2004-03-22 Andrew Cagney <cagney@redhat.com>
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / infrun.c
1 /* Target-struct-independent code to start (run) and stop an inferior
2 process.
3
4 Copyright 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994,
5 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 Free
6 Software Foundation, Inc.
7
8 This file is part of GDB.
9
10 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
11 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
12 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
13 (at your option) any later version.
14
15 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
16 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
17 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
18 GNU General Public License for more details.
19
20 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
21 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
22 Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
23 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
24
25 #include "defs.h"
26 #include "gdb_string.h"
27 #include <ctype.h>
28 #include "symtab.h"
29 #include "frame.h"
30 #include "inferior.h"
31 #include "breakpoint.h"
32 #include "gdb_wait.h"
33 #include "gdbcore.h"
34 #include "gdbcmd.h"
35 #include "cli/cli-script.h"
36 #include "target.h"
37 #include "gdbthread.h"
38 #include "annotate.h"
39 #include "symfile.h"
40 #include "top.h"
41 #include <signal.h>
42 #include "inf-loop.h"
43 #include "regcache.h"
44 #include "value.h"
45 #include "observer.h"
46 #include "language.h"
47 #include "gdb_assert.h"
48
49 /* Prototypes for local functions */
50
51 static void signals_info (char *, int);
52
53 static void handle_command (char *, int);
54
55 static void sig_print_info (enum target_signal);
56
57 static void sig_print_header (void);
58
59 static void resume_cleanups (void *);
60
61 static int hook_stop_stub (void *);
62
63 static void delete_breakpoint_current_contents (void *);
64
65 static int restore_selected_frame (void *);
66
67 static void build_infrun (void);
68
69 static int follow_fork (void);
70
71 static void set_schedlock_func (char *args, int from_tty,
72 struct cmd_list_element *c);
73
74 struct execution_control_state;
75
76 static int currently_stepping (struct execution_control_state *ecs);
77
78 static void xdb_handle_command (char *args, int from_tty);
79
80 static int prepare_to_proceed (void);
81
82 void _initialize_infrun (void);
83
84 int inferior_ignoring_startup_exec_events = 0;
85 int inferior_ignoring_leading_exec_events = 0;
86
87 /* When set, stop the 'step' command if we enter a function which has
88 no line number information. The normal behavior is that we step
89 over such function. */
90 int step_stop_if_no_debug = 0;
91
92 /* In asynchronous mode, but simulating synchronous execution. */
93
94 int sync_execution = 0;
95
96 /* wait_for_inferior and normal_stop use this to notify the user
97 when the inferior stopped in a different thread than it had been
98 running in. */
99
100 static ptid_t previous_inferior_ptid;
101
102 /* This is true for configurations that may follow through execl() and
103 similar functions. At present this is only true for HP-UX native. */
104
105 #ifndef MAY_FOLLOW_EXEC
106 #define MAY_FOLLOW_EXEC (0)
107 #endif
108
109 static int may_follow_exec = MAY_FOLLOW_EXEC;
110
111 /* If the program uses ELF-style shared libraries, then calls to
112 functions in shared libraries go through stubs, which live in a
113 table called the PLT (Procedure Linkage Table). The first time the
114 function is called, the stub sends control to the dynamic linker,
115 which looks up the function's real address, patches the stub so
116 that future calls will go directly to the function, and then passes
117 control to the function.
118
119 If we are stepping at the source level, we don't want to see any of
120 this --- we just want to skip over the stub and the dynamic linker.
121 The simple approach is to single-step until control leaves the
122 dynamic linker.
123
124 However, on some systems (e.g., Red Hat's 5.2 distribution) the
125 dynamic linker calls functions in the shared C library, so you
126 can't tell from the PC alone whether the dynamic linker is still
127 running. In this case, we use a step-resume breakpoint to get us
128 past the dynamic linker, as if we were using "next" to step over a
129 function call.
130
131 IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE says whether we're in the dynamic
132 linker code or not. Normally, this means we single-step. However,
133 if SKIP_SOLIB_RESOLVER then returns non-zero, then its value is an
134 address where we can place a step-resume breakpoint to get past the
135 linker's symbol resolution function.
136
137 IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE can generally be implemented in a
138 pretty portable way, by comparing the PC against the address ranges
139 of the dynamic linker's sections.
140
141 SKIP_SOLIB_RESOLVER is generally going to be system-specific, since
142 it depends on internal details of the dynamic linker. It's usually
143 not too hard to figure out where to put a breakpoint, but it
144 certainly isn't portable. SKIP_SOLIB_RESOLVER should do plenty of
145 sanity checking. If it can't figure things out, returning zero and
146 getting the (possibly confusing) stepping behavior is better than
147 signalling an error, which will obscure the change in the
148 inferior's state. */
149
150 #ifndef IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE
151 #define IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE(pc) 0
152 #endif
153
154 /* This function returns TRUE if pc is the address of an instruction
155 that lies within the dynamic linker (such as the event hook, or the
156 dld itself).
157
158 This function must be used only when a dynamic linker event has
159 been caught, and the inferior is being stepped out of the hook, or
160 undefined results are guaranteed. */
161
162 #ifndef SOLIB_IN_DYNAMIC_LINKER
163 #define SOLIB_IN_DYNAMIC_LINKER(pid,pc) 0
164 #endif
165
166 /* On MIPS16, a function that returns a floating point value may call
167 a library helper function to copy the return value to a floating point
168 register. The IGNORE_HELPER_CALL macro returns non-zero if we
169 should ignore (i.e. step over) this function call. */
170 #ifndef IGNORE_HELPER_CALL
171 #define IGNORE_HELPER_CALL(pc) 0
172 #endif
173
174 /* On some systems, the PC may be left pointing at an instruction that won't
175 actually be executed. This is usually indicated by a bit in the PSW. If
176 we find ourselves in such a state, then we step the target beyond the
177 nullified instruction before returning control to the user so as to avoid
178 confusion. */
179
180 #ifndef INSTRUCTION_NULLIFIED
181 #define INSTRUCTION_NULLIFIED 0
182 #endif
183
184 /* We can't step off a permanent breakpoint in the ordinary way, because we
185 can't remove it. Instead, we have to advance the PC to the next
186 instruction. This macro should expand to a pointer to a function that
187 does that, or zero if we have no such function. If we don't have a
188 definition for it, we have to report an error. */
189 #ifndef SKIP_PERMANENT_BREAKPOINT
190 #define SKIP_PERMANENT_BREAKPOINT (default_skip_permanent_breakpoint)
191 static void
192 default_skip_permanent_breakpoint (void)
193 {
194 error ("\
195 The program is stopped at a permanent breakpoint, but GDB does not know\n\
196 how to step past a permanent breakpoint on this architecture. Try using\n\
197 a command like `return' or `jump' to continue execution.");
198 }
199 #endif
200
201
202 /* Convert the #defines into values. This is temporary until wfi control
203 flow is completely sorted out. */
204
205 #ifndef HAVE_STEPPABLE_WATCHPOINT
206 #define HAVE_STEPPABLE_WATCHPOINT 0
207 #else
208 #undef HAVE_STEPPABLE_WATCHPOINT
209 #define HAVE_STEPPABLE_WATCHPOINT 1
210 #endif
211
212 #ifndef CANNOT_STEP_HW_WATCHPOINTS
213 #define CANNOT_STEP_HW_WATCHPOINTS 0
214 #else
215 #undef CANNOT_STEP_HW_WATCHPOINTS
216 #define CANNOT_STEP_HW_WATCHPOINTS 1
217 #endif
218
219 /* Tables of how to react to signals; the user sets them. */
220
221 static unsigned char *signal_stop;
222 static unsigned char *signal_print;
223 static unsigned char *signal_program;
224
225 #define SET_SIGS(nsigs,sigs,flags) \
226 do { \
227 int signum = (nsigs); \
228 while (signum-- > 0) \
229 if ((sigs)[signum]) \
230 (flags)[signum] = 1; \
231 } while (0)
232
233 #define UNSET_SIGS(nsigs,sigs,flags) \
234 do { \
235 int signum = (nsigs); \
236 while (signum-- > 0) \
237 if ((sigs)[signum]) \
238 (flags)[signum] = 0; \
239 } while (0)
240
241 /* Value to pass to target_resume() to cause all threads to resume */
242
243 #define RESUME_ALL (pid_to_ptid (-1))
244
245 /* Command list pointer for the "stop" placeholder. */
246
247 static struct cmd_list_element *stop_command;
248
249 /* Nonzero if breakpoints are now inserted in the inferior. */
250
251 static int breakpoints_inserted;
252
253 /* Function inferior was in as of last step command. */
254
255 static struct symbol *step_start_function;
256
257 /* Nonzero if we are expecting a trace trap and should proceed from it. */
258
259 static int trap_expected;
260
261 #ifdef SOLIB_ADD
262 /* Nonzero if we want to give control to the user when we're notified
263 of shared library events by the dynamic linker. */
264 static int stop_on_solib_events;
265 #endif
266
267 #ifdef HP_OS_BUG
268 /* Nonzero if the next time we try to continue the inferior, it will
269 step one instruction and generate a spurious trace trap.
270 This is used to compensate for a bug in HP-UX. */
271
272 static int trap_expected_after_continue;
273 #endif
274
275 /* Nonzero means expecting a trace trap
276 and should stop the inferior and return silently when it happens. */
277
278 int stop_after_trap;
279
280 /* Nonzero means expecting a trap and caller will handle it themselves.
281 It is used after attach, due to attaching to a process;
282 when running in the shell before the child program has been exec'd;
283 and when running some kinds of remote stuff (FIXME?). */
284
285 enum stop_kind stop_soon;
286
287 /* Nonzero if proceed is being used for a "finish" command or a similar
288 situation when stop_registers should be saved. */
289
290 int proceed_to_finish;
291
292 /* Save register contents here when about to pop a stack dummy frame,
293 if-and-only-if proceed_to_finish is set.
294 Thus this contains the return value from the called function (assuming
295 values are returned in a register). */
296
297 struct regcache *stop_registers;
298
299 /* Nonzero if program stopped due to error trying to insert breakpoints. */
300
301 static int breakpoints_failed;
302
303 /* Nonzero after stop if current stack frame should be printed. */
304
305 static int stop_print_frame;
306
307 static struct breakpoint *step_resume_breakpoint = NULL;
308 static struct breakpoint *through_sigtramp_breakpoint = NULL;
309
310 /* On some platforms (e.g., HP-UX), hardware watchpoints have bad
311 interactions with an inferior that is running a kernel function
312 (aka, a system call or "syscall"). wait_for_inferior therefore
313 may have a need to know when the inferior is in a syscall. This
314 is a count of the number of inferior threads which are known to
315 currently be running in a syscall. */
316 static int number_of_threads_in_syscalls;
317
318 /* This is a cached copy of the pid/waitstatus of the last event
319 returned by target_wait()/target_wait_hook(). This information is
320 returned by get_last_target_status(). */
321 static ptid_t target_last_wait_ptid;
322 static struct target_waitstatus target_last_waitstatus;
323
324 /* This is used to remember when a fork, vfork or exec event
325 was caught by a catchpoint, and thus the event is to be
326 followed at the next resume of the inferior, and not
327 immediately. */
328 static struct
329 {
330 enum target_waitkind kind;
331 struct
332 {
333 int parent_pid;
334 int child_pid;
335 }
336 fork_event;
337 char *execd_pathname;
338 }
339 pending_follow;
340
341 static const char follow_fork_mode_child[] = "child";
342 static const char follow_fork_mode_parent[] = "parent";
343
344 static const char *follow_fork_mode_kind_names[] = {
345 follow_fork_mode_child,
346 follow_fork_mode_parent,
347 NULL
348 };
349
350 static const char *follow_fork_mode_string = follow_fork_mode_parent;
351 \f
352
353 static int
354 follow_fork (void)
355 {
356 int follow_child = (follow_fork_mode_string == follow_fork_mode_child);
357
358 return target_follow_fork (follow_child);
359 }
360
361 void
362 follow_inferior_reset_breakpoints (void)
363 {
364 /* Was there a step_resume breakpoint? (There was if the user
365 did a "next" at the fork() call.) If so, explicitly reset its
366 thread number.
367
368 step_resumes are a form of bp that are made to be per-thread.
369 Since we created the step_resume bp when the parent process
370 was being debugged, and now are switching to the child process,
371 from the breakpoint package's viewpoint, that's a switch of
372 "threads". We must update the bp's notion of which thread
373 it is for, or it'll be ignored when it triggers. */
374
375 if (step_resume_breakpoint)
376 breakpoint_re_set_thread (step_resume_breakpoint);
377
378 /* Reinsert all breakpoints in the child. The user may have set
379 breakpoints after catching the fork, in which case those
380 were never set in the child, but only in the parent. This makes
381 sure the inserted breakpoints match the breakpoint list. */
382
383 breakpoint_re_set ();
384 insert_breakpoints ();
385 }
386
387 /* EXECD_PATHNAME is assumed to be non-NULL. */
388
389 static void
390 follow_exec (int pid, char *execd_pathname)
391 {
392 int saved_pid = pid;
393 struct target_ops *tgt;
394
395 if (!may_follow_exec)
396 return;
397
398 /* This is an exec event that we actually wish to pay attention to.
399 Refresh our symbol table to the newly exec'd program, remove any
400 momentary bp's, etc.
401
402 If there are breakpoints, they aren't really inserted now,
403 since the exec() transformed our inferior into a fresh set
404 of instructions.
405
406 We want to preserve symbolic breakpoints on the list, since
407 we have hopes that they can be reset after the new a.out's
408 symbol table is read.
409
410 However, any "raw" breakpoints must be removed from the list
411 (e.g., the solib bp's), since their address is probably invalid
412 now.
413
414 And, we DON'T want to call delete_breakpoints() here, since
415 that may write the bp's "shadow contents" (the instruction
416 value that was overwritten witha TRAP instruction). Since
417 we now have a new a.out, those shadow contents aren't valid. */
418 update_breakpoints_after_exec ();
419
420 /* If there was one, it's gone now. We cannot truly step-to-next
421 statement through an exec(). */
422 step_resume_breakpoint = NULL;
423 step_range_start = 0;
424 step_range_end = 0;
425
426 /* If there was one, it's gone now. */
427 through_sigtramp_breakpoint = NULL;
428
429 /* What is this a.out's name? */
430 printf_unfiltered ("Executing new program: %s\n", execd_pathname);
431
432 /* We've followed the inferior through an exec. Therefore, the
433 inferior has essentially been killed & reborn. */
434
435 /* First collect the run target in effect. */
436 tgt = find_run_target ();
437 /* If we can't find one, things are in a very strange state... */
438 if (tgt == NULL)
439 error ("Could find run target to save before following exec");
440
441 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
442 target_mourn_inferior ();
443 inferior_ptid = pid_to_ptid (saved_pid);
444 /* Because mourn_inferior resets inferior_ptid. */
445 push_target (tgt);
446
447 /* That a.out is now the one to use. */
448 exec_file_attach (execd_pathname, 0);
449
450 /* And also is where symbols can be found. */
451 symbol_file_add_main (execd_pathname, 0);
452
453 /* Reset the shared library package. This ensures that we get
454 a shlib event when the child reaches "_start", at which point
455 the dld will have had a chance to initialize the child. */
456 #if defined(SOLIB_RESTART)
457 SOLIB_RESTART ();
458 #endif
459 #ifdef SOLIB_CREATE_INFERIOR_HOOK
460 SOLIB_CREATE_INFERIOR_HOOK (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
461 #endif
462
463 /* Reinsert all breakpoints. (Those which were symbolic have
464 been reset to the proper address in the new a.out, thanks
465 to symbol_file_command...) */
466 insert_breakpoints ();
467
468 /* The next resume of this inferior should bring it to the shlib
469 startup breakpoints. (If the user had also set bp's on
470 "main" from the old (parent) process, then they'll auto-
471 matically get reset there in the new process.) */
472 }
473
474 /* Non-zero if we just simulating a single-step. This is needed
475 because we cannot remove the breakpoints in the inferior process
476 until after the `wait' in `wait_for_inferior'. */
477 static int singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 0;
478
479 /* The thread we inserted single-step breakpoints for. */
480 static ptid_t singlestep_ptid;
481
482 /* If another thread hit the singlestep breakpoint, we save the original
483 thread here so that we can resume single-stepping it later. */
484 static ptid_t saved_singlestep_ptid;
485 static int stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint;
486 \f
487
488 /* Things to clean up if we QUIT out of resume (). */
489 static void
490 resume_cleanups (void *ignore)
491 {
492 normal_stop ();
493 }
494
495 static const char schedlock_off[] = "off";
496 static const char schedlock_on[] = "on";
497 static const char schedlock_step[] = "step";
498 static const char *scheduler_mode = schedlock_off;
499 static const char *scheduler_enums[] = {
500 schedlock_off,
501 schedlock_on,
502 schedlock_step,
503 NULL
504 };
505
506 static void
507 set_schedlock_func (char *args, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c)
508 {
509 /* NOTE: cagney/2002-03-17: The add_show_from_set() function clones
510 the set command passed as a parameter. The clone operation will
511 include (BUG?) any ``set'' command callback, if present.
512 Commands like ``info set'' call all the ``show'' command
513 callbacks. Unfortunately, for ``show'' commands cloned from
514 ``set'', this includes callbacks belonging to ``set'' commands.
515 Making this worse, this only occures if add_show_from_set() is
516 called after add_cmd_sfunc() (BUG?). */
517 if (cmd_type (c) == set_cmd)
518 if (!target_can_lock_scheduler)
519 {
520 scheduler_mode = schedlock_off;
521 error ("Target '%s' cannot support this command.", target_shortname);
522 }
523 }
524
525
526 /* Resume the inferior, but allow a QUIT. This is useful if the user
527 wants to interrupt some lengthy single-stepping operation
528 (for child processes, the SIGINT goes to the inferior, and so
529 we get a SIGINT random_signal, but for remote debugging and perhaps
530 other targets, that's not true).
531
532 STEP nonzero if we should step (zero to continue instead).
533 SIG is the signal to give the inferior (zero for none). */
534 void
535 resume (int step, enum target_signal sig)
536 {
537 int should_resume = 1;
538 struct cleanup *old_cleanups = make_cleanup (resume_cleanups, 0);
539 QUIT;
540
541 /* FIXME: calling breakpoint_here_p (read_pc ()) three times! */
542
543
544 /* Some targets (e.g. Solaris x86) have a kernel bug when stepping
545 over an instruction that causes a page fault without triggering
546 a hardware watchpoint. The kernel properly notices that it shouldn't
547 stop, because the hardware watchpoint is not triggered, but it forgets
548 the step request and continues the program normally.
