2010-12-31 Michael Snyder <msnyder@vmware.com>
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / ser-base.c
1 /* Generic serial interface functions.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003,
4 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5
6 This file is part of GDB.
7
8 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
9 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
10 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
11 (at your option) any later version.
12
13 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
14 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
15 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
16 GNU General Public License for more details.
17
18 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
19 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
20
21 #include "defs.h"
22 #include "serial.h"
23 #include "ser-base.h"
24 #include "event-loop.h"
25
26 #include "gdb_select.h"
27 #include "gdb_string.h"
28 #include <sys/time.h>
29 #ifdef USE_WIN32API
30 #include <winsock2.h>
31 #endif
32
33
34 static timer_handler_func push_event;
35 static handler_func fd_event;
36
37 /* Event handling for ASYNC serial code.
38
39 At any time the SERIAL device either: has an empty FIFO and is
40 waiting on a FD event; or has a non-empty FIFO/error condition and
41 is constantly scheduling timer events.
42
43 ASYNC only stops pestering its client when it is de-async'ed or it
44 is told to go away. */
45
46 /* Value of scb->async_state: */
47 enum {
48 /* >= 0 (TIMER_SCHEDULED) */
49 /* The ID of the currently scheduled timer event. This state is
50 rarely encountered. Timer events are one-off so as soon as the
51 event is delivered the state is shanged to NOTHING_SCHEDULED. */
52 FD_SCHEDULED = -1,
53 /* The fd_event() handler is scheduled. It is called when ever the
54 file descriptor becomes ready. */
55 NOTHING_SCHEDULED = -2
56 /* Either no task is scheduled (just going into ASYNC mode) or a
57 timer event has just gone off and the current state has been
58 forced into nothing scheduled. */
59 };
60
61 /* Identify and schedule the next ASYNC task based on scb->async_state
62 and scb->buf* (the input FIFO). A state machine is used to avoid
63 the need to make redundant calls into the event-loop - the next
64 scheduled task is only changed when needed. */
65
66 static void
67 reschedule (struct serial *scb)
68 {
69 if (serial_is_async_p (scb))
70 {
71 int next_state;
72
73 switch (scb->async_state)
74 {
75 case FD_SCHEDULED:
76 if (scb->bufcnt == 0)
77 next_state = FD_SCHEDULED;
78 else
79 {
80 delete_file_handler (scb->fd);
81 next_state = create_timer (0, push_event, scb);
82 }
83 break;
84 case NOTHING_SCHEDULED:
85 if (scb->bufcnt == 0)
86 {
87 add_file_handler (scb->fd, fd_event, scb);
88 next_state = FD_SCHEDULED;
89 }
90 else
91 {
92 next_state = create_timer (0, push_event, scb);
93 }
94 break;
95 default: /* TIMER SCHEDULED */
96 if (scb->bufcnt == 0)
97 {
98 delete_timer (scb->async_state);
99 add_file_handler (scb->fd, fd_event, scb);
100 next_state = FD_SCHEDULED;
101 }
102 else
103 next_state = scb->async_state;
104 break;
105 }
106 if (serial_debug_p (scb))
107 {
108 switch (next_state)
109 {
110 case FD_SCHEDULED:
111 if (scb->async_state != FD_SCHEDULED)
112 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "[fd%d->fd-scheduled]\n",
113 scb->fd);
114 break;
115 default: /* TIMER SCHEDULED */
116 if (scb->async_state == FD_SCHEDULED)
117 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "[fd%d->timer-scheduled]\n",
118 scb->fd);
119 break;
120 }
121 }
122 scb->async_state = next_state;
123 }
124 }
125
126 /* FD_EVENT: This is scheduled when the input FIFO is empty (and there
127 is no pending error). As soon as data arrives, it is read into the
128 input FIFO and the client notified. The client should then drain
129 the FIFO using readchar(). If the FIFO isn't immediatly emptied,
130 push_event() is used to nag the client until it is. */
131
132 static void
133 fd_event (int error, void *context)
134 {
135 struct serial *scb = context;
136 if (error != 0)
137 {
138 scb->bufcnt = SERIAL_ERROR;
139 }
140 else if (scb->bufcnt == 0)
141 {
142 /* Prime the input FIFO. The readchar() function is used to
