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[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / breakpoint.c
1 /* Everything about breakpoints, for GDB.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995,
4 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007,
5 2008, 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6
7 This file is part of GDB.
8
9 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
10 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
11 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
12 (at your option) any later version.
13
14 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
15 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
16 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
17 GNU General Public License for more details.
18
19 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
20 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
21
22 #include "defs.h"
23 #include "arch-utils.h"
24 #include <ctype.h>
25 #include "hashtab.h"
26 #include "symtab.h"
27 #include "frame.h"
28 #include "breakpoint.h"
29 #include "tracepoint.h"
30 #include "gdbtypes.h"
31 #include "expression.h"
32 #include "gdbcore.h"
33 #include "gdbcmd.h"
34 #include "value.h"
35 #include "command.h"
36 #include "inferior.h"
37 #include "gdbthread.h"
38 #include "target.h"
39 #include "language.h"
40 #include "gdb_string.h"
41 #include "demangle.h"
42 #include "annotate.h"
43 #include "symfile.h"
44 #include "objfiles.h"
45 #include "source.h"
46 #include "linespec.h"
47 #include "completer.h"
48 #include "gdb.h"
49 #include "ui-out.h"
50 #include "cli/cli-script.h"
51 #include "gdb_assert.h"
52 #include "block.h"
53 #include "solib.h"
54 #include "solist.h"
55 #include "observer.h"
56 #include "exceptions.h"
57 #include "memattr.h"
58 #include "ada-lang.h"
59 #include "top.h"
60 #include "wrapper.h"
61 #include "valprint.h"
62 #include "jit.h"
63 #include "xml-syscall.h"
64 #include "parser-defs.h"
65
66 /* readline include files */
67 #include "readline/readline.h"
68 #include "readline/history.h"
69
70 /* readline defines this. */
71 #undef savestring
72
73 #include "mi/mi-common.h"
74
75 /* Arguments to pass as context to some catch command handlers. */
76 #define CATCH_PERMANENT ((void *) (uintptr_t) 0)
77 #define CATCH_TEMPORARY ((void *) (uintptr_t) 1)
78
79 /* Prototypes for local functions. */
80
81 static void enable_delete_command (char *, int);
82
83 static void enable_once_command (char *, int);
84
85 static void disable_command (char *, int);
86
87 static void enable_command (char *, int);
88
89 static void map_breakpoint_numbers (char *, void (*) (struct breakpoint *,
90 void *),
91 void *);
92
93 static void ignore_command (char *, int);
94
95 static int breakpoint_re_set_one (void *);
96
97 static void clear_command (char *, int);
98
99 static void catch_command (char *, int);
100
101 static void watch_command (char *, int);
102
103 static int can_use_hardware_watchpoint (struct value *);
104
105 static void break_command_1 (char *, int, int);
106
107 static void mention (struct breakpoint *);
108
109 /* This function is used in gdbtk sources and thus can not be made static. */
110 struct breakpoint *set_raw_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
111 struct symtab_and_line,
112 enum bptype);
113
114 static void breakpoint_adjustment_warning (CORE_ADDR, CORE_ADDR, int, int);
115
116 static CORE_ADDR adjust_breakpoint_address (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
117 CORE_ADDR bpaddr,
118 enum bptype bptype);
119
120 static void describe_other_breakpoints (struct gdbarch *,
121 struct program_space *, CORE_ADDR,
122 struct obj_section *, int);
123
124 static int breakpoint_address_match (struct address_space *aspace1,
125 CORE_ADDR addr1,
126 struct address_space *aspace2,
127 CORE_ADDR addr2);
128
129 static int watchpoint_locations_match (struct bp_location *loc1,
130 struct bp_location *loc2);
131
132 static void breakpoints_info (char *, int);
133
134 static void watchpoints_info (char *, int);
135
136 static int breakpoint_1 (int, int, int (*) (const struct breakpoint *));
137
138 static bpstat bpstat_alloc (const struct bp_location *, bpstat);
139
140 static int breakpoint_cond_eval (void *);
141
142 static void cleanup_executing_breakpoints (void *);
143
144 static void commands_command (char *, int);
145
146 static void condition_command (char *, int);
147
148 static int get_number_trailer (char **, int);
149
150 typedef enum
151 {
152 mark_inserted,
153 mark_uninserted
154 }
155 insertion_state_t;
156
157 static int remove_breakpoint (struct bp_location *, insertion_state_t);
158 static int remove_breakpoint_1 (struct bp_location *, insertion_state_t);
159
160 static enum print_stop_action print_it_typical (bpstat);
161
162 static enum print_stop_action print_bp_stop_message (bpstat bs);
163
164 static int watchpoint_check (void *);
165
166 static void maintenance_info_breakpoints (char *, int);
167
168 static int hw_breakpoint_used_count (void);
169
170 static int hw_watchpoint_used_count (enum bptype, int *);
171
172 static void hbreak_command (char *, int);
173
174 static void thbreak_command (char *, int);
175
176 static void watch_command_1 (char *, int, int);
177
178 static void rwatch_command (char *, int);
179
180 static void awatch_command (char *, int);
181
182 static void do_enable_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *, enum bpdisp);
183
184 static void stop_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
185
186 static void stopin_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
187
188 static void stopat_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
189
190 static char *ep_parse_optional_if_clause (char **arg);
191
192 static void catch_exception_command_1 (enum exception_event_kind ex_event,
193 char *arg, int tempflag, int from_tty);
194
195 static void tcatch_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
196
197 static void ep_skip_leading_whitespace (char **s);
198
199 static void detach_single_step_breakpoints (void);
200
201 static int single_step_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *,
202 CORE_ADDR pc);
203
204 static void free_bp_location (struct bp_location *loc);
205
206 static struct bp_location *allocate_bp_location (struct breakpoint *bpt);
207
208 static void update_global_location_list (int);
209
210 static void update_global_location_list_nothrow (int);
211
212 static int bpstat_remove_bp_location_callback (struct thread_info *th,
213 void *data);
214
215 static int is_hardware_watchpoint (const struct breakpoint *bpt);
216
217 static int is_watchpoint (const struct breakpoint *bpt);
218
219 static void insert_breakpoint_locations (void);
220
221 static int syscall_catchpoint_p (struct breakpoint *b);
222
223 static void tracepoints_info (char *, int);
224
225 static void delete_trace_command (char *, int);
226
227 static void enable_trace_command (char *, int);
228
229 static void disable_trace_command (char *, int);
230
231 static void trace_pass_command (char *, int);
232
233 /* A reference-counted struct command_line. This lets multiple
234 breakpoints share a single command list. */
235 struct counted_command_line
236 {
237 /* The reference count. */
238 int refc;
239
240 /* The command list. */
241 struct command_line *commands;
242 };
243
244 struct command_line *
245 breakpoint_commands (struct breakpoint *b)
246 {
247 return b->commands ? b->commands->commands : NULL;
248 }
249
250 /* Flag indicating that a command has proceeded the inferior past the
251 current breakpoint. */
252
253 static int breakpoint_proceeded;
254
255 static const char *
256 bpdisp_text (enum bpdisp disp)
257 {
258 /* NOTE: the following values are a part of MI protocol and represent
259 values of 'disp' field returned when inferior stops at a breakpoint. */
260 static char *bpdisps[] = {"del", "dstp", "dis", "keep"};
261
262 return bpdisps[(int) disp];
263 }
264
265 /* Prototypes for exported functions. */
266 /* If FALSE, gdb will not use hardware support for watchpoints, even
267 if such is available. */
268 static int can_use_hw_watchpoints;
269
270 static void
271 show_can_use_hw_watchpoints (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
272 struct cmd_list_element *c,
273 const char *value)
274 {
275 fprintf_filtered (file, _("\
276 Debugger's willingness to use watchpoint hardware is %s.\n"),
277 value);
278 }
279
280 /* If AUTO_BOOLEAN_FALSE, gdb will not attempt to create pending breakpoints.
281 If AUTO_BOOLEAN_TRUE, gdb will automatically create pending breakpoints
282 for unrecognized breakpoint locations.
283 If AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO, gdb will query when breakpoints are unrecognized. */
284 static enum auto_boolean pending_break_support;
285 static void
286 show_pending_break_support (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
287 struct cmd_list_element *c,
288 const char *value)
289 {
290 fprintf_filtered (file, _("\
291 Debugger's behavior regarding pending breakpoints is %s.\n"),
292 value);
293 }
294
295 /* If 1, gdb will automatically use hardware breakpoints for breakpoints
296 set with "break" but falling in read-only memory.
297 If 0, gdb will warn about such breakpoints, but won't automatically
298 use hardware breakpoints. */
299 static int automatic_hardware_breakpoints;
300 static void
301 show_automatic_hardware_breakpoints (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
302 struct cmd_list_element *c,
303 const char *value)
304 {
305 fprintf_filtered (file, _("\
306 Automatic usage of hardware breakpoints is %s.\n"),
307 value);
308 }
309
310 /* If on, gdb will keep breakpoints inserted even as inferior is
311 stopped, and immediately insert any new breakpoints. If off, gdb
312 will insert breakpoints into inferior only when resuming it, and
313 will remove breakpoints upon stop. If auto, GDB will behave as ON
314 if in non-stop mode, and as OFF if all-stop mode.*/
315
316 static const char always_inserted_auto[] = "auto";
317 static const char always_inserted_on[] = "on";
318 static const char always_inserted_off[] = "off";
319 static const char *always_inserted_enums[] = {
320 always_inserted_auto,
321 always_inserted_off,
322 always_inserted_on,
323 NULL
324 };
325 static const char *always_inserted_mode = always_inserted_auto;
326 static void
327 show_always_inserted_mode (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
328 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
329 {
330 if (always_inserted_mode == always_inserted_auto)
331 fprintf_filtered (file, _("\
332 Always inserted breakpoint mode is %s (currently %s).\n"),
333 value,
334 breakpoints_always_inserted_mode () ? "on" : "off");
335 else
336 fprintf_filtered (file, _("Always inserted breakpoint mode is %s.\n"), value);
337 }
338
339 int
340 breakpoints_always_inserted_mode (void)
341 {
342 return (always_inserted_mode == always_inserted_on
343 || (always_inserted_mode == always_inserted_auto && non_stop));
344 }
345
346 void _initialize_breakpoint (void);
347
348 /* Are we executing breakpoint commands? */
349 static int executing_breakpoint_commands;
350
351 /* Are overlay event breakpoints enabled? */
352 static int overlay_events_enabled;
353
354 /* Walk the following statement or block through all breakpoints.
355 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE does so even if the statment deletes the current
356 breakpoint. */
357
358 #define ALL_BREAKPOINTS(B) for (B = breakpoint_chain; B; B = B->next)
359
360 #define ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE(B,TMP) \
361 for (B = breakpoint_chain; \
362 B ? (TMP=B->next, 1): 0; \
363 B = TMP)
364
365 /* Similar iterator for the low-level breakpoints. SAFE variant is not
366 provided so update_global_location_list must not be called while executing
367 the block of ALL_BP_LOCATIONS. */
368
369 #define ALL_BP_LOCATIONS(B,BP_TMP) \
370 for (BP_TMP = bp_location; \
371 BP_TMP < bp_location + bp_location_count && (B = *BP_TMP); \
372 BP_TMP++)
373
374 /* Iterator for tracepoints only. */
375
376 #define ALL_TRACEPOINTS(B) \
377 for (B = breakpoint_chain; B; B = B->next) \
378 if (is_tracepoint (B))
379
380 /* Chains of all breakpoints defined. */
381
382 struct breakpoint *breakpoint_chain;
383
384 /* Array is sorted by bp_location_compare - primarily by the ADDRESS. */
385
386 static struct bp_location **bp_location;
387
388 /* Number of elements of BP_LOCATION. */
389
390 static unsigned bp_location_count;
391
392 /* Maximum alignment offset between bp_target_info.PLACED_ADDRESS and ADDRESS
393 for the current elements of BP_LOCATION which get a valid result from
394 bp_location_has_shadow. You can use it for roughly limiting the subrange of
395 BP_LOCATION to scan for shadow bytes for an address you need to read. */
396
397 static CORE_ADDR bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max;
398
399 /* Maximum offset plus alignment between
400 bp_target_info.PLACED_ADDRESS + bp_target_info.SHADOW_LEN and ADDRESS for
401 the current elements of BP_LOCATION which get a valid result from
402 bp_location_has_shadow. You can use it for roughly limiting the subrange of
403 BP_LOCATION to scan for shadow bytes for an address you need to read. */
404
405 static CORE_ADDR bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max;
406
407 /* The locations that no longer correspond to any breakpoint,
408 unlinked from bp_location array, but for which a hit
409 may still be reported by a target. */
410 VEC(bp_location_p) *moribund_locations = NULL;
411
412 /* Number of last breakpoint made. */
413
414 static int breakpoint_count;
415
416 /* The value of `breakpoint_count' before the last command that
417 created breakpoints. If the last (break-like) command created more
418 than one breakpoint, then the difference between BREAKPOINT_COUNT
419 and PREV_BREAKPOINT_COUNT is more than one. */
420 static int prev_breakpoint_count;
421
422 /* Number of last tracepoint made. */
423
424 static int tracepoint_count;
425
426 static struct cmd_list_element *breakpoint_set_cmdlist;
427 static struct cmd_list_element *breakpoint_show_cmdlist;
428 static struct cmd_list_element *save_cmdlist;
429
430 /* Return whether a breakpoint is an active enabled breakpoint. */
431 static int
432 breakpoint_enabled (struct breakpoint *b)
433 {
434 return (b->enable_state == bp_enabled);
435 }
436
437 /* Set breakpoint count to NUM. */
438
439 static void
440 set_breakpoint_count (int num)
441 {
442 prev_breakpoint_count = breakpoint_count;
443 breakpoint_count = num;
444 set_internalvar_integer (lookup_internalvar ("bpnum"), num);
445 }
446
447 /* Used by `start_rbreak_breakpoints' below, to record the current
448 breakpoint count before "rbreak" creates any breakpoint. */
449 static int rbreak_start_breakpoint_count;
450
451 /* Called at the start an "rbreak" command to record the first
452 breakpoint made. */
453
454 void
455 start_rbreak_breakpoints (void)
456 {
457 rbreak_start_breakpoint_count = breakpoint_count;
458 }
459
460 /* Called at the end of an "rbreak" command to record the last
461 breakpoint made. */
462
463 void
464 end_rbreak_breakpoints (void)
465 {
466 prev_breakpoint_count = rbreak_start_breakpoint_count;
467 }
468
469 /* Used in run_command to zero the hit count when a new run starts. */
470
471 void
472 clear_breakpoint_hit_counts (void)
473 {
474 struct breakpoint *b;
475
476 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
477 b->hit_count = 0;
478 }
479
480 /* Allocate a new counted_command_line with reference count of 1.
481 The new structure owns COMMANDS. */
482
483 static struct counted_command_line *
484 alloc_counted_command_line (struct command_line *commands)
485 {
486 struct counted_command_line *result
487 = xmalloc (sizeof (struct counted_command_line));
488
489 result->refc = 1;
490 result->commands = commands;
491 return result;
492 }
493
494 /* Increment reference count. This does nothing if CMD is NULL. */
495
496 static void
497 incref_counted_command_line (struct counted_command_line *cmd)
498 {
499 if (cmd)
500 ++cmd->refc;
501 }
502
503 /* Decrement reference count. If the reference count reaches 0,
504 destroy the counted_command_line. Sets *CMDP to NULL. This does
505 nothing if *CMDP is NULL. */
506
507 static void
508 decref_counted_command_line (struct counted_command_line **cmdp)
509 {
510 if (*cmdp)
511 {
512 if (--(*cmdp)->refc == 0)
513 {
514 free_command_lines (&(*cmdp)->commands);
515 xfree (*cmdp);
516 }
517 *cmdp = NULL;
518 }
519 }
520
521 /* A cleanup function that calls decref_counted_command_line. */
522
523 static void
524 do_cleanup_counted_command_line (void *arg)
525 {
526 decref_counted_command_line (arg);
527 }
528
529 /* Create a cleanup that calls decref_counted_command_line on the
530 argument. */
531
532 static struct cleanup *
533 make_cleanup_decref_counted_command_line (struct counted_command_line **cmdp)
534 {
535 return make_cleanup (do_cleanup_counted_command_line, cmdp);
536 }
537
538 /* Default address, symtab and line to put a breakpoint at
539 for "break" command with no arg.
540 if default_breakpoint_valid is zero, the other three are
541 not valid, and "break" with no arg is an error.
542
543 This set by print_stack_frame, which calls set_default_breakpoint. */
544
545 int default_breakpoint_valid;
546 CORE_ADDR default_breakpoint_address;
547 struct symtab *default_breakpoint_symtab;
548 int default_breakpoint_line;
549 struct program_space *default_breakpoint_pspace;
550
551 \f
552 /* *PP is a string denoting a breakpoint. Get the number of the breakpoint.
553 Advance *PP after the string and any trailing whitespace.
554
555 Currently the string can either be a number or "$" followed by the name
556 of a convenience variable. Making it an expression wouldn't work well
557 for map_breakpoint_numbers (e.g. "4 + 5 + 6").
558
559 If the string is a NULL pointer, that denotes the last breakpoint.
560
561 TRAILER is a character which can be found after the number; most
562 commonly this is `-'. If you don't want a trailer, use \0. */
563 static int
564 get_number_trailer (char **pp, int trailer)
565 {
566 int retval = 0; /* default */
567 char *p = *pp;
568
569 if (p == NULL)
570 /* Empty line means refer to the last breakpoint. */
571 return breakpoint_count;
572 else if (*p == '$')
573 {
574 /* Make a copy of the name, so we can null-terminate it
575 to pass to lookup_internalvar(). */
576 char *varname;
577 char *start = ++p;
578 LONGEST val;
579
580 while (isalnum (*p) || *p == '_')
581 p++;
582 varname = (char *) alloca (p - start + 1);
583 strncpy (varname, start, p - start);
584 varname[p - start] = '\0';
585 if (get_internalvar_integer (lookup_internalvar (varname), &val))
586 retval = (int) val;
587 else
588 {
589 printf_filtered (_("Convenience variable must have integer value.\n"));
590 retval = 0;
591 }
592 }
593 else
594 {
595 if (*p == '-')
596 ++p;
597 while (*p >= '0' && *p <= '9')
598 ++p;
599 if (p == *pp)
600 /* There is no number here. (e.g. "cond a == b"). */
601 {
602 /* Skip non-numeric token */
603 while (*p && !isspace((int) *p))
604 ++p;
605 /* Return zero, which caller must interpret as error. */
606 retval = 0;
607 }
608 else
609 retval = atoi (*pp);
610 }
611 if (!(isspace (*p) || *p == '\0' || *p == trailer))
612 {
613 /* Trailing junk: return 0 and let caller print error msg. */
614 while (!(isspace (*p) || *p == '\0' || *p == trailer))
615 ++p;
616 retval = 0;
617 }
618 while (isspace (*p))
619 p++;
620 *pp = p;
621 return retval;
622 }
623
624
625 /* Like get_number_trailer, but don't allow a trailer. */
626 int
627 get_number (char **pp)
628 {
629 return get_number_trailer (pp, '\0');
630 }
631
632 /* Parse a number or a range.
633 * A number will be of the form handled by get_number.
634 * A range will be of the form <number1> - <number2>, and
635 * will represent all the integers between number1 and number2,
636 * inclusive.
637 *
638 * While processing a range, this fuction is called iteratively;
639 * At each call it will return the next value in the range.
640 *
641 * At the beginning of parsing a range, the char pointer PP will
642 * be advanced past <number1> and left pointing at the '-' token.
643 * Subsequent calls will not advance the pointer until the range
644 * is completed. The call that completes the range will advance
645 * pointer PP past <number2>.
646 */
647
648 int
649 get_number_or_range (char **pp)
650 {
651 static int last_retval, end_value;
652 static char *end_ptr;
653 static int in_range = 0;
654
655 if (**pp != '-')
656 {
657 /* Default case: pp is pointing either to a solo number,
658 or to the first number of a range. */
659 last_retval = get_number_trailer (pp, '-');
660 if (**pp == '-')
661 {
662 char **temp;
663
664 /* This is the start of a range (<number1> - <number2>).
665 Skip the '-', parse and remember the second number,
666 and also remember the end of the final token. */
667
668 temp = &end_ptr;
669 end_ptr = *pp + 1;
670 while (isspace ((int) *end_ptr))
671 end_ptr++; /* skip white space */
672 end_value = get_number (temp);
673 if (end_value < last_retval)
674 {
675 error (_("inverted range"));
676 }
677 else if (end_value == last_retval)
678 {
679 /* degenerate range (number1 == number2). Advance the
680 token pointer so that the range will be treated as a
681 single number. */
682 *pp = end_ptr;
683 }
684 else
685 in_range = 1;
686 }
687 }
688 else if (! in_range)
689 error (_("negative value"));
690 else
691 {
692 /* pp points to the '-' that betokens a range. All
693 number-parsing has already been done. Return the next
694 integer value (one greater than the saved previous value).
695 Do not advance the token pointer 'pp' until the end of range
696 is reached. */
697
698 if (++last_retval == end_value)
699 {
700 /* End of range reached; advance token pointer. */
701 *pp = end_ptr;
702 in_range = 0;
703 }
704 }
705 return last_retval;
706 }
707
708 /* Return the breakpoint with the specified number, or NULL
709 if the number does not refer to an existing breakpoint. */
710
711 struct breakpoint *
712 get_breakpoint (int num)
713 {
714 struct breakpoint *b;
715
716 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
717 if (b->number == num)
718 return b;
719
720 return NULL;
721 }
722
723 \f
724
725 void
726 set_breakpoint_condition (struct breakpoint *b, char *exp,
727 int from_tty)
728 {
729 struct bp_location *loc = b->loc;
730
731 for (; loc; loc = loc->next)
732 {
733 xfree (loc->cond);
734 loc->cond = NULL;
735 }
736 xfree (b->cond_string);
737 b->cond_string = NULL;
738 xfree (b->cond_exp);
739 b->cond_exp = NULL;
740
741 if (*exp == 0)
742 {
743 if (from_tty)
744 printf_filtered (_("Breakpoint %d now unconditional.\n"), b->number);
745 }
746 else
747 {
748 char *arg = exp;
749
750 /* I don't know if it matters whether this is the string the user
751 typed in or the decompiled expression. */
752 b->cond_string = xstrdup (arg);
753 b->condition_not_parsed = 0;
754
755 if (is_watchpoint (b))
756 {
757 innermost_block = NULL;
758 arg = exp;
759 b->cond_exp = parse_exp_1 (&arg, 0, 0);
760 if (*arg)
761 error (_("Junk at end of expression"));
762 b->cond_exp_valid_block = innermost_block;
763 }
764 else
765 {
766 for (loc = b->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
767 {
768 arg = exp;
769 loc->cond =
770 parse_exp_1 (&arg, block_for_pc (loc->address), 0);
771 if (*arg)
772 error (_("Junk at end of expression"));
773 }
774 }
775 }
776 breakpoints_changed ();
777 observer_notify_breakpoint_modified (b->number);
778 }
779
780 /* condition N EXP -- set break condition of breakpoint N to EXP. */
781
782 static void
783 condition_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
784 {
785 struct breakpoint *b;
786 char *p;
787 int bnum;
788
789 if (arg == 0)
790 error_no_arg (_("breakpoint number"));
791
792 p = arg;
793 bnum = get_number (&p);
794 if (bnum == 0)
795 error (_("Bad breakpoint argument: '%s'"), arg);
796
797 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
798 if (b->number == bnum)
799 {
800 set_breakpoint_condition (b, p, from_tty);
801 return;
802 }
803
804 error (_("No breakpoint number %d."), bnum);
805 }
806
807 /* Check that COMMAND do not contain commands that are suitable
808 only for tracepoints and not suitable for ordinary breakpoints.
809 Throw if any such commands is found.
810 */
811 static void
812 check_no_tracepoint_commands (struct command_line *commands)
813 {
814 struct command_line *c;
815
816 for (c = commands; c; c = c->next)
817 {
818 int i;
819
820 if (c->control_type == while_stepping_control)
821 error (_("The 'while-stepping' command can only be used for tracepoints"));
822
823 for (i = 0; i < c->body_count; ++i)
824 check_no_tracepoint_commands ((c->body_list)[i]);
825
826 /* Not that command parsing removes leading whitespace and comment
827 lines and also empty lines. So, we only need to check for
828 command directly. */
829 if (strstr (c->line, "collect ") == c->line)
830 error (_("The 'collect' command can only be used for tracepoints"));
831
832 if (strstr (c->line, "teval ") == c->line)
833 error (_("The 'teval' command can only be used for tracepoints"));
834 }
835 }
836
837 /* Encapsulate tests for different types of tracepoints. */
838
839 int
840 is_tracepoint (const struct breakpoint *b)
841 {
842 return (b->type == bp_tracepoint || b->type == bp_fast_tracepoint);
843 }
844
845 /* A helper function that validsates that COMMANDS are valid for a
846 breakpoint. This function will throw an exception if a problem is
847 found. */
848
849 static void
850 validate_commands_for_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *b,
851 struct command_line *commands)
852 {
853 if (is_tracepoint (b))
854 {
855 /* We need to verify that each top-level element of commands
856 is valid for tracepoints, that there's at most one while-stepping
857 element, and that while-stepping's body has valid tracing commands
858 excluding nested while-stepping. */
859 struct command_line *c;
860 struct command_line *while_stepping = 0;
861 for (c = commands; c; c = c->next)
862 {
863 if (c->control_type == while_stepping_control)
864 {
865 if (b->type == bp_fast_tracepoint)
866 error (_("The 'while-stepping' command cannot be used for fast tracepoint"));
867
868 if (while_stepping)
869 error (_("The 'while-stepping' command can be used only once"));
870 else
871 while_stepping = c;
872 }
873 }
874 if (while_stepping)
875 {
876 struct command_line *c2;
877
878 gdb_assert (while_stepping->body_count == 1);
879 c2 = while_stepping->body_list[0];
880 for (; c2; c2 = c2->next)
881 {
882 if (c2->control_type == while_stepping_control)
883 error (_("The 'while-stepping' command cannot be nested"));
884 }
885 }
886 }
887 else
888 {
889 check_no_tracepoint_commands (commands);
890 }
891 }
892
893 /* Set the command list of B to COMMANDS. If breakpoint is tracepoint,
894 validate that only allowed commands are included.