549 Work around the problem by removing hardware watchpoints if a step is
550 requested, GDB will check for a hardware watchpoint trigger after the
551 step anyway. */
552 if (CANNOT_STEP_HW_WATCHPOINTS && step && breakpoints_inserted)
553 remove_hw_watchpoints ();
554
555
556 /* Normally, by the time we reach `resume', the breakpoints are either
557 removed or inserted, as appropriate. The exception is if we're sitting
558 at a permanent breakpoint; we need to step over it, but permanent
559 breakpoints can't be removed. So we have to test for it here. */
560 if (breakpoint_here_p (read_pc ()) == permanent_breakpoint_here)
561 SKIP_PERMANENT_BREAKPOINT ();
562
563 if (SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP_P () && step)
564 {
565 /* Do it the hard way, w/temp breakpoints */
566 SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP (sig, 1 /*insert-breakpoints */ );
567 /* ...and don't ask hardware to do it. */
568 step = 0;
569 /* and do not pull these breakpoints until after a `wait' in
570 `wait_for_inferior' */
571 singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 1;
572 singlestep_ptid = inferior_ptid;
573 }
574
575 /* Handle any optimized stores to the inferior NOW... */
576 #ifdef DO_DEFERRED_STORES
577 DO_DEFERRED_STORES;
578 #endif
579
580 /* If there were any forks/vforks/execs that were caught and are
581 now to be followed, then do so. */
582 switch (pending_follow.kind)
583 {
584 case TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED:
585 case TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED:
586 pending_follow.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
587 if (follow_fork ())
588 should_resume = 0;
589 break;
590
591 case TARGET_WAITKIND_EXECD:
592 /* follow_exec is called as soon as the exec event is seen. */
593 pending_follow.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
594 break;
595
596 default:
597 break;
598 }
599
600 /* Install inferior's terminal modes. */
601 target_terminal_inferior ();
602
603 if (should_resume)
604 {
605 ptid_t resume_ptid;
606
607 resume_ptid = RESUME_ALL; /* Default */
608
609 if ((step || singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p) &&
610 (stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint
611 || (!breakpoints_inserted && breakpoint_here_p (read_pc ()))))
612 {
613 /* Stepping past a breakpoint without inserting breakpoints.
614 Make sure only the current thread gets to step, so that
615 other threads don't sneak past breakpoints while they are
616 not inserted. */
617
618 resume_ptid = inferior_ptid;
619 }
620
621 if ((scheduler_mode == schedlock_on) ||
622 (scheduler_mode == schedlock_step &&
623 (step || singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p)))
624 {
625 /* User-settable 'scheduler' mode requires solo thread resume. */
626 resume_ptid = inferior_ptid;
627 }
628
629 if (CANNOT_STEP_BREAKPOINT)
630 {
631 /* Most targets can step a breakpoint instruction, thus
632 executing it normally. But if this one cannot, just
633 continue and we will hit it anyway. */
634 if (step && breakpoints_inserted && breakpoint_here_p (read_pc ()))
635 step = 0;
636 }
637 target_resume (resume_ptid, step, sig);
638 }
639
640 discard_cleanups (old_cleanups);
641 }
642 \f
643
644 /* Clear out all variables saying what to do when inferior is continued.
645 First do this, then set the ones you want, then call `proceed'. */
646
647 void
648 clear_proceed_status (void)
649 {
650 trap_expected = 0;
651 step_range_start = 0;
652 step_range_end = 0;
653 step_frame_id = null_frame_id;
654 step_over_calls = STEP_OVER_UNDEBUGGABLE;
655 stop_after_trap = 0;
656 stop_soon = NO_STOP_QUIETLY;
657 proceed_to_finish = 0;
658 breakpoint_proceeded = 1; /* We're about to proceed... */
659
660 /* Discard any remaining commands or status from previous stop. */
661 bpstat_clear (&stop_bpstat);
662 }
663
664 /* This should be suitable for any targets that support threads. */
665
666 static int
667 prepare_to_proceed (void)
668 {
669 ptid_t wait_ptid;
670 struct target_waitstatus wait_status;
671
672 /* Get the last target status returned by target_wait(). */
673 get_last_target_status (&wait_ptid, &wait_status);
674
675 /* Make sure we were stopped either at a breakpoint, or because
676 of a Ctrl-C. */
677 if (wait_status.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED
678 || (wait_status.value.sig != TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP &&
679 wait_status.value.sig != TARGET_SIGNAL_INT))
680 {
681 return 0;
682 }
683
684 if (!ptid_equal (wait_ptid, minus_one_ptid)
685 && !ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, wait_ptid))
686 {
687 /* Switched over from WAIT_PID. */
688 CORE_ADDR wait_pc = read_pc_pid (wait_ptid);
689
690 if (wait_pc != read_pc ())
691 {
692 /* Switch back to WAIT_PID thread. */
693 inferior_ptid = wait_ptid;
694
695 /* FIXME: This stuff came from switch_to_thread() in
696 thread.c (which should probably be a public function). */
697 flush_cached_frames ();
698 registers_changed ();
699 stop_pc = wait_pc;
700 select_frame (get_current_frame ());
701 }
702
703 /* We return 1 to indicate that there is a breakpoint here,
704 so we need to step over it before continuing to avoid
705 hitting it straight away. */
706 if (breakpoint_here_p (wait_pc))
707 return 1;
708 }
709
710 return 0;
711
712 }
713
714 /* Record the pc of the program the last time it stopped. This is
715 just used internally by wait_for_inferior, but need to be preserved
716 over calls to it and cleared when the inferior is started. */
717 static CORE_ADDR prev_pc;
718
719 /* Basic routine for continuing the program in various fashions.
720
721 ADDR is the address to resume at, or -1 for resume where stopped.
722 SIGGNAL is the signal to give it, or 0 for none,
723 or -1 for act according to how it stopped.
724 STEP is nonzero if should trap after one instruction.
725 -1 means return after that and print nothing.
726 You should probably set various step_... variables
727 before calling here, if you are stepping.
728
729 You should call clear_proceed_status before calling proceed. */
730
731 void
732 proceed (CORE_ADDR addr, enum target_signal siggnal, int step)
733 {
734 int oneproc = 0;
735
736 if (step > 0)
737 step_start_function = find_pc_function (read_pc ());
738 if (step < 0)
739 stop_after_trap = 1;
740
741 if (addr == (CORE_ADDR) -1)
742 {
743 /* If there is a breakpoint at the address we will resume at,
744 step one instruction before inserting breakpoints
745 so that we do not stop right away (and report a second
746 hit at this breakpoint). */
747
748 if (read_pc () == stop_pc && breakpoint_here_p (read_pc ()))
749 oneproc = 1;
750
751 #ifndef STEP_SKIPS_DELAY
752 #define STEP_SKIPS_DELAY(pc) (0)
753 #define STEP_SKIPS_DELAY_P (0)
754 #endif
755 /* Check breakpoint_here_p first, because breakpoint_here_p is fast
756 (it just checks internal GDB data structures) and STEP_SKIPS_DELAY
757 is slow (it needs to read memory from the target). */
758 if (STEP_SKIPS_DELAY_P
759 && breakpoint_here_p (read_pc () + 4)
760 && STEP_SKIPS_DELAY (read_pc ()))
761 oneproc = 1;
762 }
763 else
764 {
765 write_pc (addr);
766 }
767
768 /* In a multi-threaded task we may select another thread
769 and then continue or step.
770
771 But if the old thread was stopped at a breakpoint, it
772 will immediately cause another breakpoint stop without
773 any execution (i.e. it will report a breakpoint hit
774 incorrectly). So we must step over it first.
775
776 prepare_to_proceed checks the current thread against the thread
777 that reported the most recent event. If a step-over is required
778 it returns TRUE and sets the current thread to the old thread. */
779 if (prepare_to_proceed () && breakpoint_here_p (read_pc ()))
780 oneproc = 1;
781
782 #ifdef HP_OS_BUG
783 if (trap_expected_after_continue)
784 {
785 /* If (step == 0), a trap will be automatically generated after
786 the first instruction is executed. Force step one
787 instruction to clear this condition. This should not occur
788 if step is nonzero, but it is harmless in that case. */
789 oneproc = 1;
790 trap_expected_after_continue = 0;
791 }
792 #endif /* HP_OS_BUG */
793
794 if (oneproc)
795 /* We will get a trace trap after one instruction.
796 Continue it automatically and insert breakpoints then. */
797 trap_expected = 1;
798 else
799 {
800 insert_breakpoints ();
801 /* If we get here there was no call to error() in
802 insert breakpoints -- so they were inserted. */
803 breakpoints_inserted = 1;
804 }
805
806 if (siggnal != TARGET_SIGNAL_DEFAULT)
807 stop_signal = siggnal;
808 /* If this signal should not be seen by program,
809 give it zero. Used for debugging signals. */
810 else if (!signal_program[stop_signal])
811 stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0;
812
813 annotate_starting ();
814
815 /* Make sure that output from GDB appears before output from the
816 inferior. */
817 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
818
819 /* Refresh prev_pc value just prior to resuming. This used to be
820 done in stop_stepping, however, setting prev_pc there did not handle
821 scenarios such as inferior function calls or returning from
822 a function via the return command. In those cases, the prev_pc
823 value was not set properly for subsequent commands. The prev_pc value
824 is used to initialize the starting line number in the ecs. With an
825 invalid value, the gdb next command ends up stopping at the position
826 represented by the next line table entry past our start position.
827 On platforms that generate one line table entry per line, this
828 is not a problem. However, on the ia64, the compiler generates
829 extraneous line table entries that do not increase the line number.
830 When we issue the gdb next command on the ia64 after an inferior call
831 or a return command, we often end up a few instructions forward, still
832 within the original line we started.
833
834 An attempt was made to have init_execution_control_state () refresh
835 the prev_pc value before calculating the line number. This approach
836 did not work because on platforms that use ptrace, the pc register
837 cannot be read unless the inferior is stopped. At that point, we
838 are not guaranteed the inferior is stopped and so the read_pc ()
839 call can fail. Setting the prev_pc value here ensures the value is
840 updated correctly when the inferior is stopped. */
841 prev_pc = read_pc ();
842
843 /* Resume inferior. */
844 resume (oneproc || step || bpstat_should_step (), stop_signal);
845
846 /* Wait for it to stop (if not standalone)
847 and in any case decode why it stopped, and act accordingly. */
848 /* Do this only if we are not using the event loop, or if the target
849 does not support asynchronous execution. */
850 if (!event_loop_p || !target_can_async_p ())
851 {
852 wait_for_inferior ();
853 normal_stop ();
854 }
855 }
856 \f
857
858 /* Start remote-debugging of a machine over a serial link. */
859
860 void
861 start_remote (void)
862 {
863 init_thread_list ();
864 init_wait_for_inferior ();
865 stop_soon = STOP_QUIETLY;
866 trap_expected = 0;
867
868 /* Always go on waiting for the target, regardless of the mode. */
869 /* FIXME: cagney/1999-09-23: At present it isn't possible to
870 indicate to wait_for_inferior that a target should timeout if
871 nothing is returned (instead of just blocking). Because of this,
872 targets expecting an immediate response need to, internally, set
873 things up so that the target_wait() is forced to eventually
874 timeout. */
875 /* FIXME: cagney/1999-09-24: It isn't possible for target_open() to
876 differentiate to its caller what the state of the target is after
877 the initial open has been performed. Here we're assuming that
878 the target has stopped. It should be possible to eventually have
879 target_open() return to the caller an indication that the target
880 is currently running and GDB state should be set to the same as
881 for an async run. */
882 wait_for_inferior ();
883 normal_stop ();
884 }
885
886 /* Initialize static vars when a new inferior begins. */
887
888 void
889 init_wait_for_inferior (void)
890 {
891 /* These are meaningless until the first time through wait_for_inferior. */
892 prev_pc = 0;
893
894 #ifdef HP_OS_BUG
895 trap_expected_after_continue = 0;
896 #endif
897 breakpoints_inserted = 0;
898 breakpoint_init_inferior (inf_starting);
899
900 /* Don't confuse first call to proceed(). */
901 stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0;
902
903 /* The first resume is not following a fork/vfork/exec. */
904 pending_follow.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS; /* I.e., none. */
905
906 /* See wait_for_inferior's handling of SYSCALL_ENTRY/RETURN events. */
907 number_of_threads_in_syscalls = 0;
908
909 clear_proceed_status ();
910
911 stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint = 0;
912 }
913
914 static void
915 delete_breakpoint_current_contents (void *arg)
916 {
917 struct breakpoint **breakpointp = (struct breakpoint **) arg;
918 if (*breakpointp != NULL)
919 {
920 delete_breakpoint (*breakpointp);
921 *breakpointp = NULL;
922 }
923 }
924 \f
925 /* This enum encodes possible reasons for doing a target_wait, so that
926 wfi can call target_wait in one place. (Ultimately the call will be
927 moved out of the infinite loop entirely.) */
928
929 enum infwait_states
930 {
931 infwait_normal_state,
932 infwait_thread_hop_state,
933 infwait_nullified_state,
934 infwait_nonstep_watch_state
935 };
936
937 /* Why did the inferior stop? Used to print the appropriate messages
938 to the interface from within handle_inferior_event(). */
939 enum inferior_stop_reason
940 {
941 /* We don't know why. */
942 STOP_UNKNOWN,
943 /* Step, next, nexti, stepi finished. */
944 END_STEPPING_RANGE,
945 /* Found breakpoint. */
946 BREAKPOINT_HIT,
947 /* Inferior terminated by signal. */
948 SIGNAL_EXITED,
949 /* Inferior exited. */
950 EXITED,
951 /* Inferior received signal, and user asked to be notified. */
952 SIGNAL_RECEIVED
953 };
954
955 /* This structure contains what used to be local variables in
956 wait_for_inferior. Probably many of them can return to being
957 locals in handle_inferior_event. */
958
959 struct execution_control_state
960 {
961 struct target_waitstatus ws;
962 struct target_waitstatus *wp;
963 int another_trap;
964 int random_signal;
965 CORE_ADDR stop_func_start;
966 CORE_ADDR stop_func_end;
967 char *stop_func_name;
968 struct symtab_and_line sal;
969 int remove_breakpoints_on_following_step;
970 int current_line;
971 struct symtab *current_symtab;
972 int handling_longjmp; /* FIXME */
973 ptid_t ptid;
974 ptid_t saved_inferior_ptid;
975 int update_step_sp;
976 int stepping_through_solib_after_catch;
977 bpstat stepping_through_solib_catchpoints;
978 int enable_hw_watchpoints_after_wait;
979 int stepping_through_sigtramp;
980 int new_thread_event;
981 struct target_waitstatus tmpstatus;
982 enum infwait_states infwait_state;
983 ptid_t waiton_ptid;
984 int wait_some_more;
985 };
986
987 void init_execution_control_state (struct execution_control_state *ecs);
988
989 static void handle_step_into_function (struct execution_control_state *ecs);
990 void handle_inferior_event (struct execution_control_state *ecs);
991
992 static void check_sigtramp2 (struct execution_control_state *ecs);
993 static void step_into_function (struct execution_control_state *ecs);
994 static void step_over_function (struct execution_control_state *ecs);
995 static void stop_stepping (struct execution_control_state *ecs);
996 static void prepare_to_wait (struct execution_control_state *ecs);
997 static void keep_going (struct execution_control_state *ecs);
998 static void print_stop_reason (enum inferior_stop_reason stop_reason,
999 int stop_info);
1000
1001 /* Wait for control to return from inferior to debugger.
1002 If inferior gets a signal, we may decide to start it up again
1003 instead of returning. That is why there is a loop in this function.
1004 When this function actually returns it means the inferior
1005 should be left stopped and GDB should read more commands. */
1006
1007 void
1008 wait_for_inferior (void)
1009 {
1010 struct cleanup *old_cleanups;
1011 struct execution_control_state ecss;
1012 struct execution_control_state *ecs;
1013
1014 old_cleanups = make_cleanup (delete_step_resume_breakpoint,
1015 &step_resume_breakpoint);
1016 make_cleanup (delete_breakpoint_current_contents,
1017 &through_sigtramp_breakpoint);
1018
1019 /* wfi still stays in a loop, so it's OK just to take the address of
1020 a local to get the ecs pointer. */
1021 ecs = &ecss;
1022
1023 /* Fill in with reasonable starting values. */
1024 init_execution_control_state (ecs);
1025
1026 /* We'll update this if & when we switch to a new thread. */
1027 previous_inferior_ptid = inferior_ptid;
1028
1029 overlay_cache_invalid = 1;
1030
1031 /* We have to invalidate the registers BEFORE calling target_wait
1032 because they can be loaded from the target while in target_wait.
1033 This makes remote debugging a bit more efficient for those
1034 targets that provide critical registers as part of their normal
1035 status mechanism. */
1036
1037 registers_changed ();
1038
1039 while (1)
1040 {
1041 if (target_wait_hook)
1042 ecs->ptid = target_wait_hook (ecs->waiton_ptid, ecs->wp);
1043 else
1044 ecs->ptid = target_wait (ecs->waiton_ptid, ecs->wp);
1045
1046 /* Now figure out what to do with the result of the result. */
1047 handle_inferior_event (ecs);
1048
1049 if (!ecs->wait_some_more)
1050 break;
1051 }
1052 do_cleanups (old_cleanups);
1053 }
1054
1055 /* Asynchronous version of wait_for_inferior. It is called by the
1056 event loop whenever a change of state is detected on the file
1057 descriptor corresponding to the target. It can be called more than
1058 once to complete a single execution command. In such cases we need
1059 to keep the state in a global variable ASYNC_ECSS. If it is the
1060 last time that this function is called for a single execution
1061 command, then report to the user that the inferior has stopped, and
1062 do the necessary cleanups. */
1063
1064 struct execution_control_state async_ecss;
1065 struct execution_control_state *async_ecs;
1066
1067 void
1068 fetch_inferior_event (void *client_data)
1069 {
1070 static struct cleanup *old_cleanups;
1071
1072 async_ecs = &async_ecss;
1073
1074 if (!async_ecs->wait_some_more)
1075 {
1076 old_cleanups = make_exec_cleanup (delete_step_resume_breakpoint,
1077 &step_resume_breakpoint);
1078 make_exec_cleanup (delete_breakpoint_current_contents,
1079 &through_sigtramp_breakpoint);
1080
1081 /* Fill in with reasonable starting values. */
1082 init_execution_control_state (async_ecs);
1083
1084 /* We'll update this if & when we switch to a new thread. */
1085 previous_inferior_ptid = inferior_ptid;
1086
1087 overlay_cache_invalid = 1;
1088
1089 /* We have to invalidate the registers BEFORE calling target_wait
1090 because they can be loaded from the target while in target_wait.
