in the
4847 @file{MAINTAINERS} file @t{;-)}
4848 @end itemize
4849
4850 @emph{Pragmatics: Provided updates are restricted to non-core
4851 functionality there is little chance that a broken change will be fatal.
4852 This means that changes such as adding a new architectures or (within
4853 reason) support for a new host are considered acceptable.}
4854
4855
4856 @section Obsolete any code
4857
4858 Before anything else, poke the other developers (and around the source
4859 code) to see there is anything that can be removed from @value{GDBN} (an
4860 old target, an unused file).
4861
4862 Obsolete code is identified by adding an @code{OBSOLETE} prefix to every
4863 line. Doing this means that it is easy to identify obsolete code when
4864 grepping through the sources.
4865
4866 The process has a number of steps and is intentionally slow --- this is
4867 to mainly ensure that people have had a reasonable chance to respond.
4868 Remember, everything on the internet takes a week.
4869
4870 @itemize @bullet
4871 @item
4872 announce the change on @email{gdb@@sources.redhat.com, GDB mailing list}
4873 @item
4874 wait a week or so
4875 @item
4876 announce the change on @email{gdb-announce@@sources.redhat.com, GDB
4877 Announcement mailing list}
4878 @item
4879 wait a week or so
4880 @item
4881 go through and edit all relevant files and lines (e.g., in
4882 @file{configure.tgt}) so that they are prefixed with the word
4883 @code{OBSOLETE}.
4884 @end itemize
4885
4886 @emph{Maintainer note: Removing old code, while regrettable, is a good
4887 thing. Firstly it helps the developers by removing code that is either
4888 no longer relevant or simply wrong. Secondly since it removes any
4889 history associated with the file (effectively clearing the slate) the
4890 developer has a much freer hand when it comes to fixing broken files.}
4891
4892 @section Before the branch
4893
4894 The most important objective at this stage is to find and fix simple
4895 changes that become a pain to track once the branch is created. For
4896 instance, configuration problems that stop @value{GDBN} from even
4897 building. If you can't get the problem fixed, document it in the
4898 @file{gdb/PROBLEMS} file.
4899
4900 @subheading Organize and announce the schedule.
4901
4902 The following is a possible schedule. It is based on the rule-of-thumb
4903 that everything on the Internet takes a week. You may want to even
4904 increase those times further since an analysis of the actual data
4905 strongly suggests that the below is far to aggressive.
4906
4907 @itemize @bullet
4908 @item
4909 announce it
4910 @item
4911 wait a week
4912 @item
4913 announce branch date
4914 @item
4915 wait a week
4916 @item
4917 Cut the branch
4918 @item
4919 wait a week
4920 @item
4921 start enjoying all the fun
4922 @end itemize
4923
4924 As an aside, the branch tag name is probably regrettable vis:
4925 @example
4926 gdb_N_M-YYYY-MM-DD-@{branch,branchpoint@}
4927 @end example
4928
4929 @subheading Refresh any imported files.
4930
4931 A number of files are taken from external repositories. They include:
4932
4933 @itemize @bullet
4934 @item
4935 @file{texinfo/texinfo.tex}
4936 @item
4937 @file{config.guess} et.@: al.@:
4938 @end itemize
4939
4940 and should be refreshed.
4941
4942 @subheading Prompt for @file{gdb/NEWS}
4943
4944 People always forget. Send a post reminding them but also if you know
4945 something interesting happened add it your self.
4946
4947 @subheading Review @file{gdb/README}
4948
4949 Grab one of the nightly snapshots and then walk through the
4950 @file{gdb/README} looking for anything that can be improved.
4951
4952 @subheading Check the ARI
4953
4954 ARI is an @code{awk} script (Awk Regression Indicator?) that checks for a
4955 number of errors and coding conventions. The checks include things like
4956 using @code{malloc} instead of @code{xmalloc} and file naming problems.