895 */
896
897 void
898 breakpoint_set_commands (struct breakpoint *b, struct command_line *commands)
899 {
900 validate_commands_for_breakpoint (b, commands);
901
902 decref_counted_command_line (&b->commands);
903 b->commands = alloc_counted_command_line (commands);
904 breakpoints_changed ();
905 observer_notify_breakpoint_modified (b->number);
906 }
907
908 void
909 check_tracepoint_command (char *line, void *closure)
910 {
911 struct breakpoint *b = closure;
912
913 validate_actionline (&line, b);
914 }
915
916 /* A structure used to pass information through
917 map_breakpoint_numbers. */
918
919 struct commands_info
920 {
921 /* True if the command was typed at a tty. */
922 int from_tty;
923
924 /* The breakpoint range spec. */
925 char *arg;
926
927 /* Non-NULL if the body of the commands are being read from this
928 already-parsed command. */
929 struct command_line *control;
930
931 /* The command lines read from the user, or NULL if they have not
932 yet been read. */
933 struct counted_command_line *cmd;
934 };
935
936 /* A callback for map_breakpoint_numbers that sets the commands for
937 commands_command. */
938
939 static void
940 do_map_commands_command (struct breakpoint *b, void *data)
941 {
942 struct commands_info *info = data;
943
944 if (info->cmd == NULL)
945 {
946 struct command_line *l;
947
948 if (info->control != NULL)
949 l = copy_command_lines (info->control->body_list[0]);
950 else
951 {
952 struct cleanup *old_chain;
953 char *str;
954
955 str = xstrprintf (_("Type commands for breakpoint(s) %s, one per line."),
956 info->arg);
957
958 old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, str);
959
960 l = read_command_lines (str,
961 info->from_tty, 1,
962 (is_tracepoint (b)
963 ? check_tracepoint_command : 0),
964 b);
965
966 do_cleanups (old_chain);
967 }
968
969 info->cmd = alloc_counted_command_line (l);
970 }
971
972 /* If a breakpoint was on the list more than once, we don't need to
973 do anything. */
974 if (b->commands != info->cmd)
975 {
976 validate_commands_for_breakpoint (b, info->cmd->commands);
977 incref_counted_command_line (info->cmd);
978 decref_counted_command_line (&b->commands);
979 b->commands = info->cmd;
980 breakpoints_changed ();
981 observer_notify_breakpoint_modified (b->number);
982 }
983 }
984
985 static void
986 commands_command_1 (char *arg, int from_tty, struct command_line *control)
987 {
988 struct cleanup *cleanups;
989 struct commands_info info;
990
991 info.from_tty = from_tty;
992 info.control = control;
993 info.cmd = NULL;
994 /* If we read command lines from the user, then `info' will hold an
995 extra reference to the commands that we must clean up. */
996 cleanups = make_cleanup_decref_counted_command_line (&info.cmd);
997
998 if (arg == NULL || !*arg)
999 {
1000 if (breakpoint_count - prev_breakpoint_count > 1)
1001 arg = xstrprintf ("%d-%d", prev_breakpoint_count + 1, breakpoint_count);
1002 else if (breakpoint_count > 0)
1003 arg = xstrprintf ("%d", breakpoint_count);
1004 else
1005 {
1006 /* So that we don't try to free the incoming non-NULL
1007 argument in the cleanup below. Mapping breakpoint
1008 numbers will fail in this case. */
1009 arg = NULL;
1010 }
1011 }
1012 else
1013 /* The command loop has some static state, so we need to preserve
1014 our argument. */
1015 arg = xstrdup (arg);
1016
1017 if (arg != NULL)
1018 make_cleanup (xfree, arg);
1019
1020 info.arg = arg;
1021
1022 map_breakpoint_numbers (arg, do_map_commands_command, &info);
1023
1024 if (info.cmd == NULL)
1025 error (_("No breakpoints specified."));
1026
1027 do_cleanups (cleanups);
1028 }
1029
1030 static void
1031 commands_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
1032 {
1033 commands_command_1 (arg, from_tty, NULL);
1034 }
1035
1036 /* Like commands_command, but instead of reading the commands from
1037 input stream, takes them from an already parsed command structure.
1038
1039 This is used by cli-script.c to DTRT with breakpoint commands
1040 that are part of if and while bodies. */
1041 enum command_control_type
1042 commands_from_control_command (char *arg, struct command_line *cmd)
1043 {
1044 commands_command_1 (arg, 0, cmd);
1045 return simple_control;
1046 }
1047
1048 /* Return non-zero if BL->TARGET_INFO contains valid information. */
1049
1050 static int
1051 bp_location_has_shadow (struct bp_location *bl)
1052 {
1053 if (bl->loc_type != bp_loc_software_breakpoint)
1054 return 0;
1055 if (!bl->inserted)
1056 return 0;
1057 if (bl->target_info.shadow_len == 0)
1058 /* bp isn't valid, or doesn't shadow memory. */
1059 return 0;
1060 return 1;
1061 }
1062
1063 /* Update BUF, which is LEN bytes read from the target address MEMADDR,
1064 by replacing any memory breakpoints with their shadowed contents.
1065
1066 The range of shadowed area by each bp_location is:
1067 b->address - bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max
1068 up to b->address + bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max
1069 The range we were requested to resolve shadows for is:
1070 memaddr ... memaddr + len
1071 Thus the safe cutoff boundaries for performance optimization are
1072 memaddr + len <= b->address - bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max
1073 and:
1074 b->address + bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max <= memaddr */
1075
1076 void
1077 breakpoint_restore_shadows (gdb_byte *buf, ULONGEST memaddr, LONGEST len)
1078 {
1079 /* Left boundary, right boundary and median element of our binary search. */
1080 unsigned bc_l, bc_r, bc;
1081
1082 /* Find BC_L which is a leftmost element which may affect BUF content. It is
1083 safe to report lower value but a failure to report higher one. */
1084
1085 bc_l = 0;
1086 bc_r = bp_location_count;
1087 while (bc_l + 1 < bc_r)
1088 {
1089 struct bp_location *b;
1090
1091 bc = (bc_l + bc_r) / 2;
1092 b = bp_location[bc];
1093
1094 /* Check first B->ADDRESS will not overflow due to the added constant.
1095 Then advance the left boundary only if we are sure the BC element can
1096 in no way affect the BUF content (MEMADDR to MEMADDR + LEN range).
1097
1098 Use the BP_LOCATION_SHADOW_LEN_AFTER_ADDRESS_MAX safety offset so that
1099 we cannot miss a breakpoint with its shadow range tail still reaching
1100 MEMADDR. */
1101
1102 if (b->address + bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max >= b->address
1103 && b->address + bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max <= memaddr)
1104 bc_l = bc;
1105 else
1106 bc_r = bc;
1107 }
1108
1109 /* Now do full processing of the found relevant range of elements. */
1110
1111 for (bc = bc_l; bc < bp_location_count; bc++)
1112 {
1113 struct bp_location *b = bp_location[bc];
1114 CORE_ADDR bp_addr = 0;
1115 int bp_size = 0;
1116 int bptoffset = 0;
1117
1118 /* bp_location array has B->OWNER always non-NULL. */
1119 if (b->owner->type == bp_none)
1120 warning (_("reading through apparently deleted breakpoint #%d?"),
1121 b->owner->number);
1122
1123 /* Performance optimization: any futher element can no longer affect BUF
1124 content. */
1125
1126 if (b->address >= bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max
1127 && memaddr + len <= b->address
1128 - bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max)
1129 break;
1130
1131 if (!bp_location_has_shadow (b))
1132 continue;
1133 if (!breakpoint_address_match (b->target_info.placed_address_space, 0,
1134 current_program_space->aspace, 0))
1135 continue;
1136
1137 /* Addresses and length of the part of the breakpoint that
1138 we need to copy. */
1139 bp_addr = b->target_info.placed_address;
1140 bp_size = b->target_info.shadow_len;
1141
1142 if (bp_addr + bp_size <= memaddr)
1143 /* The breakpoint is entirely before the chunk of memory we
1144 are reading. */
1145 continue;
1146
1147 if (bp_addr >= memaddr + len)
1148 /* The breakpoint is entirely after the chunk of memory we are
1149 reading. */
1150 continue;
1151
1152 /* Offset within shadow_contents. */
1153 if (bp_addr < memaddr)
1154 {
1155 /* Only copy the second part of the breakpoint. */
1156 bp_size -= memaddr - bp_addr;
1157 bptoffset = memaddr - bp_addr;
1158 bp_addr = memaddr;
1159 }
1160
1161 if (bp_addr + bp_size > memaddr + len)
1162 {
1163 /* Only copy the first part of the breakpoint. */
1164 bp_size -= (bp_addr + bp_size) - (memaddr + len);
1165 }
1166
1167 memcpy (buf + bp_addr - memaddr,
1168 b->target_info.shadow_contents + bptoffset, bp_size);
1169 }
1170 }
1171 \f
1172
1173 /* A wrapper function for inserting catchpoints. */
1174 static void
1175 insert_catchpoint (struct ui_out *uo, void *args)
1176 {
1177 struct breakpoint *b = (struct breakpoint *) args;
1178
1179 gdb_assert (b->type == bp_catchpoint);
1180 gdb_assert (b->ops != NULL && b->ops->insert != NULL);
1181
1182 b->ops->insert (b);
1183 }
1184
1185 /* Return true if BPT is of any hardware watchpoint kind. */
1186
1187 static int
1188 is_hardware_watchpoint (const struct breakpoint *bpt)
1189 {
1190 return (bpt->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint
1191 || bpt->type == bp_read_watchpoint
1192 || bpt->type == bp_access_watchpoint);
1193 }
1194
1195 /* Return true if BPT is of any watchpoint kind, hardware or
1196 software. */
1197
1198 static int
1199 is_watchpoint (const struct breakpoint *bpt)
1200 {
1201 return (is_hardware_watchpoint (bpt)
1202 || bpt->type == bp_watchpoint);
1203 }
1204
1205 /* Find the current value of a watchpoint on EXP. Return the value in
1206 *VALP and *RESULTP and the chain of intermediate and final values
1207 in *VAL_CHAIN. RESULTP and VAL_CHAIN may be NULL if the caller does
1208 not need them.
1209
1210 If a memory error occurs while evaluating the expression, *RESULTP will
1211 be set to NULL. *RESULTP may be a lazy value, if the result could
1212 not be read from memory. It is used to determine whether a value
1213 is user-specified (we should watch the whole value) or intermediate
1214 (we should watch only the bit used to locate the final value).
1215
1216 If the final value, or any intermediate value, could not be read
1217 from memory, *VALP will be set to NULL. *VAL_CHAIN will still be
1218 set to any referenced values. *VALP will never be a lazy value.
1219 This is the value which we store in struct breakpoint.
1220
1221 If VAL_CHAIN is non-NULL, *VAL_CHAIN will be released from the
1222 value chain. The caller must free the values individually. If
1223 VAL_CHAIN is NULL, all generated values will be left on the value
1224 chain. */
1225
1226 static void
1227 fetch_watchpoint_value (struct expression *exp, struct value **valp,
1228 struct value **resultp, struct value **val_chain)
1229 {
1230 struct value *mark, *new_mark, *result;
1231 volatile struct gdb_exception ex;
1232
1233 *valp = NULL;
1234 if (resultp)
1235 *resultp = NULL;
1236 if (val_chain)
1237 *val_chain = NULL;
1238
1239 /* Evaluate the expression. */
1240 mark = value_mark ();
1241 result = NULL;
1242
1243 TRY_CATCH (ex, RETURN_MASK_ALL)
1244 {
1245 result = evaluate_expression (exp);
1246 }
1247 if (ex.reason < 0)
1248 {
1249 /* Ignore memory errors, we want watchpoints pointing at
1250 inaccessible memory to still be created; otherwise, throw the
1251 error to some higher catcher. */
1252 switch (ex.error)
1253 {
1254 case MEMORY_ERROR:
1255 break;
1256 default:
1257 throw_exception (ex);
1258 break;
1259 }
1260 }
1261
1262 new_mark = value_mark ();
1263 if (mark == new_mark)
1264 return;
1265 if (resultp)
1266 *resultp = result;
1267
1268 /* Make sure it's not lazy, so that after the target stops again we
1269 have a non-lazy previous value to compare with. */
1270 if (result != NULL
1271 && (!value_lazy (result) || gdb_value_fetch_lazy (result)))
1272 *valp = result;
1273
1274 if (val_chain)
1275 {
1276 /* Return the chain of intermediate values. We use this to
1277 decide which addresses to watch. */
1278 *val_chain = new_mark;
1279 value_release_to_mark (mark);
1280 }
1281 }
1282
1283 /* Assuming that B is a watchpoint: returns true if the current thread
1284 and its running state are safe to evaluate or update watchpoint B.
1285 Watchpoints on local expressions need to be evaluated in the
1286 context of the thread that was current when the watchpoint was
1287 created, and, that thread needs to be stopped to be able to select
1288 the correct frame context. Watchpoints on global expressions can
1289 be evaluated on any thread, and in any state. It is presently left
1290 to the target allowing memory accesses when threads are
1291 running. */
1292
1293 static int
1294 watchpoint_in_thread_scope (struct breakpoint *b)
1295 {
1296 return (ptid_equal (b->watchpoint_thread, null_ptid)
1297 || (ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, b->watchpoint_thread)
1298 && !is_executing (inferior_ptid)));
1299 }
1300
1301 /* Assuming that B is a watchpoint:
1302 - Reparse watchpoint expression, if REPARSE is non-zero
1303 - Evaluate expression and store the result in B->val
1304 - Evaluate the condition if there is one, and store the result
1305 in b->loc->cond.
1306 - Update the list of values that must be watched in B->loc.
1307
1308 If the watchpoint disposition is disp_del_at_next_stop, then do nothing.
1309 If this is local watchpoint that is out of scope, delete it.
1310
1311 Even with `set breakpoint always-inserted on' the watchpoints are removed
1312 + inserted on each stop here. Normal breakpoints must never be removed
1313 because they might be missed by a running thread when debugging in non-stop
1314 mode. On the other hand, hardware watchpoints (is_hardware_watchpoint;
1315 processed here) are specific to each LWP since they are stored in each LWP's
1316 hardware debug registers. Therefore, such LWP must be stopped first in
1317 order to be able to modify its hardware watchpoints.
1318
1319 Hardware watchpoints must be reset exactly once after being presented to the
1320 user. It cannot be done sooner, because it would reset the data used to
1321 present the watchpoint hit to the user. And it must not be done later
1322 because it could display the same single watchpoint hit during multiple GDB
1323 stops. Note that the latter is relevant only to the hardware watchpoint
1324 types bp_read_watchpoint and bp_access_watchpoint. False hit by
1325 bp_hardware_watchpoint is not user-visible - its hit is suppressed if the
1326 memory content has not changed.
1327
1328 The following constraints influence the location where we can reset hardware
1329 watchpoints:
1330
1331 * target_stopped_by_watchpoint and target_stopped_data_address are called
1332 several times when GDB stops.
1333
1334 [linux]
1335 * Multiple hardware watchpoints can be hit at the same time, causing GDB to
1336 stop. GDB only presents one hardware watchpoint hit at a time as the
1337 reason for stopping, and all the other hits are presented later, one after
1338 the other, each time the user requests the execution to be resumed.
1339 Execution is not resumed for the threads still having pending hit event
1340 stored in LWP_INFO->STATUS. While the watchpoint is already removed from
1341 the inferior on the first stop the thread hit event is kept being reported
1342 from its cached value by linux_nat_stopped_data_address until the real
1343 thread resume happens after the watchpoint gets presented and thus its
1344 LWP_INFO->STATUS gets reset.
1345
1346 Therefore the hardware watchpoint hit can get safely reset on the watchpoint
1347 removal from inferior. */
1348
1349 static void
1350 update_watchpoint (struct breakpoint *b, int reparse)
1351 {
1352 int within_current_scope;
1353 struct frame_id saved_frame_id;
1354 int frame_saved;
1355
1356 /* If this is a local watchpoint, we only want to check if the
1357 watchpoint frame is in scope if the current thread is the thread
1358 that was used to create the watchpoint. */
1359 if (!watchpoint_in_thread_scope (b))
1360 return;
1361
1362 /* We don't free locations. They are stored in bp_location array and
1363 update_global_locations will eventually delete them and remove
1364 breakpoints if needed. */
1365 b->loc = NULL;
1366
1367 if (b->disposition == disp_del_at_next_stop)
1368 return;
1369
1370 frame_saved = 0;
1371
1372 /* Determine if the watchpoint is within scope. */
1373 if (b->exp_valid_block == NULL)
1374 within_current_scope = 1;
1375 else
1376 {
1377 struct frame_info *fi;
1378
1379 /* Save the current frame's ID so we can restore it after
1380 evaluating the watchpoint expression on its own frame. */
1381 /* FIXME drow/2003-09-09: It would be nice if evaluate_expression
1382 took a frame parameter, so that we didn't have to change the
1383 selected frame. */
1384 frame_saved = 1;
1385 saved_frame_id = get_frame_id (get_selected_frame (NULL));
1386
1387 fi = frame_find_by_id (b->watchpoint_frame);
1388 within_current_scope = (fi != NULL);
1389 if (within_current_scope)
1390 select_frame (fi);
1391 }
1392
1393 if (within_current_scope && reparse)
1394 {
1395 char *s;
1396 if (b->exp)
1397 {
1398 xfree (b->exp);
1399 b->exp = NULL;
1400 }
1401 s = b->exp_string;
1402 b->exp = parse_exp_1 (&s, b->exp_valid_block, 0);
1403 /* If the meaning of expression itself changed, the old value is
1404 no longer relevant. We don't want to report a watchpoint hit
1405 to the user when the old value and the new value may actually
1406 be completely different objects. */
1407 value_free (b->val);
1408 b->val = NULL;
1409 b->val_valid = 0;
1410
1411 /* Note that unlike with breakpoints, the watchpoint's condition
1412 expression is stored in the breakpoint object, not in the
1413 locations (re)created below. */
1414 if (b->cond_string != NULL)
1415 {
1416 if (b->cond_exp != NULL)
1417 {
1418 xfree (b->cond_exp);
1419 b->cond_exp = NULL;
1420 }
1421
1422 s = b->cond_string;
1423 b->cond_exp = parse_exp_1 (&s, b->cond_exp_valid_block, 0);
1424 }
1425 }
1426
1427 /* If we failed to parse the expression, for example because
1428 it refers to a global variable in a not-yet-loaded shared library,
1429 don't try to insert watchpoint. We don't automatically delete
1430 such watchpoint, though, since failure to parse expression
1431 is different from out-of-scope watchpoint. */
1432 if ( !target_has_execution)
1433 {
1434 /* Without execution, memory can't change. No use to try and
1435 set watchpoint locations. The watchpoint will be reset when
1436 the target gains execution, through breakpoint_re_set. */
1437 }
1438 else if (within_current_scope && b->exp)
1439 {
1440 struct value *val_chain, *v, *result, *next;
1441 struct program_space *frame_pspace;
1442
1443 fetch_watchpoint_value (b->exp, &v, &result, &val_chain);
1444
1445 /* Avoid setting b->val if it's already set. The meaning of
1446 b->val is 'the last value' user saw, and we should update
1447 it only if we reported that last value to user. As it
1448 happens, the code that reports it updates b->val directly. */
1449 if (!b->val_valid)
1450 {
1451 b->val = v;
1452 b->val_valid = 1;
1453 }
1454
1455 /* Change the type of breakpoint between hardware assisted or an
1456 ordinary watchpoint depending on the hardware support and free
1457 hardware slots. REPARSE is set when the inferior is started. */
1458 if ((b->type == bp_watchpoint || b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint)
1459 && reparse)
1460 {
1461 int i, mem_cnt, other_type_used;
1462
1463 /* We need to determine how many resources are already used
1464 for all other hardware watchpoints to see if we still have
1465 enough resources to also fit this watchpoint in as well.
1466 To avoid the hw_watchpoint_used_count call below from counting
1467 this watchpoint, make sure that it is marked as a software
1468 watchpoint. */
1469 b->type = bp_watchpoint;
1470 i = hw_watchpoint_used_count (bp_hardware_watchpoint,
1471 &other_type_used);
1472 mem_cnt = can_use_hardware_watchpoint (val_chain);
1473
1474 if (!mem_cnt)
1475 b->type = bp_watchpoint;
1476 else
1477 {
1478 int target_resources_ok = target_can_use_hardware_watchpoint
1479 (bp_hardware_watchpoint, i + mem_cnt, other_type_used);
1480 if (target_resources_ok <= 0)
1481 b->type = bp_watchpoint;
1482 else
1483 b->type = bp_hardware_watchpoint;
1484 }
1485 }
1486
1487 frame_pspace = get_frame_program_space (get_selected_frame (NULL));
1488
1489 /* Look at each value on the value chain. */
1490 for (v = val_chain; v; v = next)
1491 {
1492 /* If it's a memory location, and GDB actually needed
1493 its contents to evaluate the expression, then we
1494 must watch it. If the first value returned is
1495 still lazy, that means an error occurred reading it;
1496 watch it anyway in case it becomes readable. */
1497 if (VALUE_LVAL (v) == lval_memory
1498 && (v == val_chain || ! value_lazy (v)))
1499 {
1500 struct type *vtype = check_typedef (value_type (v));
1501
1502 /* We only watch structs and arrays if user asked
1503 for it explicitly, never if they just happen to
1504 appear in the middle of some value chain. */
1505 if (v == result
1506 || (TYPE_CODE (vtype) != TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
1507 && TYPE_CODE (vtype) != TYPE_CODE_ARRAY))
1508 {
1509 CORE_ADDR addr;
1510 int len, type;
1511 struct bp_location *loc, **tmp;
1512
1513 addr = value_address (v);
1514 len = TYPE_LENGTH (value_type (v));
1515 type = hw_write;
1516 if (b->type == bp_read_watchpoint)
1517 type = hw_read;
1518 else if (b->type == bp_access_watchpoint)
1519 type = hw_access;
1520
1521 loc = allocate_bp_location (b);
1522 for (tmp = &(b->loc); *tmp != NULL; tmp = &((*tmp)->next))
1523 ;
1524 *tmp = loc;
1525 loc->gdbarch = get_type_arch (value_type (v));
1526
1527 loc->pspace = frame_pspace;
1528 loc->address = addr;
1529 loc->length = len;
1530 loc->watchpoint_type = type;
1531 }
1532 }
1533
1534 next = value_next (v);
1535 if (v != b->val)
1536 value_free (v);
1537 }
1538
1539 /* If a software watchpoint is not watching any memory, then the
1540 above left it without any location set up. But,
1541 bpstat_stop_status requires a location to be able to report
1542 stops, so make sure there's at least a dummy one. */
1543 if (b->type == bp_watchpoint && b->loc == NULL)
1544 {
1545 b->loc = allocate_bp_location (b);
1546 b->loc->pspace = frame_pspace;
1547 b->loc->address = -1;
1548 b->loc->length = -1;
1549 b->loc->watchpoint_type = -1;
1550 }
1551 }
1552 else if (!within_current_scope)
1553 {
1554 printf_filtered (_("\
1555 Watchpoint %d deleted because the program has left the block \n\
1556 in which its expression is valid.\n"),
1557 b->number);
1558 if (b->related_breakpoint)
1559 {
1560 b->related_breakpoint->disposition = disp_del_at_next_stop;
1561 b->related_breakpoint->related_breakpoint = NULL;
1562 b->related_breakpoint= NULL;
1563 }
1564 b->disposition = disp_del_at_next_stop;
1565 }
1566
1567 /* Restore the selected frame. */
1568 if (frame_saved)
1569 select_frame (frame_find_by_id (saved_frame_id));
1570 }
1571
1572
1573 /* Returns 1 iff breakpoint location should be
1574 inserted in the inferior. */
1575 static int
1576 should_be_inserted (struct bp_location *bpt)
1577 {
1578 if (bpt->owner == NULL || !breakpoint_enabled (bpt->owner))
1579 return 0;
1580
1581 if (bpt->owner->disposition == disp_del_at_next_stop)
1582 return 0;
1583
1584 if (!bpt->enabled || bpt->shlib_disabled || bpt->duplicate)
1585 return 0;
1586
1587 /* This is set for example, when we're attached to the parent of a
1588 vfork, and have detached from the child. The child is running
1589 free, and we expect it to do an exec or exit, at which point the
1590 OS makes the parent schedulable again (and the target reports
1591 that the vfork is done). Until the child is done with the shared
1592 memory region, do not insert breakpoints in the parent, otherwise
1593 the child could still trip on the parent's breakpoints. Since
1594 the parent is blocked anyway, it won't miss any breakpoint. */
1595 if (bpt->pspace->breakpoints_not_allowed)
1596 return 0;
1597
1598 /* Tracepoints are inserted by the target at a time of its choosing,
1599 not by us. */
1600 if (is_tracepoint (bpt->owner))
1601 return 0;
1602
1603 return 1;
1604 }
1605
1606 /* Insert a low-level "breakpoint" of some type. BPT is the breakpoint.
1607 Any error messages are printed to TMP_ERROR_STREAM; and DISABLED_BREAKS,
1608 and HW_BREAKPOINT_ERROR are used to report problems.
1609
1610 NOTE drow/2003-09-09: This routine could be broken down to an object-style
1611 method for each breakpoint or catchpoint type. */
1612 static int
1613 insert_bp_location (struct bp_location *bpt,
1614 struct ui_file *tmp_error_stream,
1615 int *disabled_breaks,
1616 int *hw_breakpoint_error)
1617 {
1618 int val = 0;
1619
1620 if (!should_be_inserted (bpt) || bpt->inserted)
1621 return 0;
1622
1623 /* Initialize the target-specific information. */
1624 memset (&bpt->target_info, 0, sizeof (bpt->target_info));
1625 bpt->target_info.placed_address = bpt->address;
1626 bpt->target_info.placed_address_space = bpt->pspace->aspace;
1627
1628 if (bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_software_breakpoint
1629 || bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
1630 {
1631 if (bpt->owner->type != bp_hardware_breakpoint)
1632 {
1633 /* If the explicitly specified breakpoint type
1634 is not hardware breakpoint, check the memory map to see
1635 if the breakpoint address is in read only memory or not.
1636 Two important cases are:
1637 - location type is not hardware breakpoint, memory
1638 is readonly. We change the type of the location to
1639 hardware breakpoint.
1640 - location type is hardware breakpoint, memory is read-write.
1641 This means we've previously made the location hardware one, but
1642 then the memory map changed, so we undo.