1091 This makes remote debugging a bit more efficient for those
1092 targets that provide critical registers as part of their normal
1093 status mechanism. */
1094
1095 registers_changed ();
1096 }
1097
1098 if (target_wait_hook)
1099 async_ecs->ptid =
1100 target_wait_hook (async_ecs->waiton_ptid, async_ecs->wp);
1101 else
1102 async_ecs->ptid = target_wait (async_ecs->waiton_ptid, async_ecs->wp);
1103
1104 /* Now figure out what to do with the result of the result. */
1105 handle_inferior_event (async_ecs);
1106
1107 if (!async_ecs->wait_some_more)
1108 {
1109 /* Do only the cleanups that have been added by this
1110 function. Let the continuations for the commands do the rest,
1111 if there are any. */
1112 do_exec_cleanups (old_cleanups);
1113 normal_stop ();
1114 if (step_multi && stop_step)
1115 inferior_event_handler (INF_EXEC_CONTINUE, NULL);
1116 else
1117 inferior_event_handler (INF_EXEC_COMPLETE, NULL);
1118 }
1119 }
1120
1121 /* Prepare an execution control state for looping through a
1122 wait_for_inferior-type loop. */
1123
1124 void
1125 init_execution_control_state (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
1126 {
1127 /* ecs->another_trap? */
1128 ecs->random_signal = 0;
1129 ecs->remove_breakpoints_on_following_step = 0;
1130 ecs->handling_longjmp = 0; /* FIXME */
1131 ecs->update_step_sp = 0;
1132 ecs->stepping_through_solib_after_catch = 0;
1133 ecs->stepping_through_solib_catchpoints = NULL;
1134 ecs->enable_hw_watchpoints_after_wait = 0;
1135 ecs->stepping_through_sigtramp = 0;
1136 ecs->sal = find_pc_line (prev_pc, 0);
1137 ecs->current_line = ecs->sal.line;
1138 ecs->current_symtab = ecs->sal.symtab;
1139 ecs->infwait_state = infwait_normal_state;
1140 ecs->waiton_ptid = pid_to_ptid (-1);
1141 ecs->wp = &(ecs->ws);
1142 }
1143
1144 /* Call this function before setting step_resume_breakpoint, as a
1145 sanity check. There should never be more than one step-resume
1146 breakpoint per thread, so we should never be setting a new
1147 step_resume_breakpoint when one is already active. */
1148 static void
1149 check_for_old_step_resume_breakpoint (void)
1150 {
1151 if (step_resume_breakpoint)
1152 warning
1153 ("GDB bug: infrun.c (wait_for_inferior): dropping old step_resume breakpoint");
1154 }
1155
1156 /* Return the cached copy of the last pid/waitstatus returned by
1157 target_wait()/target_wait_hook(). The data is actually cached by
1158 handle_inferior_event(), which gets called immediately after
1159 target_wait()/target_wait_hook(). */
1160
1161 void
1162 get_last_target_status (ptid_t *ptidp, struct target_waitstatus *status)
1163 {
1164 *ptidp = target_last_wait_ptid;
1165 *status = target_last_waitstatus;
1166 }
1167
1168 /* Switch thread contexts, maintaining "infrun state". */
1169
1170 static void
1171 context_switch (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
1172 {
1173 /* Caution: it may happen that the new thread (or the old one!)
1174 is not in the thread list. In this case we must not attempt
1175 to "switch context", or we run the risk that our context may
1176 be lost. This may happen as a result of the target module
1177 mishandling thread creation. */
1178
1179 if (in_thread_list (inferior_ptid) && in_thread_list (ecs->ptid))
1180 { /* Perform infrun state context switch: */
1181 /* Save infrun state for the old thread. */
1182 save_infrun_state (inferior_ptid, prev_pc,
1183 trap_expected, step_resume_breakpoint,
1184 through_sigtramp_breakpoint, step_range_start,
1185 step_range_end, &step_frame_id,
1186 ecs->handling_longjmp, ecs->another_trap,
1187 ecs->stepping_through_solib_after_catch,
1188 ecs->stepping_through_solib_catchpoints,
1189 ecs->stepping_through_sigtramp,
1190 ecs->current_line, ecs->current_symtab, step_sp);
1191
1192 /* Load infrun state for the new thread. */
1193 load_infrun_state (ecs->ptid, &prev_pc,
1194 &trap_expected, &step_resume_breakpoint,
1195 &through_sigtramp_breakpoint, &step_range_start,
1196 &step_range_end, &step_frame_id,
1197 &ecs->handling_longjmp, &ecs->another_trap,
1198 &ecs->stepping_through_solib_after_catch,
1199 &ecs->stepping_through_solib_catchpoints,
1200 &ecs->stepping_through_sigtramp,
1201 &ecs->current_line, &ecs->current_symtab, &step_sp);
1202 }
1203 inferior_ptid = ecs->ptid;
1204 }
1205
1206 /* Wrapper for PC_IN_SIGTRAMP that takes care of the need to find the
1207 function's name.
1208
1209 In a classic example of "left hand VS right hand", "infrun.c" was
1210 trying to improve GDB's performance by caching the result of calls
1211 to calls to find_pc_partial_funtion, while at the same time
1212 find_pc_partial_function was also trying to ramp up performance by
1213 caching its most recent return value. The below makes the the
1214 function find_pc_partial_function solely responsibile for
1215 performance issues (the local cache that relied on a global
1216 variable - arrrggg - deleted).
1217
1218 Using the testsuite and gcov, it was found that dropping the local
1219 "infrun.c" cache and instead relying on find_pc_partial_function
1220 increased the number of calls to 12000 (from 10000), but the number
1221 of times find_pc_partial_function's cache missed (this is what
1222 matters) was only increased by only 4 (to 3569). (A quick back of
1223 envelope caculation suggests that the extra 2000 function calls
1224 @1000 extra instructions per call make the 1 MIP VAX testsuite run
1225 take two extra seconds, oops :-)
1226
1227 Long term, this function can be eliminated, replaced by the code:
1228 get_frame_type(current_frame()) == SIGTRAMP_FRAME (for new
1229 architectures this is very cheap). */
1230
1231 static int
1232 pc_in_sigtramp (CORE_ADDR pc)
1233 {
1234 char *name;
1235 find_pc_partial_function (pc, &name, NULL, NULL);
1236 return PC_IN_SIGTRAMP (pc, name);
1237 }
1238
1239 /* Handle the inferior event in the cases when we just stepped
1240 into a function. */
1241
1242 static void
1243 handle_step_into_function (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
1244 {
1245 CORE_ADDR real_stop_pc;
1246
1247 if ((step_over_calls == STEP_OVER_NONE)
1248 || ((step_range_end == 1)
1249 && in_prologue (prev_pc, ecs->stop_func_start)))
1250 {
1251 /* I presume that step_over_calls is only 0 when we're
1252 supposed to be stepping at the assembly language level
1253 ("stepi"). Just stop. */
1254 /* Also, maybe we just did a "nexti" inside a prolog,
1255 so we thought it was a subroutine call but it was not.
1256 Stop as well. FENN */
1257 stop_step = 1;
1258 print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0);
1259 stop_stepping (ecs);
1260 return;
1261 }
1262
1263 if (step_over_calls == STEP_OVER_ALL || IGNORE_HELPER_CALL (stop_pc))
1264 {
1265 /* We're doing a "next". */
1266
1267 if (legacy_frame_p (current_gdbarch)
1268 && pc_in_sigtramp (stop_pc)
1269 && frame_id_inner (step_frame_id,
1270 frame_id_build (read_sp (), 0)))
1271 /* NOTE: cagney/2004-03-15: This is only needed for legacy
1272 systems. On non-legacy systems step_over_function doesn't
1273 use STEP_FRAME_ID and hence the below update "hack" isn't
1274 needed. */
1275 /* We stepped out of a signal handler, and into its calling
1276 trampoline. This is misdetected as a subroutine call, but
1277 stepping over the signal trampoline isn't such a bad idea.
1278 In order to do that, we have to ignore the value in
1279 step_frame_id, since that doesn't represent the frame
1280 that'll reach when we return from the signal trampoline.
1281 Otherwise we'll probably continue to the end of the
1282 program. */
1283 step_frame_id = null_frame_id;
1284
1285 step_over_function (ecs);
1286 keep_going (ecs);
1287 return;
1288 }
1289
1290 /* If we are in a function call trampoline (a stub between
1291 the calling routine and the real function), locate the real
1292 function. That's what tells us (a) whether we want to step
1293 into it at all, and (b) what prologue we want to run to
1294 the end of, if we do step into it. */
1295 real_stop_pc = skip_language_trampoline (stop_pc);
1296 if (real_stop_pc == 0)
1297 real_stop_pc = SKIP_TRAMPOLINE_CODE (stop_pc);
1298 if (real_stop_pc != 0)
1299 ecs->stop_func_start = real_stop_pc;
1300
1301 /* If we have line number information for the function we
1302 are thinking of stepping into, step into it.
1303
1304 If there are several symtabs at that PC (e.g. with include
1305 files), just want to know whether *any* of them have line
1306 numbers. find_pc_line handles this. */
1307 {
1308 struct symtab_and_line tmp_sal;
1309
1310 tmp_sal = find_pc_line (ecs->stop_func_start, 0);
1311 if (tmp_sal.line != 0)
1312 {
1313 step_into_function (ecs);
1314 return;
1315 }
1316 }
1317
1318 /* If we have no line number and the step-stop-if-no-debug
1319 is set, we stop the step so that the user has a chance to
1320 switch in assembly mode. */
1321 if (step_over_calls == STEP_OVER_UNDEBUGGABLE && step_stop_if_no_debug)
1322 {
1323 stop_step = 1;
1324 print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0);
1325 stop_stepping (ecs);
1326 return;
1327 }
1328
1329 step_over_function (ecs);
1330 keep_going (ecs);
1331 return;
1332 }
1333
1334 static void
1335 adjust_pc_after_break (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
1336 {
1337 CORE_ADDR stop_pc;
1338
1339 /* If this target does not decrement the PC after breakpoints, then
1340 we have nothing to do. */
1341 if (DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK == 0)
1342 return;
1343
1344 /* If we've hit a breakpoint, we'll normally be stopped with SIGTRAP. If
1345 we aren't, just return.
1346
1347 We assume that waitkinds other than TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED are not
1348 affected by DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK. Other waitkinds which are implemented
1349 by software breakpoints should be handled through the normal breakpoint
1350 layer.
1351
1352 NOTE drow/2004-01-31: On some targets, breakpoints may generate
1353 different signals (SIGILL or SIGEMT for instance), but it is less
1354 clear where the PC is pointing afterwards. It may not match
1355 DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK. I don't know any specific target that generates
1356 these signals at breakpoints (the code has been in GDB since at least
1357 1992) so I can not guess how to handle them here.
1358
1359 In earlier versions of GDB, a target with HAVE_NONSTEPPABLE_WATCHPOINTS
1360 would have the PC after hitting a watchpoint affected by
1361 DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK. I haven't found any target with both of these set
1362 in GDB history, and it seems unlikely to be correct, so
1363 HAVE_NONSTEPPABLE_WATCHPOINTS is not checked here. */
1364
1365 if (ecs->ws.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED)
1366 return;
1367
1368 if (ecs->ws.value.sig != TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP)
1369 return;
1370
1371 /* Find the location where (if we've hit a breakpoint) the breakpoint would
1372 be. */
1373 stop_pc = read_pc_pid (ecs->ptid) - DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK;
1374
1375 /* If we're software-single-stepping, then assume this is a breakpoint.
1376 NOTE drow/2004-01-17: This doesn't check that the PC matches, or that
1377 we're even in the right thread. The software-single-step code needs
1378 some modernization.
1379
1380 If we're not software-single-stepping, then we first check that there
1381 is an enabled software breakpoint at this address. If there is, and
1382 we weren't using hardware-single-step, then we've hit the breakpoint.
1383
1384 If we were using hardware-single-step, we check prev_pc; if we just
1385 stepped over an inserted software breakpoint, then we should decrement
1386 the PC and eventually report hitting the breakpoint. The prev_pc check
1387 prevents us from decrementing the PC if we just stepped over a jump
1388 instruction and landed on the instruction after a breakpoint.
1389
1390 The last bit checks that we didn't hit a breakpoint in a signal handler
1391 without an intervening stop in sigtramp, which is detected by a new
1392 stack pointer value below any usual function calling stack adjustments.
1393
1394 NOTE drow/2004-01-17: I'm not sure that this is necessary. The check
1395 predates checking for software single step at the same time. Also,
1396 if we've moved into a signal handler we should have seen the
1397 signal. */
1398
1399 if ((SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP_P () && singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p)
1400 || (software_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (stop_pc)
1401 && !(currently_stepping (ecs)
1402 && prev_pc != stop_pc
1403 && !(step_range_end && INNER_THAN (read_sp (), (step_sp - 16))))))
1404 write_pc_pid (stop_pc, ecs->ptid);
1405 }
1406
1407 /* Given an execution control state that has been freshly filled in
1408 by an event from the inferior, figure out what it means and take
1409 appropriate action. */
1410
1411 void
1412 handle_inferior_event (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
1413 {
1414 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-03-28: If you're looking at this code and
1415 thinking that the variable stepped_after_stopped_by_watchpoint
1416 isn't used, then you're wrong! The macro STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT,
1417 defined in the file "config/pa/nm-hppah.h", accesses the variable
1418 indirectly. Mutter something rude about the HP merge. */
1419 int stepped_after_stopped_by_watchpoint;
1420 int sw_single_step_trap_p = 0;
1421
1422 /* Cache the last pid/waitstatus. */
1423 target_last_wait_ptid = ecs->ptid;
1424 target_last_waitstatus = *ecs->wp;
1425
1426 adjust_pc_after_break (ecs);
1427
1428 switch (ecs->infwait_state)
1429 {
1430 case infwait_thread_hop_state:
1431 /* Cancel the waiton_ptid. */
1432 ecs->waiton_ptid = pid_to_ptid (-1);
1433 /* See comments where a TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_RETURN event
1434 is serviced in this loop, below. */
1435 if (ecs->enable_hw_watchpoints_after_wait)
1436 {
1437 TARGET_ENABLE_HW_WATCHPOINTS (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
1438 ecs->enable_hw_watchpoints_after_wait = 0;
1439 }
1440 stepped_after_stopped_by_watchpoint = 0;
1441 break;
1442
1443 case infwait_normal_state:
1444 /* See comments where a TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_RETURN event
1445 is serviced in this loop, below. */
1446 if (ecs->enable_hw_watchpoints_after_wait)
1447 {
1448 TARGET_ENABLE_HW_WATCHPOINTS (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
1449 ecs->enable_hw_watchpoints_after_wait = 0;
1450 }
1451 stepped_after_stopped_by_watchpoint = 0;
1452 break;
1453
1454 case infwait_nullified_state:
1455 stepped_after_stopped_by_watchpoint = 0;
1456 break;
1457
1458 case infwait_nonstep_watch_state:
1459 insert_breakpoints ();
1460
1461 /* FIXME-maybe: is this cleaner than setting a flag? Does it
1462 handle things like signals arriving and other things happening
1463 in combination correctly? */
1464 stepped_after_stopped_by_watchpoint = 1;
1465 break;
1466
1467 default:
1468 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "bad switch");
1469 }
1470 ecs->infwait_state = infwait_normal_state;
1471
1472 flush_cached_frames ();
1473
1474 /* If it's a new process, add it to the thread database */
1475
1476 ecs->new_thread_event = (!ptid_equal (ecs->ptid, inferior_ptid)
1477 && !in_thread_list (ecs->ptid));
1478
1479 if (ecs->ws.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED
1480 && ecs->ws.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED && ecs->new_thread_event)
1481 {
1482 add_thread (ecs->ptid);
1483
1484 ui_out_text (uiout, "[New ");
1485 ui_out_text (uiout, target_pid_or_tid_to_str (ecs->ptid));
1486 ui_out_text (uiout, "]\n");
1487
1488 #if 0
1489 /* NOTE: This block is ONLY meant to be invoked in case of a
1490 "thread creation event"! If it is invoked for any other
1491 sort of event (such as a new thread landing on a breakpoint),
1492 the event will be discarded, which is almost certainly
1493 a bad thing!
1494
1495 To avoid this, the low-level module (eg. target_wait)
1496 should call in_thread_list and add_thread, so that the
1497 new thread is known by the time we get here. */
1498
1499 /* We may want to consider not doing a resume here in order
1500 to give the user a chance to play with the new thread.
1501 It might be good to make that a user-settable option. */
1502
1503 /* At this point, all threads are stopped (happens
1504 automatically in either the OS or the native code).
1505 Therefore we need to continue all threads in order to
1506 make progress. */
1507
1508 target_resume (RESUME_ALL, 0, TARGET_SIGNAL_0);
1509 prepare_to_wait (ecs);
1510 return;
1511 #endif
1512 }
1513
1514 switch (ecs->ws.kind)
1515 {
1516 case TARGET_WAITKIND_LOADED:
1517 /* Ignore gracefully during startup of the inferior, as it
1518 might be the shell which has just loaded some objects,
1519 otherwise add the symbols for the newly loaded objects. */
1520 #ifdef SOLIB_ADD
1521 if (stop_soon == NO_STOP_QUIETLY)
1522 {
1523 /* Remove breakpoints, SOLIB_ADD might adjust
1524 breakpoint addresses via breakpoint_re_set. */
1525 if (breakpoints_inserted)
1526 remove_breakpoints ();
1527
1528 /* Check for any newly added shared libraries if we're
1529 supposed to be adding them automatically. Switch
1530 terminal for any messages produced by
1531 breakpoint_re_set. */
1532 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
1533 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-11-25: Make certain that the target
1534 stack's section table is kept up-to-date. Architectures,
1535 (e.g., PPC64), use the section table to perform
1536 operations such as address => section name and hence
1537 require the table to contain all sections (including
1538 those found in shared libraries). */
1539 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-11-25: Pass current_target and not
1540 exec_ops to SOLIB_ADD. This is because current GDB is
1541 only tooled to propagate section_table changes out from
1542 the "current_target" (see target_resize_to_sections), and
1543 not up from the exec stratum. This, of course, isn't
1544 right. "infrun.c" should only interact with the
1545 exec/process stratum, instead relying on the target stack
1546 to propagate relevant changes (stop, section table
1547 changed, ...) up to other layers. */
1548 SOLIB_ADD (NULL, 0, &current_target, auto_solib_add);
1549 target_terminal_inferior ();
1550
1551 /* Reinsert breakpoints and continue. */
1552 if (breakpoints_inserted)
1553 insert_breakpoints ();
1554 }
1555 #endif
1556 resume (0, TARGET_SIGNAL_0);
1557 prepare_to_wait (ecs);
1558 return;
1559
1560 case TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS:
1561 resume (0, TARGET_SIGNAL_0);
1562 prepare_to_wait (ecs);
1563 return;
1564
1565 case TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED:
1566 target_terminal_ours (); /* Must do this before mourn anyway */
1567 print_stop_reason (EXITED, ecs->ws.value.integer);
1568
1569 /* Record the exit code in the convenience variable $_exitcode, so
1570 that the user can inspect this again later. */
1571 set_internalvar (lookup_internalvar ("_exitcode"),
1572 value_from_longest (builtin_type_int,
1573 (LONGEST) ecs->ws.value.integer));
1574 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
1575 target_mourn_inferior ();
1576 singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 0; /*SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP_P() */
1577 stop_print_frame = 0;
1578 stop_stepping (ecs);
1579 return;
1580
1581 case TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED:
1582 stop_print_frame = 0;
1583 stop_signal = ecs->ws.value.sig;
1584 target_terminal_ours (); /* Must do this before mourn anyway */
1585
1586 /* Note: By definition of TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED, we shouldn't
1587 reach here unless the inferior is dead. However, for years
1588 target_kill() was called here, which hints that fatal signals aren't
1589 really fatal on some systems. If that's true, then some changes
1590 may be needed. */
1591 target_mourn_inferior ();
1592
1593 print_stop_reason (SIGNAL_EXITED, stop_signal);
1594 singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 0; /*SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP_P() */
1595 stop_stepping (ecs);
1596 return;
1597
1598 /* The following are the only cases in which we keep going;
1599 the above cases end in a continue or goto. */
1600 case TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED:
1601 case TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED:
1602 stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP;
1603 pending_follow.kind = ecs->ws.kind;
1604
1605 pending_follow.fork_event.parent_pid = PIDGET (ecs->ptid);
1606 pending_follow.fork_event.child_pid = ecs->ws.value.related_pid;
1607
1608 stop_pc = read_pc ();
1609
1610 stop_bpstat = bpstat_stop_status (stop_pc, ecs->ptid);
1611
1612 ecs->random_signal = !bpstat_explains_signal (stop_bpstat);
1613
1614 /* If no catchpoint triggered for this, then keep going. */
1615 if (ecs->random_signal)
1616 {
1617 stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0;
1618 keep_going (ecs);
1619 return;
1620 }
1621 goto process_event_stop_test;
1622
1623 case TARGET_WAITKIND_EXECD:
1624 stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP;
1625
1626 /* NOTE drow/2002-12-05: This code should be pushed down into the
1627 target_wait function. Until then following vfork on HP/UX 10.20
1628 is probably broken by this. Of course, it's broken anyway. */
1629 /* Is this a target which reports multiple exec events per actual
1630 call to exec()? (HP-UX using ptrace does, for example.) If so,
1631 ignore all but the last one. Just resume the exec'r, and wait
1632 for the next exec event. */
1633 if (inferior_ignoring_leading_exec_events)
1634 {
1635 inferior_ignoring_leading_exec_events--;
1636 if (pending_follow.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED)