4957 There shouldn't be any regressions.
4958
4959 @section Cut the branch
4960
4961 @subheading The dirty work
4962
4963 I think something like the below was used:
4964
4965 @example
4966 $ d=`date -u +%Y-%m-%d`
4967 $ echo $d
4968 2002-01-24
4969 $ cvs -f -d /cvs/src rtag -D $d-gmt \
4970 gdb_5_1-$d-branchpoint insight+dejagnu
4971 $ cvs -f -d /cvs/src rtag -b -r gdb_V_V-$d-branchpoint \
4972 gdb_5_1-$d-branch insight+dejagnu
4973 $
4974 @end example
4975
4976 @itemize @bullet
4977 @item
4978 the @kbd{-D YYYY-MM-DD-gmt} forces the branch to an exact date/time.
4979 @item
4980 the trunk is first tagged so that the branch point can easily be found
4981 @item
4982 Insight (which includes GDB) and dejagnu are tagged at the same time
4983 @end itemize
4984
4985 @subheading Post the branch info
4986
4987 @subheading Update the web and news pages
4988
4989 @subheading Tweak cron to track the new branch
4990
4991 @section Stabilize the branch
4992
4993 Something goes here.
4994
4995 @section Create a Release
4996
4997 This procedure can be followed when creating beta and final final
4998 releases. With a beta many of the steps can be skipped.
4999
5000 @subheading Establish a few defaults.
5001
5002 @example
5003 $ b=gdb_5_1-2001-07-29-branch
5004 $ v=5.1.1
5005 $ t=/sourceware/snapshot-tmp/gdbadmin-tmp
5006 $ echo $t/$b/$v
5007 $ mkdir -p $t/$b/$v
5008 $ cd $t/$b/$v
5009 $ pwd
5010 /sourceware/snapshot-tmp/gdbadmin-tmp/gdb_5_1-2001-07-29-branch/5.1.1
5011 $ which autoconf
5012 /home/gdbadmin/bin/autoconf
5013 $
5014 @end example
5015
5016 NB: Check the autoconf version carefully. You want to be using the
5017 version taken from the binutils snapshot directory. It is most likely
5018 that your system's installed version (@file{/usr/bin}?) is probably
5019 correct.
5020
5021 @subheading Check out the relevant modules:
5022
5023 @example
5024 $ for m in gdb insight dejagnu
5025 do
5026 ( mkdir -p $m && cd $m && cvs -q -f -d /cvs/src co -P -r $b $m )
5027 done
5028 $
5029 @end example
5030
5031 NB: The reading of @file{.cvsrc} is disabled (@file{-f}) so that there
5032 isn't any confusion between what is written here and what your local CVS
5033 really does.
5034
5035 @subheading Update relevant files.
5036
5037 @subsubheading @file{gdb/NEWS}
5038
5039 Major releases get their comments added as part of the mainline. Minor
5040 releases should probably mention any significant bugs that were fixed.
5041
5042 Don't forget to update the ChangeLog.
5043
5044 @example
5045 $ emacs gdb/src/gdb/NEWS
5046 ...
5047 c-x 4 a
5048 ...
5049 c-x c-s c-x c-c
5050 $ cp gdb/src/gdb/NEWS insight/src/gdb/NEWS
5051 $ cp gdb/src/gdb/ChangeLog insight/src/gdb/ChangeLog
5052 @end example
5053
5054 @subsubheading @file{gdb/README}
5055
5056 You'll need to update: the version, the update date, and who did it.
5057
5058 @example
5059 $ emacs gdb/src/gdb/README
5060 ...
5061 c-x 4 a
5062 ...
5063 c-x c-s c-x c-c
5064 $ cp gdb/src/gdb/README insight/src/gdb/README
5065 $ cp gdb/src/gdb/ChangeLog insight/src/gdb/ChangeLog
5066 @end example
5067
5068 @emph{Maintainer note: Hopefully the README file was reviewed before the
5069 initial branch was cut so just a simple substitute is needed to get it
5070 updated.}
5071
5072 @emph{Maintainer note: Other projects generate @file{README} and
5073 @file{INSTALL} from the core documentation. This might be worth
5074 pursuing.}
5075
5076 @subsubheading @file{gdb/version.in}
5077
5078 @example
5079 $ echo $v > gdb/src/gdb/version.in
5080 $ emacs gdb/src/gdb/version.in
5081 ...
5082 c-x 4 a
5083 ...