1643
1644 When breakpoints are removed, remove_breakpoints will
1645 use location types we've just set here, the only possible
1646 problem is that memory map has changed during running program,
1647 but it's not going to work anyway with current gdb. */
1648 struct mem_region *mr
1649 = lookup_mem_region (bpt->target_info.placed_address);
1650
1651 if (mr)
1652 {
1653 if (automatic_hardware_breakpoints)
1654 {
1655 enum bp_loc_type new_type;
1656
1657 if (mr->attrib.mode != MEM_RW)
1658 new_type = bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint;
1659 else
1660 new_type = bp_loc_software_breakpoint;
1661
1662 if (new_type != bpt->loc_type)
1663 {
1664 static int said = 0;
1665
1666 bpt->loc_type = new_type;
1667 if (!said)
1668 {
1669 fprintf_filtered (gdb_stdout, _("\
1670 Note: automatically using hardware breakpoints for read-only addresses.\n"));
1671 said = 1;
1672 }
1673 }
1674 }
1675 else if (bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_software_breakpoint
1676 && mr->attrib.mode != MEM_RW)
1677 warning (_("cannot set software breakpoint at readonly address %s"),
1678 paddress (bpt->gdbarch, bpt->address));
1679 }
1680 }
1681
1682 /* First check to see if we have to handle an overlay. */
1683 if (overlay_debugging == ovly_off
1684 || bpt->section == NULL
1685 || !(section_is_overlay (bpt->section)))
1686 {
1687 /* No overlay handling: just set the breakpoint. */
1688
1689 if (bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
1690 val = target_insert_hw_breakpoint (bpt->gdbarch,
1691 &bpt->target_info);
1692 else
1693 val = target_insert_breakpoint (bpt->gdbarch,
1694 &bpt->target_info);
1695 }
1696 else
1697 {
1698 /* This breakpoint is in an overlay section.
1699 Shall we set a breakpoint at the LMA? */
1700 if (!overlay_events_enabled)
1701 {
1702 /* Yes -- overlay event support is not active,
1703 so we must try to set a breakpoint at the LMA.
1704 This will not work for a hardware breakpoint. */
1705 if (bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
1706 warning (_("hardware breakpoint %d not supported in overlay!"),
1707 bpt->owner->number);
1708 else
1709 {
1710 CORE_ADDR addr = overlay_unmapped_address (bpt->address,
1711 bpt->section);
1712 /* Set a software (trap) breakpoint at the LMA. */
1713 bpt->overlay_target_info = bpt->target_info;
1714 bpt->overlay_target_info.placed_address = addr;
1715 val = target_insert_breakpoint (bpt->gdbarch,
1716 &bpt->overlay_target_info);
1717 if (val != 0)
1718 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
1719 "Overlay breakpoint %d failed: in ROM?\n",
1720 bpt->owner->number);
1721 }
1722 }
1723 /* Shall we set a breakpoint at the VMA? */
1724 if (section_is_mapped (bpt->section))
1725 {
1726 /* Yes. This overlay section is mapped into memory. */
1727 if (bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
1728 val = target_insert_hw_breakpoint (bpt->gdbarch,
1729 &bpt->target_info);
1730 else
1731 val = target_insert_breakpoint (bpt->gdbarch,
1732 &bpt->target_info);
1733 }
1734 else
1735 {
1736 /* No. This breakpoint will not be inserted.
1737 No error, but do not mark the bp as 'inserted'. */
1738 return 0;
1739 }
1740 }
1741
1742 if (val)
1743 {
1744 /* Can't set the breakpoint. */
1745 if (solib_name_from_address (bpt->pspace, bpt->address))
1746 {
1747 /* See also: disable_breakpoints_in_shlibs. */
1748 val = 0;
1749 bpt->shlib_disabled = 1;
1750 if (!*disabled_breaks)
1751 {
1752 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
1753 "Cannot insert breakpoint %d.\n",
1754 bpt->owner->number);
1755 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
1756 "Temporarily disabling shared library breakpoints:\n");
1757 }
1758 *disabled_breaks = 1;
1759 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
1760 "breakpoint #%d\n", bpt->owner->number);
1761 }
1762 else
1763 {
1764 if (bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
1765 {
1766 *hw_breakpoint_error = 1;
1767 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
1768 "Cannot insert hardware breakpoint %d.\n",
1769 bpt->owner->number);
1770 }
1771 else
1772 {
1773 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
1774 "Cannot insert breakpoint %d.\n",
1775 bpt->owner->number);
1776 fprintf_filtered (tmp_error_stream,
1777 "Error accessing memory address ");
1778 fputs_filtered (paddress (bpt->gdbarch, bpt->address),
1779 tmp_error_stream);
1780 fprintf_filtered (tmp_error_stream, ": %s.\n",
1781 safe_strerror (val));
1782 }
1783
1784 }
1785 }
1786 else
1787 bpt->inserted = 1;
1788
1789 return val;
1790 }
1791
1792 else if (bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_watchpoint
1793 /* NOTE drow/2003-09-08: This state only exists for removing
1794 watchpoints. It's not clear that it's necessary... */
1795 && bpt->owner->disposition != disp_del_at_next_stop)
1796 {
1797 val = target_insert_watchpoint (bpt->address,
1798 bpt->length,
1799 bpt->watchpoint_type);
1800
1801 /* If trying to set a read-watchpoint, and it turns out it's not
1802 supported, try emulating one with an access watchpoint. */
1803 if (val == 1 && bpt->watchpoint_type == hw_read)
1804 {
1805 struct bp_location *loc, **loc_temp;
1806
1807 /* But don't try to insert it, if there's already another
1808 hw_access location that would be considered a duplicate
1809 of this one. */
1810 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (loc, loc_temp)
1811 if (loc != bpt
1812 && loc->watchpoint_type == hw_access
1813 && watchpoint_locations_match (bpt, loc))
1814 {
1815 bpt->duplicate = 1;
1816 bpt->inserted = 1;
1817 bpt->target_info = loc->target_info;
1818 bpt->watchpoint_type = hw_access;
1819 val = 0;
1820 break;
1821 }
1822
1823 if (val == 1)
1824 {
1825 val = target_insert_watchpoint (bpt->address,
1826 bpt->length,
1827 hw_access);
1828 if (val == 0)
1829 bpt->watchpoint_type = hw_access;
1830 }
1831 }
1832
1833 bpt->inserted = (val == 0);
1834 }
1835
1836 else if (bpt->owner->type == bp_catchpoint)
1837 {
1838 struct gdb_exception e = catch_exception (uiout, insert_catchpoint,
1839 bpt->owner, RETURN_MASK_ERROR);
1840 exception_fprintf (gdb_stderr, e, "warning: inserting catchpoint %d: ",
1841 bpt->owner->number);
1842 if (e.reason < 0)
1843 bpt->owner->enable_state = bp_disabled;
1844 else
1845 bpt->inserted = 1;
1846
1847 /* We've already printed an error message if there was a problem
1848 inserting this catchpoint, and we've disabled the catchpoint,
1849 so just return success. */
1850 return 0;
1851 }
1852
1853 return 0;
1854 }
1855
1856 /* This function is called when program space PSPACE is about to be
1857 deleted. It takes care of updating breakpoints to not reference
1858 PSPACE anymore. */
1859
1860 void
1861 breakpoint_program_space_exit (struct program_space *pspace)
1862 {
1863 struct breakpoint *b, *b_temp;
1864 struct bp_location *loc, **loc_temp;
1865
1866 /* Remove any breakpoint that was set through this program space. */
1867 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, b_temp)
1868 {
1869 if (b->pspace == pspace)
1870 delete_breakpoint (b);
1871 }
1872
1873 /* Breakpoints set through other program spaces could have locations
1874 bound to PSPACE as well. Remove those. */
1875 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (loc, loc_temp)
1876 {
1877 struct bp_location *tmp;
1878
1879 if (loc->pspace == pspace)
1880 {
1881 /* ALL_BP_LOCATIONS bp_location has LOC->OWNER always non-NULL. */
1882 if (loc->owner->loc == loc)
1883 loc->owner->loc = loc->next;
1884 else
1885 for (tmp = loc->owner->loc; tmp->next != NULL; tmp = tmp->next)
1886 if (tmp->next == loc)
1887 {
1888 tmp->next = loc->next;
1889 break;
1890 }
1891 }
1892 }
1893
1894 /* Now update the global location list to permanently delete the
1895 removed locations above. */
1896 update_global_location_list (0);
1897 }
1898
1899 /* Make sure all breakpoints are inserted in inferior.
1900 Throws exception on any error.
1901 A breakpoint that is already inserted won't be inserted
1902 again, so calling this function twice is safe. */
1903 void
1904 insert_breakpoints (void)
1905 {
1906 struct breakpoint *bpt;
1907
1908 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bpt)
1909 if (is_hardware_watchpoint (bpt))
1910 update_watchpoint (bpt, 0 /* don't reparse. */);
1911
1912 update_global_location_list (1);
1913
1914 /* update_global_location_list does not insert breakpoints when
1915 always_inserted_mode is not enabled. Explicitly insert them
1916 now. */
1917 if (!breakpoints_always_inserted_mode ())
1918 insert_breakpoint_locations ();
1919 }
1920
1921 /* insert_breakpoints is used when starting or continuing the program.
1922 remove_breakpoints is used when the program stops.
1923 Both return zero if successful,
1924 or an `errno' value if could not write the inferior. */
1925
1926 static void
1927 insert_breakpoint_locations (void)
1928 {
1929 struct breakpoint *bpt;
1930 struct bp_location *b, **bp_tmp;
1931 int error = 0;
1932 int val = 0;
1933 int disabled_breaks = 0;
1934 int hw_breakpoint_error = 0;
1935
1936 struct ui_file *tmp_error_stream = mem_fileopen ();
1937 struct cleanup *cleanups = make_cleanup_ui_file_delete (tmp_error_stream);
1938
1939 /* Explicitly mark the warning -- this will only be printed if
1940 there was an error. */
1941 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream, "Warning:\n");
1942
1943 save_current_space_and_thread ();
1944
1945 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (b, bp_tmp)
1946 {
1947 if (!should_be_inserted (b) || b->inserted)
1948 continue;
1949
1950 /* There is no point inserting thread-specific breakpoints if the
1951 thread no longer exists. ALL_BP_LOCATIONS bp_location has B->OWNER
1952 always non-NULL. */
1953 if (b->owner->thread != -1
1954 && !valid_thread_id (b->owner->thread))
1955 continue;
1956
1957 switch_to_program_space_and_thread (b->pspace);
1958
1959 /* For targets that support global breakpoints, there's no need
1960 to select an inferior to insert breakpoint to. In fact, even
1961 if we aren't attached to any process yet, we should still
1962 insert breakpoints. */
1963 if (!gdbarch_has_global_breakpoints (target_gdbarch)
1964 && ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, null_ptid))
1965 continue;
1966
1967 val = insert_bp_location (b, tmp_error_stream,
1968 &disabled_breaks,
1969 &hw_breakpoint_error);
1970 if (val)
1971 error = val;
1972 }
1973
1974 /* If we failed to insert all locations of a watchpoint,
1975 remove them, as half-inserted watchpoint is of limited use. */
1976 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bpt)
1977 {
1978 int some_failed = 0;
1979 struct bp_location *loc;
1980
1981 if (!is_hardware_watchpoint (bpt))
1982 continue;
1983
1984 if (!breakpoint_enabled (bpt))
1985 continue;
1986
1987 if (bpt->disposition == disp_del_at_next_stop)
1988 continue;
1989
1990 for (loc = bpt->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
1991 if (!loc->inserted && should_be_inserted (loc))
1992 {
1993 some_failed = 1;
1994 break;
1995 }
1996 if (some_failed)
1997 {
1998 for (loc = bpt->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
1999 if (loc->inserted)
2000 remove_breakpoint (loc, mark_uninserted);
2001
2002 hw_breakpoint_error = 1;
2003 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
2004 "Could not insert hardware watchpoint %d.\n",
2005 bpt->number);
2006 error = -1;
2007 }
2008 }
2009
2010 if (error)
2011 {
2012 /* If a hardware breakpoint or watchpoint was inserted, add a
2013 message about possibly exhausted resources. */
2014 if (hw_breakpoint_error)
2015 {
2016 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
2017 "Could not insert hardware breakpoints:\n\
2018 You may have requested too many hardware breakpoints/watchpoints.\n");
2019 }
2020 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
2021 error_stream (tmp_error_stream);
2022 }
2023
2024 do_cleanups (cleanups);
2025 }
2026
2027 int
2028 remove_breakpoints (void)
2029 {
2030 struct bp_location *b, **bp_tmp;
2031 int val = 0;
2032
2033 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (b, bp_tmp)
2034 {
2035 if (b->inserted)
2036 val |= remove_breakpoint (b, mark_uninserted);
2037 }
2038 return val;
2039 }
2040
2041 /* Remove breakpoints of process PID. */
2042
2043 int
2044 remove_breakpoints_pid (int pid)
2045 {
2046 struct bp_location *b, **b_tmp;
2047 int val;
2048 struct inferior *inf = find_inferior_pid (pid);
2049
2050 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (b, b_tmp)
2051 {
2052 if (b->pspace != inf->pspace)
2053 continue;
2054
2055 if (b->inserted)
2056 {
2057 val = remove_breakpoint (b, mark_uninserted);
2058 if (val != 0)
2059 return val;
2060 }
2061 }
2062 return 0;
2063 }
2064
2065 int
2066 remove_hw_watchpoints (void)
2067 {
2068 struct bp_location *b, **bp_tmp;
2069 int val = 0;
2070
2071 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (b, bp_tmp)
2072 {
2073 if (b->inserted && b->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_watchpoint)
2074 val |= remove_breakpoint (b, mark_uninserted);
2075 }
2076 return val;
2077 }
2078
2079 int
2080 reattach_breakpoints (int pid)
2081 {
2082 struct cleanup *old_chain;
2083 struct bp_location *b, **bp_tmp;
2084 int val;
2085 struct ui_file *tmp_error_stream = mem_fileopen ();
2086 int dummy1 = 0, dummy2 = 0;
2087 struct inferior *inf;
2088 struct thread_info *tp;
2089
2090 tp = any_live_thread_of_process (pid);
2091 if (tp == NULL)
2092 return 1;
2093
2094 inf = find_inferior_pid (pid);
2095 old_chain = save_inferior_ptid ();
2096
2097 inferior_ptid = tp->ptid;
2098
2099 make_cleanup_ui_file_delete (tmp_error_stream);
2100
2101 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (b, bp_tmp)
2102 {
2103 if (b->pspace != inf->pspace)
2104 continue;
2105
2106 if (b->inserted)
2107 {
2108 b->inserted = 0;
2109 val = insert_bp_location (b, tmp_error_stream,
2110 &dummy1, &dummy2);
2111 if (val != 0)
2112 {
2113 do_cleanups (old_chain);
2114 return val;
2115 }
2116 }
2117 }
2118 do_cleanups (old_chain);
2119 return 0;
2120 }
2121
2122 static int internal_breakpoint_number = -1;
2123
2124 static struct breakpoint *
2125 create_internal_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
2126 CORE_ADDR address, enum bptype type)
2127 {
2128 struct symtab_and_line sal;
2129 struct breakpoint *b;
2130
2131 init_sal (&sal); /* initialize to zeroes */
2132
2133 sal.pc = address;
2134 sal.section = find_pc_overlay (sal.pc);
2135 sal.pspace = current_program_space;
2136
2137 b = set_raw_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, type);
2138 b->number = internal_breakpoint_number--;
2139 b->disposition = disp_donttouch;
2140
2141 return b;
2142 }
2143
2144 static void
2145 create_overlay_event_breakpoint (char *func_name)
2146 {
2147 struct objfile *objfile;
2148
2149 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile)
2150 {
2151 struct breakpoint *b;
2152 struct minimal_symbol *m;
2153
2154 m = lookup_minimal_symbol_text (func_name, objfile);
2155 if (m == NULL)
2156 continue;
2157
2158 b = create_internal_breakpoint (get_objfile_arch (objfile),
2159 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (m),
2160 bp_overlay_event);
2161 b->addr_string = xstrdup (func_name);
2162
2163 if (overlay_debugging == ovly_auto)
2164 {
2165 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
2166 overlay_events_enabled = 1;
2167 }
2168 else
2169 {
2170 b->enable_state = bp_disabled;
2171 overlay_events_enabled = 0;
2172 }
2173 }
2174 update_global_location_list (1);
2175 }
2176
2177 static void
2178 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint (char *func_name)
2179 {
2180 struct program_space *pspace;
2181 struct objfile *objfile;
2182 struct cleanup *old_chain;
2183
2184 old_chain = save_current_program_space ();
2185
2186 ALL_PSPACES (pspace)
2187 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile)
2188 {
2189 struct breakpoint *b;
2190 struct minimal_symbol *m;
2191
2192 if (!gdbarch_get_longjmp_target_p (get_objfile_arch (objfile)))
2193 continue;
2194
2195 set_current_program_space (pspace);
2196
2197 m = lookup_minimal_symbol_text (func_name, objfile);
2198 if (m == NULL)
2199 continue;
2200
2201 b = create_internal_breakpoint (get_objfile_arch (objfile),
2202 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (m),
2203 bp_longjmp_master);
2204 b->addr_string = xstrdup (func_name);
2205 b->enable_state = bp_disabled;
2206 }
2207 update_global_location_list (1);
2208
2209 do_cleanups (old_chain);
2210 }
2211
2212 /* Create a master std::terminate breakpoint. The actual function
2213 looked for is named FUNC_NAME. */
2214 static void
2215 create_std_terminate_master_breakpoint (const char *func_name)
2216 {
2217 struct program_space *pspace;
2218 struct objfile *objfile;
2219 struct cleanup *old_chain;
2220
2221 old_chain = save_current_program_space ();
2222
2223 ALL_PSPACES (pspace)
2224 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile)
2225 {
2226 struct breakpoint *b;
2227 struct minimal_symbol *m;
2228
2229 set_current_program_space (pspace);
2230
2231 m = lookup_minimal_symbol (func_name, NULL, objfile);
2232 if (m == NULL || (MSYMBOL_TYPE (m) != mst_text
2233 && MSYMBOL_TYPE (m) != mst_file_text))
2234 continue;
2235
2236 b = create_internal_breakpoint (get_objfile_arch (objfile),
2237 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (m),
2238 bp_std_terminate_master);
2239 b->addr_string = xstrdup (func_name);
2240 b->enable_state = bp_disabled;
2241 }
2242 update_global_location_list (1);
2243
2244 do_cleanups (old_chain);
2245 }
2246
2247 void
2248 update_breakpoints_after_exec (void)
2249 {
2250 struct breakpoint *b;
2251 struct breakpoint *temp;
2252 struct bp_location *bploc, **bplocp_tmp;
2253
2254 /* We're about to delete breakpoints from GDB's lists. If the
2255 INSERTED flag is true, GDB will try to lift the breakpoints by
2256 writing the breakpoints' "shadow contents" back into memory. The
2257 "shadow contents" are NOT valid after an exec, so GDB should not
2258 do that. Instead, the target is responsible from marking
2259 breakpoints out as soon as it detects an exec. We don't do that
2260 here instead, because there may be other attempts to delete
2261 breakpoints after detecting an exec and before reaching here. */
2262 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bploc, bplocp_tmp)
2263 if (bploc->pspace == current_program_space)
2264 gdb_assert (!bploc->inserted);
2265
2266 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
2267 {
2268 if (b->pspace != current_program_space)
2269 continue;
2270
2271 /* Solib breakpoints must be explicitly reset after an exec(). */
2272 if (b->type == bp_shlib_event)
2273 {
2274 delete_breakpoint (b);
2275 continue;
2276 }
2277
2278 /* JIT breakpoints must be explicitly reset after an exec(). */
2279 if (b->type == bp_jit_event)
2280 {
2281 delete_breakpoint (b);
2282 continue;
2283 }
2284
2285 /* Thread event breakpoints must be set anew after an exec(),
2286 as must overlay event and longjmp master breakpoints. */
2287 if (b->type == bp_thread_event || b->type == bp_overlay_event
2288 || b->type == bp_longjmp_master || b->type == bp_std_terminate_master)
2289 {
2290 delete_breakpoint (b);
2291 continue;
2292 }
2293
2294 /* Step-resume breakpoints are meaningless after an exec(). */
2295 if (b->type == bp_step_resume)
2296 {
2297 delete_breakpoint (b);
2298 continue;
2299 }
2300
2301 /* Longjmp and longjmp-resume breakpoints are also meaningless
2302 after an exec. */
2303 if (b->type == bp_longjmp || b->type == bp_longjmp_resume)
2304 {
2305 delete_breakpoint (b);
2306 continue;
2307 }
2308
2309 if (b->type == bp_catchpoint)
2310 {
2311 /* For now, none of the bp_catchpoint breakpoints need to
2312 do anything at this point. In the future, if some of
2313 the catchpoints need to something, we will need to add
2314 a new method, and call this method from here. */
2315 continue;
2316 }
2317
2318 /* bp_finish is a special case. The only way we ought to be able
2319 to see one of these when an exec() has happened, is if the user
2320 caught a vfork, and then said "finish". Ordinarily a finish just
2321 carries them to the call-site of the current callee, by setting
2322 a temporary bp there and resuming. But in this case, the finish
2323 will carry them entirely through the vfork & exec.
2324
2325 We don't want to allow a bp_finish to remain inserted now. But
2326 we can't safely delete it, 'cause finish_command has a handle to
2327 the bp on a bpstat, and will later want to delete it. There's a
2328 chance (and I've seen it happen) that if we delete the bp_finish
2329 here, that its storage will get reused by the time finish_command
2330 gets 'round to deleting the "use to be a bp_finish" breakpoint.
2331 We really must allow finish_command to delete a bp_finish.
2332
2333 In the absense of a general solution for the "how do we know
2334 it's safe to delete something others may have handles to?"
2335 problem, what we'll do here is just uninsert the bp_finish, and
2336 let finish_command delete it.
2337
2338 (We know the bp_finish is "doomed" in the sense that it's
2339 momentary, and will be deleted as soon as finish_command sees
2340 the inferior stopped. So it doesn't matter that the bp's
2341 address is probably bogus in the new a.out, unlike e.g., the
2342 solib breakpoints.) */
2343
2344 if (b->type == bp_finish)
2345 {
2346 continue;
2347 }
2348
2349 /* Without a symbolic address, we have little hope of the
2350 pre-exec() address meaning the same thing in the post-exec()
2351 a.out. */
2352 if (b->addr_string == NULL)
2353 {
2354 delete_breakpoint (b);
2355 continue;
2356 }
2357 }
2358 /* FIXME what about longjmp breakpoints? Re-create them here? */
2359 create_overlay_event_breakpoint ("_ovly_debug_event");
2360 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("longjmp");
2361 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("_longjmp");
2362 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("siglongjmp");
2363 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("_siglongjmp");
2364 create_std_terminate_master_breakpoint ("std::terminate()");
2365 }
2366
2367 int
2368 detach_breakpoints (int pid)
2369 {
2370 struct bp_location *b, **bp_tmp;
2371 int val = 0;
2372 struct cleanup *old_chain = save_inferior_ptid ();
2373 struct inferior *inf = current_inferior ();
2374
2375 if (pid == PIDGET (inferior_ptid))
2376 error (_("Cannot detach breakpoints of inferior_ptid"));
2377
2378 /* Set inferior_ptid; remove_breakpoint_1 uses this global. */
2379 inferior_ptid = pid_to_ptid (pid);
2380 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (b, bp_tmp)
2381 {
2382 if (b->pspace != inf->pspace)
2383 continue;
2384
2385 if (b->inserted)
2386 val |= remove_breakpoint_1 (b, mark_inserted);
2387 }
2388
2389 /* Detach single-step breakpoints as well. */
2390 detach_single_step_breakpoints ();
2391
2392 do_cleanups (old_chain);
2393 return val;
2394 }
2395
2396 /* Remove the breakpoint location B from the current address space.
2397 Note that this is used to detach breakpoints from a child fork.
2398 When we get here, the child isn't in the inferior list, and neither
2399 do we have objects to represent its address space --- we should
2400 *not* look at b->pspace->aspace here. */
2401
2402 static int
2403 remove_breakpoint_1 (struct bp_location *b, insertion_state_t is)
2404 {
2405 int val;
2406
2407 /* B is never in moribund_locations by our callers. */
2408 gdb_assert (b->owner != NULL);
2409
2410 if (b->owner->enable_state == bp_permanent)
2411 /* Permanent breakpoints cannot be inserted or removed. */
2412 return 0;
2413
2414 /* The type of none suggests that owner is actually deleted.
2415 This should not ever happen. */
2416 gdb_assert (b->owner->type != bp_none);
2417
2418 if (b->loc_type == bp_loc_software_breakpoint
2419 || b->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
2420 {
2421 /* "Normal" instruction breakpoint: either the standard
2422 trap-instruction bp (bp_breakpoint), or a
2423 bp_hardware_breakpoint. */
2424
2425 /* First check to see if we have to handle an overlay. */
2426 if (overlay_debugging == ovly_off
2427 || b->section == NULL
2428 || !(section_is_overlay (b->section)))
2429 {
2430 /* No overlay handling: just remove the breakpoint. */
2431
2432 if (b->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
2433 val = target_remove_hw_breakpoint (b->gdbarch, &b->target_info);
2434 else
2435 val = target_remove_breakpoint (b->gdbarch, &b->target_info);
2436 }
2437 else
2438 {
2439 /* This breakpoint is in an overlay section.
2440 Did we set a breakpoint at the LMA? */
2441 if (!overlay_events_enabled)
2442 {
2443 /* Yes -- overlay event support is not active, so we
2444 should have set a breakpoint at the LMA. Remove it.
2445 */
2446 /* Ignore any failures: if the LMA is in ROM, we will
2447 have already warned when we failed to insert it. */
2448 if (b->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
2449 target_remove_hw_breakpoint (b->gdbarch,
2450 &b->overlay_target_info);
2451 else
2452 target_remove_breakpoint (b->gdbarch,
2453 &b->overlay_target_info);
2454 }
2455 /* Did we set a breakpoint at the VMA?