1637 ENSURE_VFORKING_PARENT_REMAINS_STOPPED (pending_follow.fork_event.
1638 parent_pid);
1639 target_resume (ecs->ptid, 0, TARGET_SIGNAL_0);
1640 prepare_to_wait (ecs);
1641 return;
1642 }
1643 inferior_ignoring_leading_exec_events =
1644 target_reported_exec_events_per_exec_call () - 1;
1645
1646 pending_follow.execd_pathname =
1647 savestring (ecs->ws.value.execd_pathname,
1648 strlen (ecs->ws.value.execd_pathname));
1649
1650 /* This causes the eventpoints and symbol table to be reset. Must
1651 do this now, before trying to determine whether to stop. */
1652 follow_exec (PIDGET (inferior_ptid), pending_follow.execd_pathname);
1653 xfree (pending_follow.execd_pathname);
1654
1655 stop_pc = read_pc_pid (ecs->ptid);
1656 ecs->saved_inferior_ptid = inferior_ptid;
1657 inferior_ptid = ecs->ptid;
1658
1659 stop_bpstat = bpstat_stop_status (stop_pc, ecs->ptid);
1660
1661 ecs->random_signal = !bpstat_explains_signal (stop_bpstat);
1662 inferior_ptid = ecs->saved_inferior_ptid;
1663
1664 /* If no catchpoint triggered for this, then keep going. */
1665 if (ecs->random_signal)
1666 {
1667 stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0;
1668 keep_going (ecs);
1669 return;
1670 }
1671 goto process_event_stop_test;
1672
1673 /* These syscall events are returned on HP-UX, as part of its
1674 implementation of page-protection-based "hardware" watchpoints.
1675 HP-UX has unfortunate interactions between page-protections and
1676 some system calls. Our solution is to disable hardware watches
1677 when a system call is entered, and reenable them when the syscall
1678 completes. The downside of this is that we may miss the precise
1679 point at which a watched piece of memory is modified. "Oh well."
1680
1681 Note that we may have multiple threads running, which may each
1682 enter syscalls at roughly the same time. Since we don't have a
1683 good notion currently of whether a watched piece of memory is
1684 thread-private, we'd best not have any page-protections active
1685 when any thread is in a syscall. Thus, we only want to reenable
1686 hardware watches when no threads are in a syscall.
1687
1688 Also, be careful not to try to gather much state about a thread
1689 that's in a syscall. It's frequently a losing proposition. */
1690 case TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY:
1691 number_of_threads_in_syscalls++;
1692 if (number_of_threads_in_syscalls == 1)
1693 {
1694 TARGET_DISABLE_HW_WATCHPOINTS (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
1695 }
1696 resume (0, TARGET_SIGNAL_0);
1697 prepare_to_wait (ecs);
1698 return;
1699
1700 /* Before examining the threads further, step this thread to
1701 get it entirely out of the syscall. (We get notice of the
1702 event when the thread is just on the verge of exiting a
1703 syscall. Stepping one instruction seems to get it back
1704 into user code.)
1705
1706 Note that although the logical place to reenable h/w watches
1707 is here, we cannot. We cannot reenable them before stepping
1708 the thread (this causes the next wait on the thread to hang).
1709
1710 Nor can we enable them after stepping until we've done a wait.
1711 Thus, we simply set the flag ecs->enable_hw_watchpoints_after_wait
1712 here, which will be serviced immediately after the target
1713 is waited on. */
1714 case TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_RETURN:
1715 target_resume (ecs->ptid, 1, TARGET_SIGNAL_0);
1716
1717 if (number_of_threads_in_syscalls > 0)
1718 {
1719 number_of_threads_in_syscalls--;
1720 ecs->enable_hw_watchpoints_after_wait =
1721 (number_of_threads_in_syscalls == 0);
1722 }
1723 prepare_to_wait (ecs);
1724 return;
1725
1726 case TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED:
1727 stop_signal = ecs->ws.value.sig;
1728 break;
1729
1730 /* We had an event in the inferior, but we are not interested
1731 in handling it at this level. The lower layers have already
1732 done what needs to be done, if anything.
1733
1734 One of the possible circumstances for this is when the
1735 inferior produces output for the console. The inferior has
1736 not stopped, and we are ignoring the event. Another possible
1737 circumstance is any event which the lower level knows will be
1738 reported multiple times without an intervening resume. */
1739 case TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE:
1740 prepare_to_wait (ecs);
1741 return;
1742 }
1743
1744 /* We may want to consider not doing a resume here in order to give
1745 the user a chance to play with the new thread. It might be good
1746 to make that a user-settable option. */
1747
1748 /* At this point, all threads are stopped (happens automatically in
1749 either the OS or the native code). Therefore we need to continue
1750 all threads in order to make progress. */
1751 if (ecs->new_thread_event)
1752 {
1753 target_resume (RESUME_ALL, 0, TARGET_SIGNAL_0);
1754 prepare_to_wait (ecs);
1755 return;
1756 }
1757
1758 stop_pc = read_pc_pid (ecs->ptid);
1759
1760 if (stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint)
1761 {
1762 gdb_assert (SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP_P () && singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p);
1763 gdb_assert (ptid_equal (singlestep_ptid, ecs->ptid));
1764 gdb_assert (!ptid_equal (singlestep_ptid, saved_singlestep_ptid));
1765
1766 stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint = 0;
1767
1768 /* We've either finished single-stepping past the single-step
1769 breakpoint, or stopped for some other reason. It would be nice if
1770 we could tell, but we can't reliably. */
1771 if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP)
1772 {
1773 /* Pull the single step breakpoints out of the target. */
1774 SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP (0, 0);
1775 singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 0;
1776
1777 ecs->random_signal = 0;
1778
1779 ecs->ptid = saved_singlestep_ptid;
1780 context_switch (ecs);
1781 if (context_hook)
1782 context_hook (pid_to_thread_id (ecs->ptid));
1783
1784 resume (1, TARGET_SIGNAL_0);
1785 prepare_to_wait (ecs);
1786 return;
1787 }
1788 }
1789
1790 stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint = 0;
1791
1792 /* See if a thread hit a thread-specific breakpoint that was meant for
1793 another thread. If so, then step that thread past the breakpoint,
1794 and continue it. */
1795
1796 if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP)
1797 {
1798 int thread_hop_needed = 0;
1799
1800 /* Check if a regular breakpoint has been hit before checking
1801 for a potential single step breakpoint. Otherwise, GDB will
1802 not see this breakpoint hit when stepping onto breakpoints. */
1803 if (breakpoints_inserted && breakpoint_here_p (stop_pc))
1804 {
1805 ecs->random_signal = 0;
1806 if (!breakpoint_thread_match (stop_pc, ecs->ptid))
1807 thread_hop_needed = 1;
1808 }
1809 else if (SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP_P () && singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p)
1810 {
1811 ecs->random_signal = 0;
1812 /* The call to in_thread_list is necessary because PTIDs sometimes
1813 change when we go from single-threaded to multi-threaded. If
1814 the singlestep_ptid is still in the list, assume that it is
1815 really different from ecs->ptid. */
1816 if (!ptid_equal (singlestep_ptid, ecs->ptid)
1817 && in_thread_list (singlestep_ptid))
1818 {
1819 thread_hop_needed = 1;
1820 stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint = 1;
1821 saved_singlestep_ptid = singlestep_ptid;
1822 }
1823 }
1824
1825 if (thread_hop_needed)
1826 {
1827 int remove_status;
1828
1829 /* Saw a breakpoint, but it was hit by the wrong thread.
1830 Just continue. */
1831
1832 if (SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP_P () && singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p)
1833 {
1834 /* Pull the single step breakpoints out of the target. */
1835 SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP (0, 0);
1836 singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 0;
1837 }
1838
1839 remove_status = remove_breakpoints ();
1840 /* Did we fail to remove breakpoints? If so, try
1841 to set the PC past the bp. (There's at least
1842 one situation in which we can fail to remove
1843 the bp's: On HP-UX's that use ttrace, we can't
1844 change the address space of a vforking child
1845 process until the child exits (well, okay, not
1846 then either :-) or execs. */
1847 if (remove_status != 0)
1848 {
1849 /* FIXME! This is obviously non-portable! */
1850 write_pc_pid (stop_pc + 4, ecs->ptid);
1851 /* We need to restart all the threads now,
1852 * unles we're running in scheduler-locked mode.
1853 * Use currently_stepping to determine whether to
1854 * step or continue.
1855 */
1856 /* FIXME MVS: is there any reason not to call resume()? */
1857 if (scheduler_mode == schedlock_on)
1858 target_resume (ecs->ptid,
1859 currently_stepping (ecs), TARGET_SIGNAL_0);
1860 else
1861 target_resume (RESUME_ALL,
1862 currently_stepping (ecs), TARGET_SIGNAL_0);
1863 prepare_to_wait (ecs);
1864 return;
1865 }
1866 else
1867 { /* Single step */
1868 breakpoints_inserted = 0;
1869 if (!ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, ecs->ptid))
1870 context_switch (ecs);
1871 ecs->waiton_ptid = ecs->ptid;
1872 ecs->wp = &(ecs->ws);
1873 ecs->another_trap = 1;
1874
1875 ecs->infwait_state = infwait_thread_hop_state;
1876 keep_going (ecs);
1877 registers_changed ();
1878 return;
1879 }
1880 }
1881 else if (SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP_P () && singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p)
1882 {
1883 sw_single_step_trap_p = 1;
1884 ecs->random_signal = 0;
1885 }
1886 }
1887 else
1888 ecs->random_signal = 1;
1889
1890 /* See if something interesting happened to the non-current thread. If
1891 so, then switch to that thread. */
1892 if (!ptid_equal (ecs->ptid, inferior_ptid))
1893 {
1894 context_switch (ecs);
1895
1896 if (context_hook)
1897 context_hook (pid_to_thread_id (ecs->ptid));
1898
1899 flush_cached_frames ();
1900 }
1901
1902 if (SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP_P () && singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p)
1903 {
1904 /* Pull the single step breakpoints out of the target. */
1905 SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP (0, 0);
1906 singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 0;
1907 }
1908
1909 /* If PC is pointing at a nullified instruction, then step beyond
1910 it so that the user won't be confused when GDB appears to be ready
1911 to execute it. */
1912
1913 /* if (INSTRUCTION_NULLIFIED && currently_stepping (ecs)) */
1914 if (INSTRUCTION_NULLIFIED)
1915 {
1916 registers_changed ();
1917 target_resume (ecs->ptid, 1, TARGET_SIGNAL_0);
1918
1919 /* We may have received a signal that we want to pass to
1920 the inferior; therefore, we must not clobber the waitstatus
1921 in WS. */
1922
1923 ecs->infwait_state = infwait_nullified_state;
1924 ecs->waiton_ptid = ecs->ptid;
1925 ecs->wp = &(ecs->tmpstatus);
1926 prepare_to_wait (ecs);
1927 return;
1928 }
1929
1930 /* It may not be necessary to disable the watchpoint to stop over
1931 it. For example, the PA can (with some kernel cooperation)
1932 single step over a watchpoint without disabling the watchpoint. */
1933 if (HAVE_STEPPABLE_WATCHPOINT && STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT (ecs->ws))
1934 {
1935 resume (1, 0);
1936 prepare_to_wait (ecs);
1937 return;
1938 }
1939
1940 /* It is far more common to need to disable a watchpoint to step
1941 the inferior over it. FIXME. What else might a debug
1942 register or page protection watchpoint scheme need here? */
1943 if (HAVE_NONSTEPPABLE_WATCHPOINT && STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT (ecs->ws))
1944 {
1945 /* At this point, we are stopped at an instruction which has
1946 attempted to write to a piece of memory under control of
1947 a watchpoint. The instruction hasn't actually executed
1948 yet. If we were to evaluate the watchpoint expression
1949 now, we would get the old value, and therefore no change
1950 would seem to have occurred.
1951
1952 In order to make watchpoints work `right', we really need
1953 to complete the memory write, and then evaluate the
1954 watchpoint expression. The following code does that by
1955 removing the watchpoint (actually, all watchpoints and
1956 breakpoints), single-stepping the target, re-inserting
1957 watchpoints, and then falling through to let normal
1958 single-step processing handle proceed. Since this
1959 includes evaluating watchpoints, things will come to a
1960 stop in the correct manner. */
1961
1962 remove_breakpoints ();
1963 registers_changed ();
1964 target_resume (ecs->ptid, 1, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); /* Single step */
1965
1966 ecs->waiton_ptid = ecs->ptid;
1967 ecs->wp = &(ecs->ws);
1968 ecs->infwait_state = infwait_nonstep_watch_state;
1969 prepare_to_wait (ecs);
1970 return;
1971 }
1972
1973 /* It may be possible to simply continue after a watchpoint. */
1974 if (HAVE_CONTINUABLE_WATCHPOINT)
1975 STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT (ecs->ws);
1976
1977 ecs->stop_func_start = 0;
1978 ecs->stop_func_end = 0;
1979 ecs->stop_func_name = 0;
1980 /* Don't care about return value; stop_func_start and stop_func_name
1981 will both be 0 if it doesn't work. */
1982 find_pc_partial_function (stop_pc, &ecs->stop_func_name,
1983 &ecs->stop_func_start, &ecs->stop_func_end);
1984 ecs->stop_func_start += FUNCTION_START_OFFSET;
1985 ecs->another_trap = 0;
1986 bpstat_clear (&stop_bpstat);
1987 stop_step = 0;
1988 stop_stack_dummy = 0;
1989 stop_print_frame = 1;
1990 ecs->random_signal = 0;
1991 stopped_by_random_signal = 0;
1992 breakpoints_failed = 0;
1993
1994 /* Look at the cause of the stop, and decide what to do.
1995 The alternatives are:
1996 1) break; to really stop and return to the debugger,
1997 2) drop through to start up again
1998 (set ecs->another_trap to 1 to single step once)
1999 3) set ecs->random_signal to 1, and the decision between 1 and 2
2000 will be made according to the signal handling tables. */
2001
2002 /* First, distinguish signals caused by the debugger from signals
2003 that have to do with the program's own actions. Note that
2004 breakpoint insns may cause SIGTRAP or SIGILL or SIGEMT, depending
2005 on the operating system version. Here we detect when a SIGILL or
2006 SIGEMT is really a breakpoint and change it to SIGTRAP. We do
2007 something similar for SIGSEGV, since a SIGSEGV will be generated
2008 when we're trying to execute a breakpoint instruction on a
2009 non-executable stack. This happens for call dummy breakpoints
2010 for architectures like SPARC that place call dummies on the
2011 stack. */
2012
2013 if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP
2014 || (breakpoints_inserted &&
2015 (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_ILL
2016 || stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_SEGV
2017 || stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_EMT))
2018 || stop_soon == STOP_QUIETLY
2019 || stop_soon == STOP_QUIETLY_NO_SIGSTOP)
2020 {
2021 if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP && stop_after_trap)
2022 {
2023 stop_print_frame = 0;
2024 stop_stepping (ecs);
2025 return;
2026 }
2027
2028 /* This is originated from start_remote(), start_inferior() and
2029 shared libraries hook functions. */
2030 if (stop_soon == STOP_QUIETLY)
2031 {
2032 stop_stepping (ecs);
2033 return;
2034 }
2035
2036 /* This originates from attach_command(). We need to overwrite
2037 the stop_signal here, because some kernels don't ignore a
2038 SIGSTOP in a subsequent ptrace(PTRACE_SONT,SOGSTOP) call.
2039 See more comments in inferior.h. */
2040 if (stop_soon == STOP_QUIETLY_NO_SIGSTOP)
2041 {
2042 stop_stepping (ecs);
2043 if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_STOP)
2044 stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0;
2045 return;
2046 }
2047
2048 /* Don't even think about breakpoints
2049 if just proceeded over a breakpoint.
2050
2051 However, if we are trying to proceed over a breakpoint
2052 and end up in sigtramp, then through_sigtramp_breakpoint
2053 will be set and we should check whether we've hit the
2054 step breakpoint. */
2055 if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP && trap_expected
2056 && through_sigtramp_breakpoint == NULL)
2057 bpstat_clear (&stop_bpstat);
2058 else
2059 {
2060 /* See if there is a breakpoint at the current PC. */
2061 stop_bpstat = bpstat_stop_status (stop_pc, ecs->ptid);
2062
2063 /* Following in case break condition called a
2064 function. */
2065 stop_print_frame = 1;
2066 }
2067
2068 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-03-29: These two checks for a random signal
2069 at one stage in the past included checks for an inferior
2070 function call's call dummy's return breakpoint. The original
2071 comment, that went with the test, read:
2072
2073 ``End of a stack dummy. Some systems (e.g. Sony news) give
2074 another signal besides SIGTRAP, so check here as well as
2075 above.''
2076
2077 If someone ever tries to get get call dummys on a
2078 non-executable stack to work (where the target would stop
2079 with something like a SIGSEGV), then those tests might need
2080 to be re-instated. Given, however, that the tests were only
2081 enabled when momentary breakpoints were not being used, I
2082 suspect that it won't be the case.
2083
2084 NOTE: kettenis/2004-02-05: Indeed such checks don't seem to
2085 be necessary for call dummies on a non-executable stack on
2086 SPARC. */
2087
2088 if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP)
2089 ecs->random_signal
2090 = !(bpstat_explains_signal (stop_bpstat)
2091 || trap_expected
2092 || (step_range_end && step_resume_breakpoint == NULL));
2093 else
2094 {
2095 ecs->random_signal = !bpstat_explains_signal (stop_bpstat);
2096 if (!ecs->random_signal)
2097 stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP;
2098 }
2099 }
2100
2101 /* When we reach this point, we've pretty much decided
2102 that the reason for stopping must've been a random
2103 (unexpected) signal. */
2104
2105 else
2106 ecs->random_signal = 1;
2107
2108 process_event_stop_test:
2109 /* For the program's own signals, act according to
2110 the signal handling tables. */
2111
2112 if (ecs->random_signal)
2113 {
2114 /* Signal not for debugging purposes. */
2115 int printed = 0;
2116
2117 stopped_by_random_signal = 1;
2118
2119 if (signal_print[stop_signal])
2120 {
2121 printed = 1;
2122 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
2123 print_stop_reason (SIGNAL_RECEIVED, stop_signal);
2124 }
2125 if (signal_stop[stop_signal])
2126 {
2127 stop_stepping (ecs);
2128 return;
2129 }
2130 /* If not going to stop, give terminal back
2131 if we took it away. */
2132 else if (printed)
2133 target_terminal_inferior ();
2134
2135 /* Clear the signal if it should not be passed. */
2136 if (signal_program[stop_signal] == 0)
2137 stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0;
2138
2139 /* I'm not sure whether this needs to be check_sigtramp2 or
2140 whether it could/should be keep_going.