5084 c-x c-s c-x c-c
5085 $ cp gdb/src/gdb/version.in insight/src/gdb/version.in
5086 $ cp gdb/src/gdb/ChangeLog insight/src/gdb/ChangeLog
5087 @end example
5088
5089 @subsubheading @file{dejagnu/src/dejagnu/configure.in}
5090
5091 Dejagnu is more complicated. The version number is a parameter to
5092 @var{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE}. Tweak it to read something like
5093 @var{gdb-5.1.1}.
5094
5095 Re-generate configure.
5096
5097 Add a ChangeLog.
5098
5099 @subheading Do the dirty work
5100
5101 This is identical to the process used when creating the daily snapshot.
5102
5103 @example
5104 $ for m in gdb insight dejagnu
5105 do
5106 ( cd $m/src && gmake -f Makefile.in $m.tar.bz2 )
5107 done
5108 @end example
5109
5110 @subheading Check the source files
5111
5112 You're looking for files that have mysteriously disappeared as the
5113 @kbd{distclean} has the habit of deleting files it shouldn't. Watch out
5114 for the @file{version.in} update @kbd{cronjob}.
5115
5116 @example
5117 $ ( cd gdb/src && cvs -f -q -n update )
5118 M djunpack.bat
5119 ? proto-toplev
5120 ? gdb-5.1.1.tar.bz2
5121 M gdb/ChangeLog
5122 M gdb/NEWS
5123 M gdb/README
5124 M gdb/version.in
5125 ? gdb/p-exp.tab.c
5126 ? gdb/doc/gdb.info-11
5127 ? gdb/doc/gdb.info-12
5128 ? gdb/doc/gdb.info-13
5129 ? gdb/doc/gdb.info-14
5130 ? gdb/doc/gdb.info-15
5131 ? gdb/doc/gdbint.info-4
5132 ? gdb/doc/gdbint.info-5
5133 $
5134 @end example
5135
5136 @emph{Don't worry about the @file{gdb.info-??} or
5137 @file{gdb/p-exp.tab.c}. They were generated (and yes @file{gdb.info-1}
5138 was also generated only something strange with CVS means that they
5139 didn't get supressed). Fixing it would be nice though.}
5140
5141 @subheading Re-pack the release with @code{gzip}
5142
5143 @example
5144 $ cp */*/*.bz2 .
5145 $ bunzip2 -k -v *.bz2
5146 $ gzip -9 -v *.tar
5147 @end example
5148
5149 NB: A pipe such as @kbd{bunzip2 < xxx.bz2 | gzip -9 > xxx.gz} shouldn't
5150 be used since, in that mode, gzip doesn't know the file name information
5151 and consequently can't include it. This is also why the release process
5152 runs @code{tar} and @code{bzip2} as separate passes.
5153
5154 @emph{Maintainer note: The release process could be changed to create
5155 @file{.tar} rather than @file{.tar.bz2} files.}
5156
5157 @section Check the release
5158
5159 Grab the @file{gdb.tar.bz2}, copy it to your local machine and then try
5160 a simple build using it.
5161
5162 If this is a pre-release just copy the @file{.bz2} files to the snapshot
5163 directory and skip the remaining steps.
5164
5165 If it is a final release, also make it available under a bogus name so
5166 that others can download and check it.
5167
5168 @emph{Maintainer note: This adds an extra day to the release process but
5169 is very much worth it. Other developers are given the opportunity to
5170 check that things like your @file{NEWS} entries are correct or that
5171 other changes actually work.}
5172
5173 @section Release the tar ball
5174
5175 This is where, unfortunately, the notes just get vague.
5176
5177 @subheading Install on sware
5178
5179 @example
5180 $ cp *.bz2 *.gz ~ftp/pub/gdb/releases
5181 @end example
5182
5183 @subheading Create and update the web pages.
5184
5185 Try the following:
5186
5187 @itemize @bullet
5188 @item
5189 create the directory @file{htdocs/@var{version}} (e.g., @file{htdocs/5.1.1}
5190 @item
5191 copy @file{index.html} and @file{ANNOUNCE} from the previous release
5192 into the @file{htdocs/@var{version}} directory and edit for content.
5193 Things like the MD5 sums, @kbd{ls -l} output, the version number and so
5194 on will need updating. Add NEWS entries to the @file{ANNOUNCE}. This
5195 ensures that the previous announcement is kept somewhere handy.