2456 If so, we will have marked the breakpoint 'inserted'. */
2457 if (b->inserted)
2458 {
2459 /* Yes -- remove it. Previously we did not bother to
2460 remove the breakpoint if the section had been
2461 unmapped, but let's not rely on that being safe. We
2462 don't know what the overlay manager might do. */
2463 if (b->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
2464 val = target_remove_hw_breakpoint (b->gdbarch,
2465 &b->target_info);
2466
2467 /* However, we should remove *software* breakpoints only
2468 if the section is still mapped, or else we overwrite
2469 wrong code with the saved shadow contents. */
2470 else if (section_is_mapped (b->section))
2471 val = target_remove_breakpoint (b->gdbarch,
2472 &b->target_info);
2473 else
2474 val = 0;
2475 }
2476 else
2477 {
2478 /* No -- not inserted, so no need to remove. No error. */
2479 val = 0;
2480 }
2481 }
2482
2483 /* In some cases, we might not be able to remove a breakpoint
2484 in a shared library that has already been removed, but we
2485 have not yet processed the shlib unload event. */
2486 if (val && solib_name_from_address (b->pspace, b->address))
2487 val = 0;
2488
2489 if (val)
2490 return val;
2491 b->inserted = (is == mark_inserted);
2492 }
2493 else if (b->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_watchpoint)
2494 {
2495 b->inserted = (is == mark_inserted);
2496 val = target_remove_watchpoint (b->address, b->length,
2497 b->watchpoint_type);
2498
2499 /* Failure to remove any of the hardware watchpoints comes here. */
2500 if ((is == mark_uninserted) && (b->inserted))
2501 warning (_("Could not remove hardware watchpoint %d."),
2502 b->owner->number);
2503 }
2504 else if (b->owner->type == bp_catchpoint
2505 && breakpoint_enabled (b->owner)
2506 && !b->duplicate)
2507 {
2508 gdb_assert (b->owner->ops != NULL && b->owner->ops->remove != NULL);
2509
2510 val = b->owner->ops->remove (b->owner);
2511 if (val)
2512 return val;
2513 b->inserted = (is == mark_inserted);
2514 }
2515
2516 return 0;
2517 }
2518
2519 static int
2520 remove_breakpoint (struct bp_location *b, insertion_state_t is)
2521 {
2522 int ret;
2523 struct cleanup *old_chain;
2524
2525 /* B is never in moribund_locations by our callers. */
2526 gdb_assert (b->owner != NULL);
2527
2528 if (b->owner->enable_state == bp_permanent)
2529 /* Permanent breakpoints cannot be inserted or removed. */
2530 return 0;
2531
2532 /* The type of none suggests that owner is actually deleted.
2533 This should not ever happen. */
2534 gdb_assert (b->owner->type != bp_none);
2535
2536 old_chain = save_current_space_and_thread ();
2537
2538 switch_to_program_space_and_thread (b->pspace);
2539
2540 ret = remove_breakpoint_1 (b, is);
2541
2542 do_cleanups (old_chain);
2543 return ret;
2544 }
2545
2546 /* Clear the "inserted" flag in all breakpoints. */
2547
2548 void
2549 mark_breakpoints_out (void)
2550 {
2551 struct bp_location *bpt, **bptp_tmp;
2552
2553 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bpt, bptp_tmp)
2554 if (bpt->pspace == current_program_space)
2555 bpt->inserted = 0;
2556 }
2557
2558 /* Clear the "inserted" flag in all breakpoints and delete any
2559 breakpoints which should go away between runs of the program.
2560
2561 Plus other such housekeeping that has to be done for breakpoints
2562 between runs.
2563
2564 Note: this function gets called at the end of a run (by
2565 generic_mourn_inferior) and when a run begins (by
2566 init_wait_for_inferior). */
2567
2568
2569
2570 void
2571 breakpoint_init_inferior (enum inf_context context)
2572 {
2573 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
2574 struct bp_location *bpt, **bptp_tmp;
2575 int ix;
2576 struct program_space *pspace = current_program_space;
2577
2578 /* If breakpoint locations are shared across processes, then there's
2579 nothing to do. */
2580 if (gdbarch_has_global_breakpoints (target_gdbarch))
2581 return;
2582
2583 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bpt, bptp_tmp)
2584 {
2585 /* ALL_BP_LOCATIONS bp_location has BPT->OWNER always non-NULL. */
2586 if (bpt->pspace == pspace
2587 && bpt->owner->enable_state != bp_permanent)
2588 bpt->inserted = 0;
2589 }
2590
2591 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
2592 {
2593 if (b->loc && b->loc->pspace != pspace)
2594 continue;
2595
2596 switch (b->type)
2597 {
2598 case bp_call_dummy:
2599
2600 /* If the call dummy breakpoint is at the entry point it will
2601 cause problems when the inferior is rerun, so we better get
2602 rid of it. */
2603
2604 case bp_watchpoint_scope:
2605
2606 /* Also get rid of scope breakpoints. */
2607
2608 case bp_shlib_event:
2609
2610 /* Also remove solib event breakpoints. Their addresses may
2611 have changed since the last time we ran the program.
2612 Actually we may now be debugging against different target;
2613 and so the solib backend that installed this breakpoint may
2614 not be used in by the target. E.g.,
2615
2616 (gdb) file prog-linux
2617 (gdb) run # native linux target
2618 ...
2619 (gdb) kill
2620 (gdb) file prog-win.exe
2621 (gdb) tar rem :9999 # remote Windows gdbserver.
2622 */
2623
2624 delete_breakpoint (b);
2625 break;
2626
2627 case bp_watchpoint:
2628 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
2629 case bp_read_watchpoint:
2630 case bp_access_watchpoint:
2631
2632 /* Likewise for watchpoints on local expressions. */
2633 if (b->exp_valid_block != NULL)
2634 delete_breakpoint (b);
2635 else if (context == inf_starting)
2636 {
2637 /* Reset val field to force reread of starting value
2638 in insert_breakpoints. */
2639 if (b->val)
2640 value_free (b->val);
2641 b->val = NULL;
2642 b->val_valid = 0;
2643 }
2644 break;
2645 default:
2646 break;
2647 }
2648 }
2649
2650 /* Get rid of the moribund locations. */
2651 for (ix = 0; VEC_iterate (bp_location_p, moribund_locations, ix, bpt); ++ix)
2652 free_bp_location (bpt);
2653 VEC_free (bp_location_p, moribund_locations);
2654 }
2655
2656 /* These functions concern about actual breakpoints inserted in the
2657 target --- to e.g. check if we need to do decr_pc adjustment or if
2658 we need to hop over the bkpt --- so we check for address space
2659 match, not program space. */
2660
2661 /* breakpoint_here_p (PC) returns non-zero if an enabled breakpoint
2662 exists at PC. It returns ordinary_breakpoint_here if it's an
2663 ordinary breakpoint, or permanent_breakpoint_here if it's a
2664 permanent breakpoint.
2665 - When continuing from a location with an ordinary breakpoint, we
2666 actually single step once before calling insert_breakpoints.
2667 - When continuing from a localion with a permanent breakpoint, we
2668 need to use the `SKIP_PERMANENT_BREAKPOINT' macro, provided by
2669 the target, to advance the PC past the breakpoint. */
2670
2671 enum breakpoint_here
2672 breakpoint_here_p (struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc)
2673 {
2674 struct bp_location *bpt, **bptp_tmp;
2675 int any_breakpoint_here = 0;
2676
2677 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bpt, bptp_tmp)
2678 {
2679 if (bpt->loc_type != bp_loc_software_breakpoint
2680 && bpt->loc_type != bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
2681 continue;
2682
2683 /* ALL_BP_LOCATIONS bp_location has BPT->OWNER always non-NULL. */
2684 if ((breakpoint_enabled (bpt->owner)
2685 || bpt->owner->enable_state == bp_permanent)
2686 && breakpoint_address_match (bpt->pspace->aspace, bpt->address,
2687 aspace, pc))
2688 {
2689 if (overlay_debugging
2690 && section_is_overlay (bpt->section)
2691 && !section_is_mapped (bpt->section))
2692 continue; /* unmapped overlay -- can't be a match */
2693 else if (bpt->owner->enable_state == bp_permanent)
2694 return permanent_breakpoint_here;
2695 else
2696 any_breakpoint_here = 1;
2697 }
2698 }
2699
2700 return any_breakpoint_here ? ordinary_breakpoint_here : 0;
2701 }
2702
2703 /* Return true if there's a moribund breakpoint at PC. */
2704
2705 int
2706 moribund_breakpoint_here_p (struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc)
2707 {
2708 struct bp_location *loc;
2709 int ix;
2710
2711 for (ix = 0; VEC_iterate (bp_location_p, moribund_locations, ix, loc); ++ix)
2712 if (breakpoint_address_match (loc->pspace->aspace, loc->address,
2713 aspace, pc))
2714 return 1;
2715
2716 return 0;
2717 }
2718
2719 /* Returns non-zero if there's a breakpoint inserted at PC, which is
2720 inserted using regular breakpoint_chain / bp_location array mechanism.
2721 This does not check for single-step breakpoints, which are
2722 inserted and removed using direct target manipulation. */
2723
2724 int
2725 regular_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc)
2726 {
2727 struct bp_location *bpt, **bptp_tmp;
2728
2729 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bpt, bptp_tmp)
2730 {
2731 if (bpt->loc_type != bp_loc_software_breakpoint
2732 && bpt->loc_type != bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
2733 continue;
2734
2735 if (bpt->inserted
2736 && breakpoint_address_match (bpt->pspace->aspace, bpt->address,
2737 aspace, pc))
2738 {
2739 if (overlay_debugging
2740 && section_is_overlay (bpt->section)
2741 && !section_is_mapped (bpt->section))
2742 continue; /* unmapped overlay -- can't be a match */
2743 else
2744 return 1;
2745 }
2746 }
2747 return 0;
2748 }
2749
2750 /* Returns non-zero iff there's either regular breakpoint
2751 or a single step breakpoint inserted at PC. */
2752
2753 int
2754 breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc)
2755 {
2756 if (regular_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (aspace, pc))
2757 return 1;
2758
2759 if (single_step_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (aspace, pc))
2760 return 1;
2761
2762 return 0;
2763 }
2764
2765 /* This function returns non-zero iff there is a software breakpoint
2766 inserted at PC. */
2767
2768 int
2769 software_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc)
2770 {
2771 struct bp_location *bpt, **bptp_tmp;
2772
2773 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bpt, bptp_tmp)
2774 {
2775 if (bpt->loc_type != bp_loc_software_breakpoint)
2776 continue;
2777
2778 if (bpt->inserted
2779 && breakpoint_address_match (bpt->pspace->aspace, bpt->address,
2780 aspace, pc))
2781 {
2782 if (overlay_debugging
2783 && section_is_overlay (bpt->section)
2784 && !section_is_mapped (bpt->section))
2785 continue; /* unmapped overlay -- can't be a match */
2786 else
2787 return 1;
2788 }
2789 }
2790
2791 /* Also check for software single-step breakpoints. */
2792 if (single_step_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (aspace, pc))
2793 return 1;
2794
2795 return 0;
2796 }
2797
2798 int
2799 hardware_watchpoint_inserted_in_range (struct address_space *aspace,
2800 CORE_ADDR addr, ULONGEST len)
2801 {
2802 struct breakpoint *bpt;
2803
2804 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bpt)
2805 {
2806 struct bp_location *loc;
2807
2808 if (bpt->type != bp_hardware_watchpoint
2809 && bpt->type != bp_access_watchpoint)
2810 continue;
2811
2812 if (!breakpoint_enabled (bpt))
2813 continue;
2814
2815 for (loc = bpt->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
2816 if (loc->pspace->aspace == aspace && loc->inserted)
2817 {
2818 CORE_ADDR l, h;
2819
2820 /* Check for intersection. */
2821 l = max (loc->address, addr);
2822 h = min (loc->address + loc->length, addr + len);
2823 if (l < h)
2824 return 1;
2825 }
2826 }
2827 return 0;
2828 }
2829
2830 /* breakpoint_thread_match (PC, PTID) returns true if the breakpoint at
2831 PC is valid for process/thread PTID. */
2832
2833 int
2834 breakpoint_thread_match (struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc,
2835 ptid_t ptid)
2836 {
2837 struct bp_location *bpt, **bptp_tmp;
2838 /* The thread and task IDs associated to PTID, computed lazily. */
2839 int thread = -1;
2840 int task = 0;
2841
2842 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bpt, bptp_tmp)
2843 {
2844 if (bpt->loc_type != bp_loc_software_breakpoint
2845 && bpt->loc_type != bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
2846 continue;
2847
2848 /* ALL_BP_LOCATIONS bp_location has BPT->OWNER always non-NULL. */
2849 if (!breakpoint_enabled (bpt->owner)
2850 && bpt->owner->enable_state != bp_permanent)
2851 continue;
2852
2853 if (!breakpoint_address_match (bpt->pspace->aspace, bpt->address,
2854 aspace, pc))
2855 continue;
2856
2857 if (bpt->owner->thread != -1)
2858 {
2859 /* This is a thread-specific breakpoint. Check that ptid
2860 matches that thread. If thread hasn't been computed yet,
2861 it is now time to do so. */
2862 if (thread == -1)
2863 thread = pid_to_thread_id (ptid);
2864 if (bpt->owner->thread != thread)
2865 continue;
2866 }
2867
2868 if (bpt->owner->task != 0)
2869 {
2870 /* This is a task-specific breakpoint. Check that ptid
2871 matches that task. If task hasn't been computed yet,
2872 it is now time to do so. */
2873 if (task == 0)
2874 task = ada_get_task_number (ptid);
2875 if (bpt->owner->task != task)
2876 continue;
2877 }
2878
2879 if (overlay_debugging
2880 && section_is_overlay (bpt->section)
2881 && !section_is_mapped (bpt->section))
2882 continue; /* unmapped overlay -- can't be a match */
2883
2884 return 1;
2885 }
2886
2887 return 0;
2888 }
2889 \f
2890
2891 /* bpstat stuff. External routines' interfaces are documented
2892 in breakpoint.h. */
2893
2894 int
2895 ep_is_catchpoint (struct breakpoint *ep)
2896 {
2897 return (ep->type == bp_catchpoint);
2898 }
2899
2900 void
2901 bpstat_free (bpstat bs)
2902 {
2903 if (bs->old_val != NULL)
2904 value_free (bs->old_val);
2905 decref_counted_command_line (&bs->commands);
2906 xfree (bs);
2907 }
2908
2909 /* Clear a bpstat so that it says we are not at any breakpoint.
2910 Also free any storage that is part of a bpstat. */
2911
2912 void
2913 bpstat_clear (bpstat *bsp)
2914 {
2915 bpstat p;
2916 bpstat q;
2917
2918 if (bsp == 0)
2919 return;
2920 p = *bsp;
2921 while (p != NULL)
2922 {
2923 q = p->next;
2924 bpstat_free (p);
2925 p = q;
2926 }
2927 *bsp = NULL;
2928 }
2929
2930 /* Return a copy of a bpstat. Like "bs1 = bs2" but all storage that
2931 is part of the bpstat is copied as well. */
2932
2933 bpstat
2934 bpstat_copy (bpstat bs)
2935 {
2936 bpstat p = NULL;
2937 bpstat tmp;
2938 bpstat retval = NULL;
2939
2940 if (bs == NULL)
2941 return bs;
2942
2943 for (; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
2944 {
2945 tmp = (bpstat) xmalloc (sizeof (*tmp));
2946 memcpy (tmp, bs, sizeof (*tmp));
2947 incref_counted_command_line (tmp->commands);
2948 if (bs->old_val != NULL)
2949 {
2950 tmp->old_val = value_copy (bs->old_val);
2951 release_value (tmp->old_val);
2952 }
2953
2954 if (p == NULL)
2955 /* This is the first thing in the chain. */
2956 retval = tmp;
2957 else
2958 p->next = tmp;
2959 p = tmp;
2960 }
2961 p->next = NULL;
2962 return retval;
2963 }
2964
2965 /* Find the bpstat associated with this breakpoint */
2966
2967 bpstat
2968 bpstat_find_breakpoint (bpstat bsp, struct breakpoint *breakpoint)
2969 {
2970 if (bsp == NULL)
2971 return NULL;
2972
2973 for (; bsp != NULL; bsp = bsp->next)
2974 {
2975 if (bsp->breakpoint_at && bsp->breakpoint_at->owner == breakpoint)
2976 return bsp;
2977 }
2978 return NULL;
2979 }
2980
2981 /* Put in *NUM the breakpoint number of the first breakpoint we are stopped
2982 at. *BSP upon return is a bpstat which points to the remaining
2983 breakpoints stopped at (but which is not guaranteed to be good for
2984 anything but further calls to bpstat_num).
2985 Return 0 if passed a bpstat which does not indicate any breakpoints.
2986 Return -1 if stopped at a breakpoint that has been deleted since
2987 we set it.
2988 Return 1 otherwise. */
2989
2990 int
2991 bpstat_num (bpstat *bsp, int *num)
2992 {
2993 struct breakpoint *b;
2994
2995 if ((*bsp) == NULL)
2996 return 0; /* No more breakpoint values */
2997
2998 /* We assume we'll never have several bpstats that
2999 correspond to a single breakpoint -- otherwise,
3000 this function might return the same number more
3001 than once and this will look ugly. */
3002 b = (*bsp)->breakpoint_at ? (*bsp)->breakpoint_at->owner : NULL;
3003 *bsp = (*bsp)->next;
3004 if (b == NULL)
3005 return -1; /* breakpoint that's been deleted since */
3006
3007 *num = b->number; /* We have its number */
3008 return 1;
3009 }
3010
3011 /* Modify BS so that the actions will not be performed. */
3012
3013 void
3014 bpstat_clear_actions (bpstat bs)
3015 {
3016 for (; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
3017 {
3018 decref_counted_command_line (&bs->commands);
3019 bs->commands_left = NULL;
3020 if (bs->old_val != NULL)
3021 {
3022 value_free (bs->old_val);
3023 bs->old_val = NULL;
3024 }
3025 }
3026 }
3027
3028 /* Called when a command is about to proceed the inferior. */
3029
3030 static void
3031 breakpoint_about_to_proceed (void)
3032 {
3033 if (!ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, null_ptid))
3034 {
3035 struct thread_info *tp = inferior_thread ();
3036
3037 /* Allow inferior function calls in breakpoint commands to not
3038 interrupt the command list. When the call finishes
3039 successfully, the inferior will be standing at the same
3040 breakpoint as if nothing happened. */
3041 if (tp->in_infcall)
3042 return;
3043 }
3044
3045 breakpoint_proceeded = 1;
3046 }
3047
3048 /* Stub for cleaning up our state if we error-out of a breakpoint command */
3049 static void
3050 cleanup_executing_breakpoints (void *ignore)
3051 {
3052 executing_breakpoint_commands = 0;
3053 }
3054
3055 /* Execute all the commands associated with all the breakpoints at this
3056 location. Any of these commands could cause the process to proceed
3057 beyond this point, etc. We look out for such changes by checking
3058 the global "breakpoint_proceeded" after each command.
3059
3060 Returns true if a breakpoint command resumed the inferior. In that
3061 case, it is the caller's responsibility to recall it again with the
3062 bpstat of the current thread. */
3063
3064 static int
3065 bpstat_do_actions_1 (bpstat *bsp)
3066 {
3067 bpstat bs;
3068 struct cleanup *old_chain;
3069 int again = 0;
3070
3071 /* Avoid endless recursion if a `source' command is contained
3072 in bs->commands. */
3073 if (executing_breakpoint_commands)
3074 return 0;
3075
3076 executing_breakpoint_commands = 1;
3077 old_chain = make_cleanup (cleanup_executing_breakpoints, 0);
3078
3079 /* This pointer will iterate over the list of bpstat's. */
3080 bs = *bsp;
3081
3082 breakpoint_proceeded = 0;
3083 for (; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
3084 {
3085 struct counted_command_line *ccmd;
3086 struct command_line *cmd;
3087 struct cleanup *this_cmd_tree_chain;
3088
3089 /* Take ownership of the BSP's command tree, if it has one.
3090
3091 The command tree could legitimately contain commands like
3092 'step' and 'next', which call clear_proceed_status, which
3093 frees stop_bpstat's command tree. To make sure this doesn't
3094 free the tree we're executing out from under us, we need to
3095 take ownership of the tree ourselves. Since a given bpstat's
3096 commands are only executed once, we don't need to copy it; we
3097 can clear the pointer in the bpstat, and make sure we free
3098 the tree when we're done. */
3099 ccmd = bs->commands;
3100 bs->commands = NULL;
3101 this_cmd_tree_chain
3102 = make_cleanup_decref_counted_command_line (&ccmd);
3103 cmd = bs->commands_left;
3104 bs->commands_left = NULL;
3105
3106 while (cmd != NULL)
3107 {
3108 execute_control_command (cmd);
3109
3110 if (breakpoint_proceeded)
3111 break;
3112 else
3113 cmd = cmd->next;
3114 }
3115
3116 /* We can free this command tree now. */
3117 do_cleanups (this_cmd_tree_chain);
3118
3119 if (breakpoint_proceeded)
3120 {
3121 if (target_can_async_p ())
3122 /* If we are in async mode, then the target might be still
3123 running, not stopped at any breakpoint, so nothing for
3124 us to do here -- just return to the event loop. */
3125 ;
3126 else
3127 /* In sync mode, when execute_control_command returns
3128 we're already standing on the next breakpoint.
3129 Breakpoint commands for that stop were not run, since
3130 execute_command does not run breakpoint commands --
3131 only command_line_handler does, but that one is not
3132 involved in execution of breakpoint commands. So, we
3133 can now execute breakpoint commands. It should be
3134 noted that making execute_command do bpstat actions is
3135 not an option -- in this case we'll have recursive
3136 invocation of bpstat for each breakpoint with a
3137 command, and can easily blow up GDB stack. Instead, we
3138 return true, which will trigger the caller to recall us
3139 with the new stop_bpstat. */
3140 again = 1;
3141 break;
3142 }
3143 }
3144 do_cleanups (old_chain);
3145 return again;
3146 }
3147
3148 void
3149 bpstat_do_actions (void)
3150 {
3151 /* Do any commands attached to breakpoint we are stopped at. */
3152 while (!ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, null_ptid)
3153 && target_has_execution
3154 && !is_exited (inferior_ptid)
3155 && !is_executing (inferior_ptid))
3156 /* Since in sync mode, bpstat_do_actions may resume the inferior,
3157 and only return when it is stopped at the next breakpoint, we
3158 keep doing breakpoint actions until it returns false to
3159 indicate the inferior was not resumed. */
3160 if (!bpstat_do_actions_1 (&inferior_thread ()->stop_bpstat))
3161 break;
3162 }
3163
3164 /* Print out the (old or new) value associated with a watchpoint. */
3165
3166 static void
3167 watchpoint_value_print (struct value *val, struct ui_file *stream)
3168 {
3169 if (val == NULL)
3170 fprintf_unfiltered (stream, _("<unreadable>"));
3171 else
3172 {
3173 struct value_print_options opts;
3174 get_user_print_options (&opts);
3175 value_print (val, stream, &opts);
3176 }
3177 }
3178
3179 /* This is the normal print function for a bpstat. In the future,
3180 much of this logic could (should?) be moved to bpstat_stop_status,
3181 by having it set different print_it values.
3182
3183 Current scheme: When we stop, bpstat_print() is called. It loops
3184 through the bpstat list of things causing this stop, calling the
3185 print_bp_stop_message function on each one. The behavior of the
3186 print_bp_stop_message function depends on the print_it field of
3187 bpstat. If such field so indicates, call this function here.
3188
3189 Return values from this routine (ultimately used by bpstat_print()
3190 and normal_stop() to decide what to do):
3191 PRINT_NOTHING: Means we already printed all we needed to print,
3192 don't print anything else.
3193 PRINT_SRC_ONLY: Means we printed something, and we do *not* desire
3194 that something to be followed by a location.
3195 PRINT_SCR_AND_LOC: Means we printed something, and we *do* desire
3196 that something to be followed by a location.
3197 PRINT_UNKNOWN: Means we printed nothing or we need to do some more
3198 analysis. */
3199
3200 static enum print_stop_action
3201 print_it_typical (bpstat bs)
3202 {
3203 struct cleanup *old_chain;
3204 struct breakpoint *b;
3205 const struct bp_location *bl;
3206 struct ui_stream *stb;
3207 int bp_temp = 0;
3208 enum print_stop_action result;
3209
3210 /* bs->breakpoint_at can be NULL if it was a momentary breakpoint
3211 which has since been deleted. */
3212 if (bs->breakpoint_at == NULL)
3213 return PRINT_UNKNOWN;
3214 bl = bs->breakpoint_at;
3215
3216 /* bl->owner can be NULL if it was a momentary breakpoint
3217 which has since been placed into moribund_locations. */
3218 if (bl->owner == NULL)
3219 return PRINT_UNKNOWN;
3220 b = bl->owner;
3221
3222 stb = ui_out_stream_new (uiout);
3223 old_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_stream_delete (stb);
3224
3225 switch (b->type)
3226 {
3227 case bp_breakpoint:
3228 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
3229 bp_temp = bs->breakpoint_at->owner->disposition == disp_del;
3230 if (bl->address != bl->requested_address)
3231 breakpoint_adjustment_warning (bl->requested_address,
3232 bl->address,
3233 b->number, 1);
3234 annotate_breakpoint (b->number);
3235 if (bp_temp)
3236 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nTemporary breakpoint ");
3237 else
3238 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nBreakpoint ");
3239 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3240 {
3241 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "reason",
3242 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_BREAKPOINT_HIT));
3243 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "disp", bpdisp_text (b->disposition));
3244 }
3245 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "bkptno", b->number);
3246 ui_out_text (uiout, ", ");
3247 result = PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC;
3248 break;
3249
3250 case bp_shlib_event:
3251 /* Did we stop because the user set the stop_on_solib_events
3252 variable? (If so, we report this as a generic, "Stopped due
3253 to shlib event" message.) */
3254 printf_filtered (_("Stopped due to shared library event\n"));
3255 result = PRINT_NOTHING;
3256 break;
3257
3258 case bp_thread_event:
3259 /* Not sure how we will get here.