2141
2142 This used to jump to step_over_function if we are stepping,
2143 which is wrong.
2144
2145 Suppose the user does a `next' over a function call, and while
2146 that call is in progress, the inferior receives a signal for
2147 which GDB does not stop (i.e., signal_stop[SIG] is false). In
2148 that case, when we reach this point, there is already a
2149 step-resume breakpoint established, right where it should be:
2150 immediately after the function call the user is "next"-ing
2151 over. If we call step_over_function now, two bad things
2152 happen:
2153
2154 - we'll create a new breakpoint, at wherever the current
2155 frame's return address happens to be. That could be
2156 anywhere, depending on what function call happens to be on
2157 the top of the stack at that point. Point is, it's probably
2158 not where we need it.
2159
2160 - the existing step-resume breakpoint (which is at the correct
2161 address) will get orphaned: step_resume_breakpoint will point
2162 to the new breakpoint, and the old step-resume breakpoint
2163 will never be cleaned up.
2164
2165 The old behavior was meant to help HP-UX single-step out of
2166 sigtramps. It would place the new breakpoint at prev_pc, which
2167 was certainly wrong. I don't know the details there, so fixing
2168 this probably breaks that. As with anything else, it's up to
2169 the HP-UX maintainer to furnish a fix that doesn't break other
2170 platforms. --JimB, 20 May 1999 */
2171 check_sigtramp2 (ecs);
2172 keep_going (ecs);
2173 return;
2174 }
2175
2176 /* Handle cases caused by hitting a breakpoint. */
2177 {
2178 CORE_ADDR jmp_buf_pc;
2179 struct bpstat_what what;
2180
2181 what = bpstat_what (stop_bpstat);
2182
2183 if (what.call_dummy)
2184 {
2185 stop_stack_dummy = 1;
2186 #ifdef HP_OS_BUG
2187 trap_expected_after_continue = 1;
2188 #endif
2189 }
2190
2191 switch (what.main_action)
2192 {
2193 case BPSTAT_WHAT_SET_LONGJMP_RESUME:
2194 /* If we hit the breakpoint at longjmp, disable it for the
2195 duration of this command. Then, install a temporary
2196 breakpoint at the target of the jmp_buf. */
2197 disable_longjmp_breakpoint ();
2198 remove_breakpoints ();
2199 breakpoints_inserted = 0;
2200 if (!GET_LONGJMP_TARGET_P () || !GET_LONGJMP_TARGET (&jmp_buf_pc))
2201 {
2202 keep_going (ecs);
2203 return;
2204 }
2205
2206 /* Need to blow away step-resume breakpoint, as it
2207 interferes with us */
2208 if (step_resume_breakpoint != NULL)
2209 {
2210 delete_step_resume_breakpoint (&step_resume_breakpoint);
2211 }
2212 /* Not sure whether we need to blow this away too, but probably
2213 it is like the step-resume breakpoint. */
2214 if (through_sigtramp_breakpoint != NULL)
2215 {
2216 delete_breakpoint (through_sigtramp_breakpoint);
2217 through_sigtramp_breakpoint = NULL;
2218 }
2219
2220 #if 0
2221 /* FIXME - Need to implement nested temporary breakpoints */
2222 if (step_over_calls > 0)
2223 set_longjmp_resume_breakpoint (jmp_buf_pc, get_current_frame ());
2224 else
2225 #endif /* 0 */
2226 set_longjmp_resume_breakpoint (jmp_buf_pc, null_frame_id);
2227 ecs->handling_longjmp = 1; /* FIXME */
2228 keep_going (ecs);
2229 return;
2230
2231 case BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME:
2232 case BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME_SINGLE:
2233 remove_breakpoints ();
2234 breakpoints_inserted = 0;
2235 #if 0
2236 /* FIXME - Need to implement nested temporary breakpoints */
2237 if (step_over_calls
2238 && (frame_id_inner (get_frame_id (get_current_frame ()),
2239 step_frame_id)))
2240 {
2241 ecs->another_trap = 1;
2242 keep_going (ecs);
2243 return;
2244 }
2245 #endif /* 0 */
2246 disable_longjmp_breakpoint ();
2247 ecs->handling_longjmp = 0; /* FIXME */
2248 if (what.main_action == BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME)
2249 break;
2250 /* else fallthrough */
2251
2252 case BPSTAT_WHAT_SINGLE:
2253 if (breakpoints_inserted)
2254 {
2255 remove_breakpoints ();
2256 }
2257 breakpoints_inserted = 0;
2258 ecs->another_trap = 1;
2259 /* Still need to check other stuff, at least the case
2260 where we are stepping and step out of the right range. */
2261 break;
2262
2263 case BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_NOISY:
2264 stop_print_frame = 1;
2265
2266 /* We are about to nuke the step_resume_breakpoint and
2267 through_sigtramp_breakpoint via the cleanup chain, so
2268 no need to worry about it here. */
2269
2270 stop_stepping (ecs);
2271 return;
2272
2273 case BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_SILENT:
2274 stop_print_frame = 0;
2275
2276 /* We are about to nuke the step_resume_breakpoint and
2277 through_sigtramp_breakpoint via the cleanup chain, so
2278 no need to worry about it here. */
2279
2280 stop_stepping (ecs);
2281 return;
2282
2283 case BPSTAT_WHAT_STEP_RESUME:
2284 /* This proably demands a more elegant solution, but, yeah
2285 right...
2286
2287 This function's use of the simple variable
2288 step_resume_breakpoint doesn't seem to accomodate
2289 simultaneously active step-resume bp's, although the
2290 breakpoint list certainly can.
2291
2292 If we reach here and step_resume_breakpoint is already
2293 NULL, then apparently we have multiple active
2294 step-resume bp's. We'll just delete the breakpoint we
2295 stopped at, and carry on.
2296
2297 Correction: what the code currently does is delete a
2298 step-resume bp, but it makes no effort to ensure that
2299 the one deleted is the one currently stopped at. MVS */
2300
2301 if (step_resume_breakpoint == NULL)
2302 {
2303 step_resume_breakpoint =
2304 bpstat_find_step_resume_breakpoint (stop_bpstat);
2305 }
2306 delete_step_resume_breakpoint (&step_resume_breakpoint);
2307 break;
2308
2309 case BPSTAT_WHAT_THROUGH_SIGTRAMP:
2310 if (through_sigtramp_breakpoint)
2311 delete_breakpoint (through_sigtramp_breakpoint);
2312 through_sigtramp_breakpoint = NULL;
2313
2314 /* If were waiting for a trap, hitting the step_resume_break
2315 doesn't count as getting it. */
2316 if (trap_expected)
2317 ecs->another_trap = 1;
2318 break;
2319
2320 case BPSTAT_WHAT_CHECK_SHLIBS:
2321 case BPSTAT_WHAT_CHECK_SHLIBS_RESUME_FROM_HOOK:
2322 #ifdef SOLIB_ADD
2323 {
2324 /* Remove breakpoints, we eventually want to step over the
2325 shlib event breakpoint, and SOLIB_ADD might adjust
2326 breakpoint addresses via breakpoint_re_set. */
2327 if (breakpoints_inserted)
2328 remove_breakpoints ();
2329 breakpoints_inserted = 0;
2330
2331 /* Check for any newly added shared libraries if we're
2332 supposed to be adding them automatically. Switch
2333 terminal for any messages produced by
2334 breakpoint_re_set. */
2335 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
2336 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-11-25: Make certain that the target
2337 stack's section table is kept up-to-date. Architectures,
2338 (e.g., PPC64), use the section table to perform
2339 operations such as address => section name and hence
2340 require the table to contain all sections (including
2341 those found in shared libraries). */
2342 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-11-25: Pass current_target and not
2343 exec_ops to SOLIB_ADD. This is because current GDB is
2344 only tooled to propagate section_table changes out from
2345 the "current_target" (see target_resize_to_sections), and
2346 not up from the exec stratum. This, of course, isn't
2347 right. "infrun.c" should only interact with the
2348 exec/process stratum, instead relying on the target stack
2349 to propagate relevant changes (stop, section table
2350 changed, ...) up to other layers. */
2351 SOLIB_ADD (NULL, 0, &current_target, auto_solib_add);
2352 target_terminal_inferior ();
2353
2354 /* Try to reenable shared library breakpoints, additional
2355 code segments in shared libraries might be mapped in now. */
2356 re_enable_breakpoints_in_shlibs ();
2357
2358 /* If requested, stop when the dynamic linker notifies
2359 gdb of events. This allows the user to get control
2360 and place breakpoints in initializer routines for
2361 dynamically loaded objects (among other things). */
2362 if (stop_on_solib_events || stop_stack_dummy)
2363 {
2364 stop_stepping (ecs);
2365 return;
2366 }
2367
2368 /* If we stopped due to an explicit catchpoint, then the
2369 (see above) call to SOLIB_ADD pulled in any symbols
2370 from a newly-loaded library, if appropriate.
2371
2372 We do want the inferior to stop, but not where it is
2373 now, which is in the dynamic linker callback. Rather,
2374 we would like it stop in the user's program, just after
2375 the call that caused this catchpoint to trigger. That
2376 gives the user a more useful vantage from which to
2377 examine their program's state. */
2378 else if (what.main_action ==
2379 BPSTAT_WHAT_CHECK_SHLIBS_RESUME_FROM_HOOK)
2380 {
2381 /* ??rehrauer: If I could figure out how to get the
2382 right return PC from here, we could just set a temp
2383 breakpoint and resume. I'm not sure we can without
2384 cracking open the dld's shared libraries and sniffing
2385 their unwind tables and text/data ranges, and that's
2386 not a terribly portable notion.
2387
2388 Until that time, we must step the inferior out of the
2389 dld callback, and also out of the dld itself (and any
2390 code or stubs in libdld.sl, such as "shl_load" and
2391 friends) until we reach non-dld code. At that point,
2392 we can stop stepping. */
2393 bpstat_get_triggered_catchpoints (stop_bpstat,
2394 &ecs->
2395 stepping_through_solib_catchpoints);
2396 ecs->stepping_through_solib_after_catch = 1;
2397
2398 /* Be sure to lift all breakpoints, so the inferior does
2399 actually step past this point... */
2400 ecs->another_trap = 1;
2401 break;
2402 }
2403 else
2404 {
2405 /* We want to step over this breakpoint, then keep going. */
2406 ecs->another_trap = 1;
2407 break;
2408 }
2409 }
2410 #endif
2411 break;
2412
2413 case BPSTAT_WHAT_LAST:
2414 /* Not a real code, but listed here to shut up gcc -Wall. */
2415
2416 case BPSTAT_WHAT_KEEP_CHECKING:
2417 break;
2418 }
2419 }
2420
2421 /* We come here if we hit a breakpoint but should not
2422 stop for it. Possibly we also were stepping
2423 and should stop for that. So fall through and
2424 test for stepping. But, if not stepping,
2425 do not stop. */
2426
2427 /* Are we stepping to get the inferior out of the dynamic
2428 linker's hook (and possibly the dld itself) after catching
2429 a shlib event? */
2430 if (ecs->stepping_through_solib_after_catch)
2431 {
2432 #if defined(SOLIB_ADD)
2433 /* Have we reached our destination? If not, keep going. */
2434 if (SOLIB_IN_DYNAMIC_LINKER (PIDGET (ecs->ptid), stop_pc))
2435 {
2436 ecs->another_trap = 1;
2437 keep_going (ecs);
2438 return;
2439 }
2440 #endif
2441 /* Else, stop and report the catchpoint(s) whose triggering
2442 caused us to begin stepping. */
2443 ecs->stepping_through_solib_after_catch = 0;
2444 bpstat_clear (&stop_bpstat);
2445 stop_bpstat = bpstat_copy (ecs->stepping_through_solib_catchpoints);
2446 bpstat_clear (&ecs->stepping_through_solib_catchpoints);
2447 stop_print_frame = 1;
2448 stop_stepping (ecs);
2449 return;
2450 }
2451
2452 if (step_resume_breakpoint)
2453 {
2454 /* Having a step-resume breakpoint overrides anything
2455 else having to do with stepping commands until
2456 that breakpoint is reached. */
2457 /* I'm not sure whether this needs to be check_sigtramp2 or
2458 whether it could/should be keep_going. */
2459 check_sigtramp2 (ecs);
2460 keep_going (ecs);
2461 return;
2462 }
2463
2464 if (step_range_end == 0)
2465 {
2466 /* Likewise if we aren't even stepping. */
2467 /* I'm not sure whether this needs to be check_sigtramp2 or
2468 whether it could/should be keep_going. */
2469 check_sigtramp2 (ecs);
2470 keep_going (ecs);
2471 return;
2472 }
2473
2474 /* If stepping through a line, keep going if still within it.
2475
2476 Note that step_range_end is the address of the first instruction
2477 beyond the step range, and NOT the address of the last instruction
2478 within it! */
2479 if (stop_pc >= step_range_start && stop_pc < step_range_end)
2480 {
2481 /* We might be doing a BPSTAT_WHAT_SINGLE and getting a signal.
2482 So definately need to check for sigtramp here. */
2483 check_sigtramp2 (ecs);
2484 keep_going (ecs);
2485 return;
2486 }
2487
2488 /* We stepped out of the stepping range. */
2489
2490 /* If we are stepping at the source level and entered the runtime
2491 loader dynamic symbol resolution code, we keep on single stepping
2492 until we exit the run time loader code and reach the callee's
2493 address. */
2494 if (step_over_calls == STEP_OVER_UNDEBUGGABLE
2495 && IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE (stop_pc))
2496 {
2497 CORE_ADDR pc_after_resolver =
2498 gdbarch_skip_solib_resolver (current_gdbarch, stop_pc);
2499
2500 if (pc_after_resolver)
2501 {
2502 /* Set up a step-resume breakpoint at the address
2503 indicated by SKIP_SOLIB_RESOLVER. */
2504 struct symtab_and_line sr_sal;
2505 init_sal (&sr_sal);
2506 sr_sal.pc = pc_after_resolver;
2507
2508 check_for_old_step_resume_breakpoint ();
2509 step_resume_breakpoint =
2510 set_momentary_breakpoint (sr_sal, null_frame_id, bp_step_resume);
2511 if (breakpoints_inserted)
2512 insert_breakpoints ();
2513 }
2514
2515 keep_going (ecs);
2516 return;
2517 }
2518
2519 /* We can't update step_sp every time through the loop, because
2520 reading the stack pointer would slow down stepping too much.
2521 But we can update it every time we leave the step range. */
2522 ecs->update_step_sp = 1;
2523
2524 /* Did we just step into a singal trampoline (either by stepping out
2525 of a handler, or by taking a signal)? */
2526 /* NOTE: cagney/2004-03-16: Replaced (except for legacy) a check for
2527 "pc_in_sigtramp(stop_pc) != pc_in_sigtramp(step_pc)" with
2528 frame_type == SIGTRAMP && !frame_id_eq. The latter is far more
2529 robust as it will correctly handle nested signal trampolines. */
2530 if (legacy_frame_p (current_gdbarch)
2531 ? (pc_in_sigtramp (stop_pc)
2532 && !pc_in_sigtramp (prev_pc)
2533 && INNER_THAN (read_sp (), step_sp))
2534 : (get_frame_type (get_current_frame ()) == SIGTRAMP_FRAME
2535 && !frame_id_eq (get_frame_id (get_current_frame ()), step_frame_id)))
2536 {
2537 {
2538 struct frame_id current_frame = get_frame_id (get_current_frame ());
2539
2540 if (frame_id_inner (current_frame, step_frame_id))
2541 {
2542 /* We have just taken a signal; go until we are back to
2543 the point where we took it and one more. */
2544
2545 /* This code is needed at least in the following case:
2546 The user types "next" and then a signal arrives (before
2547 the "next" is done). */
2548
2549 /* Note that if we are stopped at a breakpoint, then we need
2550 the step_resume breakpoint to override any breakpoints at
2551 the same location, so that we will still step over the
2552 breakpoint even though the signal happened. */
2553 struct symtab_and_line sr_sal;
2554
2555 init_sal (&sr_sal);
2556 sr_sal.symtab = NULL;
2557 sr_sal.line = 0;
2558 sr_sal.pc = prev_pc;
2559 /* We could probably be setting the frame to
2560 step_frame_id; I don't think anyone thought to try it. */
2561 check_for_old_step_resume_breakpoint ();
2562 step_resume_breakpoint =
2563 set_momentary_breakpoint (sr_sal, null_frame_id, bp_step_resume);
2564 if (breakpoints_inserted)
2565 insert_breakpoints ();
2566 }
2567 else
2568 {
2569 /* We just stepped out of a signal handler and into
2570 its calling trampoline.
2571
2572 Normally, we'd call step_over_function from
2573 here, but for some reason GDB can't unwind the
2574 stack correctly to find the real PC for the point
2575 user code where the signal trampoline will return
2576 -- FRAME_SAVED_PC fails, at least on HP-UX 10.20.