5196 @item
5197 copy the @file{NEWS} from the distro into the
5198 @file{htdocs/@var{version}} directory, trim down to just the most recent
5199 news items
5200 @item
5201 Add a short (identical) announcement to both @file{htdocs/index.html}
5202 and @file{htdocs/news/index.html}
5203 @item
5204 edit the script @file{htdocs/index.sh} to link in the new release
5205 number. Run it across all @file{index.html} files vis @kbd{./index.sh
5206 index.html */index.html}.
5207 @item
5208 grep the @file{htdocs} tree for references to the previous release
5209 version (@file{htdocs/download/index.html})
5210 @end itemize
5211
5212 @emph{Maintainer note: This step is too fragile --- it is too easy to
5213 mis one of the entries and forget to update it.}
5214
5215 @subheading Generate online docs
5216
5217 You need to find the magic command that is used to generate the online
5218 docs from the @file{.tar.bz2}. The best way is to look in the output
5219 from one of the nightly cronjobs and then just edit accordingly.
5220 Something like:
5221
5222 @example
5223 $ ~/ss/update-web-docs \
5224 ~ftp/pub/gdb/releases/gdb-5.1.1.tar.bz2 \
5225 $PWD/www \
5226 /www/sourceware/htdocs/gdb/5.1.1/onlinedocs \
5227 gdb
5228 @end example
5229
5230 @subheading Something about @file{ANNOUNCEMENT}
5231
5232 Send the @file{ANNOUNCEMENT} file you created above to:
5233
5234 @itemize @bullet
5235 @item
5236 @email{gdb-announce@@sources.redhat.com, GDB Announcement mailing list}
5237 @item
5238 The gnu announce list (but delay it a day or so to let things get out).
5239 @end itemize
5240
5241 @subheading Install it on GNU
5242
5243 At the time of writing, the GNU machine was @kbd{gnudist.gnu.org} in
5244 @file{~ftp/gnu/gdb} (I think, I'm still waiting for it to copy into my
5245 home directory).
5246
5247 @section Cleanup
5248
5249 @subheading Commit outstanding changes
5250
5251 In particular you'll need to commit the changes to:
5252
5253 @itemize @bullet
5254 @item
5255 @file{gdb/ChangeLog}
5256 @item
5257 @file{gdb/version.in}
5258 @item
5259 @file{gdb/NEWS}
5260 @item
5261 @file{gdb/README}
5262 @end itemize
5263
5264 @subheading Tag the release
5265
5266 Something like:
5267
5268 @example
5269 $ d=`date -u +%Y-%m-%d`
5270 $ echo $d
5271 2002-01-24
5272 $ ( cd insight/src/gdb && cvs -f -q update )
5273 $ ( cd insight/src && cvs -f -q tag gdb_5_1_1-$d-release )
5274 @end example
5275
5276 Insight is used since that contains more of the release than GDB (yes
5277 dejagnu doesn't get tagged but I think we can live with that.).
5278
5279 @subheading Restart @file{gdb/version.in}
5280
5281 If @file{gdb/version.in} does not contain an ISO date such as
5282 @kbd{2002-01-24} then the daily @code{cronjob} won't update it. Having
5283 committed all the release changes it can be set to
5284 @file{5.1.0_0000-00-00-cvs} which will restart things (yes the @kbd{_}
5285 is important - it affects the snapshot process).
5286
5287 Don't forget the @file{ChangeLog}.
5288
5289 @subheading Merge into trunk
5290
5291 The files committed to the branch may also need changes merged into the
5292 trunk.
5293
5294 @section Post release
5295
5296 Remove any @code{OBSOLETE} code.
5297
5298 @node Testsuite
5299
5300 @chapter Testsuite
5301 @cindex test suite
5302
5303 The testsuite is an important component of the @value{GDBN} package.
5304 While it is always worthwhile to encourage user testing, in practice
5305 this is rarely sufficient; users typically use only a small subset of
5306 the available commands, and it has proven all too common for a change
5307 to cause a significant regression that went unnoticed for some time.
5308
5309 The @value{GDBN} testsuite uses the DejaGNU testing framework.
5310 DejaGNU is built using @code{Tcl} and @code{expect}. The tests
5311 themselves are calls to various @code{Tcl} procs; the framework runs all the
5312 procs and summarizes the passes and fails.