3260 GDB should not stop for these breakpoints. */
3261 printf_filtered (_("Thread Event Breakpoint: gdb should not stop!\n"));
3262 result = PRINT_NOTHING;
3263 break;
3264
3265 case bp_overlay_event:
3266 /* By analogy with the thread event, GDB should not stop for these. */
3267 printf_filtered (_("Overlay Event Breakpoint: gdb should not stop!\n"));
3268 result = PRINT_NOTHING;
3269 break;
3270
3271 case bp_longjmp_master:
3272 /* These should never be enabled. */
3273 printf_filtered (_("Longjmp Master Breakpoint: gdb should not stop!\n"));
3274 result = PRINT_NOTHING;
3275 break;
3276
3277 case bp_std_terminate_master:
3278 /* These should never be enabled. */
3279 printf_filtered (_("std::terminate Master Breakpoint: gdb should not stop!\n"));
3280 result = PRINT_NOTHING;
3281 break;
3282
3283 case bp_watchpoint:
3284 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
3285 annotate_watchpoint (b->number);
3286 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3287 ui_out_field_string
3288 (uiout, "reason",
3289 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_WATCHPOINT_TRIGGER));
3290 mention (b);
3291 make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "value");
3292 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nOld value = ");
3293 watchpoint_value_print (bs->old_val, stb->stream);
3294 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "old", stb);
3295 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nNew value = ");
3296 watchpoint_value_print (b->val, stb->stream);
3297 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "new", stb);
3298 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
3299 /* More than one watchpoint may have been triggered. */
3300 result = PRINT_UNKNOWN;
3301 break;
3302
3303 case bp_read_watchpoint:
3304 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3305 ui_out_field_string
3306 (uiout, "reason",
3307 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_READ_WATCHPOINT_TRIGGER));
3308 mention (b);
3309 make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "value");
3310 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nValue = ");
3311 watchpoint_value_print (b->val, stb->stream);
3312 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "value", stb);
3313 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
3314 result = PRINT_UNKNOWN;
3315 break;
3316
3317 case bp_access_watchpoint:
3318 if (bs->old_val != NULL)
3319 {
3320 annotate_watchpoint (b->number);
3321 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3322 ui_out_field_string
3323 (uiout, "reason",
3324 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_ACCESS_WATCHPOINT_TRIGGER));
3325 mention (b);
3326 make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "value");
3327 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nOld value = ");
3328 watchpoint_value_print (bs->old_val, stb->stream);
3329 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "old", stb);
3330 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nNew value = ");
3331 }
3332 else
3333 {
3334 mention (b);
3335 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3336 ui_out_field_string
3337 (uiout, "reason",
3338 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_ACCESS_WATCHPOINT_TRIGGER));
3339 make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "value");
3340 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nValue = ");
3341 }
3342 watchpoint_value_print (b->val, stb->stream);
3343 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "new", stb);
3344 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
3345 result = PRINT_UNKNOWN;
3346 break;
3347
3348 /* Fall through, we don't deal with these types of breakpoints
3349 here. */
3350
3351 case bp_finish:
3352 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3353 ui_out_field_string
3354 (uiout, "reason",
3355 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_FUNCTION_FINISHED));
3356 result = PRINT_UNKNOWN;
3357 break;
3358
3359 case bp_until:
3360 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3361 ui_out_field_string
3362 (uiout, "reason",
3363 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_LOCATION_REACHED));
3364 result = PRINT_UNKNOWN;
3365 break;
3366
3367 case bp_none:
3368 case bp_longjmp:
3369 case bp_longjmp_resume:
3370 case bp_step_resume:
3371 case bp_watchpoint_scope:
3372 case bp_call_dummy:
3373 case bp_std_terminate:
3374 case bp_tracepoint:
3375 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
3376 case bp_jit_event:
3377 default:
3378 result = PRINT_UNKNOWN;
3379 break;
3380 }
3381
3382 do_cleanups (old_chain);
3383 return result;
3384 }
3385
3386 /* Generic routine for printing messages indicating why we
3387 stopped. The behavior of this function depends on the value
3388 'print_it' in the bpstat structure. Under some circumstances we
3389 may decide not to print anything here and delegate the task to
3390 normal_stop(). */
3391
3392 static enum print_stop_action
3393 print_bp_stop_message (bpstat bs)
3394 {
3395 switch (bs->print_it)
3396 {
3397 case print_it_noop:
3398 /* Nothing should be printed for this bpstat entry. */
3399 return PRINT_UNKNOWN;
3400 break;
3401
3402 case print_it_done:
3403 /* We still want to print the frame, but we already printed the
3404 relevant messages. */
3405 return PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC;
3406 break;
3407
3408 case print_it_normal:
3409 {
3410 const struct bp_location *bl = bs->breakpoint_at;
3411 struct breakpoint *b = bl ? bl->owner : NULL;
3412
3413 /* Normal case. Call the breakpoint's print_it method, or
3414 print_it_typical. */
3415 /* FIXME: how breakpoint can ever be NULL here? */
3416 if (b != NULL && b->ops != NULL && b->ops->print_it != NULL)
3417 return b->ops->print_it (b);
3418 else
3419 return print_it_typical (bs);
3420 }
3421 break;
3422
3423 default:
3424 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
3425 _("print_bp_stop_message: unrecognized enum value"));
3426 break;
3427 }
3428 }
3429
3430 /* Print a message indicating what happened. This is called from
3431 normal_stop(). The input to this routine is the head of the bpstat
3432 list - a list of the eventpoints that caused this stop. This
3433 routine calls the generic print routine for printing a message
3434 about reasons for stopping. This will print (for example) the
3435 "Breakpoint n," part of the output. The return value of this
3436 routine is one of:
3437
3438 PRINT_UNKNOWN: Means we printed nothing
3439 PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC: Means we printed something, and expect subsequent
3440 code to print the location. An example is
3441 "Breakpoint 1, " which should be followed by
3442 the location.
3443 PRINT_SRC_ONLY: Means we printed something, but there is no need
3444 to also print the location part of the message.
3445 An example is the catch/throw messages, which
3446 don't require a location appended to the end.
3447 PRINT_NOTHING: We have done some printing and we don't need any
3448 further info to be printed.*/
3449
3450 enum print_stop_action
3451 bpstat_print (bpstat bs)
3452 {
3453 int val;
3454
3455 /* Maybe another breakpoint in the chain caused us to stop.
3456 (Currently all watchpoints go on the bpstat whether hit or not.
3457 That probably could (should) be changed, provided care is taken
3458 with respect to bpstat_explains_signal). */
3459 for (; bs; bs = bs->next)
3460 {
3461 val = print_bp_stop_message (bs);
3462 if (val == PRINT_SRC_ONLY
3463 || val == PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC
3464 || val == PRINT_NOTHING)
3465 return val;
3466 }
3467
3468 /* We reached the end of the chain, or we got a null BS to start
3469 with and nothing was printed. */
3470 return PRINT_UNKNOWN;
3471 }
3472
3473 /* Evaluate the expression EXP and return 1 if value is zero.
3474 This is used inside a catch_errors to evaluate the breakpoint condition.
3475 The argument is a "struct expression *" that has been cast to char * to
3476 make it pass through catch_errors. */
3477
3478 static int
3479 breakpoint_cond_eval (void *exp)
3480 {
3481 struct value *mark = value_mark ();
3482 int i = !value_true (evaluate_expression ((struct expression *) exp));
3483
3484 value_free_to_mark (mark);
3485 return i;
3486 }
3487
3488 /* Allocate a new bpstat and chain it to the current one. */
3489
3490 static bpstat
3491 bpstat_alloc (const struct bp_location *bl, bpstat cbs /* Current "bs" value */ )
3492 {
3493 bpstat bs;
3494
3495 bs = (bpstat) xmalloc (sizeof (*bs));
3496 cbs->next = bs;
3497 bs->breakpoint_at = bl;
3498 /* If the condition is false, etc., don't do the commands. */
3499 bs->commands = NULL;
3500 bs->commands_left = NULL;
3501 bs->old_val = NULL;
3502 bs->print_it = print_it_normal;
3503 return bs;
3504 }
3505 \f
3506 /* The target has stopped with waitstatus WS. Check if any hardware
3507 watchpoints have triggered, according to the target. */
3508
3509 int
3510 watchpoints_triggered (struct target_waitstatus *ws)
3511 {
3512 int stopped_by_watchpoint = target_stopped_by_watchpoint ();
3513 CORE_ADDR addr;
3514 struct breakpoint *b;
3515
3516 if (!stopped_by_watchpoint)
3517 {
3518 /* We were not stopped by a watchpoint. Mark all watchpoints
3519 as not triggered. */
3520 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
3521 if (is_hardware_watchpoint (b))
3522 b->watchpoint_triggered = watch_triggered_no;
3523
3524 return 0;
3525 }
3526
3527 if (!target_stopped_data_address (&current_target, &addr))
3528 {
3529 /* We were stopped by a watchpoint, but we don't know where.
3530 Mark all watchpoints as unknown. */
3531 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
3532 if (is_hardware_watchpoint (b))
3533 b->watchpoint_triggered = watch_triggered_unknown;
3534
3535 return stopped_by_watchpoint;
3536 }
3537
3538 /* The target could report the data address. Mark watchpoints
3539 affected by this data address as triggered, and all others as not
3540 triggered. */
3541
3542 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
3543 if (is_hardware_watchpoint (b))
3544 {
3545 struct bp_location *loc;
3546
3547 b->watchpoint_triggered = watch_triggered_no;
3548 for (loc = b->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
3549 /* Exact match not required. Within range is
3550 sufficient. */
3551 if (target_watchpoint_addr_within_range (&current_target,
3552 addr, loc->address,
3553 loc->length))
3554 {
3555 b->watchpoint_triggered = watch_triggered_yes;
3556 break;
3557 }
3558 }
3559
3560 return 1;
3561 }
3562
3563 /* Possible return values for watchpoint_check (this can't be an enum
3564 because of check_errors). */
3565 /* The watchpoint has been deleted. */
3566 #define WP_DELETED 1
3567 /* The value has changed. */
3568 #define WP_VALUE_CHANGED 2
3569 /* The value has not changed. */
3570 #define WP_VALUE_NOT_CHANGED 3
3571 /* Ignore this watchpoint, no matter if the value changed or not. */
3572 #define WP_IGNORE 4
3573
3574 #define BP_TEMPFLAG 1
3575 #define BP_HARDWAREFLAG 2
3576
3577 /* Evaluate watchpoint condition expression and check if its value changed.
3578
3579 P should be a pointer to struct bpstat, but is defined as a void *
3580 in order for this function to be usable with catch_errors. */
3581
3582 static int
3583 watchpoint_check (void *p)
3584 {
3585 bpstat bs = (bpstat) p;
3586 struct breakpoint *b;
3587 struct frame_info *fr;
3588 int within_current_scope;
3589
3590 /* BS is built for existing struct breakpoint. */
3591 gdb_assert (bs->breakpoint_at != NULL);
3592 gdb_assert (bs->breakpoint_at->owner != NULL);
3593 b = bs->breakpoint_at->owner;
3594
3595 /* If this is a local watchpoint, we only want to check if the
3596 watchpoint frame is in scope if the current thread is the thread
3597 that was used to create the watchpoint. */
3598 if (!watchpoint_in_thread_scope (b))
3599 return WP_IGNORE;
3600
3601 if (b->exp_valid_block == NULL)
3602 within_current_scope = 1;
3603 else
3604 {
3605 struct frame_info *frame = get_current_frame ();
3606 struct gdbarch *frame_arch = get_frame_arch (frame);
3607 CORE_ADDR frame_pc = get_frame_pc (frame);
3608
3609 /* in_function_epilogue_p() returns a non-zero value if we're still
3610 in the function but the stack frame has already been invalidated.
3611 Since we can't rely on the values of local variables after the
3612 stack has been destroyed, we are treating the watchpoint in that
3613 state as `not changed' without further checking. Don't mark
3614 watchpoints as changed if the current frame is in an epilogue -
3615 even if they are in some other frame, our view of the stack
3616 is likely to be wrong and frame_find_by_id could error out. */
3617 if (gdbarch_in_function_epilogue_p (frame_arch, frame_pc))
3618 return WP_IGNORE;
3619
3620 fr = frame_find_by_id (b->watchpoint_frame);
3621 within_current_scope = (fr != NULL);
3622
3623 /* If we've gotten confused in the unwinder, we might have
3624 returned a frame that can't describe this variable. */
3625 if (within_current_scope)
3626 {
3627 struct symbol *function;
3628
3629 function = get_frame_function (fr);
3630 if (function == NULL
3631 || !contained_in (b->exp_valid_block,
3632 SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE (function)))
3633 within_current_scope = 0;
3634 }
3635
3636 if (within_current_scope)
3637 /* If we end up stopping, the current frame will get selected
3638 in normal_stop. So this call to select_frame won't affect
3639 the user. */
3640 select_frame (fr);
3641 }
3642
3643 if (within_current_scope)
3644 {
3645 /* We use value_{,free_to_}mark because it could be a
3646 *long* time before we return to the command level and
3647 call free_all_values. We can't call free_all_values because
3648 we might be in the middle of evaluating a function call. */
3649
3650 struct value *mark = value_mark ();
3651 struct value *new_val;
3652
3653 fetch_watchpoint_value (b->exp, &new_val, NULL, NULL);
3654
3655 /* We use value_equal_contents instead of value_equal because the latter
3656 coerces an array to a pointer, thus comparing just the address of the
3657 array instead of its contents. This is not what we want. */
3658 if ((b->val != NULL) != (new_val != NULL)
3659 || (b->val != NULL && !value_equal_contents (b->val, new_val)))
3660 {
3661 if (new_val != NULL)
3662 {
3663 release_value (new_val);
3664 value_free_to_mark (mark);
3665 }
3666 bs->old_val = b->val;
3667 b->val = new_val;
3668 b->val_valid = 1;
3669 return WP_VALUE_CHANGED;
3670 }
3671 else
3672 {
3673 /* Nothing changed. */
3674 value_free_to_mark (mark);
3675 return WP_VALUE_NOT_CHANGED;
3676 }
3677 }
3678 else
3679 {
3680 /* This seems like the only logical thing to do because
3681 if we temporarily ignored the watchpoint, then when
3682 we reenter the block in which it is valid it contains
3683 garbage (in the case of a function, it may have two
3684 garbage values, one before and one after the prologue).
3685 So we can't even detect the first assignment to it and
3686 watch after that (since the garbage may or may not equal
3687 the first value assigned). */
3688 /* We print all the stop information in print_it_typical(), but
3689 in this case, by the time we call print_it_typical() this bp
3690 will be deleted already. So we have no choice but print the
3691 information here. */
3692 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3693 ui_out_field_string
3694 (uiout, "reason", async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_WATCHPOINT_SCOPE));
3695 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nWatchpoint ");
3696 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "wpnum", b->number);
3697 ui_out_text (uiout, " deleted because the program has left the block in\n\
3698 which its expression is valid.\n");
3699
3700 if (b->related_breakpoint)
3701 {
3702 b->related_breakpoint->disposition = disp_del_at_next_stop;
3703 b->related_breakpoint->related_breakpoint = NULL;
3704 b->related_breakpoint = NULL;
3705 }
3706 b->disposition = disp_del_at_next_stop;
3707
3708 return WP_DELETED;
3709 }
3710 }
3711
3712 /* Return true if it looks like target has stopped due to hitting
3713 breakpoint location BL. This function does not check if we
3714 should stop, only if BL explains the stop. */
3715 static int
3716 bpstat_check_location (const struct bp_location *bl,
3717 struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR bp_addr)
3718 {
3719 struct breakpoint *b = bl->owner;
3720
3721 /* BL is from existing struct breakpoint. */
3722 gdb_assert (b != NULL);
3723
3724 /* By definition, the inferior does not report stops at
3725 tracepoints. */
3726 if (is_tracepoint (b))
3727 return 0;
3728
3729 if (!is_watchpoint (b)
3730 && b->type != bp_hardware_breakpoint
3731 && b->type != bp_catchpoint) /* a non-watchpoint bp */
3732 {
3733 if (!breakpoint_address_match (bl->pspace->aspace, bl->address,
3734 aspace, bp_addr))
3735 return 0;
3736 if (overlay_debugging /* unmapped overlay section */
3737 && section_is_overlay (bl->section)
3738 && !section_is_mapped (bl->section))
3739 return 0;
3740 }
3741
3742 /* Continuable hardware watchpoints are treated as non-existent if the
3743 reason we stopped wasn't a hardware watchpoint (we didn't stop on
3744 some data address). Otherwise gdb won't stop on a break instruction
3745 in the code (not from a breakpoint) when a hardware watchpoint has
3746 been defined. Also skip watchpoints which we know did not trigger
3747 (did not match the data address). */
3748
3749 if (is_hardware_watchpoint (b)
3750 && b->watchpoint_triggered == watch_triggered_no)
3751 return 0;
3752
3753 if (b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
3754 {
3755 if (bl->address != bp_addr)
3756 return 0;
3757 if (overlay_debugging /* unmapped overlay section */
3758 && section_is_overlay (bl->section)
3759 && !section_is_mapped (bl->section))
3760 return 0;
3761 }
3762
3763 if (b->type == bp_catchpoint)
3764 {
3765 gdb_assert (b->ops != NULL && b->ops->breakpoint_hit != NULL);
3766 if (!b->ops->breakpoint_hit (b))
3767 return 0;
3768 }
3769
3770 return 1;
3771 }
3772
3773 /* If BS refers to a watchpoint, determine if the watched values
3774 has actually changed, and we should stop. If not, set BS->stop
3775 to 0. */
3776 static void
3777 bpstat_check_watchpoint (bpstat bs)
3778 {
3779 const struct bp_location *bl;
3780 struct breakpoint *b;
3781
3782 /* BS is built for existing struct breakpoint. */
3783 bl = bs->breakpoint_at;
3784 gdb_assert (bl != NULL);
3785 b = bl->owner;
3786 gdb_assert (b != NULL);
3787
3788 if (is_watchpoint (b))
3789 {
3790 int must_check_value = 0;
3791
3792 if (b->type == bp_watchpoint)
3793 /* For a software watchpoint, we must always check the
3794 watched value. */
3795 must_check_value = 1;
3796 else if (b->watchpoint_triggered == watch_triggered_yes)
3797 /* We have a hardware watchpoint (read, write, or access)
3798 and the target earlier reported an address watched by
3799 this watchpoint. */
3800 must_check_value = 1;
3801 else if (b->watchpoint_triggered == watch_triggered_unknown
3802 && b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint)
3803 /* We were stopped by a hardware watchpoint, but the target could
3804 not report the data address. We must check the watchpoint's
3805 value. Access and read watchpoints are out of luck; without
3806 a data address, we can't figure it out. */
3807 must_check_value = 1;
3808
3809 if (must_check_value)
3810 {
3811 char *message = xstrprintf ("Error evaluating expression for watchpoint %d\n",
3812 b->number);
3813 struct cleanup *cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, message);
3814 int e = catch_errors (watchpoint_check, bs, message,
3815 RETURN_MASK_ALL);
3816 do_cleanups (cleanups);
3817 switch (e)
3818 {
3819 case WP_DELETED:
3820 /* We've already printed what needs to be printed. */
3821 bs->print_it = print_it_done;
3822 /* Stop. */
3823 break;
3824 case WP_IGNORE:
3825 bs->print_it = print_it_noop;
3826 bs->stop = 0;
3827 break;
3828 case WP_VALUE_CHANGED:
3829 if (b->type == bp_read_watchpoint)
3830 {
3831 /* There are two cases to consider here:
3832
3833 1. we're watching the triggered memory for reads.
3834 In that case, trust the target, and always report
3835 the watchpoint hit to the user. Even though
3836 reads don't cause value changes, the value may
3837 have changed since the last time it was read, and
3838 since we're not trapping writes, we will not see
3839 those, and as such we should ignore our notion of
3840 old value.
3841
3842 2. we're watching the triggered memory for both
3843 reads and writes. There are two ways this may
3844 happen:
3845
3846 2.1. this is a target that can't break on data
3847 reads only, but can break on accesses (reads or
3848 writes), such as e.g., x86. We detect this case
3849 at the time we try to insert read watchpoints.
3850
3851 2.2. otherwise, the target supports read
3852 watchpoints, but, the user set an access or write
3853 watchpoint watching the same memory as this read
3854 watchpoint.
3855
3856 If we're watching memory writes as well as reads,
3857 ignore watchpoint hits when we find that the
3858 value hasn't changed, as reads don't cause
3859 changes. This still gives false positives when
3860 the program writes the same value to memory as
3861 what there was already in memory (we will confuse
3862 it for a read), but it's much better than
3863 nothing. */
3864
3865 int other_write_watchpoint = 0;
3866
3867 if (bl->watchpoint_type == hw_read)
3868 {
3869 struct breakpoint *other_b;
3870
3871 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (other_b)
3872 if ((other_b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint
3873 || other_b->type == bp_access_watchpoint)
3874 && (other_b->watchpoint_triggered
3875 == watch_triggered_yes))
3876 {
3877 other_write_watchpoint = 1;
3878 break;
3879 }
3880 }
3881
3882 if (other_write_watchpoint
3883 || bl->watchpoint_type == hw_access)
3884 {
3885 /* We're watching the same memory for writes,
3886 and the value changed since the last time we
3887 updated it, so this trap must be for a write.
3888 Ignore it. */
3889 bs->print_it = print_it_noop;
3890 bs->stop = 0;
3891 }
3892 }
3893 break;
3894 case WP_VALUE_NOT_CHANGED:
3895 if (b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint
3896 || b->type == bp_watchpoint)
3897 {
3898 /* Don't stop: write watchpoints shouldn't fire if
3899 the value hasn't changed. */
3900 bs->print_it = print_it_noop;
3901 bs->stop = 0;
3902 }
3903 /* Stop. */
3904 break;
3905 default:
3906 /* Can't happen. */
3907 case 0:
3908 /* Error from catch_errors. */
3909 printf_filtered (_("Watchpoint %d deleted.\n"), b->number);
3910 if (b->related_breakpoint)
3911 b->related_breakpoint->disposition = disp_del_at_next_stop;
3912 b->disposition = disp_del_at_next_stop;
3913 /* We've already printed what needs to be printed. */
3914 bs->print_it = print_it_done;
3915 break;
3916 }
3917 }
3918 else /* must_check_value == 0 */
3919 {
3920 /* This is a case where some watchpoint(s) triggered, but
3921 not at the address of this watchpoint, or else no
3922 watchpoint triggered after all. So don't print
3923 anything for this watchpoint. */
3924 bs->print_it = print_it_noop;
3925 bs->stop = 0;
3926 }
3927 }
3928 }
3929
3930
3931 /* Check conditions (condition proper, frame, thread and ignore count)
3932 of breakpoint referred to by BS. If we should not stop for this
3933 breakpoint, set BS->stop to 0. */
3934 static void
3935 bpstat_check_breakpoint_conditions (bpstat bs, ptid_t ptid)
3936 {
3937 int thread_id = pid_to_thread_id (ptid);
3938 const struct bp_location *bl;
3939 struct breakpoint *b;
3940
3941 /* BS is built for existing struct breakpoint. */
3942 bl = bs->breakpoint_at;
3943 gdb_assert (bl != NULL);
3944 b = bl->owner;
3945 gdb_assert (b != NULL);
3946
3947 if (frame_id_p (b->frame_id)
3948 && !frame_id_eq (b->frame_id, get_stack_frame_id (get_current_frame ())))
3949 bs->stop = 0;
3950 else if (bs->stop)
3951 {
3952 int value_is_zero = 0;
3953 struct expression *cond;
3954
3955 /* If this is a scope breakpoint, mark the associated
3956 watchpoint as triggered so that we will handle the
3957 out-of-scope event. We'll get to the watchpoint next
3958 iteration. */
3959 if (b->type == bp_watchpoint_scope)
3960 b->related_breakpoint->watchpoint_triggered = watch_triggered_yes;
3961
3962 if (is_watchpoint (b))
3963 cond = b->cond_exp;
3964 else
3965 cond = bl->cond;
3966
3967 if (cond && bl->owner->disposition != disp_del_at_next_stop)
3968 {
3969 int within_current_scope = 1;
3970
3971 /* We use value_mark and value_free_to_mark because it could
3972 be a long time before we return to the command level and
3973 call free_all_values. We can't call free_all_values
3974 because we might be in the middle of evaluating a
3975 function call. */
3976 struct value *mark = value_mark ();
3977
3978 /* Need to select the frame, with all that implies so that
3979 the conditions will have the right context. Because we
3980 use the frame, we will not see an inlined function's
3981 variables when we arrive at a breakpoint at the start
3982 of the inlined function; the current frame will be the
3983 call site. */
3984 if (!is_watchpoint (b) || b->cond_exp_valid_block == NULL)
3985 select_frame (get_current_frame ());
3986 else
3987 {
3988 struct frame_info *frame;
3989
3990 /* For local watchpoint expressions, which particular
3991 instance of a local is being watched matters, so we
3992 keep track of the frame to evaluate the expression
3993 in. To evaluate the condition however, it doesn't
3994 really matter which instantiation of the function
3995 where the condition makes sense triggers the
3996 watchpoint. This allows an expression like "watch
3997 global if q > 10" set in `func', catch writes to
3998 global on all threads that call `func', or catch
3999 writes on all recursive calls of `func' by a single
4000 thread. We simply always evaluate the condition in
4001 the innermost frame that's executing where it makes
4002 sense to evaluate the condition. It seems
4003 intuitive. */
4004 frame = block_innermost_frame (b->cond_exp_valid_block);
4005 if (frame != NULL)
4006 select_frame (frame);
4007 else
4008 within_current_scope = 0;
4009 }
4010 if (within_current_scope)
4011 value_is_zero
4012 = catch_errors (breakpoint_cond_eval, cond,
4013 "Error in testing breakpoint condition:\n",
4014 RETURN_MASK_ALL);
4015 else
4016 {
4017 warning (_("Watchpoint condition cannot be tested "
4018 "in the current scope"));
4019 /* If we failed to set the right context for this
4020 watchpoint, unconditionally report it. */
4021 value_is_zero = 0;
4022 }
4023 /* FIXME-someday, should give breakpoint # */
4024 value_free_to_mark (mark);
4025 }
4026
4027 if (cond && value_is_zero)
4028 {
4029 bs->stop = 0;
4030 }
4031 else if (b->thread != -1 && b->thread != thread_id)
4032 {
4033 bs->stop = 0;
4034 }
4035 else if (b->ignore_count > 0)
4036 {
4037 b->ignore_count--;
4038 annotate_ignore_count_change ();
4039 bs->stop = 0;
4040 /* Increase the hit count even though we don't
4041 stop. */
4042 ++(b->hit_count);
4043 }
4044 }
4045 }
4046
4047
4048 /* Get a bpstat associated with having just stopped at address
4049 BP_ADDR in thread PTID.
4050
4051 Determine whether we stopped at a breakpoint, etc, or whether we
4052 don't understand this stop. Result is a chain of bpstat's such that:
4053
4054 if we don't understand the stop, the result is a null pointer.
4055
4056 if we understand why we stopped, the result is not null.
4057
4058 Each element of the chain refers to a particular breakpoint or
4059 watchpoint at which we have stopped. (We may have stopped for
4060 several reasons concurrently.)