2577 But signal trampolines are pretty small stubs of
2578 code, anyway, so it's OK instead to just
2579 single-step out. Note: assuming such trampolines
2580 don't exhibit recursion on any platform... */
2581 find_pc_partial_function (stop_pc, &ecs->stop_func_name,
2582 &ecs->stop_func_start,
2583 &ecs->stop_func_end);
2584 /* Readjust stepping range */
2585 step_range_start = ecs->stop_func_start;
2586 step_range_end = ecs->stop_func_end;
2587 ecs->stepping_through_sigtramp = 1;
2588 }
2589 }
2590
2591
2592 /* If this is stepi or nexti, make sure that the stepping range
2593 gets us past that instruction. */
2594 if (step_range_end == 1)
2595 /* FIXME: Does this run afoul of the code below which, if
2596 we step into the middle of a line, resets the stepping
2597 range? */
2598 step_range_end = (step_range_start = prev_pc) + 1;
2599
2600 ecs->remove_breakpoints_on_following_step = 1;
2601 keep_going (ecs);
2602 return;
2603 }
2604
2605 if (((stop_pc == ecs->stop_func_start /* Quick test */
2606 || in_prologue (stop_pc, ecs->stop_func_start))
2607 && !IN_SOLIB_RETURN_TRAMPOLINE (stop_pc, ecs->stop_func_name))
2608 || IN_SOLIB_CALL_TRAMPOLINE (stop_pc, ecs->stop_func_name)
2609 || ecs->stop_func_name == 0)
2610 {
2611 /* It's a subroutine call. */
2612 handle_step_into_function (ecs);
2613 return;
2614 }
2615
2616 /* We've wandered out of the step range. */
2617
2618 ecs->sal = find_pc_line (stop_pc, 0);
2619
2620 if (step_range_end == 1)
2621 {
2622 /* It is stepi or nexti. We always want to stop stepping after
2623 one instruction. */
2624 stop_step = 1;
2625 print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0);
2626 stop_stepping (ecs);
2627 return;
2628 }
2629
2630 /* If we're in the return path from a shared library trampoline,
2631 we want to proceed through the trampoline when stepping. */
2632 if (IN_SOLIB_RETURN_TRAMPOLINE (stop_pc, ecs->stop_func_name))
2633 {
2634 /* Determine where this trampoline returns. */
2635 CORE_ADDR real_stop_pc = SKIP_TRAMPOLINE_CODE (stop_pc);
2636
2637 /* Only proceed through if we know where it's going. */
2638 if (real_stop_pc)
2639 {
2640 /* And put the step-breakpoint there and go until there. */
2641 struct symtab_and_line sr_sal;
2642
2643 init_sal (&sr_sal); /* initialize to zeroes */
2644 sr_sal.pc = real_stop_pc;
2645 sr_sal.section = find_pc_overlay (sr_sal.pc);
2646 /* Do not specify what the fp should be when we stop
2647 since on some machines the prologue
2648 is where the new fp value is established. */
2649 check_for_old_step_resume_breakpoint ();
2650 step_resume_breakpoint =
2651 set_momentary_breakpoint (sr_sal, null_frame_id, bp_step_resume);
2652 if (breakpoints_inserted)
2653 insert_breakpoints ();
2654
2655 /* Restart without fiddling with the step ranges or
2656 other state. */
2657 keep_going (ecs);
2658 return;
2659 }
2660 }
2661
2662 if (ecs->sal.line == 0)
2663 {
2664 /* We have no line number information. That means to stop
2665 stepping (does this always happen right after one instruction,
2666 when we do "s" in a function with no line numbers,
2667 or can this happen as a result of a return or longjmp?). */
2668 stop_step = 1;
2669 print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0);
2670 stop_stepping (ecs);
2671 return;
2672 }
2673
2674 if ((stop_pc == ecs->sal.pc)
2675 && (ecs->current_line != ecs->sal.line
2676 || ecs->current_symtab != ecs->sal.symtab))
2677 {
2678 /* We are at the start of a different line. So stop. Note that
2679 we don't stop if we step into the middle of a different line.
2680 That is said to make things like for (;;) statements work
2681 better. */
2682 stop_step = 1;
2683 print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0);
2684 stop_stepping (ecs);
2685 return;
2686 }
2687
2688 /* We aren't done stepping.
2689
2690 Optimize by setting the stepping range to the line.
2691 (We might not be in the original line, but if we entered a
2692 new line in mid-statement, we continue stepping. This makes
2693 things like for(;;) statements work better.) */
2694
2695 if (ecs->stop_func_end && ecs->sal.end >= ecs->stop_func_end)
2696 {
2697 /* If this is the last line of the function, don't keep stepping
2698 (it would probably step us out of the function).
2699 This is particularly necessary for a one-line function,
2700 in which after skipping the prologue we better stop even though
2701 we will be in mid-line. */
2702 stop_step = 1;
2703 print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0);
2704 stop_stepping (ecs);
2705 return;
2706 }
2707 step_range_start = ecs->sal.pc;
2708 step_range_end = ecs->sal.end;
2709 step_frame_id = get_frame_id (get_current_frame ());
2710 ecs->current_line = ecs->sal.line;
2711 ecs->current_symtab = ecs->sal.symtab;
2712
2713 /* In the case where we just stepped out of a function into the
2714 middle of a line of the caller, continue stepping, but
2715 step_frame_id must be modified to current frame */
2716 #if 0
2717 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-10-16: I think this frame ID inner test is too
2718 generous. It will trigger on things like a step into a frameless
2719 stackless leaf function. I think the logic should instead look
2720 at the unwound frame ID has that should give a more robust
2721 indication of what happened. */
2722 if (step-ID == current-ID)
2723 still stepping in same function;
2724 else if (step-ID == unwind (current-ID))
2725 stepped into a function;
2726 else
2727 stepped out of a function;
2728 /* Of course this assumes that the frame ID unwind code is robust
2729 and we're willing to introduce frame unwind logic into this
2730 function. Fortunately, those days are nearly upon us. */
2731 #endif
2732 {
2733 struct frame_id current_frame = get_frame_id (get_current_frame ());
2734 if (!(frame_id_inner (current_frame, step_frame_id)))
2735 step_frame_id = current_frame;
2736 }
2737
2738 keep_going (ecs);
2739 }
2740
2741 /* Are we in the middle of stepping? */
2742
2743 static int
2744 currently_stepping (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
2745 {
2746 return ((through_sigtramp_breakpoint == NULL
2747 && !ecs->handling_longjmp
2748 && ((step_range_end && step_resume_breakpoint == NULL)
2749 || trap_expected))
2750 || ecs->stepping_through_solib_after_catch
2751 || bpstat_should_step ());
2752 }
2753
2754 static void
2755 check_sigtramp2 (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
2756 {
2757 if (trap_expected
2758 && pc_in_sigtramp (stop_pc)
2759 && !pc_in_sigtramp (prev_pc)
2760 && INNER_THAN (read_sp (), step_sp))
2761 {
2762 /* What has happened here is that we have just stepped the
2763 inferior with a signal (because it is a signal which
2764 shouldn't make us stop), thus stepping into sigtramp.
2765
2766 So we need to set a step_resume_break_address breakpoint and
2767 continue until we hit it, and then step. FIXME: This should
2768 be more enduring than a step_resume breakpoint; we should
2769 know that we will later need to keep going rather than
2770 re-hitting the breakpoint here (see the testsuite,
2771 gdb.base/signals.exp where it says "exceedingly difficult"). */
2772
2773 struct symtab_and_line sr_sal;
2774
2775 init_sal (&sr_sal); /* initialize to zeroes */
2776 sr_sal.pc = prev_pc;
2777 sr_sal.section = find_pc_overlay (sr_sal.pc);
2778 /* We perhaps could set the frame if we kept track of what the
2779 frame corresponding to prev_pc was. But we don't, so don't. */
2780 through_sigtramp_breakpoint =
2781 set_momentary_breakpoint (sr_sal, null_frame_id, bp_through_sigtramp);
2782 if (breakpoints_inserted)
2783 insert_breakpoints ();
2784
2785 ecs->remove_breakpoints_on_following_step = 1;
2786 ecs->another_trap = 1;
2787 }
2788 }
2789
2790 /* Subroutine call with source code we should not step over. Do step
2791 to the first line of code in it. */
2792
2793 static void
2794 step_into_function (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
2795 {
2796 struct symtab *s;
2797 struct symtab_and_line sr_sal;
2798
2799 s = find_pc_symtab (stop_pc);
2800 if (s && s->language != language_asm)
2801 ecs->stop_func_start = SKIP_PROLOGUE (ecs->stop_func_start);
2802
2803 ecs->sal = find_pc_line (ecs->stop_func_start, 0);
2804 /* Use the step_resume_break to step until the end of the prologue,
2805 even if that involves jumps (as it seems to on the vax under
2806 4.2). */
2807 /* If the prologue ends in the middle of a source line, continue to
2808 the end of that source line (if it is still within the function).
2809 Otherwise, just go to end of prologue. */
2810 if (ecs->sal.end
2811 && ecs->sal.pc != ecs->stop_func_start
2812 && ecs->sal.end < ecs->stop_func_end)
2813 ecs->stop_func_start = ecs->sal.end;
2814
2815 /* Architectures which require breakpoint adjustment might not be able
2816 to place a breakpoint at the computed address. If so, the test
2817 ``ecs->stop_func_start == stop_pc'' will never succeed. Adjust
2818 ecs->stop_func_start to an address at which a breakpoint may be
2819 legitimately placed.
2820
2821 Note: kevinb/2004-01-19: On FR-V, if this adjustment is not
2822 made, GDB will enter an infinite loop when stepping through
2823 optimized code consisting of VLIW instructions which contain
2824 subinstructions corresponding to different source lines. On
2825 FR-V, it's not permitted to place a breakpoint on any but the
2826 first subinstruction of a VLIW instruction. When a breakpoint is
2827 set, GDB will adjust the breakpoint address to the beginning of
2828 the VLIW instruction. Thus, we need to make the corresponding
2829 adjustment here when computing the stop address. */
2830
2831 if (gdbarch_adjust_breakpoint_address_p (current_gdbarch))
2832 {
2833 ecs->stop_func_start
2834 = gdbarch_adjust_breakpoint_address (current_gdbarch,
2835 ecs->stop_func_start);
2836 }
2837
2838 if (ecs->stop_func_start == stop_pc)
2839 {
2840 /* We are already there: stop now. */
2841 stop_step = 1;
2842 print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0);
2843 stop_stepping (ecs);
2844 return;
2845 }
2846 else
2847 {
2848 /* Put the step-breakpoint there and go until there. */
2849 init_sal (&sr_sal); /* initialize to zeroes */
2850 sr_sal.pc = ecs->stop_func_start;
2851 sr_sal.section = find_pc_overlay (ecs->stop_func_start);
2852 /* Do not specify what the fp should be when we stop since on
2853 some machines the prologue is where the new fp value is
2854 established. */
2855 check_for_old_step_resume_breakpoint ();
2856 step_resume_breakpoint =
2857 set_momentary_breakpoint (sr_sal, null_frame_id, bp_step_resume);
2858 if (breakpoints_inserted)
2859 insert_breakpoints ();
2860
2861 /* And make sure stepping stops right away then. */
2862 step_range_end = step_range_start;
2863 }
2864 keep_going (ecs);
2865 }
2866
2867 /* We've just entered a callee, and we wish to resume until it returns
2868 to the caller. Setting a step_resume breakpoint on the return
2869 address will catch a return from the callee.
2870
2871 However, if the callee is recursing, we want to be careful not to
2872 catch returns of those recursive calls, but only of THIS instance
2873 of the caller.
2874
2875 To do this, we set the step_resume bp's frame to our current
2876 caller's frame (obtained by doing a frame ID unwind). */
2877
2878 static void
2879 step_over_function (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
2880 {
2881 struct symtab_and_line sr_sal;
2882 struct frame_id sr_id;
2883
2884 init_sal (&sr_sal); /* initialize to zeros */
2885
2886 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-04-06:
2887
2888 At this point the equality get_frame_pc() == get_frame_func()
2889 should hold. This may make it possible for this code to tell the
2890 frame where it's function is, instead of the reverse. This would
2891 avoid the need to search for the frame's function, which can get
2892 very messy when there is no debug info available (look at the
2893 heuristic find pc start code found in targets like the MIPS). */
2894
2895 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-04-06:
2896
2897 The intent of DEPRECATED_SAVED_PC_AFTER_CALL was to:
2898
2899 - provide a very light weight equivalent to frame_unwind_pc()
2900 (nee FRAME_SAVED_PC) that avoids the prologue analyzer
2901
2902 - avoid handling the case where the PC hasn't been saved in the
2903 prologue analyzer
2904
2905 Unfortunately, not five lines further down, is a call to
2906 get_frame_id() and that is guarenteed to trigger the prologue
2907 analyzer.
2908
2909 The `correct fix' is for the prologe analyzer to handle the case
2910 where the prologue is incomplete (PC in prologue) and,
2911 consequently, the return pc has not yet been saved. It should be
2912 noted that the prologue analyzer needs to handle this case
2913 anyway: frameless leaf functions that don't save the return PC;
2914 single stepping through a prologue.
2915
2916 The d10v handles all this by bailing out of the prologue analsis
2917 when it reaches the current instruction. */
2918
2919 if (DEPRECATED_SAVED_PC_AFTER_CALL_P ())
2920 sr_sal.pc = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (DEPRECATED_SAVED_PC_AFTER_CALL (get_current_frame ()));
2921 else
2922 sr_sal.pc = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (frame_pc_unwind (get_current_frame ()));
2923 sr_sal.section = find_pc_overlay (sr_sal.pc);
2924
2925 check_for_old_step_resume_breakpoint ();
2926
2927 /* NOTE: cagney/2004-03-15: Code using the current value of
2928 "step_frame_id", instead of unwinding that frame ID, removed (at
2929 least for non-legacy platforms). On s390 GNU/Linux, after taking
2930 a signal, the program is directly resumed at the signal handler
2931 and, consequently, the PC would point at at the first instruction
2932 of that signal handler but STEP_FRAME_ID would [incorrectly] at
2933 the interrupted code when it should point at the signal
2934 trampoline. By always and locally doing a frame ID unwind, it's
2935 possible to assert that the code is always using the correct
2936 ID. */
2937 if (legacy_frame_p (current_gdbarch))
2938 {
2939 if (frame_id_p (step_frame_id)
2940 && !IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE (sr_sal.pc))
2941 /* NOTE: cagney/2004-02-27: Use the global state's idea of the
2942 stepping frame ID. I suspect this is done as it is lighter
2943 weight than a call to get_prev_frame. */
2944 /* NOTE: cagney/2004-03-15: See comment above about how this
2945 is also broken. */
2946 sr_id = step_frame_id;
2947 else
2948 /* NOTE: cagney/2004-03-15: This is the way it was 'cos this
2949 is the way it always was. It should be using the unwound
2950 (or caller's) ID, and not this (or the callee's) ID. It
2951 appeared to work because: legacy architectures used the
2952 wrong end of the frame for the ID.stack (inner-most rather
2953 than outer-most) so that the callee's id.stack (un
2954 adjusted) matched the caller's id.stack giving the
2955 "correct" id; more often than not
2956 !IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE and hence the code above (it
2957 was originally later in the function) fixed the ID by using
2958 global state. */
2959 sr_id = get_frame_id (get_current_frame ());
2960 }
2961 else
2962 sr_id = get_frame_id (get_prev_frame (get_current_frame ()));
2963
2964 step_resume_breakpoint = set_momentary_breakpoint (sr_sal, sr_id, bp_step_resume);
2965
2966 if (breakpoints_inserted)
2967 insert_breakpoints ();
2968 }
2969
2970 static void
2971 stop_stepping (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
2972 {
2973 /* Let callers know we don't want to wait for the inferior anymore. */
2974 ecs->wait_some_more = 0;
2975 }
2976
2977 /* This function handles various cases where we need to continue
2978 waiting for the inferior. */
2979 /* (Used to be the keep_going: label in the old wait_for_inferior) */
2980
2981 static void
2982 keep_going (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
2983 {
2984 /* Save the pc before execution, to compare with pc after stop. */
2985 prev_pc = read_pc (); /* Might have been DECR_AFTER_BREAK */
2986
2987 if (ecs->update_step_sp)
2988 step_sp = read_sp ();
2989 ecs->update_step_sp = 0;
2990
2991 /* If we did not do break;, it means we should keep running the
2992 inferior and not return to debugger. */
2993
2994 if (trap_expected && stop_signal != TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP)
2995 {
2996 /* We took a signal (which we are supposed to pass through to
2997 the inferior, else we'd have done a break above) and we
2998 haven't yet gotten our trap. Simply continue. */
2999 resume (currently_stepping (ecs), stop_signal);
3000 }
3001 else
3002 {
3003 /* Either the trap was not expected, but we are continuing
3004 anyway (the user asked that this signal be passed to the
3005 child)
3006 -- or --
3007 The signal was SIGTRAP, e.g. it was our signal, but we
3008 decided we should resume from it.
3009
3010 We're going to run this baby now!
3011
3012 Insert breakpoints now, unless we are trying to one-proceed
3013 past a breakpoint. */
3014 /* If we've just finished a special step resume and we don't
3015 want to hit a breakpoint, pull em out. */
3016 if (step_resume_breakpoint == NULL
3017 && through_sigtramp_breakpoint == NULL
3018 && ecs->remove_breakpoints_on_following_step)
3019 {
3020 ecs->remove_breakpoints_on_following_step = 0;
3021 remove_breakpoints ();
3022 breakpoints_inserted = 0;
3023 }
3024 else if (!breakpoints_inserted &&
3025 (through_sigtramp_breakpoint != NULL || !ecs->another_trap))
3026 {
3027 breakpoints_failed = insert_breakpoints ();
3028 if (breakpoints_failed)
3029 {
3030 stop_stepping (ecs);
3031 return;
3032 }
3033 breakpoints_inserted = 1;
3034 }
3035
3036 trap_expected = ecs->another_trap;
3037
3038 /* Do not deliver SIGNAL_TRAP (except when the user explicitly
3039 specifies that such a signal should be delivered to the
3040 target program).
3041
3042 Typically, this would occure when a user is debugging a
3043 target monitor on a simulator: the target monitor sets a
3044 breakpoint; the simulator encounters this break-point and
3045 halts the simulation handing control to GDB; GDB, noteing
3046 that the break-point isn't valid, returns control back to the
3047 simulator; the simulator then delivers the hardware
3048 equivalent of a SIGNAL_TRAP to the program being debugged. */
3049
3050 if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP && !signal_program[stop_signal])
3051 stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0;
3052
3053
3054 resume (currently_stepping (ecs), stop_signal);
3055 }
3056
3057 prepare_to_wait (ecs);
3058 }
3059
3060 /* This function normally comes after a resume, before
3061 handle_inferior_event exits. It takes care of any last bits of
3062 housekeeping, and sets the all-important wait_some_more flag. */
3063
3064 static void
3065 prepare_to_wait (struct execution_control_state *ecs)
3066 {
3067 if (ecs->infwait_state == infwait_normal_state)
3068 {
3069 overlay_cache_invalid = 1;
3070
3071 /* We have to invalidate the registers BEFORE calling
3072 target_wait because they can be loaded from the target while
3073 in target_wait. This makes remote debugging a bit more
3074 efficient for those targets that provide critical registers
3075 as part of their normal status mechanism. */
3076
3077 registers_changed ();
3078 ecs->waiton_ptid = pid_to_ptid (-1);
3079 ecs->wp = &(ecs->ws);
3080 }
3081 /* This is the old end of the while loop. Let everybody know we
3082 want to wait for the inferior some more and get called again
3083 soon. */
3084 ecs->wait_some_more = 1;
3085 }
3086
3087 /* Print why the inferior has stopped. We always print something when
3088 the inferior exits, or receives a signal. The rest of the cases are
3089 dealt with later on in normal_stop() and print_it_typical(). Ideally
3090 there should be a call to this function from handle_inferior_event()
3091 each time stop_stepping() is called.*/
3092 static void
3093 print_stop_reason (enum inferior_stop_reason stop_reason, int stop_info)
3094 {
3095 switch (stop_reason)
3096 {
3097 case STOP_UNKNOWN:
3098 /* We don't deal with these cases from handle_inferior_event()
3099 yet. */
3100 break;
3101 case END_STEPPING_RANGE:
3102 /* We are done with a step/next/si/ni command. */
3103 /* For now print nothing. */
3104 /* Print a message only if not in the middle of doing a "step n"
3105 operation for n > 1 */
3106 if (!step_multi || !stop_step)
3107 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3108 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "reason", "end-stepping-range");
3109 break;
3110 case BREAKPOINT_HIT:
3111 /* We found a breakpoint. */
3112 /* For now print nothing. */
3113 break;
3114 case SIGNAL_EXITED:
3115 /* The inferior was terminated by a signal. */
3116 annotate_signalled ();
3117 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3118 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "reason", "exited-signalled");
3119 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nProgram terminated with signal ");
3120 annotate_signal_name ();
3121 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "signal-name",
3122 target_signal_to_name (stop_info));
3123 annotate_signal_name_end ();
3124 ui_out_text (uiout, ", ");
3125 annotate_signal_string ();
3126 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "signal-meaning",
3127 target_signal_to_string (stop_info));
3128 annotate_signal_string_end ();
3129 ui_out_text (uiout, ".\n");
3130 ui_out_text (uiout, "The program no longer exists.\n");
3131 break;
3132 case EXITED:
3133 /* The inferior program is finished. */
3134 annotate_exited (stop_info);
3135 if (stop_info)
3136 {
3137 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3138 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "reason", "exited");
3139 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nProgram exited with code ");
3140 ui_out_field_fmt (uiout, "exit-code", "0%o",
3141 (unsigned int) stop_info);
3142 ui_out_text (uiout, ".\n");
3143 }
3144 else
3145 {
3146 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3147 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "reason", "exited-normally");
3148 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nProgram exited normally.\n");
3149 }
3150 break;
3151 case SIGNAL_RECEIVED:
3152 /* Signal received. The signal table tells us to print about
3153 it. */
3154 annotate_signal ();
3155 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nProgram received signal ");
3156 annotate_signal_name ();
3157 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3158 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "reason", "signal-received");
3159 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "signal-name",
3160 target_signal_to_name (stop_info));
3161 annotate_signal_name_end ();
3162 ui_out_text (uiout, ", ");
3163 annotate_signal_string ();
3164 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "signal-meaning",
3165 target_signal_to_string (stop_info));
3166 annotate_signal_string_end ();
3167 ui_out_text (uiout, ".\n");
3168 break;
3169 default:
3170 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
3171 "print_stop_reason: unrecognized enum value");
3172 break;
3173 }
3174 }
3175 \f
3176
3177 /* Here to return control to GDB when the inferior stops for real.