5313
5314 @section Using the Testsuite
5315
5316 @cindex running the test suite
5317 To run the testsuite, simply go to the @value{GDBN} object directory (or to the
5318 testsuite's objdir) and type @code{make check}. This just sets up some
5319 environment variables and invokes DejaGNU's @code{runtest} script. While
5320 the testsuite is running, you'll get mentions of which test file is in use,
5321 and a mention of any unexpected passes or fails. When the testsuite is
5322 finished, you'll get a summary that looks like this:
5323
5324 @example
5325 === gdb Summary ===
5326
5327 # of expected passes 6016
5328 # of unexpected failures 58
5329 # of unexpected successes 5
5330 # of expected failures 183
5331 # of unresolved testcases 3
5332 # of untested testcases 5
5333 @end example
5334
5335 The ideal test run consists of expected passes only; however, reality
5336 conspires to keep us from this ideal. Unexpected failures indicate
5337 real problems, whether in @value{GDBN} or in the testsuite. Expected
5338 failures are still failures, but ones which have been decided are too
5339 hard to deal with at the time; for instance, a test case might work
5340 everywhere except on AIX, and there is no prospect of the AIX case
5341 being fixed in the near future. Expected failures should not be added
5342 lightly, since you may be masking serious bugs in @value{GDBN}.
5343 Unexpected successes are expected fails that are passing for some
5344 reason, while unresolved and untested cases often indicate some minor
5345 catastrophe, such as the compiler being unable to deal with a test
5346 program.
5347
5348 When making any significant change to @value{GDBN}, you should run the
5349 testsuite before and after the change, to confirm that there are no
5350 regressions. Note that truly complete testing would require that you
5351 run the testsuite with all supported configurations and a variety of
5352 compilers; however this is more than really necessary. In many cases
5353 testing with a single configuration is sufficient. Other useful
5354 options are to test one big-endian (Sparc) and one little-endian (x86)
5355 host, a cross config with a builtin simulator (powerpc-eabi,
5356 mips-elf), or a 64-bit host (Alpha).
5357
5358 If you add new functionality to @value{GDBN}, please consider adding
5359 tests for it as well; this way future @value{GDBN} hackers can detect
5360 and fix their changes that break the functionality you added.
5361 Similarly, if you fix a bug that was not previously reported as a test
5362 failure, please add a test case for it. Some cases are extremely
5363 difficult to test, such as code that handles host OS failures or bugs
5364 in particular versions of compilers, and it's OK not to try to write
5365 tests for all of those.
5366
5367 @section Testsuite Organization
5368
5369 @cindex test suite organization
5370 The testsuite is entirely contained in @file{gdb/testsuite}. While the
5371 testsuite includes some makefiles and configury, these are very minimal,
5372 and used for little besides cleaning up, since the tests themselves
5373 handle the compilation of the programs that @value{GDBN} will run. The file
5374 @file{testsuite/lib/gdb.exp} contains common utility procs useful for
5375 all @value{GDBN} tests, while the directory @file{testsuite/config} contains
5376 configuration-specific files, typically used for special-purpose
5377 definitions of procs like @code{gdb_load} and @code{gdb_start}.
5378
5379 The tests themselves are to be found in @file{testsuite/gdb.*} and
5380 subdirectories of those. The names of the test files must always end
5381 with @file{.exp}. DejaGNU collects the test files by wildcarding
5382 in the test directories, so both subdirectories and individual files
5383 get chosen and run in alphabetical order.
5384
5385 The following table lists the main types of subdirectories and what they
5386 are for. Since DejaGNU finds test files no matter where they are
5387 located, and since each test file sets up its own compilation and
5388 execution environment, this organization is simply for convenience and
5389 intelligibility.
5390
5391 @table @file
5392 @item gdb.base
5393 This is the base testsuite. The tests in it should apply to all
5394 configurations of @value{GDBN} (but generic native-only tests may live here).
5395 The test programs should be in the subset of C that is valid K&R,
5396 ANSI/ISO, and C++ (@code{#ifdef}s are allowed if necessary, for instance
5397 for prototypes).