4061
4062 Each element of the chain has valid next, breakpoint_at,
4063 commands, FIXME??? fields. */
4064
4065 bpstat
4066 bpstat_stop_status (struct address_space *aspace,
4067 CORE_ADDR bp_addr, ptid_t ptid)
4068 {
4069 struct breakpoint *b = NULL;
4070 struct bp_location *bl;
4071 struct bp_location *loc;
4072 /* Root of the chain of bpstat's */
4073 struct bpstats root_bs[1];
4074 /* Pointer to the last thing in the chain currently. */
4075 bpstat bs = root_bs;
4076 int ix;
4077 int need_remove_insert;
4078
4079 /* ALL_BP_LOCATIONS iteration would break across
4080 update_global_location_list possibly executed by
4081 bpstat_check_breakpoint_conditions's inferior call. */
4082
4083 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
4084 {
4085 if (!breakpoint_enabled (b) && b->enable_state != bp_permanent)
4086 continue;
4087
4088 for (bl = b->loc; bl != NULL; bl = bl->next)
4089 {
4090 /* For hardware watchpoints, we look only at the first location.
4091 The watchpoint_check function will work on the entire expression,
4092 not the individual locations. For read watchpoints, the
4093 watchpoints_triggered function has checked all locations
4094 already. */
4095 if (b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint && bl != b->loc)
4096 break;
4097
4098 if (bl->shlib_disabled)
4099 continue;
4100
4101 if (!bpstat_check_location (bl, aspace, bp_addr))
4102 continue;
4103
4104 /* Come here if it's a watchpoint, or if the break address matches */
4105
4106 bs = bpstat_alloc (bl, bs); /* Alloc a bpstat to explain stop */
4107
4108 /* Assume we stop. Should we find watchpoint that is not actually
4109 triggered, or if condition of breakpoint is false, we'll reset
4110 'stop' to 0. */
4111 bs->stop = 1;
4112 bs->print = 1;
4113
4114 bpstat_check_watchpoint (bs);
4115 if (!bs->stop)
4116 continue;
4117
4118 if (b->type == bp_thread_event || b->type == bp_overlay_event
4119 || b->type == bp_longjmp_master
4120 || b->type == bp_std_terminate_master)
4121 /* We do not stop for these. */
4122 bs->stop = 0;
4123 else
4124 bpstat_check_breakpoint_conditions (bs, ptid);
4125
4126 if (bs->stop)
4127 {
4128 ++(b->hit_count);
4129
4130 /* We will stop here */
4131 if (b->disposition == disp_disable)
4132 {
4133 if (b->enable_state != bp_permanent)
4134 b->enable_state = bp_disabled;
4135 update_global_location_list (0);
4136 }
4137 if (b->silent)
4138 bs->print = 0;
4139 bs->commands = b->commands;
4140 incref_counted_command_line (bs->commands);
4141 bs->commands_left = bs->commands ? bs->commands->commands : NULL;
4142 if (bs->commands_left
4143 && (strcmp ("silent", bs->commands_left->line) == 0
4144 || (xdb_commands
4145 && strcmp ("Q",
4146 bs->commands_left->line) == 0)))
4147 {
4148 bs->commands_left = bs->commands_left->next;
4149 bs->print = 0;
4150 }
4151 }
4152
4153 /* Print nothing for this entry if we dont stop or dont print. */
4154 if (bs->stop == 0 || bs->print == 0)
4155 bs->print_it = print_it_noop;
4156 }
4157 }
4158
4159 for (ix = 0; VEC_iterate (bp_location_p, moribund_locations, ix, loc); ++ix)
4160 {
4161 if (breakpoint_address_match (loc->pspace->aspace, loc->address,
4162 aspace, bp_addr))
4163 {
4164 bs = bpstat_alloc (loc, bs);
4165 /* For hits of moribund locations, we should just proceed. */
4166 bs->stop = 0;
4167 bs->print = 0;
4168 bs->print_it = print_it_noop;
4169 }
4170 }
4171
4172 bs->next = NULL; /* Terminate the chain */
4173
4174 /* If we aren't stopping, the value of some hardware watchpoint may
4175 not have changed, but the intermediate memory locations we are
4176 watching may have. Don't bother if we're stopping; this will get
4177 done later. */
4178 need_remove_insert = 0;
4179 if (! bpstat_causes_stop (root_bs->next))
4180 for (bs = root_bs->next; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
4181 if (!bs->stop
4182 && bs->breakpoint_at->owner
4183 && is_hardware_watchpoint (bs->breakpoint_at->owner))
4184 {
4185 update_watchpoint (bs->breakpoint_at->owner, 0 /* don't reparse. */);
4186 /* Updating watchpoints invalidates bs->breakpoint_at.
4187 Prevent further code from trying to use it. */
4188 bs->breakpoint_at = NULL;
4189 need_remove_insert = 1;
4190 }
4191
4192 if (need_remove_insert)
4193 update_global_location_list (1);
4194
4195 return root_bs->next;
4196 }
4197
4198 static void
4199 handle_jit_event (void)
4200 {
4201 struct frame_info *frame;
4202 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
4203
4204 /* Switch terminal for any messages produced by
4205 breakpoint_re_set. */
4206 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
4207
4208 frame = get_current_frame ();
4209 gdbarch = get_frame_arch (frame);
4210
4211 jit_event_handler (gdbarch);
4212
4213 target_terminal_inferior ();
4214 }
4215
4216 /* Prepare WHAT final decision for infrun. */
4217
4218 /* Decide what infrun needs to do with this bpstat. */
4219
4220 struct bpstat_what
4221 bpstat_what (bpstat bs)
4222 {
4223 struct bpstat_what retval;
4224 /* We need to defer calling `solib_add', as adding new symbols
4225 resets breakpoints, which in turn deletes breakpoint locations,
4226 and hence may clear unprocessed entries in the BS chain. */
4227 int shlib_event = 0;
4228 int jit_event = 0;
4229
4230 retval.main_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_KEEP_CHECKING;
4231 retval.call_dummy = STOP_NONE;
4232
4233 for (; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
4234 {
4235 /* Extract this BS's action. After processing each BS, we check
4236 if its action overrides all we've seem so far. */
4237 enum bpstat_what_main_action this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_KEEP_CHECKING;
4238 enum bptype bptype;
4239
4240 if (bs->breakpoint_at == NULL)
4241 {
4242 /* I suspect this can happen if it was a momentary
4243 breakpoint which has since been deleted. */
4244 bptype = bp_none;
4245 }
4246 else if (bs->breakpoint_at->owner == NULL)
4247 bptype = bp_none;
4248 else
4249 bptype = bs->breakpoint_at->owner->type;
4250
4251 switch (bptype)
4252 {
4253 case bp_none:
4254 break;
4255 case bp_breakpoint:
4256 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
4257 case bp_until:
4258 case bp_finish:
4259 if (bs->stop)
4260 {
4261 if (bs->print)
4262 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_NOISY;
4263 else
4264 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_SILENT;
4265 }
4266 else
4267 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_SINGLE;
4268 break;
4269 case bp_watchpoint:
4270 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
4271 case bp_read_watchpoint:
4272 case bp_access_watchpoint:
4273 if (bs->stop)
4274 {
4275 if (bs->print)
4276 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_NOISY;
4277 else
4278 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_SILENT;
4279 }
4280 else
4281 {
4282 /* There was a watchpoint, but we're not stopping.
4283 This requires no further action. */
4284 }
4285 break;
4286 case bp_longjmp:
4287 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_SET_LONGJMP_RESUME;
4288 break;
4289 case bp_longjmp_resume:
4290 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME;
4291 break;
4292 case bp_step_resume:
4293 if (bs->stop)
4294 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_STEP_RESUME;
4295 else
4296 {
4297 /* It is for the wrong frame. */
4298 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_SINGLE;
4299 }
4300 break;
4301 case bp_watchpoint_scope:
4302 case bp_thread_event:
4303 case bp_overlay_event:
4304 case bp_longjmp_master:
4305 case bp_std_terminate_master:
4306 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_SINGLE;
4307 break;
4308 case bp_catchpoint:
4309 if (bs->stop)
4310 {
4311 if (bs->print)
4312 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_NOISY;
4313 else
4314 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_SILENT;
4315 }
4316 else
4317 {
4318 /* There was a catchpoint, but we're not stopping.
4319 This requires no further action. */
4320 }
4321 break;
4322 case bp_shlib_event:
4323 shlib_event = 1;
4324
4325 /* If requested, stop when the dynamic linker notifies GDB
4326 of events. This allows the user to get control and place
4327 breakpoints in initializer routines for dynamically
4328 loaded objects (among other things). */
4329 if (stop_on_solib_events)
4330 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_NOISY;
4331 else
4332 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_SINGLE;
4333 break;
4334 case bp_jit_event:
4335 jit_event = 1;
4336 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_SINGLE;
4337 break;
4338 case bp_call_dummy:
4339 /* Make sure the action is stop (silent or noisy),
4340 so infrun.c pops the dummy frame. */
4341 retval.call_dummy = STOP_STACK_DUMMY;
4342 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_SILENT;
4343 break;
4344 case bp_std_terminate:
4345 /* Make sure the action is stop (silent or noisy),
4346 so infrun.c pops the dummy frame. */
4347 retval.call_dummy = STOP_STD_TERMINATE;
4348 this_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_SILENT;
4349 break;
4350 case bp_tracepoint:
4351 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
4352 /* Tracepoint hits should not be reported back to GDB, and
4353 if one got through somehow, it should have been filtered
4354 out already. */
4355 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
4356 _("bpstat_what: tracepoint encountered"));
4357 default:
4358 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
4359 _("bpstat_what: unhandled bptype %d"), (int) bptype);
4360 }
4361
4362 retval.main_action = max (retval.main_action, this_action);
4363 }
4364
4365 if (shlib_event)
4366 {
4367 if (debug_infrun)
4368 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "bpstat_what: bp_shlib_event\n");
4369
4370 /* Check for any newly added shared libraries if we're supposed
4371 to be adding them automatically. */
4372
4373 /* Switch terminal for any messages produced by
4374 breakpoint_re_set. */
4375 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
4376
4377 #ifdef SOLIB_ADD
4378 SOLIB_ADD (NULL, 0, &current_target, auto_solib_add);
4379 #else
4380 solib_add (NULL, 0, &current_target, auto_solib_add);
4381 #endif
4382
4383 target_terminal_inferior ();
4384 }
4385
4386 if (jit_event)
4387 {
4388 if (debug_infrun)
4389 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "bpstat_what: bp_jit_event\n");
4390
4391 handle_jit_event ();
4392 }
4393
4394 return retval;
4395 }
4396
4397 /* Nonzero if we should step constantly (e.g. watchpoints on machines
4398 without hardware support). This isn't related to a specific bpstat,
4399 just to things like whether watchpoints are set. */
4400
4401 int
4402 bpstat_should_step (void)
4403 {
4404 struct breakpoint *b;
4405
4406 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
4407 if (breakpoint_enabled (b) && b->type == bp_watchpoint && b->loc != NULL)
4408 return 1;
4409 return 0;
4410 }
4411
4412 int
4413 bpstat_causes_stop (bpstat bs)
4414 {
4415 for (; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
4416 if (bs->stop)
4417 return 1;
4418
4419 return 0;
4420 }
4421
4422 \f
4423
4424 /* Print the LOC location out of the list of B->LOC locations. */
4425
4426 static void print_breakpoint_location (struct breakpoint *b,
4427 struct bp_location *loc,
4428 char *wrap_indent,
4429 struct ui_stream *stb)
4430 {
4431 struct cleanup *old_chain = save_current_program_space ();
4432
4433 if (loc != NULL && loc->shlib_disabled)
4434 loc = NULL;
4435
4436 if (loc != NULL)
4437 set_current_program_space (loc->pspace);
4438
4439 if (b->source_file && loc)
4440 {
4441 struct symbol *sym
4442 = find_pc_sect_function (loc->address, loc->section);
4443 if (sym)
4444 {
4445 ui_out_text (uiout, "in ");
4446 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "func",
4447 SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (sym));
4448 ui_out_wrap_hint (uiout, wrap_indent);
4449 ui_out_text (uiout, " at ");
4450 }
4451 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "file", b->source_file);
4452 ui_out_text (uiout, ":");
4453
4454 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
4455 {
4456 struct symtab_and_line sal = find_pc_line (loc->address, 0);
4457 char *fullname = symtab_to_fullname (sal.symtab);
4458
4459 if (fullname)
4460 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "fullname", fullname);
4461 }
4462
4463 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "line", b->line_number);
4464 }
4465 else if (loc)
4466 {
4467 print_address_symbolic (loc->gdbarch, loc->address, stb->stream,
4468 demangle, "");
4469 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "at", stb);
4470 }
4471 else
4472 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "pending", b->addr_string);
4473
4474 do_cleanups (old_chain);
4475 }
4476
4477 /* Print B to gdb_stdout. */
4478 static void
4479 print_one_breakpoint_location (struct breakpoint *b,
4480 struct bp_location *loc,
4481 int loc_number,
4482 struct bp_location **last_loc,
4483 int print_address_bits,
4484 int allflag)
4485 {
4486 struct command_line *l;
4487 struct ep_type_description
4488 {
4489 enum bptype type;
4490 char *description;
4491 };
4492 static struct ep_type_description bptypes[] =
4493 {
4494 {bp_none, "?deleted?"},
4495 {bp_breakpoint, "breakpoint"},
4496 {bp_hardware_breakpoint, "hw breakpoint"},
4497 {bp_until, "until"},
4498 {bp_finish, "finish"},
4499 {bp_watchpoint, "watchpoint"},
4500 {bp_hardware_watchpoint, "hw watchpoint"},
4501 {bp_read_watchpoint, "read watchpoint"},
4502 {bp_access_watchpoint, "acc watchpoint"},
4503 {bp_longjmp, "longjmp"},
4504 {bp_longjmp_resume, "longjmp resume"},
4505 {bp_step_resume, "step resume"},
4506 {bp_watchpoint_scope, "watchpoint scope"},
4507 {bp_call_dummy, "call dummy"},
4508 {bp_std_terminate, "std::terminate"},
4509 {bp_shlib_event, "shlib events"},
4510 {bp_thread_event, "thread events"},
4511 {bp_overlay_event, "overlay events"},
4512 {bp_longjmp_master, "longjmp master"},
4513 {bp_std_terminate_master, "std::terminate master"},
4514 {bp_catchpoint, "catchpoint"},
4515 {bp_tracepoint, "tracepoint"},
4516 {bp_fast_tracepoint, "fast tracepoint"},
4517 {bp_jit_event, "jit events"},
4518 };
4519
4520 static char bpenables[] = "nynny";
4521 char wrap_indent[80];
4522 struct ui_stream *stb = ui_out_stream_new (uiout);
4523 struct cleanup *old_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_stream_delete (stb);
4524 struct cleanup *bkpt_chain;
4525
4526 int header_of_multiple = 0;
4527 int part_of_multiple = (loc != NULL);
4528 struct value_print_options opts;
4529
4530 get_user_print_options (&opts);
4531
4532 gdb_assert (!loc || loc_number != 0);
4533 /* See comment in print_one_breakpoint concerning
4534 treatment of breakpoints with single disabled
4535 location. */
4536 if (loc == NULL
4537 && (b->loc != NULL
4538 && (b->loc->next != NULL || !b->loc->enabled)))
4539 header_of_multiple = 1;
4540 if (loc == NULL)
4541 loc = b->loc;
4542
4543 annotate_record ();
4544 bkpt_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "bkpt");
4545
4546 /* 1 */
4547 annotate_field (0);
4548 if (part_of_multiple)
4549 {
4550 char *formatted;
4551 formatted = xstrprintf ("%d.%d", b->number, loc_number);
4552 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "number", formatted);
4553 xfree (formatted);
4554 }
4555 else
4556 {
4557 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "number", b->number);
4558 }
4559
4560 /* 2 */
4561 annotate_field (1);
4562 if (part_of_multiple)
4563 ui_out_field_skip (uiout, "type");
4564 else
4565 {
4566 if (((int) b->type >= (sizeof (bptypes) / sizeof (bptypes[0])))
4567 || ((int) b->type != bptypes[(int) b->type].type))
4568 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
4569 _("bptypes table does not describe type #%d."),
4570 (int) b->type);
4571 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "type", bptypes[(int) b->type].description);
4572 }
4573
4574 /* 3 */
4575 annotate_field (2);
4576 if (part_of_multiple)
4577 ui_out_field_skip (uiout, "disp");
4578 else
4579 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "disp", bpdisp_text (b->disposition));
4580
4581
4582 /* 4 */
4583 annotate_field (3);
4584 if (part_of_multiple)
4585 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "enabled", loc->enabled ? "y" : "n");
4586 else
4587 ui_out_field_fmt (uiout, "enabled", "%c",
4588 bpenables[(int) b->enable_state]);
4589 ui_out_spaces (uiout, 2);
4590
4591
4592 /* 5 and 6 */
4593 strcpy (wrap_indent, " ");
4594 if (opts.addressprint)
4595 {
4596 if (print_address_bits <= 32)
4597 strcat (wrap_indent, " ");
4598 else
4599 strcat (wrap_indent, " ");
4600 }
4601
4602 if (b->ops != NULL && b->ops->print_one != NULL)
4603 {
4604 /* Although the print_one can possibly print
4605 all locations, calling it here is not likely
4606 to get any nice result. So, make sure there's
4607 just one location. */
4608 gdb_assert (b->loc == NULL || b->loc->next == NULL);
4609 b->ops->print_one (b, last_loc);
4610 }
4611 else
4612 switch (b->type)
4613 {
4614 case bp_none:
4615 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
4616 _("print_one_breakpoint: bp_none encountered\n"));
4617 break;
4618
4619 case bp_watchpoint:
4620 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
4621 case bp_read_watchpoint:
4622 case bp_access_watchpoint:
4623 /* Field 4, the address, is omitted (which makes the columns
4624 not line up too nicely with the headers, but the effect
4625 is relatively readable). */
4626 if (opts.addressprint)
4627 ui_out_field_skip (uiout, "addr");
4628 annotate_field (5);
4629 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", b->exp_string);
4630 break;
4631
4632 case bp_breakpoint:
4633 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
4634 case bp_until:
4635 case bp_finish:
4636 case bp_longjmp:
4637 case bp_longjmp_resume:
4638 case bp_step_resume:
4639 case bp_watchpoint_scope:
4640 case bp_call_dummy:
4641 case bp_std_terminate:
4642 case bp_shlib_event:
4643 case bp_thread_event:
4644 case bp_overlay_event:
4645 case bp_longjmp_master:
4646 case bp_std_terminate_master:
4647 case bp_tracepoint:
4648 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
4649 case bp_jit_event:
4650 if (opts.addressprint)
4651 {
4652 annotate_field (4);
4653 if (header_of_multiple)
4654 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "addr", "<MULTIPLE>");
4655 else if (b->loc == NULL || loc->shlib_disabled)
4656 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "addr", "<PENDING>");
4657 else
4658 ui_out_field_core_addr (uiout, "addr",
4659 loc->gdbarch, loc->address);
4660 }
4661 annotate_field (5);
4662 if (!header_of_multiple)
4663 print_breakpoint_location (b, loc, wrap_indent, stb);
4664 if (b->loc)
4665 *last_loc = b->loc;
4666 break;
4667 }
4668
4669
4670 /* For backward compatibility, don't display inferiors unless there
4671 are several. */
4672 if (loc != NULL
4673 && !header_of_multiple
4674 && (allflag
4675 || (!gdbarch_has_global_breakpoints (target_gdbarch)
4676 && (number_of_program_spaces () > 1
4677 || number_of_inferiors () > 1)
4678 /* LOC is for existing B, it cannot be in moribund_locations and
4679 thus having NULL OWNER. */
4680 && loc->owner->type != bp_catchpoint)))
4681 {
4682 struct inferior *inf;
4683 int first = 1;
4684
4685 for (inf = inferior_list; inf != NULL; inf = inf->next)
4686 {
4687 if (inf->pspace == loc->pspace)
4688 {
4689 if (first)
4690 {
4691 first = 0;
4692 ui_out_text (uiout, " inf ");
4693 }
4694 else
4695 ui_out_text (uiout, ", ");
4696 ui_out_text (uiout, plongest (inf->num));
4697 }
4698 }
4699 }
4700
4701 if (!part_of_multiple)
4702 {
4703 if (b->thread != -1)
4704 {
4705 /* FIXME: This seems to be redundant and lost here; see the
4706 "stop only in" line a little further down. */
4707 ui_out_text (uiout, " thread ");
4708 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "thread", b->thread);
4709 }
4710 else if (b->task != 0)
4711 {
4712 ui_out_text (uiout, " task ");
4713 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "task", b->task);
4714 }
4715 }
4716
4717 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
4718
4719 if (part_of_multiple && frame_id_p (b->frame_id))
4720 {
4721 annotate_field (6);
4722 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tstop only in stack frame at ");
4723 /* FIXME: cagney/2002-12-01: Shouldn't be poeking around inside
4724 the frame ID. */
4725 ui_out_field_core_addr (uiout, "frame",
4726 b->gdbarch, b->frame_id.stack_addr);
4727 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
4728 }
4729
4730 if (!part_of_multiple && b->cond_string && !ada_exception_catchpoint_p (b))
4731 {
4732 /* We do not print the condition for Ada exception catchpoints
4733 because the condition is an internal implementation detail
4734 that we do not want to expose to the user. */
4735 annotate_field (7);
4736 if (is_tracepoint (b))
4737 ui_out_text (uiout, "\ttrace only if ");
4738 else
4739 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tstop only if ");
4740 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "cond", b->cond_string);
4741 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
4742 }
4743
4744 if (!part_of_multiple && b->thread != -1)
4745 {
4746 /* FIXME should make an annotation for this */
4747 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tstop only in thread ");
4748 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "thread", b->thread);
4749 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
4750 }
4751
4752 if (!part_of_multiple && b->hit_count)
4753 {
4754 /* FIXME should make an annotation for this */
4755 if (ep_is_catchpoint (b))
4756 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tcatchpoint");
4757 else
4758 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tbreakpoint");
4759 ui_out_text (uiout, " already hit ");
4760 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "times", b->hit_count);
4761 if (b->hit_count == 1)
4762 ui_out_text (uiout, " time\n");
4763 else
4764 ui_out_text (uiout, " times\n");
4765 }
4766
4767 /* Output the count also if it is zero, but only if this is
4768 mi. FIXME: Should have a better test for this. */
4769 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
4770 if (!part_of_multiple && b->hit_count == 0)
4771 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "times", b->hit_count);
4772
4773 if (!part_of_multiple && b->ignore_count)
4774 {
4775 annotate_field (8);
4776 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tignore next ");
4777 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "ignore", b->ignore_count);
4778 ui_out_text (uiout, " hits\n");
4779 }
4780
4781 l = b->commands ? b->commands->commands : NULL;
4782 if (!part_of_multiple && l)
4783 {
4784 struct cleanup *script_chain;
4785
4786 annotate_field (9);
4787 script_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "script");
4788 print_command_lines (uiout, l, 4);
4789 do_cleanups (script_chain);
4790 }
4791
4792 if (!part_of_multiple && b->pass_count)
4793 {
4794 annotate_field (10);
4795 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tpass count ");
4796 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "pass", b->pass_count);
4797 ui_out_text (uiout, " \n");
4798 }
4799
4800 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout) && !part_of_multiple)
4801 {
4802 if (b->addr_string)
4803 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "original-location", b->addr_string);
4804 else if (b->exp_string)
4805 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "original-location", b->exp_string);
4806 }
4807
4808 do_cleanups (bkpt_chain);
4809 do_cleanups (old_chain);
4810 }
4811
4812 static void
4813 print_one_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *b,
4814 struct bp_location **last_loc, int print_address_bits,
4815 int allflag)
4816 {
4817 print_one_breakpoint_location (b, NULL, 0, last_loc,
4818 print_address_bits, allflag);
4819
4820 /* If this breakpoint has custom print function,
4821 it's already printed. Otherwise, print individual
4822 locations, if any. */
4823 if (b->ops == NULL || b->ops->print_one == NULL)
4824 {
4825 /* If breakpoint has a single location that is
4826 disabled, we print it as if it had
4827 several locations, since otherwise it's hard to
4828 represent "breakpoint enabled, location disabled"
4829 situation.
4830 Note that while hardware watchpoints have
4831 several locations internally, that's no a property
4832 exposed to user. */
4833 if (b->loc
4834 && !is_hardware_watchpoint (b)
4835 && (b->loc->next || !b->loc->enabled)
4836 && !ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
4837 {
4838 struct bp_location *loc;
4839 int n = 1;
4840 for (loc = b->loc; loc; loc = loc->next, ++n)
4841 print_one_breakpoint_location (b, loc, n, last_loc,
4842 print_address_bits, allflag);
4843 }
4844 }
4845 }
4846
4847 static int
4848 breakpoint_address_bits (struct breakpoint *b)
4849 {
4850 int print_address_bits = 0;
4851 struct bp_location *loc;
4852
4853 for (loc = b->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
4854 {
4855 int addr_bit;
4856
4857 /* Software watchpoints that aren't watching memory don't have
4858 an address to print. */
4859 if (b->type == bp_watchpoint && loc->watchpoint_type == -1)
4860 continue;
4861
4862 addr_bit = gdbarch_addr_bit (loc->gdbarch);
4863 if (addr_bit > print_address_bits)
4864 print_address_bits = addr_bit;
4865 }
4866
4867 return print_address_bits;
4868 }
4869
4870 struct captured_breakpoint_query_args
4871 {
4872 int bnum;
4873 };
4874
4875 static int
4876 do_captured_breakpoint_query (struct ui_out *uiout, void *data)
4877 {
4878 struct captured_breakpoint_query_args *args = data;
4879 struct breakpoint *b;
4880 struct bp_location *dummy_loc = NULL;
4881
4882 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
4883 {
4884 if (args->bnum == b->number)
4885 {
4886 int print_address_bits = breakpoint_address_bits (b);
4887
4888 print_one_breakpoint (b, &dummy_loc, print_address_bits, 0);
4889 return GDB_RC_OK;
4890 }
4891 }
4892 return GDB_RC_NONE;
4893 }
4894
4895 enum gdb_rc
4896 gdb_breakpoint_query (struct ui_out *uiout, int bnum, char **error_message)
4897 {
4898 struct captured_breakpoint_query_args args;
4899
4900 args.bnum = bnum;
4901 /* For the moment we don't trust print_one_breakpoint() to not throw
4902 an error. */
4903 if (catch_exceptions_with_msg (uiout, do_captured_breakpoint_query, &args,
4904 error_message, RETURN_MASK_ALL) < 0)
4905 return GDB_RC_FAIL;
4906 else
4907 return GDB_RC_OK;
4908 }
4909
4910 /* Return non-zero if B is user settable (breakpoints, watchpoints,
4911 catchpoints, et.al.). */
4912
4913 static int
4914 user_settable_breakpoint (const struct breakpoint *b)
4915 {
4916 return (b->type == bp_breakpoint
4917 || b->type == bp_catchpoint
4918 || b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint
4919 || is_tracepoint (b)
4920 || is_watchpoint (b));
4921 }
4922
4923 /* Print information on user settable breakpoint (watchpoint, etc)
4924 number BNUM. If BNUM is -1 print all user-settable breakpoints.