3178 Print appropriate messages, remove breakpoints, give terminal our modes.
3179
3180 STOP_PRINT_FRAME nonzero means print the executing frame
3181 (pc, function, args, file, line number and line text).
3182 BREAKPOINTS_FAILED nonzero means stop was due to error
3183 attempting to insert breakpoints. */
3184
3185 void
3186 normal_stop (void)
3187 {
3188 struct target_waitstatus last;
3189 ptid_t last_ptid;
3190
3191 get_last_target_status (&last_ptid, &last);
3192
3193 /* As with the notification of thread events, we want to delay
3194 notifying the user that we've switched thread context until
3195 the inferior actually stops.
3196
3197 There's no point in saying anything if the inferior has exited.
3198 Note that SIGNALLED here means "exited with a signal", not
3199 "received a signal". */
3200 if (!ptid_equal (previous_inferior_ptid, inferior_ptid)
3201 && target_has_execution
3202 && last.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED
3203 && last.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED)
3204 {
3205 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
3206 printf_filtered ("[Switching to %s]\n",
3207 target_pid_or_tid_to_str (inferior_ptid));
3208 previous_inferior_ptid = inferior_ptid;
3209 }
3210
3211 /* NOTE drow/2004-01-17: Is this still necessary? */
3212 /* Make sure that the current_frame's pc is correct. This
3213 is a correction for setting up the frame info before doing
3214 DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK */
3215 if (target_has_execution)
3216 /* FIXME: cagney/2002-12-06: Has the PC changed? Thanks to
3217 DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK, the program counter can change. Ask the
3218 frame code to check for this and sort out any resultant mess.
3219 DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK needs to just go away. */
3220 deprecated_update_frame_pc_hack (get_current_frame (), read_pc ());
3221
3222 if (target_has_execution && breakpoints_inserted)
3223 {
3224 if (remove_breakpoints ())
3225 {
3226 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
3227 printf_filtered ("Cannot remove breakpoints because ");
3228 printf_filtered ("program is no longer writable.\n");
3229 printf_filtered ("It might be running in another process.\n");
3230 printf_filtered ("Further execution is probably impossible.\n");
3231 }
3232 }
3233 breakpoints_inserted = 0;
3234
3235 /* Delete the breakpoint we stopped at, if it wants to be deleted.
3236 Delete any breakpoint that is to be deleted at the next stop. */
3237
3238 breakpoint_auto_delete (stop_bpstat);
3239
3240 /* If an auto-display called a function and that got a signal,
3241 delete that auto-display to avoid an infinite recursion. */
3242
3243 if (stopped_by_random_signal)
3244 disable_current_display ();
3245
3246 /* Don't print a message if in the middle of doing a "step n"
3247 operation for n > 1 */
3248 if (step_multi && stop_step)
3249 goto done;
3250
3251 target_terminal_ours ();
3252
3253 /* Look up the hook_stop and run it (CLI internally handles problem
3254 of stop_command's pre-hook not existing). */
3255 if (stop_command)
3256 catch_errors (hook_stop_stub, stop_command,
3257 "Error while running hook_stop:\n", RETURN_MASK_ALL);
3258
3259 if (!target_has_stack)
3260 {
3261
3262 goto done;
3263 }
3264
3265 /* Select innermost stack frame - i.e., current frame is frame 0,
3266 and current location is based on that.
3267 Don't do this on return from a stack dummy routine,
3268 or if the program has exited. */
3269
3270 if (!stop_stack_dummy)
3271 {
3272 select_frame (get_current_frame ());
3273
3274 /* Print current location without a level number, if
3275 we have changed functions or hit a breakpoint.
3276 Print source line if we have one.
3277 bpstat_print() contains the logic deciding in detail
3278 what to print, based on the event(s) that just occurred. */
3279
3280 if (stop_print_frame && deprecated_selected_frame)
3281 {
3282 int bpstat_ret;
3283 int source_flag;
3284 int do_frame_printing = 1;
3285
3286 bpstat_ret = bpstat_print (stop_bpstat);
3287 switch (bpstat_ret)
3288 {
3289 case PRINT_UNKNOWN:
3290 /* FIXME: cagney/2002-12-01: Given that a frame ID does
3291 (or should) carry around the function and does (or
3292 should) use that when doing a frame comparison. */
3293 if (stop_step
3294 && frame_id_eq (step_frame_id,
3295 get_frame_id (get_current_frame ()))
3296 && step_start_function == find_pc_function (stop_pc))
3297 source_flag = SRC_LINE; /* finished step, just print source line */
3298 else
3299 source_flag = SRC_AND_LOC; /* print location and source line */
3300 break;
3301 case PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC:
3302 source_flag = SRC_AND_LOC; /* print location and source line */
3303 break;
3304 case PRINT_SRC_ONLY:
3305 source_flag = SRC_LINE;
3306 break;
3307 case PRINT_NOTHING:
3308 source_flag = SRC_LINE; /* something bogus */
3309 do_frame_printing = 0;
3310 break;
3311 default:
3312 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "Unknown value.");
3313 }
3314 /* For mi, have the same behavior every time we stop:
3315 print everything but the source line. */
3316 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3317 source_flag = LOC_AND_ADDRESS;
3318
3319 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3320 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "thread-id",
3321 pid_to_thread_id (inferior_ptid));
3322 /* The behavior of this routine with respect to the source
3323 flag is:
3324 SRC_LINE: Print only source line
3325 LOCATION: Print only location
3326 SRC_AND_LOC: Print location and source line */
3327 if (do_frame_printing)
3328 print_stack_frame (deprecated_selected_frame, -1, source_flag);
3329
3330 /* Display the auto-display expressions. */
3331 do_displays ();
3332 }
3333 }
3334
3335 /* Save the function value return registers, if we care.
3336 We might be about to restore their previous contents. */
3337 if (proceed_to_finish)
3338 /* NB: The copy goes through to the target picking up the value of
3339 all the registers. */
3340 regcache_cpy (stop_registers, current_regcache);
3341
3342 if (stop_stack_dummy)
3343 {
3344 /* Pop the empty frame that contains the stack dummy. POP_FRAME
3345 ends with a setting of the current frame, so we can use that
3346 next. */
3347 frame_pop (get_current_frame ());
3348 /* Set stop_pc to what it was before we called the function.
3349 Can't rely on restore_inferior_status because that only gets
3350 called if we don't stop in the called function. */
3351 stop_pc = read_pc ();
3352 select_frame (get_current_frame ());
3353 }
3354
3355 done:
3356 annotate_stopped ();
3357 observer_notify_normal_stop ();
3358 }
3359
3360 static int
3361 hook_stop_stub (void *cmd)
3362 {
3363 execute_cmd_pre_hook ((struct cmd_list_element *) cmd);
3364 return (0);
3365 }
3366 \f
3367 int
3368 signal_stop_state (int signo)
3369 {
3370 return signal_stop[signo];
3371 }
3372
3373 int
3374 signal_print_state (int signo)
3375 {
3376 return signal_print[signo];
3377 }
3378
3379 int
3380 signal_pass_state (int signo)
3381 {
3382 return signal_program[signo];
3383 }
3384
3385 int
3386 signal_stop_update (int signo, int state)
3387 {
3388 int ret = signal_stop[signo];
3389 signal_stop[signo] = state;
3390 return ret;
3391 }
3392
3393 int
3394 signal_print_update (int signo, int state)
3395 {
3396 int ret = signal_print[signo];
3397 signal_print[signo] = state;
3398 return ret;
3399 }
3400
3401 int
3402 signal_pass_update (int signo, int state)
3403 {
3404 int ret = signal_program[signo];
3405 signal_program[signo] = state;
3406 return ret;
3407 }
3408
3409 static void
3410 sig_print_header (void)
3411 {
3412 printf_filtered ("\
3413 Signal Stop\tPrint\tPass to program\tDescription\n");
3414 }
3415
3416 static void
3417 sig_print_info (enum target_signal oursig)
3418 {
3419 char *name = target_signal_to_name (oursig);
3420 int name_padding = 13 - strlen (name);
3421
3422 if (name_padding <= 0)
3423 name_padding = 0;
3424
3425 printf_filtered ("%s", name);
3426 printf_filtered ("%*.*s ", name_padding, name_padding, " ");
3427 printf_filtered ("%s\t", signal_stop[oursig] ? "Yes" : "No");
3428 printf_filtered ("%s\t", signal_print[oursig] ? "Yes" : "No");
3429 printf_filtered ("%s\t\t", signal_program[oursig] ? "Yes" : "No");
3430 printf_filtered ("%s\n", target_signal_to_string (oursig));
3431 }
3432
3433 /* Specify how various signals in the inferior should be handled. */
3434
3435 static void
3436 handle_command (char *args, int from_tty)
3437 {
3438 char **argv;
3439 int digits, wordlen;
3440 int sigfirst, signum, siglast;
3441 enum target_signal oursig;
3442 int allsigs;
3443 int nsigs;
3444 unsigned char *sigs;
3445 struct cleanup *old_chain;
3446
3447 if (args == NULL)
3448 {
3449 error_no_arg ("signal to handle");
3450 }
3451
3452 /* Allocate and zero an array of flags for which signals to handle. */
3453
3454 nsigs = (int) TARGET_SIGNAL_LAST;
3455 sigs = (unsigned char *) alloca (nsigs);
3456 memset (sigs, 0, nsigs);
3457
3458 /* Break the command line up into args. */
3459
3460 argv = buildargv (args);
3461 if (argv == NULL)
3462 {
3463 nomem (0);
3464 }
3465 old_chain = make_cleanup_freeargv (argv);
3466
3467 /* Walk through the args, looking for signal oursigs, signal names, and
3468 actions. Signal numbers and signal names may be interspersed with
3469 actions, with the actions being performed for all signals cumulatively
3470 specified. Signal ranges can be specified as <LOW>-<HIGH>. */
3471
3472 while (*argv != NULL)
3473 {
3474 wordlen = strlen (*argv);
3475 for (digits = 0; isdigit ((*argv)[digits]); digits++)
3476 {;
3477 }
3478 allsigs = 0;
3479 sigfirst = siglast = -1;
3480
3481 if (wordlen >= 1 && !strncmp (*argv, "all", wordlen))
3482 {
3483 /* Apply action to all signals except those used by the
3484 debugger. Silently skip those. */
3485 allsigs = 1;
3486 sigfirst = 0;
3487 siglast = nsigs - 1;
3488 }
3489 else if (wordlen >= 1 && !strncmp (*argv, "stop", wordlen))
3490 {
3491 SET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_stop);
3492 SET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_print);
3493 }
3494 else if (wordlen >= 1 && !strncmp (*argv, "ignore", wordlen))
3495 {
3496 UNSET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_program);
3497 }
3498 else if (wordlen >= 2 && !strncmp (*argv, "print", wordlen))
3499 {
3500 SET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_print);
3501 }
3502 else if (wordlen >= 2 && !strncmp (*argv, "pass", wordlen))
3503 {
3504 SET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_program);
3505 }
3506 else if (wordlen >= 3 && !strncmp (*argv, "nostop", wordlen))
3507 {
3508 UNSET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_stop);
3509 }
3510 else if (wordlen >= 3 && !strncmp (*argv, "noignore", wordlen))
3511 {
3512 SET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_program);
3513 }
3514 else if (wordlen >= 4 && !strncmp (*argv, "noprint", wordlen))
3515 {
3516 UNSET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_print);
3517 UNSET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_stop);
3518 }
3519 else if (wordlen >= 4 && !strncmp (*argv, "nopass", wordlen))
3520 {
3521 UNSET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_program);
3522 }
3523 else if (digits > 0)
3524 {
3525 /* It is numeric. The numeric signal refers to our own
3526 internal signal numbering from target.h, not to host/target
3527 signal number. This is a feature; users really should be
3528 using symbolic names anyway, and the common ones like
3529 SIGHUP, SIGINT, SIGALRM, etc. will work right anyway. */
3530
3531 sigfirst = siglast = (int)
3532 target_signal_from_command (atoi (*argv));
3533 if ((*argv)[digits] == '-')
3534 {
3535 siglast = (int)
3536 target_signal_from_command (atoi ((*argv) + digits + 1));
3537 }
3538 if (sigfirst > siglast)
3539 {
3540 /* Bet he didn't figure we'd think of this case... */
3541 signum = sigfirst;
3542 sigfirst = siglast;
3543 siglast = signum;
3544 }
3545 }
3546 else
3547 {
3548 oursig = target_signal_from_name (*argv);
3549 if (oursig != TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN)
3550 {
3551 sigfirst = siglast = (int) oursig;
3552 }
3553 else
3554 {
3555 /* Not a number and not a recognized flag word => complain. */
3556 error ("Unrecognized or ambiguous flag word: \"%s\".", *argv);
3557 }
3558 }
3559
3560 /* If any signal numbers or symbol names were found, set flags for
3561 which signals to apply actions to. */
3562
3563 for (signum = sigfirst; signum >= 0 && signum <= siglast; signum++)
3564 {
3565 switch ((enum target_signal) signum)
3566 {
3567 case TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP:
3568 case TARGET_SIGNAL_INT:
3569 if (!allsigs && !sigs[signum])
3570 {
3571 if (query ("%s is used by the debugger.\n\
3572 Are you sure you want to change it? ", target_signal_to_name ((enum target_signal) signum)))
3573 {
3574 sigs[signum] = 1;
3575 }
3576 else
3577 {
3578 printf_unfiltered ("Not confirmed, unchanged.\n");
3579 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
3580 }
3581 }
3582 break;
3583 case TARGET_SIGNAL_0:
3584 case TARGET_SIGNAL_DEFAULT:
3585 case TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN:
3586 /* Make sure that "all" doesn't print these. */
3587 break;
3588 default:
3589 sigs[signum] = 1;
3590 break;
3591 }
3592 }
3593
3594 argv++;
3595 }
3596
3597 target_notice_signals (inferior_ptid);
3598
3599 if (from_tty)
3600 {
3601 /* Show the results. */
3602 sig_print_header ();
3603 for (signum = 0; signum < nsigs; signum++)
3604 {
3605 if (sigs[signum])
3606 {
3607 sig_print_info (signum);
3608 }
3609 }
3610 }
3611
3612 do_cleanups (old_chain);
3613 }
3614
3615 static void
3616 xdb_handle_command (char *args, int from_tty)
3617 {
3618 char **argv;
3619 struct cleanup *old_chain;
3620
3621 /* Break the command line up into args. */
3622
3623 argv = buildargv (args);
3624 if (argv == NULL)
3625 {
3626 nomem (0);
3627 }
3628 old_chain = make_cleanup_freeargv (argv);
3629 if (argv[1] != (char *) NULL)
3630 {
3631 char *argBuf;
3632 int bufLen;
3633
3634 bufLen = strlen (argv[0]) + 20;
3635 argBuf = (char *) xmalloc (bufLen);
3636 if (argBuf)
3637 {
3638 int validFlag = 1;
3639 enum target_signal oursig;
3640
3641 oursig = target_signal_from_name (argv[0]);
3642 memset (argBuf, 0, bufLen);
3643 if (strcmp (argv[1], "Q") == 0)
3644 sprintf (argBuf, "%s %s", argv[0], "noprint");
3645 else
3646 {
3647 if (strcmp (argv[1], "s") == 0)
3648 {
3649 if (!signal_stop[oursig])
3650 sprintf (argBuf, "%s %s", argv[0], "stop");
3651 else
3652 sprintf (argBuf, "%s %s", argv[0], "nostop");
3653 }
3654 else if (strcmp (argv[1], "i") == 0)
3655 {
3656 if (!signal_program[oursig])
3657 sprintf (argBuf, "%s %s", argv[0], "pass");
3658 else
3659 sprintf (argBuf, "%s %s", argv[0], "nopass");
3660 }
3661 else if (strcmp (argv[1], "r") == 0)
3662 {
3663 if (!signal_print[oursig])
3664 sprintf (argBuf, "%s %s", argv[0], "print");
3665 else
3666 sprintf (argBuf, "%s %s", argv[0], "noprint");
3667 }
3668 else
3669 validFlag = 0;
3670 }
3671 if (validFlag)
3672 handle_command (argBuf, from_tty);
3673 else
3674 printf_filtered ("Invalid signal handling flag.\n");
3675 if (argBuf)
3676 xfree (argBuf);
3677 }
3678 }
3679 do_cleanups (old_chain);
3680 }
3681
3682 /* Print current contents of the tables set by the handle command.