5398
5399 @item gdb.@var{lang}
5400 Language-specific tests for any language @var{lang} besides C. Examples are
5401 @file{gdb.c++} and @file{gdb.java}.
5402
5403 @item gdb.@var{platform}
5404 Non-portable tests. The tests are specific to a specific configuration
5405 (host or target), such as HP-UX or eCos. Example is @file{gdb.hp}, for
5406 HP-UX.
5407
5408 @item gdb.@var{compiler}
5409 Tests specific to a particular compiler. As of this writing (June
5410 1999), there aren't currently any groups of tests in this category that
5411 couldn't just as sensibly be made platform-specific, but one could
5412 imagine a @file{gdb.gcc}, for tests of @value{GDBN}'s handling of GCC
5413 extensions.
5414
5415 @item gdb.@var{subsystem}
5416 Tests that exercise a specific @value{GDBN} subsystem in more depth. For
5417 instance, @file{gdb.disasm} exercises various disassemblers, while
5418 @file{gdb.stabs} tests pathways through the stabs symbol reader.
5419 @end table
5420
5421 @section Writing Tests
5422 @cindex writing tests
5423
5424 In many areas, the @value{GDBN} tests are already quite comprehensive; you
5425 should be able to copy existing tests to handle new cases.
5426
5427 You should try to use @code{gdb_test} whenever possible, since it
5428 includes cases to handle all the unexpected errors that might happen.
5429 However, it doesn't cost anything to add new test procedures; for
5430 instance, @file{gdb.base/exprs.exp} defines a @code{test_expr} that
5431 calls @code{gdb_test} multiple times.
5432
5433 Only use @code{send_gdb} and @code{gdb_expect} when absolutely
5434 necessary, such as when @value{GDBN} has several valid responses to a command.
5435
5436 The source language programs do @emph{not} need to be in a consistent
5437 style. Since @value{GDBN} is used to debug programs written in many different
5438 styles, it's worth having a mix of styles in the testsuite; for
5439 instance, some @value{GDBN} bugs involving the display of source lines would
5440 never manifest themselves if the programs used GNU coding style
5441 uniformly.
5442
5443 @node Hints
5444
5445 @chapter Hints
5446
5447 Check the @file{README} file, it often has useful information that does not
5448 appear anywhere else in the directory.
5449
5450 @menu
5451 * Getting Started:: Getting started working on @value{GDBN}
5452 * Debugging GDB:: Debugging @value{GDBN} with itself
5453 @end menu
5454
5455 @node Getting Started,,, Hints
5456
5457 @section Getting Started
5458
5459 @value{GDBN} is a large and complicated program, and if you first starting to
5460 work on it, it can be hard to know where to start. Fortunately, if you
5461 know how to go about it, there are ways to figure out what is going on.
5462
5463 This manual, the @value{GDBN} Internals manual, has information which applies
5464 generally to many parts of @value{GDBN}.
5465
5466 Information about particular functions or data structures are located in
5467 comments with those functions or data structures. If you run across a
5468 function or a global variable which does not have a comment correctly
5469 explaining what is does, this can be thought of as a bug in @value{GDBN}; feel
5470 free to submit a bug report, with a suggested comment if you can figure
5471 out what the comment should say. If you find a comment which is
5472 actually wrong, be especially sure to report that.
5473
5474 Comments explaining the function of macros defined in host, target, or
5475 native dependent files can be in several places. Sometimes they are
5476 repeated every place the macro is defined. Sometimes they are where the
5477 macro is used. Sometimes there is a header file which supplies a
5478 default definition of the macro, and the comment is there. This manual
5479 also documents all the available macros.
5480 @c (@pxref{Host Conditionals}, @pxref{Target
5481 @c Conditionals}, @pxref{Native Conditionals}, and @pxref{Obsolete
5482 @c Conditionals})
5483
5484 Start with the header files. Once you have some idea of how
5485 @value{GDBN}'s internal symbol tables are stored (see @file{symtab.h},
5486 @file{gdbtypes.h}), you will find it much easier to understand the
5487 code which uses and creates those symbol tables.
5488
5489 You may wish to process the information you are getting somehow, to
5490 enhance your understanding of it. Summarize it, translate it to another
5491 language, add some (perhaps trivial or non-useful) feature to @value{GDBN}, use
5492 the code to predict what a test case would do and write the test case
5493 and verify your prediction, etc. If you are reading code and your eyes
5494 are starting to glaze over, this is a sign you need to use a more active
5495 approach.