4925 If ALLFLAG is non-zero, include non-user-settable breakpoints. If
4926 FILTER is non-NULL, call it on each breakpoint and only include the
4927 ones for which it returns non-zero. Return the total number of
4928 breakpoints listed. */
4929
4930 static int
4931 breakpoint_1 (int bnum, int allflag, int (*filter) (const struct breakpoint *))
4932 {
4933 struct breakpoint *b;
4934 struct bp_location *last_loc = NULL;
4935 int nr_printable_breakpoints;
4936 struct cleanup *bkpttbl_chain;
4937 struct value_print_options opts;
4938 int print_address_bits = 0;
4939
4940 get_user_print_options (&opts);
4941
4942 /* Compute the number of rows in the table, as well as the
4943 size required for address fields. */
4944 nr_printable_breakpoints = 0;
4945 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
4946 if (bnum == -1
4947 || bnum == b->number)
4948 {
4949 /* If we have a filter, only list the breakpoints it accepts. */
4950 if (filter && !filter (b))
4951 continue;
4952
4953 if (allflag || user_settable_breakpoint (b))
4954 {
4955 int addr_bit = breakpoint_address_bits (b);
4956 if (addr_bit > print_address_bits)
4957 print_address_bits = addr_bit;
4958
4959 nr_printable_breakpoints++;
4960 }
4961 }
4962
4963 if (opts.addressprint)
4964 bkpttbl_chain
4965 = make_cleanup_ui_out_table_begin_end (uiout, 6, nr_printable_breakpoints,
4966 "BreakpointTable");
4967 else
4968 bkpttbl_chain
4969 = make_cleanup_ui_out_table_begin_end (uiout, 5, nr_printable_breakpoints,
4970 "BreakpointTable");
4971
4972 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4973 annotate_breakpoints_headers ();
4974 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4975 annotate_field (0);
4976 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 7, ui_left, "number", "Num"); /* 1 */
4977 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4978 annotate_field (1);
4979 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 14, ui_left, "type", "Type"); /* 2 */
4980 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4981 annotate_field (2);
4982 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 4, ui_left, "disp", "Disp"); /* 3 */
4983 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4984 annotate_field (3);
4985 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 3, ui_left, "enabled", "Enb"); /* 4 */
4986 if (opts.addressprint)
4987 {
4988 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4989 annotate_field (4);
4990 if (print_address_bits <= 32)
4991 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 10, ui_left, "addr", "Address");/* 5 */
4992 else
4993 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 18, ui_left, "addr", "Address");/* 5 */
4994 }
4995 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4996 annotate_field (5);
4997 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 40, ui_noalign, "what", "What"); /* 6 */
4998 ui_out_table_body (uiout);
4999 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
5000 annotate_breakpoints_table ();
5001
5002 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
5003 {
5004 QUIT;
5005 if (bnum == -1
5006 || bnum == b->number)
5007 {
5008 /* If we have a filter, only list the breakpoints it accepts. */
5009 if (filter && !filter (b))
5010 continue;
5011
5012 /* We only print out user settable breakpoints unless the
5013 allflag is set. */
5014 if (allflag || user_settable_breakpoint (b))
5015 print_one_breakpoint (b, &last_loc, print_address_bits, allflag);
5016 }
5017 }
5018
5019 do_cleanups (bkpttbl_chain);
5020
5021 if (nr_printable_breakpoints == 0)
5022 {
5023 /* If there's a filter, let the caller decide how to report empty list. */
5024 if (!filter)
5025 {
5026 if (bnum == -1)
5027 ui_out_message (uiout, 0, "No breakpoints or watchpoints.\n");
5028 else
5029 ui_out_message (uiout, 0, "No breakpoint or watchpoint number %d.\n",
5030 bnum);
5031 }
5032 }
5033 else
5034 {
5035 if (last_loc && !server_command)
5036 set_next_address (last_loc->gdbarch, last_loc->address);
5037 }
5038
5039 /* FIXME? Should this be moved up so that it is only called when
5040 there have been breakpoints? */
5041 annotate_breakpoints_table_end ();
5042
5043 return nr_printable_breakpoints;
5044 }
5045
5046 /* Display the value of default-collect in a way that is generally
5047 compatible with the breakpoint list. */
5048
5049 static void
5050 default_collect_info (void)
5051 {
5052 /* If it has no value (which is frequently the case), say nothing; a
5053 message like "No default-collect." gets in user's face when it's
5054 not wanted. */
5055 if (!*default_collect)
5056 return;
5057
5058 /* The following phrase lines up nicely with per-tracepoint collect
5059 actions. */
5060 ui_out_text (uiout, "default collect ");
5061 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "default-collect", default_collect);
5062 ui_out_text (uiout, " \n");
5063 }
5064
5065 static void
5066 breakpoints_info (char *bnum_exp, int from_tty)
5067 {
5068 int bnum = -1;
5069
5070 if (bnum_exp)
5071 bnum = parse_and_eval_long (bnum_exp);
5072
5073 breakpoint_1 (bnum, 0, NULL);
5074
5075 default_collect_info ();
5076 }
5077
5078 static void
5079 watchpoints_info (char *wpnum_exp, int from_tty)
5080 {
5081 int wpnum = -1, num_printed;
5082
5083 if (wpnum_exp)
5084 wpnum = parse_and_eval_long (wpnum_exp);
5085
5086 num_printed = breakpoint_1 (wpnum, 0, is_watchpoint);
5087
5088 if (num_printed == 0)
5089 {
5090 if (wpnum == -1)
5091 ui_out_message (uiout, 0, "No watchpoints.\n");
5092 else
5093 ui_out_message (uiout, 0, "No watchpoint number %d.\n", wpnum);
5094 }
5095 }
5096
5097 static void
5098 maintenance_info_breakpoints (char *bnum_exp, int from_tty)
5099 {
5100 int bnum = -1;
5101
5102 if (bnum_exp)
5103 bnum = parse_and_eval_long (bnum_exp);
5104
5105 breakpoint_1 (bnum, 1, NULL);
5106
5107 default_collect_info ();
5108 }
5109
5110 static int
5111 breakpoint_has_pc (struct breakpoint *b,
5112 struct program_space *pspace,
5113 CORE_ADDR pc, struct obj_section *section)
5114 {
5115 struct bp_location *bl = b->loc;
5116
5117 for (; bl; bl = bl->next)
5118 {
5119 if (bl->pspace == pspace
5120 && bl->address == pc
5121 && (!overlay_debugging || bl->section == section))
5122 return 1;
5123 }
5124 return 0;
5125 }
5126
5127 /* Print a message describing any breakpoints set at PC. This
5128 concerns with logical breakpoints, so we match program spaces, not
5129 address spaces. */
5130
5131 static void
5132 describe_other_breakpoints (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
5133 struct program_space *pspace, CORE_ADDR pc,
5134 struct obj_section *section, int thread)
5135 {
5136 int others = 0;
5137 struct breakpoint *b;
5138
5139 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
5140 others += breakpoint_has_pc (b, pspace, pc, section);
5141 if (others > 0)
5142 {
5143 if (others == 1)
5144 printf_filtered (_("Note: breakpoint "));
5145 else /* if (others == ???) */
5146 printf_filtered (_("Note: breakpoints "));
5147 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
5148 if (breakpoint_has_pc (b, pspace, pc, section))
5149 {
5150 others--;
5151 printf_filtered ("%d", b->number);
5152 if (b->thread == -1 && thread != -1)
5153 printf_filtered (" (all threads)");
5154 else if (b->thread != -1)
5155 printf_filtered (" (thread %d)", b->thread);
5156 printf_filtered ("%s%s ",
5157 ((b->enable_state == bp_disabled
5158 || b->enable_state == bp_call_disabled
5159 || b->enable_state == bp_startup_disabled)
5160 ? " (disabled)"
5161 : b->enable_state == bp_permanent
5162 ? " (permanent)"
5163 : ""),
5164 (others > 1) ? ","
5165 : ((others == 1) ? " and" : ""));
5166 }
5167 printf_filtered (_("also set at pc "));
5168 fputs_filtered (paddress (gdbarch, pc), gdb_stdout);
5169 printf_filtered (".\n");
5170 }
5171 }
5172 \f
5173 /* Set the default place to put a breakpoint
5174 for the `break' command with no arguments. */
5175
5176 void
5177 set_default_breakpoint (int valid, struct program_space *pspace,
5178 CORE_ADDR addr, struct symtab *symtab,
5179 int line)
5180 {
5181 default_breakpoint_valid = valid;
5182 default_breakpoint_pspace = pspace;
5183 default_breakpoint_address = addr;
5184 default_breakpoint_symtab = symtab;
5185 default_breakpoint_line = line;
5186 }
5187
5188 /* Return true iff it is meaningful to use the address member of
5189 BPT. For some breakpoint types, the address member is irrelevant
5190 and it makes no sense to attempt to compare it to other addresses
5191 (or use it for any other purpose either).
5192
5193 More specifically, each of the following breakpoint types will always
5194 have a zero valued address and we don't want to mark breakpoints of any of
5195 these types to be a duplicate of an actual breakpoint at address zero:
5196
5197 bp_watchpoint
5198 bp_catchpoint
5199
5200 */
5201
5202 static int
5203 breakpoint_address_is_meaningful (struct breakpoint *bpt)
5204 {
5205 enum bptype type = bpt->type;
5206
5207 return (type != bp_watchpoint && type != bp_catchpoint);
5208 }
5209
5210 /* Assuming LOC1 and LOC2's owners are hardware watchpoints, returns
5211 true if LOC1 and LOC2 represent the same watchpoint location. */
5212
5213 static int
5214 watchpoint_locations_match (struct bp_location *loc1, struct bp_location *loc2)
5215 {
5216 /* Both of them must not be in moribund_locations. */
5217 gdb_assert (loc1->owner != NULL);
5218 gdb_assert (loc2->owner != NULL);
5219
5220 /* Note that this checks the owner's type, not the location's. In
5221 case the target does not support read watchpoints, but does
5222 support access watchpoints, we'll have bp_read_watchpoint
5223 watchpoints with hw_access locations. Those should be considered
5224 duplicates of hw_read locations. The hw_read locations will
5225 become hw_access locations later. */
5226 return (loc1->owner->type == loc2->owner->type
5227 && loc1->pspace->aspace == loc2->pspace->aspace
5228 && loc1->address == loc2->address
5229 && loc1->length == loc2->length);
5230 }
5231
5232 /* Returns true if {ASPACE1,ADDR1} and {ASPACE2,ADDR2} represent the
5233 same breakpoint location. In most targets, this can only be true
5234 if ASPACE1 matches ASPACE2. On targets that have global
5235 breakpoints, the address space doesn't really matter. */
5236
5237 static int
5238 breakpoint_address_match (struct address_space *aspace1, CORE_ADDR addr1,
5239 struct address_space *aspace2, CORE_ADDR addr2)
5240 {
5241 return ((gdbarch_has_global_breakpoints (target_gdbarch)
5242 || aspace1 == aspace2)
5243 && addr1 == addr2);
5244 }
5245
5246 /* Assuming LOC1 and LOC2's types' have meaningful target addresses
5247 (breakpoint_address_is_meaningful), returns true if LOC1 and LOC2
5248 represent the same location. */
5249
5250 static int
5251 breakpoint_locations_match (struct bp_location *loc1, struct bp_location *loc2)
5252 {
5253 int hw_point1, hw_point2;
5254
5255 /* Both of them must not be in moribund_locations. */
5256 gdb_assert (loc1->owner != NULL);
5257 gdb_assert (loc2->owner != NULL);
5258
5259 hw_point1 = is_hardware_watchpoint (loc1->owner);
5260 hw_point2 = is_hardware_watchpoint (loc2->owner);
5261
5262 if (hw_point1 != hw_point2)
5263 return 0;
5264 else if (hw_point1)
5265 return watchpoint_locations_match (loc1, loc2);
5266 else
5267 return breakpoint_address_match (loc1->pspace->aspace, loc1->address,
5268 loc2->pspace->aspace, loc2->address);
5269 }
5270
5271 static void
5272 breakpoint_adjustment_warning (CORE_ADDR from_addr, CORE_ADDR to_addr,
5273 int bnum, int have_bnum)
5274 {
5275 char astr1[40];
5276 char astr2[40];
5277
5278 strcpy (astr1, hex_string_custom ((unsigned long) from_addr, 8));
5279 strcpy (astr2, hex_string_custom ((unsigned long) to_addr, 8));
5280 if (have_bnum)
5281 warning (_("Breakpoint %d address previously adjusted from %s to %s."),
5282 bnum, astr1, astr2);
5283 else
5284 warning (_("Breakpoint address adjusted from %s to %s."), astr1, astr2);
5285 }
5286
5287 /* Adjust a breakpoint's address to account for architectural constraints
5288 on breakpoint placement. Return the adjusted address. Note: Very
5289 few targets require this kind of adjustment. For most targets,
5290 this function is simply the identity function. */
5291
5292 static CORE_ADDR
5293 adjust_breakpoint_address (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
5294 CORE_ADDR bpaddr, enum bptype bptype)
5295 {
5296 if (!gdbarch_adjust_breakpoint_address_p (gdbarch))
5297 {
5298 /* Very few targets need any kind of breakpoint adjustment. */
5299 return bpaddr;
5300 }
5301 else if (bptype == bp_watchpoint
5302 || bptype == bp_hardware_watchpoint
5303 || bptype == bp_read_watchpoint
5304 || bptype == bp_access_watchpoint
5305 || bptype == bp_catchpoint)
5306 {
5307 /* Watchpoints and the various bp_catch_* eventpoints should not
5308 have their addresses modified. */
5309 return bpaddr;
5310 }
5311 else
5312 {
5313 CORE_ADDR adjusted_bpaddr;
5314
5315 /* Some targets have architectural constraints on the placement
5316 of breakpoint instructions. Obtain the adjusted address. */
5317 adjusted_bpaddr = gdbarch_adjust_breakpoint_address (gdbarch, bpaddr);
5318
5319 /* An adjusted breakpoint address can significantly alter
5320 a user's expectations. Print a warning if an adjustment
5321 is required. */
5322 if (adjusted_bpaddr != bpaddr)
5323 breakpoint_adjustment_warning (bpaddr, adjusted_bpaddr, 0, 0);
5324
5325 return adjusted_bpaddr;
5326 }
5327 }
5328
5329 /* Allocate a struct bp_location. */
5330
5331 static struct bp_location *
5332 allocate_bp_location (struct breakpoint *bpt)
5333 {
5334 struct bp_location *loc;
5335
5336 loc = xmalloc (sizeof (struct bp_location));
5337 memset (loc, 0, sizeof (*loc));
5338
5339 loc->owner = bpt;
5340 loc->cond = NULL;
5341 loc->shlib_disabled = 0;
5342 loc->enabled = 1;
5343
5344 switch (bpt->type)
5345 {
5346 case bp_breakpoint:
5347 case bp_until:
5348 case bp_finish:
5349 case bp_longjmp:
5350 case bp_longjmp_resume:
5351 case bp_step_resume:
5352 case bp_watchpoint_scope:
5353 case bp_call_dummy:
5354 case bp_std_terminate:
5355 case bp_shlib_event:
5356 case bp_thread_event:
5357 case bp_overlay_event:
5358 case bp_jit_event:
5359 case bp_longjmp_master:
5360 case bp_std_terminate_master:
5361 loc->loc_type = bp_loc_software_breakpoint;
5362 break;
5363 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
5364 loc->loc_type = bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint;
5365 break;
5366 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
5367 case bp_read_watchpoint:
5368 case bp_access_watchpoint:
5369 loc->loc_type = bp_loc_hardware_watchpoint;
5370 break;
5371 case bp_watchpoint:
5372 case bp_catchpoint:
5373 case bp_tracepoint:
5374 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
5375 loc->loc_type = bp_loc_other;
5376 break;
5377 default:
5378 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("unknown breakpoint type"));
5379 }
5380
5381 return loc;
5382 }
5383
5384 static void free_bp_location (struct bp_location *loc)
5385 {
5386 /* Be sure no bpstat's are pointing at it after it's been freed. */
5387 /* FIXME, how can we find all bpstat's?
5388 We just check stop_bpstat for now. Note that we cannot just
5389 remove bpstats pointing at bpt from the stop_bpstat list
5390 entirely, as breakpoint commands are associated with the bpstat;
5391 if we remove it here, then the later call to
5392 bpstat_do_actions (&stop_bpstat);
5393 in event-top.c won't do anything, and temporary breakpoints
5394 with commands won't work. */
5395
5396 iterate_over_threads (bpstat_remove_bp_location_callback, loc);
5397
5398 if (loc->cond)
5399 xfree (loc->cond);
5400
5401 if (loc->function_name)
5402 xfree (loc->function_name);
5403
5404 xfree (loc);
5405 }
5406
5407 /* Helper to set_raw_breakpoint below. Creates a breakpoint
5408 that has type BPTYPE and has no locations as yet. */
5409 /* This function is used in gdbtk sources and thus can not be made static. */
5410
5411 static struct breakpoint *
5412 set_raw_breakpoint_without_location (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
5413 enum bptype bptype)
5414 {
5415 struct breakpoint *b, *b1;
5416
5417 b = (struct breakpoint *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct breakpoint));
5418 memset (b, 0, sizeof (*b));
5419
5420 b->type = bptype;
5421 b->gdbarch = gdbarch;
5422 b->language = current_language->la_language;
5423 b->input_radix = input_radix;
5424 b->thread = -1;
5425 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
5426 b->next = 0;
5427 b->silent = 0;
5428 b->ignore_count = 0;
5429 b->commands = NULL;
5430 b->frame_id = null_frame_id;
5431 b->forked_inferior_pid = null_ptid;
5432 b->exec_pathname = NULL;
5433 b->syscalls_to_be_caught = NULL;
5434 b->ops = NULL;
5435 b->condition_not_parsed = 0;
5436
5437 /* Add this breakpoint to the end of the chain
5438 so that a list of breakpoints will come out in order
5439 of increasing numbers. */
5440
5441 b1 = breakpoint_chain;
5442 if (b1 == 0)
5443 breakpoint_chain = b;
5444 else
5445 {
5446 while (b1->next)
5447 b1 = b1->next;
5448 b1->next = b;
5449 }
5450 return b;
5451 }
5452
5453 /* Initialize loc->function_name. */
5454 static void
5455 set_breakpoint_location_function (struct bp_location *loc)
5456 {
5457 gdb_assert (loc->owner != NULL);
5458
5459 if (loc->owner->type == bp_breakpoint
5460 || loc->owner->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint
5461 || is_tracepoint (loc->owner))
5462 {
5463 find_pc_partial_function (loc->address, &(loc->function_name),
5464 NULL, NULL);
5465 if (loc->function_name)
5466 loc->function_name = xstrdup (loc->function_name);
5467 }
5468 }
5469
5470 /* Attempt to determine architecture of location identified by SAL. */
5471 static struct gdbarch *
5472 get_sal_arch (struct symtab_and_line sal)
5473 {
5474 if (sal.section)
5475 return get_objfile_arch (sal.section->objfile);
5476 if (sal.symtab)
5477 return get_objfile_arch (sal.symtab->objfile);
5478
5479 return NULL;
5480 }
5481
5482 /* set_raw_breakpoint is a low level routine for allocating and
5483 partially initializing a breakpoint of type BPTYPE. The newly
5484 created breakpoint's address, section, source file name, and line
5485 number are provided by SAL. The newly created and partially
5486 initialized breakpoint is added to the breakpoint chain and
5487 is also returned as the value of this function.
5488
5489 It is expected that the caller will complete the initialization of
5490 the newly created breakpoint struct as well as output any status
5491 information regarding the creation of a new breakpoint. In
5492 particular, set_raw_breakpoint does NOT set the breakpoint
5493 number! Care should be taken to not allow an error to occur
5494 prior to completing the initialization of the breakpoint. If this
5495 should happen, a bogus breakpoint will be left on the chain. */
5496
5497 struct breakpoint *
5498 set_raw_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
5499 struct symtab_and_line sal, enum bptype bptype)
5500 {
5501 struct breakpoint *b = set_raw_breakpoint_without_location (gdbarch, bptype);
5502 CORE_ADDR adjusted_address;
5503 struct gdbarch *loc_gdbarch;
5504
5505 loc_gdbarch = get_sal_arch (sal);
5506 if (!loc_gdbarch)
5507 loc_gdbarch = b->gdbarch;
5508
5509 if (bptype != bp_catchpoint)
5510 gdb_assert (sal.pspace != NULL);
5511
5512 /* Adjust the breakpoint's address prior to allocating a location.
5513 Once we call allocate_bp_location(), that mostly uninitialized
5514 location will be placed on the location chain. Adjustment of the
5515 breakpoint may cause target_read_memory() to be called and we do
5516 not want its scan of the location chain to find a breakpoint and
5517 location that's only been partially initialized. */
5518 adjusted_address = adjust_breakpoint_address (loc_gdbarch, sal.pc, b->type);
5519
5520 b->loc = allocate_bp_location (b);
5521 b->loc->gdbarch = loc_gdbarch;
5522 b->loc->requested_address = sal.pc;
5523 b->loc->address = adjusted_address;
5524 b->loc->pspace = sal.pspace;
5525
5526 /* Store the program space that was used to set the breakpoint, for
5527 breakpoint resetting. */
5528 b->pspace = sal.pspace;
5529
5530 if (sal.symtab == NULL)
5531 b->source_file = NULL;
5532 else
5533 b->source_file = xstrdup (sal.symtab->filename);
5534 b->loc->section = sal.section;
5535 b->line_number = sal.line;
5536
5537 set_breakpoint_location_function (b->loc);
5538
5539 breakpoints_changed ();
5540
5541 return b;
5542 }
5543
5544
5545 /* Note that the breakpoint object B describes a permanent breakpoint
5546 instruction, hard-wired into the inferior's code. */
5547 void
5548 make_breakpoint_permanent (struct breakpoint *b)
5549 {
5550 struct bp_location *bl;
5551
5552 b->enable_state = bp_permanent;
5553
5554 /* By definition, permanent breakpoints are already present in the code.