143 pull characters out of the buffer. See also
144 generic_readchar(). */
145 int nr;
146 nr = scb->ops->read_prim (scb, BUFSIZ);
147 if (nr == 0)
148 {
149 scb->bufcnt = SERIAL_EOF;
150 }
151 else if (nr > 0)
152 {
153 scb->bufcnt = nr;
154 scb->bufp = scb->buf;
155 }
156 else
157 {
158 scb->bufcnt = SERIAL_ERROR;
159 }
160 }
161 scb->async_handler (scb, scb->async_context);
162 reschedule (scb);
163 }
164
165 /* PUSH_EVENT: The input FIFO is non-empty (or there is a pending
166 error). Nag the client until all the data has been read. In the
167 case of errors, the client will need to close or de-async the
168 device before naging stops. */
169
170 static void
171 push_event (void *context)
172 {
173 struct serial *scb = context;
174
175 scb->async_state = NOTHING_SCHEDULED; /* Timers are one-off */
176 scb->async_handler (scb, scb->async_context);
177 /* re-schedule */
178 reschedule (scb);
179 }
180
181 /* Wait for input on scb, with timeout seconds. Returns 0 on success,
182 otherwise SERIAL_TIMEOUT or SERIAL_ERROR. */
183
184 static int
185 ser_base_wait_for (struct serial *scb, int timeout)
186 {
187 while (1)
188 {
189 int numfds;
190 struct timeval tv;
191 fd_set readfds, exceptfds;
192
193 /* NOTE: Some OS's can scramble the READFDS when the select()
194 call fails (ex the kernel with Red Hat 5.2). Initialize all
195 arguments before each call. */
196
197 tv.tv_sec = timeout;
198 tv.tv_usec = 0;
199
200 FD_ZERO (&readfds);
201 FD_ZERO (&exceptfds);
202 FD_SET (scb->fd, &readfds);
203 FD_SET (scb->fd, &exceptfds);
204
205 if (timeout >= 0)
206 numfds = gdb_select (scb->fd + 1, &readfds, 0, &exceptfds, &tv);
207 else
208 numfds = gdb_select (scb->fd + 1, &readfds, 0, &exceptfds, 0);
209
210 if (numfds <= 0)
211 {
212 if (numfds == 0)
213 return SERIAL_TIMEOUT;
214 else if (errno == EINTR)
215 continue;
216 else
217 return SERIAL_ERROR; /* Got an error from select or poll */
218 }
219
220 return 0;
221 }
222 }
223
224 /* Read a character with user-specified timeout. TIMEOUT is number of seconds
225 to wait, or -1 to wait forever. Use timeout of 0 to effect a poll. Returns
226 char if successful. Returns -2 if timeout expired, EOF if line dropped
227 dead, or -3 for any other error (see errno in that case). */
228
229 static int
230 do_ser_base_readchar (struct serial *scb, int timeout)
231 {
232 int status;
233 int delta;
234
235 /* We have to be able to keep the GUI alive here, so we break the
236 original timeout into steps of 1 second, running the "keep the
237 GUI alive" hook each time through the loop.
238
239 Also, timeout = 0 means to poll, so we just set the delta to 0,
240 so we will only go through the loop once. */
241
242 delta = (timeout == 0 ? 0 : 1);
243 while (1)
244 {
245 /* N.B. The UI may destroy our world (for instance by calling
246 remote_stop,) in which case we want to get out of here as
247 quickly as possible. It is not safe to touch scb, since
248 someone else might have freed it. The
249 deprecated_ui_loop_hook signals that we should exit by
250 returning 1. */
251
252 if (deprecated_ui_loop_hook)
253 {
254 if (deprecated_ui_loop_hook (0))
255 return SERIAL_TIMEOUT;
256 }
257
258 status = ser_base_wait_for (scb, delta);
259 if (timeout > 0)
260 timeout -= delta;
261
262 /* If we got a character or an error back from wait_for, then we can
263 break from the loop before the timeout is completed. */
264 if (status != SERIAL_TIMEOUT)
265 break;
266
267 /* If we have exhausted the original timeout, then generate
268 a SERIAL_TIMEOUT, and pass it out of the loop. */
269 else if (timeout == 0)
270 {
271 status = SERIAL_TIMEOUT;
272 break;
273 }
274 }
275
276 if (status < 0)
277 return status;
278
279 status = scb->ops->read_prim (scb, BUFSIZ);
280
281 if (status <= 0)
282 {
283 if (status == 0)
284 return SERIAL_EOF;
285 else
286 /* Got an error from read. */
287 return SERIAL_ERROR;
288 }
289
290 scb->bufcnt = status;
291 scb->bufcnt--;
292 scb->bufp = scb->buf;
293 return *scb->bufp++;
294 }
295
296 /* Perform operations common to both old and new readchar. */
297
298 /* Return the next character from the input FIFO. If the FIFO is
299 empty, call the SERIAL specific routine to try and read in more
300 characters.