5496
5497 Once you have a part of @value{GDBN} to start with, you can find more
5498 specifically the part you are looking for by stepping through each
5499 function with the @code{next} command. Do not use @code{step} or you
5500 will quickly get distracted; when the function you are stepping through
5501 calls another function try only to get a big-picture understanding
5502 (perhaps using the comment at the beginning of the function being
5503 called) of what it does. This way you can identify which of the
5504 functions being called by the function you are stepping through is the
5505 one which you are interested in. You may need to examine the data
5506 structures generated at each stage, with reference to the comments in
5507 the header files explaining what the data structures are supposed to
5508 look like.
5509
5510 Of course, this same technique can be used if you are just reading the
5511 code, rather than actually stepping through it. The same general
5512 principle applies---when the code you are looking at calls something
5513 else, just try to understand generally what the code being called does,
5514 rather than worrying about all its details.
5515
5516 @cindex command implementation
5517 A good place to start when tracking down some particular area is with
5518 a command which invokes that feature. Suppose you want to know how
5519 single-stepping works. As a @value{GDBN} user, you know that the
5520 @code{step} command invokes single-stepping. The command is invoked
5521 via command tables (see @file{command.h}); by convention the function
5522 which actually performs the command is formed by taking the name of
5523 the command and adding @samp{_command}, or in the case of an
5524 @code{info} subcommand, @samp{_info}. For example, the @code{step}
5525 command invokes the @code{step_command} function and the @code{info
5526 display} command invokes @code{display_info}. When this convention is
5527 not followed, you might have to use @code{grep} or @kbd{M-x
5528 tags-search} in emacs, or run @value{GDBN} on itself and set a
5529 breakpoint in @code{execute_command}.
5530
5531 @cindex @code{bug-gdb} mailing list
5532 If all of the above fail, it may be appropriate to ask for information
5533 on @code{bug-gdb}. But @emph{never} post a generic question like ``I was
5534 wondering if anyone could give me some tips about understanding
5535 @value{GDBN}''---if we had some magic secret we would put it in this manual.
5536 Suggestions for improving the manual are always welcome, of course.
5537
5538 @node Debugging GDB,,,Hints
5539
5540 @section Debugging @value{GDBN} with itself
5541 @cindex debugging @value{GDBN}
5542
5543 If @value{GDBN} is limping on your machine, this is the preferred way to get it
5544 fully functional. Be warned that in some ancient Unix systems, like
5545 Ultrix 4.2, a program can't be running in one process while it is being
5546 debugged in another. Rather than typing the command @kbd{@w{./gdb
5547 ./gdb}}, which works on Suns and such, you can copy @file{gdb} to
5548 @file{gdb2} and then type @kbd{@w{./gdb ./gdb2}}.
5549
5550 When you run @value{GDBN} in the @value{GDBN} source directory, it will read a
5551 @file{.gdbinit} file that sets up some simple things to make debugging
5552 gdb easier. The @code{info} command, when executed without a subcommand
5553 in a @value{GDBN} being debugged by gdb, will pop you back up to the top level
5554 gdb. See @file{.gdbinit} for details.
5555
5556 If you use emacs, you will probably want to do a @code{make TAGS} after
5557 you configure your distribution; this will put the machine dependent
5558 routines for your local machine where they will be accessed first by
5559 @kbd{M-.}
5560
5561 Also, make sure that you've either compiled @value{GDBN} with your local cc, or
5562 have run @code{fixincludes} if you are compiling with gcc.
5563
5564 @section Submitting Patches
5565
5566 @cindex submitting patches
5567 Thanks for thinking of offering your changes back to the community of
5568 @value{GDBN} users. In general we like to get well designed enhancements.
5569 Thanks also for checking in advance about the best way to transfer the
5570 changes.
5571
5572 The @value{GDBN} maintainers will only install ``cleanly designed'' patches.
5573 This manual summarizes what we believe to be clean design for @value{GDBN}.
5574
5575 If the maintainers don't have time to put the patch in when it arrives,
5576 or if there is any question about a patch, it goes into a large queue
5577 with everyone else's patches and bug reports.