3683 It is possible we should just be printing signals actually used
3684 by the current target (but for things to work right when switching
3685 targets, all signals should be in the signal tables). */
3686
3687 static void
3688 signals_info (char *signum_exp, int from_tty)
3689 {
3690 enum target_signal oursig;
3691 sig_print_header ();
3692
3693 if (signum_exp)
3694 {
3695 /* First see if this is a symbol name. */
3696 oursig = target_signal_from_name (signum_exp);
3697 if (oursig == TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN)
3698 {
3699 /* No, try numeric. */
3700 oursig =
3701 target_signal_from_command (parse_and_eval_long (signum_exp));
3702 }
3703 sig_print_info (oursig);
3704 return;
3705 }
3706
3707 printf_filtered ("\n");
3708 /* These ugly casts brought to you by the native VAX compiler. */
3709 for (oursig = TARGET_SIGNAL_FIRST;
3710 (int) oursig < (int) TARGET_SIGNAL_LAST;
3711 oursig = (enum target_signal) ((int) oursig + 1))
3712 {
3713 QUIT;
3714
3715 if (oursig != TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN
3716 && oursig != TARGET_SIGNAL_DEFAULT && oursig != TARGET_SIGNAL_0)
3717 sig_print_info (oursig);
3718 }
3719
3720 printf_filtered ("\nUse the \"handle\" command to change these tables.\n");
3721 }
3722 \f
3723 struct inferior_status
3724 {
3725 enum target_signal stop_signal;
3726 CORE_ADDR stop_pc;
3727 bpstat stop_bpstat;
3728 int stop_step;
3729 int stop_stack_dummy;
3730 int stopped_by_random_signal;
3731 int trap_expected;
3732 CORE_ADDR step_range_start;
3733 CORE_ADDR step_range_end;
3734 struct frame_id step_frame_id;
3735 enum step_over_calls_kind step_over_calls;
3736 CORE_ADDR step_resume_break_address;
3737 int stop_after_trap;
3738 int stop_soon;
3739 struct regcache *stop_registers;
3740
3741 /* These are here because if call_function_by_hand has written some
3742 registers and then decides to call error(), we better not have changed
3743 any registers. */
3744 struct regcache *registers;
3745
3746 /* A frame unique identifier. */
3747 struct frame_id selected_frame_id;
3748
3749 int breakpoint_proceeded;
3750 int restore_stack_info;
3751 int proceed_to_finish;
3752 };
3753
3754 void
3755 write_inferior_status_register (struct inferior_status *inf_status, int regno,
3756 LONGEST val)
3757 {
3758 int size = DEPRECATED_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regno);
3759 void *buf = alloca (size);
3760 store_signed_integer (buf, size, val);
3761 regcache_raw_write (inf_status->registers, regno, buf);
3762 }
3763
3764 /* Save all of the information associated with the inferior<==>gdb
3765 connection. INF_STATUS is a pointer to a "struct inferior_status"
3766 (defined in inferior.h). */
3767
3768 struct inferior_status *
3769 save_inferior_status (int restore_stack_info)
3770 {
3771 struct inferior_status *inf_status = XMALLOC (struct inferior_status);
3772
3773 inf_status->stop_signal = stop_signal;
3774 inf_status->stop_pc = stop_pc;
3775 inf_status->stop_step = stop_step;
3776 inf_status->stop_stack_dummy = stop_stack_dummy;
3777 inf_status->stopped_by_random_signal = stopped_by_random_signal;
3778 inf_status->trap_expected = trap_expected;
3779 inf_status->step_range_start = step_range_start;
3780 inf_status->step_range_end = step_range_end;
3781 inf_status->step_frame_id = step_frame_id;
3782 inf_status->step_over_calls = step_over_calls;
3783 inf_status->stop_after_trap = stop_after_trap;
3784 inf_status->stop_soon = stop_soon;
3785 /* Save original bpstat chain here; replace it with copy of chain.
3786 If caller's caller is walking the chain, they'll be happier if we
3787 hand them back the original chain when restore_inferior_status is
3788 called. */
3789 inf_status->stop_bpstat = stop_bpstat;
3790 stop_bpstat = bpstat_copy (stop_bpstat);
3791 inf_status->breakpoint_proceeded = breakpoint_proceeded;
3792 inf_status->restore_stack_info = restore_stack_info;
3793 inf_status->proceed_to_finish = proceed_to_finish;
3794
3795 inf_status->stop_registers = regcache_dup_no_passthrough (stop_registers);
3796
3797 inf_status->registers = regcache_dup (current_regcache);
3798
3799 inf_status->selected_frame_id = get_frame_id (deprecated_selected_frame);
3800 return inf_status;
3801 }
3802
3803 static int
3804 restore_selected_frame (void *args)
3805 {
3806 struct frame_id *fid = (struct frame_id *) args;
3807 struct frame_info *frame;
3808
3809 frame = frame_find_by_id (*fid);
3810
3811 /* If inf_status->selected_frame_id is NULL, there was no previously
3812 selected frame. */
3813 if (frame == NULL)
3814 {
3815 warning ("Unable to restore previously selected frame.\n");
3816 return 0;
3817 }
3818
3819 select_frame (frame);
3820
3821 return (1);
3822 }
3823
3824 void
3825 restore_inferior_status (struct inferior_status *inf_status)
3826 {
3827 stop_signal = inf_status->stop_signal;
3828 stop_pc = inf_status->stop_pc;
3829 stop_step = inf_status->stop_step;
3830 stop_stack_dummy = inf_status->stop_stack_dummy;
3831 stopped_by_random_signal = inf_status->stopped_by_random_signal;
3832 trap_expected = inf_status->trap_expected;
3833 step_range_start = inf_status->step_range_start;
3834 step_range_end = inf_status->step_range_end;
3835 step_frame_id = inf_status->step_frame_id;
3836 step_over_calls = inf_status->step_over_calls;
3837 stop_after_trap = inf_status->stop_after_trap;
3838 stop_soon = inf_status->stop_soon;
3839 bpstat_clear (&stop_bpstat);
3840 stop_bpstat = inf_status->stop_bpstat;
3841 breakpoint_proceeded = inf_status->breakpoint_proceeded;
3842 proceed_to_finish = inf_status->proceed_to_finish;
3843
3844 /* FIXME: Is the restore of stop_registers always needed. */
3845 regcache_xfree (stop_registers);
3846 stop_registers = inf_status->stop_registers;
3847
3848 /* The inferior can be gone if the user types "print exit(0)"
3849 (and perhaps other times). */
3850 if (target_has_execution)
3851 /* NB: The register write goes through to the target. */
3852 regcache_cpy (current_regcache, inf_status->registers);
3853 regcache_xfree (inf_status->registers);
3854
3855 /* FIXME: If we are being called after stopping in a function which
3856 is called from gdb, we should not be trying to restore the
3857 selected frame; it just prints a spurious error message (The
3858 message is useful, however, in detecting bugs in gdb (like if gdb
3859 clobbers the stack)). In fact, should we be restoring the
3860 inferior status at all in that case? . */
3861
3862 if (target_has_stack && inf_status->restore_stack_info)
3863 {
3864 /* The point of catch_errors is that if the stack is clobbered,
3865 walking the stack might encounter a garbage pointer and
3866 error() trying to dereference it. */
3867 if (catch_errors
3868 (restore_selected_frame, &inf_status->selected_frame_id,
3869 "Unable to restore previously selected frame:\n",
3870 RETURN_MASK_ERROR) == 0)
3871 /* Error in restoring the selected frame. Select the innermost
3872 frame. */
3873 select_frame (get_current_frame ());
3874
3875 }
3876
3877 xfree (inf_status);
3878 }
3879
3880 static void
3881 do_restore_inferior_status_cleanup (void *sts)
3882 {
3883 restore_inferior_status (sts);
3884 }
3885
3886 struct cleanup *
3887 make_cleanup_restore_inferior_status (struct inferior_status *inf_status)
3888 {
3889 return make_cleanup (do_restore_inferior_status_cleanup, inf_status);
3890 }
3891
3892 void
3893 discard_inferior_status (struct inferior_status *inf_status)
3894 {
3895 /* See save_inferior_status for info on stop_bpstat. */
3896 bpstat_clear (&inf_status->stop_bpstat);
3897 regcache_xfree (inf_status->registers);
3898 regcache_xfree (inf_status->stop_registers);
3899 xfree (inf_status);
3900 }
3901
3902 int
3903 inferior_has_forked (int pid, int *child_pid)
3904 {
3905 struct target_waitstatus last;
3906 ptid_t last_ptid;
3907
3908 get_last_target_status (&last_ptid, &last);
3909
3910 if (last.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED)
3911 return 0;
3912
3913 if (ptid_get_pid (last_ptid) != pid)
3914 return 0;
3915
3916 *child_pid = last.value.related_pid;
3917 return 1;
3918 }
3919
3920 int
3921 inferior_has_vforked (int pid, int *child_pid)
3922 {
3923 struct target_waitstatus last;
3924 ptid_t last_ptid;
3925
3926 get_last_target_status (&last_ptid, &last);
3927
3928 if (last.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED)
3929 return 0;
3930
3931 if (ptid_get_pid (last_ptid) != pid)
3932 return 0;
3933
3934 *child_pid = last.value.related_pid;
3935 return 1;
3936 }
3937
3938 int
3939 inferior_has_execd (int pid, char **execd_pathname)
3940 {
3941 struct target_waitstatus last;
3942 ptid_t last_ptid;
3943
3944 get_last_target_status (&last_ptid, &last);
3945
3946 if (last.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_EXECD)
3947 return 0;
3948
3949 if (ptid_get_pid (last_ptid) != pid)
3950 return 0;
3951
3952 *execd_pathname = xstrdup (last.value.execd_pathname);
3953 return 1;
3954 }
3955
3956 /* Oft used ptids */
3957 ptid_t null_ptid;
3958 ptid_t minus_one_ptid;
3959
3960 /* Create a ptid given the necessary PID, LWP, and TID components. */
3961
3962 ptid_t
3963 ptid_build (int pid, long lwp, long tid)
3964 {
3965 ptid_t ptid;
3966
3967 ptid.pid = pid;
3968 ptid.lwp = lwp;
3969 ptid.tid = tid;
3970 return ptid;
3971 }
3972
3973 /* Create a ptid from just a pid. */
3974
3975 ptid_t
3976 pid_to_ptid (int pid)
3977 {
3978 return ptid_build (pid, 0, 0);
3979 }
3980
3981 /* Fetch the pid (process id) component from a ptid. */
3982
3983 int
3984 ptid_get_pid (ptid_t ptid)
3985 {
3986 return ptid.pid;
3987 }
3988
3989 /* Fetch the lwp (lightweight process) component from a ptid. */
3990
3991 long
3992 ptid_get_lwp (ptid_t ptid)
3993 {
3994 return ptid.lwp;
3995 }
3996
3997 /* Fetch the tid (thread id) component from a ptid. */
3998
3999 long
4000 ptid_get_tid (ptid_t ptid)
4001 {
4002 return ptid.tid;
4003 }
4004
4005 /* ptid_equal() is used to test equality of two ptids. */
4006
4007 int
4008 ptid_equal (ptid_t ptid1, ptid_t ptid2)
4009 {
4010 return (ptid1.pid == ptid2.pid && ptid1.lwp == ptid2.lwp
4011 && ptid1.tid == ptid2.tid);
4012 }
4013
4014 /* restore_inferior_ptid() will be used by the cleanup machinery
4015 to restore the inferior_ptid value saved in a call to
4016 save_inferior_ptid(). */
4017
4018 static void
4019 restore_inferior_ptid (void *arg)
4020 {
4021 ptid_t *saved_ptid_ptr = arg;
4022 inferior_ptid = *saved_ptid_ptr;
4023 xfree (arg);
4024 }
4025
4026 /* Save the value of inferior_ptid so that it may be restored by a
4027 later call to do_cleanups(). Returns the struct cleanup pointer
4028 needed for later doing the cleanup. */
4029
4030 struct cleanup *
4031 save_inferior_ptid (void)
4032 {
4033 ptid_t *saved_ptid_ptr;
4034
4035 saved_ptid_ptr = xmalloc (sizeof (ptid_t));
4036 *saved_ptid_ptr = inferior_ptid;
4037 return make_cleanup (restore_inferior_ptid, saved_ptid_ptr);
4038 }
4039 \f
4040
4041 static void
4042 build_infrun (void)
4043 {
4044 stop_registers = regcache_xmalloc (current_gdbarch);
4045 }
4046
4047 void
4048 _initialize_infrun (void)
4049 {
4050 int i;
4051 int numsigs;
4052 struct cmd_list_element *c;
4053
4054 DEPRECATED_REGISTER_GDBARCH_SWAP (stop_registers);
4055 deprecated_register_gdbarch_swap (NULL, 0, build_infrun);
4056
4057 add_info ("signals", signals_info,
4058 "What debugger does when program gets various signals.\n\
4059 Specify a signal as argument to print info on that signal only.");
4060 add_info_alias ("handle", "signals", 0);
4061
4062 add_com ("handle", class_run, handle_command,
4063 concat ("Specify how to handle a signal.\n\
4064 Args are signals and actions to apply to those signals.\n\
4065 Symbolic signals (e.g. SIGSEGV) are recommended but numeric signals\n\
4066 from 1-15 are allowed for compatibility with old versions of GDB.\n\
4067 Numeric ranges may be specified with the form LOW-HIGH (e.g. 1-5).\n\
4068 The special arg \"all\" is recognized to mean all signals except those\n\
4069 used by the debugger, typically SIGTRAP and SIGINT.\n", "Recognized actions include \"stop\", \"nostop\", \"print\", \"noprint\",\n\
4070 \"pass\", \"nopass\", \"ignore\", or \"noignore\".\n\
4071 Stop means reenter debugger if this signal happens (implies print).\n\
4072 Print means print a message if this signal happens.\n\
4073 Pass means let program see this signal; otherwise program doesn't know.\n\
4074 Ignore is a synonym for nopass and noignore is a synonym for pass.\n\
4075 Pass and Stop may be combined.", NULL));
4076 if (xdb_commands)
4077 {
4078 add_com ("lz", class_info, signals_info,
4079 "What debugger does when program gets various signals.\n\
4080 Specify a signal as argument to print info on that signal only.");
4081 add_com ("z", class_run, xdb_handle_command,
4082 concat ("Specify how to handle a signal.\n\
4083 Args are signals and actions to apply to those signals.\n\
4084 Symbolic signals (e.g. SIGSEGV) are recommended but numeric signals\n\
4085 from 1-15 are allowed for compatibility with old versions of GDB.\n\
4086 Numeric ranges may be specified with the form LOW-HIGH (e.g. 1-5).\n\
4087 The special arg \"all\" is recognized to mean all signals except those\n\
4088 used by the debugger, typically SIGTRAP and SIGINT.\n", "Recognized actions include \"s\" (toggles between stop and nostop), \n\
4089 \"r\" (toggles between print and noprint), \"i\" (toggles between pass and \
4090 nopass), \"Q\" (noprint)\n\
4091 Stop means reenter debugger if this signal happens (implies print).\n\
4092 Print means print a message if this signal happens.\n\
4093 Pass means let program see this signal; otherwise program doesn't know.\n\
4094 Ignore is a synonym for nopass and noignore is a synonym for pass.\n\
4095 Pass and Stop may be combined.", NULL));
4096 }
4097
4098 if (!dbx_commands)
4099 stop_command =
4100 add_cmd ("stop", class_obscure, not_just_help_class_command, "There is no `stop' command, but you can set a hook on `stop'.\n\
4101 This allows you to set a list of commands to be run each time execution\n\
4102 of the program stops.", &cmdlist);
4103
4104 numsigs = (int) TARGET_SIGNAL_LAST;
4105 signal_stop = (unsigned char *) xmalloc (sizeof (signal_stop[0]) * numsigs);
4106 signal_print = (unsigned char *)
4107 xmalloc (sizeof (signal_print[0]) * numsigs);
4108 signal_program = (unsigned char *)
4109 xmalloc (sizeof (signal_program[0]) * numsigs);
4110 for (i = 0; i < numsigs; i++)
4111 {
4112 signal_stop[i] = 1;
4113 signal_print[i] = 1;
4114 signal_program[i] = 1;
4115 }
4116
4117 /* Signals caused by debugger's own actions
4118 should not be given to the program afterwards. */
4119 signal_program[TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP] = 0;
4120 signal_program[TARGET_SIGNAL_INT] = 0;
4121
4122 /* Signals that are not errors should not normally enter the debugger. */
4123 signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_ALRM] = 0;
4124 signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_ALRM] = 0;
4125 signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_VTALRM] = 0;
4126 signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_VTALRM] = 0;
4127 signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_PROF] = 0;
4128 signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_PROF] = 0;
4129 signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_CHLD] = 0;
4130 signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_CHLD] = 0;
4131 signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_IO] = 0;
4132 signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_IO] = 0;
4133 signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_POLL] = 0;
4134 signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_POLL] = 0;
4135 signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_URG] = 0;
4136 signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_URG] = 0;
4137 signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_WINCH] = 0;
4138 signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_WINCH] = 0;
4139
4140 /* These signals are used internally by user-level thread
4141 implementations. (See signal(5) on Solaris.) Like the above
4142 signals, a healthy program receives and handles them as part of
4143 its normal operation. */
4144 signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_LWP] = 0;
4145 signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_LWP] = 0;
4146 signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_WAITING] = 0;
4147 signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_WAITING] = 0;
4148 signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_CANCEL] = 0;
4149 signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_CANCEL] = 0;
4150
4151 #ifdef SOLIB_ADD
4152 add_show_from_set
4153 (add_set_cmd ("stop-on-solib-events", class_support, var_zinteger,
4154 (char *) &stop_on_solib_events,
4155 "Set stopping for shared library events.\n\
4156 If nonzero, gdb will give control to the user when the dynamic linker\n\
4157 notifies gdb of shared library events. The most common event of interest\n\
4158 to the user would be loading/unloading of a new library.\n", &setlist), &showlist);
4159 #endif
4160
4161 c = add_set_enum_cmd ("follow-fork-mode",
4162 class_run,
4163 follow_fork_mode_kind_names, &follow_fork_mode_string,
4164 "Set debugger response to a program call of fork \
4165 or vfork.\n\
4166 A fork or vfork creates a new process. follow-fork-mode can be:\n\
4167 parent - the original process is debugged after a fork\n\
4168 child - the new process is debugged after a fork\n\
4169 The unfollowed process will continue to run.\n\
4170 By default, the debugger will follow the parent process.", &setlist);
4171 add_show_from_set (c, &showlist);
4172
4173 c = add_set_enum_cmd ("scheduler-locking", class_run, scheduler_enums, /* array of string names */
4174 &scheduler_mode, /* current mode */
4175 "Set mode for locking scheduler during execution.\n\
4176 off == no locking (threads may preempt at any time)\n\
4177 on == full locking (no thread except the current thread may run)\n\
4178 step == scheduler locked during every single-step operation.\n\
4179 In this mode, no other thread may run during a step command.\n\
4180 Other threads may run while stepping over a function call ('next').", &setlist);
4181
4182 set_cmd_sfunc (c, set_schedlock_func); /* traps on target vector */
4183 add_show_from_set (c, &showlist);
4184
4185 c = add_set_cmd ("step-mode", class_run,
4186 var_boolean, (char *) &step_stop_if_no_debug,
4187 "Set mode of the step operation. When set, doing a step over a\n\
4188 function without debug line information will stop at the first\n\
4189 instruction of that function. Otherwise, the function is skipped and\n\
4190 the step command stops at a different source line.", &setlist);
4191 add_show_from_set (c, &showlist);
4192
4193 /* ptid initializations */
4194 null_ptid = ptid_build (0, 0, 0);
4195 minus_one_ptid = ptid_build (-1, 0, 0);
4196 inferior_ptid = null_ptid;
4197 target_last_wait_ptid = minus_one_ptid;
4198 }
This page took 0.181971 seconds and 4 git commands to generate.