301
302 Initially data from the input FIFO is returned (fd_event()
303 pre-reads the input into that FIFO. Once that has been emptied,
304 further data is obtained by polling the input FD using the device
305 specific readchar() function. Note: reschedule() is called after
306 every read. This is because there is no guarentee that the lower
307 level fd_event() poll_event() code (which also calls reschedule())
308 will be called. */
309
310 int
311 generic_readchar (struct serial *scb, int timeout,
312 int (do_readchar) (struct serial *scb, int timeout))
313 {
314 int ch;
315 if (scb->bufcnt > 0)
316 {
317 ch = *scb->bufp;
318 scb->bufcnt--;
319 scb->bufp++;
320 }
321 else if (scb->bufcnt < 0)
322 {
323 /* Some errors/eof are are sticky. */
324 ch = scb->bufcnt;
325 }
326 else
327 {
328 ch = do_readchar (scb, timeout);
329 if (ch < 0)
330 {
331 switch ((enum serial_rc) ch)
332 {
333 case SERIAL_EOF:
334 case SERIAL_ERROR:
335 /* Make the error/eof stick. */
336 scb->bufcnt = ch;
337 break;
338 case SERIAL_TIMEOUT:
339 scb->bufcnt = 0;
340 break;
341 }
342 }
343 }
344 /* Read any error output we might have. */
345 if (scb->error_fd != -1)
346 {
347 ssize_t s;
348 char buf[81];
349
350 for (;;)
351 {
352 char *current;
353 char *newline;
354 int to_read = 80;
355
356 int num_bytes = -1;
357 if (scb->ops->avail)
358 num_bytes = (scb->ops->avail)(scb, scb->error_fd);
359 if (num_bytes != -1)
360 to_read = (num_bytes < to_read) ? num_bytes : to_read;
361
362 if (to_read == 0)
363 break;
364
365 s = read (scb->error_fd, &buf, to_read);
366 if (s == -1)
367 break;
368 if (s == 0)
369 {
370 /* EOF */
371 close (scb->error_fd);
372 scb->error_fd = -1;
373 break;
374 }
375
376 /* In theory, embedded newlines are not a problem.
377 But for MI, we want each output line to have just
378 one newline for legibility. So output things
379 in newline chunks. */
380 buf[s] = '\0';
381 current = buf;
382 while ((newline = strstr (current, "\n")) != NULL)
383 {
384 *newline = '\0';
385 fputs_unfiltered (current, gdb_stderr);
386 fputs_unfiltered ("\n", gdb_stderr);
387 current = newline + 1;
388 }
389 fputs_unfiltered (current, gdb_stderr);
390 }
391 }
392
393 reschedule (scb);
394 return ch;
395 }
396
397 int
398 ser_base_readchar (struct serial *scb, int timeout)
399 {
400 return generic_readchar (scb, timeout, do_ser_base_readchar);
401 }
402
403 int
404 ser_base_write (struct serial *scb, const char *str, int len)
405 {
406 int cc;
407
408 while (len > 0)
409 {
410 cc = scb->ops->write_prim (scb, str, len);
411
412 if (cc < 0)
413 return 1;
414 len -= cc;
415 str += cc;
416 }
417 return 0;
418 }
419
420 int
421 ser_base_flush_output (struct serial *scb)
422 {
423 return 0;
424 }
425
426 int
427 ser_base_flush_input (struct serial *scb)
428 {
429 if (scb->bufcnt >= 0)
430 {
431 scb->bufcnt = 0;
432 scb->bufp = scb->buf;
433 return 0;
434 }
435 else
436 return SERIAL_ERROR;
437 }
438
439 int
440 ser_base_send_break (struct serial *scb)
441 {
442 return 0;
443 }
444
445 int
446 ser_base_drain_output (struct serial *scb)
447 {
448 return 0;
449 }
450
451 void
452 ser_base_raw (struct serial *scb)
453 {
454 return; /* Always in raw mode */
455 }
456
457 serial_ttystate
458 ser_base_get_tty_state (struct serial *scb)
459 {
460 /* allocate a dummy */
461 return (serial_ttystate) XMALLOC (int);
462 }
463
464 int
465 ser_base_set_tty_state (struct serial *scb, serial_ttystate ttystate)
466 {
467 return 0;
468 }
469
470 int
471 ser_base_noflush_set_tty_state (struct serial *scb,
472 serial_ttystate new_ttystate,
473 serial_ttystate old_ttystate)
474 {
475 return 0;
476 }
477
478 void
479 ser_base_print_tty_state (struct serial *scb,
480 serial_ttystate ttystate,
481 struct ui_file *stream)
482 {
483 /* Nothing to print. */
484 return;
485 }
486
487 int
488 ser_base_setbaudrate (struct serial *scb, int rate)
489 {
490 return 0; /* Never fails! */
491 }
492
493 int
494 ser_base_setstopbits (struct serial *scb, int num)
495 {
496 return 0; /* Never fails! */
497 }
498
499 /* Put the SERIAL device into/out-of ASYNC mode. */
500
501 void
502 ser_base_async (struct serial *scb,
503 int async_p)
504 {
505 if (async_p)
506 {
507 /* Force a re-schedule. */
508 scb->async_state = NOTHING_SCHEDULED;
509 if (serial_debug_p (scb))
510 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "[fd%d->asynchronous]\n",
511 scb->fd);
512 reschedule (scb);
513 }
514 else
515 {
516 if (serial_debug_p (scb))
517 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "[fd%d->synchronous]\n",
518 scb->fd);
519 /* De-schedule whatever tasks are currently scheduled. */
520 switch (scb->async_state)
521 {
522 case FD_SCHEDULED:
523 delete_file_handler (scb->fd);
524 break;
525 case NOTHING_SCHEDULED:
526 break;
527 default: /* TIMER SCHEDULED */
528 delete_timer (scb->async_state);
529 break;
530 }
531 }
532 }
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