5578
5579 @cindex legal papers for code contributions
5580 The legal issue is that to incorporate substantial changes requires a
5581 copyright assignment from you and/or your employer, granting ownership
5582 of the changes to the Free Software Foundation. You can get the
5583 standard documents for doing this by sending mail to @code{gnu@@gnu.org}
5584 and asking for it. We recommend that people write in "All programs
5585 owned by the Free Software Foundation" as "NAME OF PROGRAM", so that
5586 changes in many programs (not just @value{GDBN}, but GAS, Emacs, GCC,
5587 etc) can be
5588 contributed with only one piece of legalese pushed through the
5589 bureaucracy and filed with the FSF. We can't start merging changes until
5590 this paperwork is received by the FSF (their rules, which we follow
5591 since we maintain it for them).
5592
5593 Technically, the easiest way to receive changes is to receive each
5594 feature as a small context diff or unidiff, suitable for @code{patch}.
5595 Each message sent to me should include the changes to C code and
5596 header files for a single feature, plus @file{ChangeLog} entries for
5597 each directory where files were modified, and diffs for any changes
5598 needed to the manuals (@file{gdb/doc/gdb.texinfo} or
5599 @file{gdb/doc/gdbint.texinfo}). If there are a lot of changes for a
5600 single feature, they can be split down into multiple messages.
5601
5602 In this way, if we read and like the feature, we can add it to the
5603 sources with a single patch command, do some testing, and check it in.
5604 If you leave out the @file{ChangeLog}, we have to write one. If you leave
5605 out the doc, we have to puzzle out what needs documenting. Etc., etc.
5606
5607 The reason to send each change in a separate message is that we will not
5608 install some of the changes. They'll be returned to you with questions
5609 or comments. If we're doing our job correctly, the message back to you
5610 will say what you have to fix in order to make the change acceptable.
5611 The reason to have separate messages for separate features is so that
5612 the acceptable changes can be installed while one or more changes are
5613 being reworked. If multiple features are sent in a single message, we
5614 tend to not put in the effort to sort out the acceptable changes from
5615 the unacceptable, so none of the features get installed until all are
5616 acceptable.
5617
5618 If this sounds painful or authoritarian, well, it is. But we get a lot
5619 of bug reports and a lot of patches, and many of them don't get
5620 installed because we don't have the time to finish the job that the bug
5621 reporter or the contributor could have done. Patches that arrive
5622 complete, working, and well designed, tend to get installed on the day
5623 they arrive. The others go into a queue and get installed as time
5624 permits, which, since the maintainers have many demands to meet, may not
5625 be for quite some time.
5626
5627 Please send patches directly to
5628 @email{gdb-patches@@sources.redhat.com, the @value{GDBN} maintainers}.
5629
5630 @section Obsolete Conditionals
5631 @cindex obsolete code
5632
5633 Fragments of old code in @value{GDBN} sometimes reference or set the following
5634 configuration macros. They should not be used by new code, and old uses
5635 should be removed as those parts of the debugger are otherwise touched.
5636
5637 @table @code
5638 @item STACK_END_ADDR
5639 This macro used to define where the end of the stack appeared, for use
5640 in interpreting core file formats that don't record this address in the
5641 core file itself. This information is now configured in BFD, and @value{GDBN}
5642 gets the info portably from there. The values in @value{GDBN}'s configuration
5643 files should be moved into BFD configuration files (if needed there),
5644 and deleted from all of @value{GDBN}'s config files.
5645
5646 Any @file{@var{foo}-xdep.c} file that references STACK_END_ADDR
5647 is so old that it has never been converted to use BFD. Now that's old!
5648
5649 @item PYRAMID_CONTROL_FRAME_DEBUGGING
5650 pyr-xdep.c
5651 @item PYRAMID_CORE
5652 pyr-xdep.c
5653 @item PYRAMID_PTRACE
5654 pyr-xdep.c
5655
5656 @item REG_STACK_SEGMENT
5657 exec.c
5658
5659 @end table
5660
5661 @include fdl.texi
5662
5663 @node Index
5664 @unnumbered Index
5665
5666 @printindex cp
5667
5668 @bye
This page took 0.160768 seconds and 4 git commands to generate.