5555 Mark all locations as inserted. For now, make_breakpoint_permanent
5556 is called in just one place, so it's hard to say if it's reasonable
5557 to have permanent breakpoint with multiple locations or not,
5558 but it's easy to implmement. */
5559 for (bl = b->loc; bl; bl = bl->next)
5560 bl->inserted = 1;
5561 }
5562
5563 /* Call this routine when stepping and nexting to enable a breakpoint
5564 if we do a longjmp() in THREAD. When we hit that breakpoint, call
5565 set_longjmp_resume_breakpoint() to figure out where we are going. */
5566
5567 void
5568 set_longjmp_breakpoint (int thread)
5569 {
5570 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
5571
5572 /* To avoid having to rescan all objfile symbols at every step,
5573 we maintain a list of continually-inserted but always disabled
5574 longjmp "master" breakpoints. Here, we simply create momentary
5575 clones of those and enable them for the requested thread. */
5576 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
5577 if (b->pspace == current_program_space
5578 && b->type == bp_longjmp_master)
5579 {
5580 struct breakpoint *clone = clone_momentary_breakpoint (b);
5581
5582 clone->type = bp_longjmp;
5583 clone->thread = thread;
5584 }
5585 }
5586
5587 /* Delete all longjmp breakpoints from THREAD. */
5588 void
5589 delete_longjmp_breakpoint (int thread)
5590 {
5591 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
5592
5593 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
5594 if (b->type == bp_longjmp)
5595 {
5596 if (b->thread == thread)
5597 delete_breakpoint (b);
5598 }
5599 }
5600
5601 void
5602 enable_overlay_breakpoints (void)
5603 {
5604 struct breakpoint *b;
5605
5606 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
5607 if (b->type == bp_overlay_event)
5608 {
5609 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
5610 update_global_location_list (1);
5611 overlay_events_enabled = 1;
5612 }
5613 }
5614
5615 void
5616 disable_overlay_breakpoints (void)
5617 {
5618 struct breakpoint *b;
5619
5620 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
5621 if (b->type == bp_overlay_event)
5622 {
5623 b->enable_state = bp_disabled;
5624 update_global_location_list (0);
5625 overlay_events_enabled = 0;
5626 }
5627 }
5628
5629 /* Set an active std::terminate breakpoint for each std::terminate
5630 master breakpoint. */
5631 void
5632 set_std_terminate_breakpoint (void)
5633 {
5634 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
5635
5636 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
5637 if (b->pspace == current_program_space
5638 && b->type == bp_std_terminate_master)
5639 {
5640 struct breakpoint *clone = clone_momentary_breakpoint (b);
5641 clone->type = bp_std_terminate;
5642 }
5643 }
5644
5645 /* Delete all the std::terminate breakpoints. */
5646 void
5647 delete_std_terminate_breakpoint (void)
5648 {
5649 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
5650
5651 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
5652 if (b->type == bp_std_terminate)
5653 delete_breakpoint (b);
5654 }
5655
5656 struct breakpoint *
5657 create_thread_event_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR address)
5658 {
5659 struct breakpoint *b;
5660
5661 b = create_internal_breakpoint (gdbarch, address, bp_thread_event);
5662
5663 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
5664 /* addr_string has to be used or breakpoint_re_set will delete me. */
5665 b->addr_string
5666 = xstrprintf ("*%s", paddress (b->loc->gdbarch, b->loc->address));
5667
5668 update_global_location_list_nothrow (1);
5669
5670 return b;
5671 }
5672
5673 void
5674 remove_thread_event_breakpoints (void)
5675 {
5676 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
5677
5678 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
5679 if (b->type == bp_thread_event
5680 && b->loc->pspace == current_program_space)
5681 delete_breakpoint (b);
5682 }
5683
5684 struct captured_parse_breakpoint_args
5685 {
5686 char **arg_p;
5687 struct symtabs_and_lines *sals_p;
5688 char ***addr_string_p;
5689 int *not_found_ptr;
5690 };
5691
5692 struct lang_and_radix
5693 {
5694 enum language lang;
5695 int radix;
5696 };
5697
5698 /* Create a breakpoint for JIT code registration and unregistration. */
5699
5700 struct breakpoint *
5701 create_jit_event_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR address)
5702 {
5703 struct breakpoint *b;
5704
5705 b = create_internal_breakpoint (gdbarch, address, bp_jit_event);
5706 update_global_location_list_nothrow (1);
5707 return b;
5708 }
5709
5710 void
5711 remove_solib_event_breakpoints (void)
5712 {
5713 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
5714
5715 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
5716 if (b->type == bp_shlib_event
5717 && b->loc->pspace == current_program_space)
5718 delete_breakpoint (b);
5719 }
5720
5721 struct breakpoint *
5722 create_solib_event_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR address)
5723 {
5724 struct breakpoint *b;
5725
5726 b = create_internal_breakpoint (gdbarch, address, bp_shlib_event);
5727 update_global_location_list_nothrow (1);
5728 return b;
5729 }
5730
5731 /* Disable any breakpoints that are on code in shared libraries. Only
5732 apply to enabled breakpoints, disabled ones can just stay disabled. */
5733
5734 void
5735 disable_breakpoints_in_shlibs (void)
5736 {
5737 struct bp_location *loc, **locp_tmp;
5738
5739 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (loc, locp_tmp)
5740 {
5741 /* ALL_BP_LOCATIONS bp_location has LOC->OWNER always non-NULL. */
5742 struct breakpoint *b = loc->owner;
5743
5744 /* We apply the check to all breakpoints, including disabled
5745 for those with loc->duplicate set. This is so that when breakpoint
5746 becomes enabled, or the duplicate is removed, gdb will try to insert
5747 all breakpoints. If we don't set shlib_disabled here, we'll try
5748 to insert those breakpoints and fail. */
5749 if (((b->type == bp_breakpoint)
5750 || (b->type == bp_jit_event)
5751 || (b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
5752 || (is_tracepoint (b)))
5753 && loc->pspace == current_program_space
5754 && !loc->shlib_disabled
5755 #ifdef PC_SOLIB
5756 && PC_SOLIB (loc->address)
5757 #else
5758 && solib_name_from_address (loc->pspace, loc->address)
5759 #endif
5760 )
5761 {
5762 loc->shlib_disabled = 1;
5763 }
5764 }
5765 }
5766
5767 /* Disable any breakpoints that are in in an unloaded shared library. Only
5768 apply to enabled breakpoints, disabled ones can just stay disabled. */
5769
5770 static void
5771 disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib (struct so_list *solib)
5772 {
5773 struct bp_location *loc, **locp_tmp;
5774 int disabled_shlib_breaks = 0;
5775
5776 /* SunOS a.out shared libraries are always mapped, so do not
5777 disable breakpoints; they will only be reported as unloaded
5778 through clear_solib when GDB discards its shared library
5779 list. See clear_solib for more information. */
5780 if (exec_bfd != NULL
5781 && bfd_get_flavour (exec_bfd) == bfd_target_aout_flavour)
5782 return;
5783
5784 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (loc, locp_tmp)
5785 {
5786 /* ALL_BP_LOCATIONS bp_location has LOC->OWNER always non-NULL. */
5787 struct breakpoint *b = loc->owner;
5788
5789 if ((loc->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint
5790 || loc->loc_type == bp_loc_software_breakpoint)
5791 && solib->pspace == loc->pspace
5792 && !loc->shlib_disabled
5793 && (b->type == bp_breakpoint
5794 || b->type == bp_jit_event
5795 || b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
5796 && solib_contains_address_p (solib, loc->address))
5797 {
5798 loc->shlib_disabled = 1;
5799 /* At this point, we cannot rely on remove_breakpoint
5800 succeeding so we must mark the breakpoint as not inserted
5801 to prevent future errors occurring in remove_breakpoints. */
5802 loc->inserted = 0;
5803 if (!disabled_shlib_breaks)
5804 {
5805 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
5806 warning (_("Temporarily disabling breakpoints for unloaded shared library \"%s\""),
5807 solib->so_name);
5808 }
5809 disabled_shlib_breaks = 1;
5810 }
5811 }
5812 }
5813
5814 /* FORK & VFORK catchpoints. */
5815
5816 /* Implement the "insert" breakpoint_ops method for fork catchpoints. */
5817
5818 static void
5819 insert_catch_fork (struct breakpoint *b)
5820 {
5821 target_insert_fork_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
5822 }
5823
5824 /* Implement the "remove" breakpoint_ops method for fork catchpoints. */
5825
5826 static int
5827 remove_catch_fork (struct breakpoint *b)
5828 {
5829 return target_remove_fork_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
5830 }
5831
5832 /* Implement the "breakpoint_hit" breakpoint_ops method for fork
5833 catchpoints. */
5834
5835 static int
5836 breakpoint_hit_catch_fork (struct breakpoint *b)
5837 {
5838 return inferior_has_forked (inferior_ptid, &b->forked_inferior_pid);
5839 }
5840
5841 /* Implement the "print_it" breakpoint_ops method for fork catchpoints. */
5842
5843 static enum print_stop_action
5844 print_it_catch_fork (struct breakpoint *b)
5845 {
5846 annotate_catchpoint (b->number);
5847 printf_filtered (_("\nCatchpoint %d (forked process %d), "),
5848 b->number, ptid_get_pid (b->forked_inferior_pid));
5849 return PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC;
5850 }
5851
5852 /* Implement the "print_one" breakpoint_ops method for fork catchpoints. */
5853
5854 static void
5855 print_one_catch_fork (struct breakpoint *b, struct bp_location **last_loc)
5856 {
5857 struct value_print_options opts;
5858
5859 get_user_print_options (&opts);
5860
5861 /* Field 4, the address, is omitted (which makes the columns
5862 not line up too nicely with the headers, but the effect
5863 is relatively readable). */
5864 if (opts.addressprint)
5865 ui_out_field_skip (uiout, "addr");
5866 annotate_field (5);
5867 ui_out_text (uiout, "fork");
5868 if (!ptid_equal (b->forked_inferior_pid, null_ptid))
5869 {
5870 ui_out_text (uiout, ", process ");
5871 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "what",
5872 ptid_get_pid (b->forked_inferior_pid));
5873 ui_out_spaces (uiout, 1);
5874 }
5875 }
5876
5877 /* Implement the "print_mention" breakpoint_ops method for fork
5878 catchpoints. */
5879
5880 static void
5881 print_mention_catch_fork (struct breakpoint *b)
5882 {
5883 printf_filtered (_("Catchpoint %d (fork)"), b->number);
5884 }
5885
5886 /* Implement the "print_recreate" breakpoint_ops method for fork
5887 catchpoints. */
5888
5889 static void
5890 print_recreate_catch_fork (struct breakpoint *b, struct ui_file *fp)
5891 {
5892 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "catch fork");
5893 }
5894
5895 /* The breakpoint_ops structure to be used in fork catchpoints. */
5896
5897 static struct breakpoint_ops catch_fork_breakpoint_ops =
5898 {
5899 insert_catch_fork,
5900 remove_catch_fork,
5901 breakpoint_hit_catch_fork,
5902 print_it_catch_fork,
5903 print_one_catch_fork,
5904 print_mention_catch_fork,
5905 print_recreate_catch_fork
5906 };
5907
5908 /* Implement the "insert" breakpoint_ops method for vfork catchpoints. */
5909
5910 static void
5911 insert_catch_vfork (struct breakpoint *b)
5912 {
5913 target_insert_vfork_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
5914 }
5915
5916 /* Implement the "remove" breakpoint_ops method for vfork catchpoints. */
5917
5918 static int
5919 remove_catch_vfork (struct breakpoint *b)
5920 {
5921 return target_remove_vfork_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
5922 }
5923
5924 /* Implement the "breakpoint_hit" breakpoint_ops method for vfork
5925 catchpoints. */
5926
5927 static int
5928 breakpoint_hit_catch_vfork (struct breakpoint *b)
5929 {
5930 return inferior_has_vforked (inferior_ptid, &b->forked_inferior_pid);
5931 }
5932
5933 /* Implement the "print_it" breakpoint_ops method for vfork catchpoints. */
5934
5935 static enum print_stop_action
5936 print_it_catch_vfork (struct breakpoint *b)
5937 {
5938 annotate_catchpoint (b->number);
5939 printf_filtered (_("\nCatchpoint %d (vforked process %d), "),
5940 b->number, ptid_get_pid (b->forked_inferior_pid));
5941 return PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC;
5942 }
5943
5944 /* Implement the "print_one" breakpoint_ops method for vfork catchpoints. */
5945
5946 static void
5947 print_one_catch_vfork (struct breakpoint *b, struct bp_location **last_loc)
5948 {
5949 struct value_print_options opts;
5950
5951 get_user_print_options (&opts);
5952 /* Field 4, the address, is omitted (which makes the columns
5953 not line up too nicely with the headers, but the effect
5954 is relatively readable). */
5955 if (opts.addressprint)
5956 ui_out_field_skip (uiout, "addr");
5957 annotate_field (5);
5958 ui_out_text (uiout, "vfork");
5959 if (!ptid_equal (b->forked_inferior_pid, null_ptid))
5960 {
5961 ui_out_text (uiout, ", process ");
5962 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "what",
5963 ptid_get_pid (b->forked_inferior_pid));
5964 ui_out_spaces (uiout, 1);
5965 }
5966 }
5967
5968 /* Implement the "print_mention" breakpoint_ops method for vfork
5969 catchpoints. */
5970
5971 static void
5972 print_mention_catch_vfork (struct breakpoint *b)
5973 {
5974 printf_filtered (_("Catchpoint %d (vfork)"), b->number);
5975 }
5976
5977 /* Implement the "print_recreate" breakpoint_ops method for vfork
5978 catchpoints. */
5979
5980 static void
5981 print_recreate_catch_vfork (struct breakpoint *b, struct ui_file *fp)
5982 {
5983 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "catch vfork");
5984 }
5985
5986 /* The breakpoint_ops structure to be used in vfork catchpoints. */
5987
5988 static struct breakpoint_ops catch_vfork_breakpoint_ops =
5989 {
5990 insert_catch_vfork,
5991 remove_catch_vfork,
5992 breakpoint_hit_catch_vfork,
5993 print_it_catch_vfork,
5994 print_one_catch_vfork,
5995 print_mention_catch_vfork,
5996 print_recreate_catch_vfork
5997 };
5998
5999 /* Implement the "insert" breakpoint_ops method for syscall
6000 catchpoints. */
6001
6002 static void
6003 insert_catch_syscall (struct breakpoint *b)
6004 {
6005 struct inferior *inf = current_inferior ();
6006
6007 ++inf->total_syscalls_count;
6008 if (!b->syscalls_to_be_caught)
6009 ++inf->any_syscall_count;
6010 else
6011 {
6012 int i, iter;
6013
6014 for (i = 0;
6015 VEC_iterate (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught, i, iter);
6016 i++)
6017 {
6018 int elem;
6019
6020 if (iter >= VEC_length (int, inf->syscalls_counts))
6021 {
6022 int old_size = VEC_length (int, inf->syscalls_counts);
6023 uintptr_t vec_addr_offset = old_size * ((uintptr_t) sizeof (int));
6024 uintptr_t vec_addr;
6025 VEC_safe_grow (int, inf->syscalls_counts, iter + 1);
6026 vec_addr = (uintptr_t) VEC_address (int, inf->syscalls_counts) +
6027 vec_addr_offset;
6028 memset ((void *) vec_addr, 0,
6029 (iter + 1 - old_size) * sizeof (int));
6030 }
6031 elem = VEC_index (int, inf->syscalls_counts, iter);
6032 VEC_replace (int, inf->syscalls_counts, iter, ++elem);
6033 }
6034 }
6035
6036 target_set_syscall_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid),
6037 inf->total_syscalls_count != 0,
6038 inf->any_syscall_count,
6039 VEC_length (int, inf->syscalls_counts),
6040 VEC_address (int, inf->syscalls_counts));
6041 }
6042
6043 /* Implement the "remove" breakpoint_ops method for syscall
6044 catchpoints. */
6045
6046 static int
6047 remove_catch_syscall (struct breakpoint *b)
6048 {
6049 struct inferior *inf = current_inferior ();
6050
6051 --inf->total_syscalls_count;
6052 if (!b->syscalls_to_be_caught)
6053 --inf->any_syscall_count;
6054 else
6055 {
6056 int i, iter;
6057
6058 for (i = 0;
6059 VEC_iterate (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught, i, iter);
6060 i++)
6061 {
6062 int elem;
6063 if (iter >= VEC_length (int, inf->syscalls_counts))
6064 /* Shouldn't happen. */
6065 continue;
6066 elem = VEC_index (int, inf->syscalls_counts, iter);
6067 VEC_replace (int, inf->syscalls_counts, iter, --elem);
6068 }
6069 }
6070
6071 return target_set_syscall_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid),
6072 inf->total_syscalls_count != 0,
6073 inf->any_syscall_count,
6074 VEC_length (int, inf->syscalls_counts),
6075 VEC_address (int, inf->syscalls_counts));
6076 }
6077
6078 /* Implement the "breakpoint_hit" breakpoint_ops method for syscall
6079 catchpoints. */
6080
6081 static int
6082 breakpoint_hit_catch_syscall (struct breakpoint *b)
6083 {
6084 /* We must check if we are catching specific syscalls in this breakpoint.
6085 If we are, then we must guarantee that the called syscall is the same
6086 syscall we are catching. */
6087 int syscall_number = 0;
6088
6089 if (!inferior_has_called_syscall (inferior_ptid, &syscall_number))
6090 return 0;
6091
6092 /* Now, checking if the syscall is the same. */
6093 if (b->syscalls_to_be_caught)
6094 {
6095 int i, iter;
6096
6097 for (i = 0;
6098 VEC_iterate (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught, i, iter);
6099 i++)
6100 if (syscall_number == iter)
6101 break;
6102 /* Not the same. */
6103 if (!iter)
6104 return 0;
6105 }
6106
6107 return 1;
6108 }
6109
6110 /* Implement the "print_it" breakpoint_ops method for syscall
6111 catchpoints. */
6112
6113 static enum print_stop_action
6114 print_it_catch_syscall (struct breakpoint *b)
6115 {
6116 /* These are needed because we want to know in which state a
6117 syscall is. It can be in the TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY
6118 or TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_RETURN, and depending on it we
6119 must print "called syscall" or "returned from syscall". */
6120 ptid_t ptid;
6121 struct target_waitstatus last;
6122 struct syscall s;
6123 struct cleanup *old_chain;
6124 char *syscall_id;
6125
6126 get_last_target_status (&ptid, &last);
6127
6128 get_syscall_by_number (last.value.syscall_number, &s);
6129
6130 annotate_catchpoint (b->number);
6131
6132 if (s.name == NULL)
6133 syscall_id = xstrprintf ("%d", last.value.syscall_number);
6134 else
6135 syscall_id = xstrprintf ("'%s'", s.name);
6136
6137 old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, syscall_id);
6138
6139 if (last.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY)
6140 printf_filtered (_("\nCatchpoint %d (call to syscall %s), "),
6141 b->number, syscall_id);
6142 else if (last.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_RETURN)
6143 printf_filtered (_("\nCatchpoint %d (returned from syscall %s), "),
6144 b->number, syscall_id);
6145
6146 do_cleanups (old_chain);
6147
6148 return PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC;
6149 }
6150
6151 /* Implement the "print_one" breakpoint_ops method for syscall
6152 catchpoints. */
6153
6154 static void
6155 print_one_catch_syscall (struct breakpoint *b,
6156 struct bp_location **last_loc)
6157 {
6158 struct value_print_options opts;
6159
6160 get_user_print_options (&opts);
6161 /* Field 4, the address, is omitted (which makes the columns
6162 not line up too nicely with the headers, but the effect
6163 is relatively readable). */
6164 if (opts.addressprint)
6165 ui_out_field_skip (uiout, "addr");
6166 annotate_field (5);
6167
6168 if (b->syscalls_to_be_caught
6169 && VEC_length (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught) > 1)
6170 ui_out_text (uiout, "syscalls \"");
6171 else
6172 ui_out_text (uiout, "syscall \"");
6173
6174 if (b->syscalls_to_be_caught)
6175 {
6176 int i, iter;
6177 char *text = xstrprintf ("%s", "");
6178
6179 for (i = 0;
6180 VEC_iterate (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught, i, iter);
6181 i++)
6182 {
6183 char *x = text;
6184 struct syscall s;
6185 get_syscall_by_number (iter, &s);
6186
6187 if (s.name != NULL)
6188 text = xstrprintf ("%s%s, ", text, s.name);
6189 else
6190 text = xstrprintf ("%s%d, ", text, iter);
6191
6192 /* We have to xfree the last 'text' (now stored at 'x')
6193 because xstrprintf dinamically allocates new space for it
6194 on every call. */
6195 xfree (x);
6196 }
6197 /* Remove the last comma. */
6198 text[strlen (text) - 2] = '\0';
6199 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", text);
6200 }
6201 else
6202 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", "<any syscall>");
6203 ui_out_text (uiout, "\" ");
6204 }
6205
6206 /* Implement the "print_mention" breakpoint_ops method for syscall
6207 catchpoints. */
6208
6209 static void
6210 print_mention_catch_syscall (struct breakpoint *b)
6211 {
6212 if (b->syscalls_to_be_caught)
6213 {
6214 int i, iter;
6215
6216 if (VEC_length (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught) > 1)
6217 printf_filtered (_("Catchpoint %d (syscalls"), b->number);
6218 else
6219 printf_filtered (_("Catchpoint %d (syscall"), b->number);
6220
6221 for (i = 0;
6222 VEC_iterate (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught, i, iter);
6223 i++)
6224 {
6225 struct syscall s;
6226 get_syscall_by_number (iter, &s);
6227
6228 if (s.name)
6229 printf_filtered (" '%s' [%d]", s.name, s.number);
6230 else
6231 printf_filtered (" %d", s.number);
6232 }
6233 printf_filtered (")");
6234 }
6235 else
6236 printf_filtered (_("Catchpoint %d (any syscall)"),
6237 b->number);
6238 }
6239
6240 /* Implement the "print_recreate" breakpoint_ops method for syscall
6241 catchpoints. */
6242
6243 static void
6244 print_recreate_catch_syscall (struct breakpoint *b, struct ui_file *fp)
6245 {
6246 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "catch syscall");
6247
6248 if (b->syscalls_to_be_caught)
6249 {
6250 int i, iter;
6251
6252 for (i = 0;
6253 VEC_iterate (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught, i, iter);
6254 i++)
6255 {
6256 struct syscall s;
6257
6258 get_syscall_by_number (iter, &s);
6259 if (s.name)
6260 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, " %s", s.name);
6261 else
6262 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, " %d", s.number);
6263 }
6264 }
6265 }
6266
6267 /* The breakpoint_ops structure to be used in syscall catchpoints. */
6268
6269 static struct breakpoint_ops catch_syscall_breakpoint_ops =
6270 {
6271 insert_catch_syscall,
6272 remove_catch_syscall,
6273 breakpoint_hit_catch_syscall,
6274 print_it_catch_syscall,
6275 print_one_catch_syscall,
6276 print_mention_catch_syscall,
6277 print_recreate_catch_syscall
6278 };
6279
6280 /* Returns non-zero if 'b' is a syscall catchpoint. */
6281
6282 static int
6283 syscall_catchpoint_p (struct breakpoint *b)
6284 {
6285 return (b->ops == &catch_syscall_breakpoint_ops);
6286 }
6287
6288 /* Create a new breakpoint of the bp_catchpoint kind and return it,
6289 but does NOT mention it nor update the global location list.
6290 This is useful if you need to fill more fields in the
6291 struct breakpoint before calling mention.
6292
6293 If TEMPFLAG is non-zero, then make the breakpoint temporary.
6294 If COND_STRING is not NULL, then store it in the breakpoint.
6295 OPS, if not NULL, is the breakpoint_ops structure associated
6296 to the catchpoint. */
6297
6298 static struct breakpoint *
6299 create_catchpoint_without_mention (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int tempflag,
6300 char *cond_string,
6301 struct breakpoint_ops *ops)
6302 {
6303 struct symtab_and_line sal;
6304 struct breakpoint *b;
6305
6306 init_sal (&sal);
6307 sal.pspace = current_program_space;
6308
6309 b = set_raw_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, bp_catchpoint);
6310 set_breakpoint_count (breakpoint_count + 1);
6311 b->number = breakpoint_count;
6312
6313 b->cond_string = (cond_string == NULL) ? NULL : xstrdup (cond_string);
6314 b->thread = -1;
6315 b->addr_string = NULL;
6316 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
6317 b->disposition = tempflag ? disp_del : disp_donttouch;
6318 b->ops = ops;
6319
6320 return b;
6321 }
6322
6323 /* Create a new breakpoint of the bp_catchpoint kind and return it.
6324
6325 If TEMPFLAG is non-zero, then make the breakpoint temporary.
6326 If COND_STRING is not NULL, then store it in the breakpoint.
6327 OPS, if not NULL, is the breakpoint_ops structure associated
6328 to the catchpoint. */
6329
6330 static struct breakpoint *
6331 create_catchpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int tempflag,
6332 char *cond_string, struct breakpoint_ops *ops)
6333 {
6334 struct breakpoint *b =
6335 create_catchpoint_without_mention (gdbarch, tempflag, cond_string, ops);
6336
6337 mention (b);
6338 update_global_location_list (1);
6339
6340 return b;
6341 }
6342
6343 static void
6344 create_fork_vfork_event_catchpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
6345 int tempflag, char *cond_string,
6346 struct breakpoint_ops *ops)
6347 {
6348 struct breakpoint *b
6349 = create_catchpoint (gdbarch, tempflag, cond_string, ops);
6350
6351 /* FIXME: We should put this information in a breakpoint private data
6352 area. */
6353 b->forked_inferior_pid = null_ptid;
6354 }
6355
6356 /* Exec catchpoints. */
6357
6358 static void
6359 insert_catch_exec (struct breakpoint *b)
6360 {
6361 target_insert_exec_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
6362 }
6363
6364 static int
6365 remove_catch_exec (struct breakpoint *b)
6366 {
6367 return target_remove_exec_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
6368 }
6369
6370 static int
6371 breakpoint_hit_catch_exec (struct breakpoint *b)
6372 {
6373 return inferior_has_execd (inferior_ptid, &b->exec_pathname);
6374 }
6375
6376 static enum print_stop_action
6377 print_it_catch_exec (struct breakpoint *b)
6378 {
6379 annotate_catchpoint (b->number);
6380 printf_filtered (_("\nCatchpoint %d (exec'd %s), "), b->number,
6381 b->exec_pathname);
6382 return PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC;
6383 }
6384
6385 static void
6386 print_one_catch_exec (struct breakpoint *b, struct bp_location **last_loc)
6387 {
6388 struct value_print_options opts;
6389
6390 get_user_print_options (&opts);
6391
6392 /* Field 4, the address, is omitted (which makes the columns
6393 not line up too nicely with the headers, but the effect
6394 is relatively readable). */
6395 if (opts.addressprint)
6396 ui_out_field_skip (uiout, "addr");
6397 annotate_field (5);
6398 ui_out_text (uiout, "exec");
6399 if (b->exec_pathname != NULL)
6400 {
6401 ui_out_text (uiout, ", program \"");
6402 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", b->exec_pathname);
6403 ui_out_text (uiout, "\" ");
6404 }
6405 }
6406
6407 static void
6408 print_mention_catch_exec (struct breakpoint *b)
6409 {
6410 printf_filtered (_("Catchpoint %d (exec)"), b->number);
6411 }
6412
6413 /* Implement the "print_recreate" breakpoint_ops method for exec
6414 catchpoints. */
6415
6416 static void
6417 print_recreate_catch_exec (struct breakpoint *b, struct ui_file *fp)
6418 {
6419 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "catch exec");
6420 }
6421
6422 static struct breakpoint_ops catch_exec_breakpoint_ops =
6423 {
6424 insert_catch_exec,
6425 remove_catch_exec,
6426 breakpoint_hit_catch_exec,
6427 print_it_catch_exec,
6428 print_one_catch_exec,
6429 print_mention_catch_exec,
6430 print_recreate_catch_exec
6431 };
6432
6433 static void
6434 create_syscall_event_catchpoint (int tempflag, VEC(int) *filter,
6435 struct breakpoint_ops *ops)
6436 {
6437 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_current_arch ();
6438 struct breakpoint *b =
6439 create_catchpoint_without_mention (gdbarch, tempflag, NULL, ops);
6440
6441 b->syscalls_to_be_caught = filter;
6442
6443 /* Now, we have to mention the breakpoint and update the global
6444 location list. */
6445 mention (b);
6446 update_global_location_list (1);
6447 }
6448
6449 static int
6450 hw_breakpoint_used_count (void)
6451 {
6452 struct breakpoint *b;
6453 int i = 0;
6454
6455 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
6456 {
6457 if (b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint && breakpoint_enabled (b))
6458 i++;
6459 }
6460
6461 return i;
6462 }
6463
6464 static int
6465 hw_watchpoint_used_count (enum bptype type, int *other_type_used)
6466 {
6467 struct breakpoint *b;
6468 int i = 0;
6469
6470 *other_type_used = 0;
6471 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
6472 {
6473 if (breakpoint_enabled (b))
6474 {
6475 if (b->type == type)
6476 i++;
6477 else if (is_hardware_watchpoint (b))
6478 *other_type_used = 1;
6479 }
6480 }
6481 return i;
6482 }
6483
6484 void
6485 disable_watchpoints_before_interactive_call_start (void)
6486 {
6487 struct breakpoint *b;
6488
6489 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
6490 {
6491 if (is_watchpoint (b) && breakpoint_enabled (b))
6492 {
6493 b->enable_state = bp_call_disabled;
6494 update_global_location_list (0);
6495 }
6496 }
6497 }
6498
6499 void
6500 enable_watchpoints_after_interactive_call_stop (void)
6501 {
6502 struct breakpoint *b;
6503
6504 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
6505 {
6506 if (is_watchpoint (b) && b->enable_state == bp_call_disabled)
6507 {
6508 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
6509 update_global_location_list (1);
6510 }
6511 }
6512 }
6513
6514 void
6515 disable_breakpoints_before_startup (void)
6516 {
6517 struct breakpoint *b;
6518 int found = 0;
6519
6520 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
6521 {
6522 if (b->pspace != current_program_space)
6523 continue;
6524
6525 if ((b->type == bp_breakpoint
6526 || b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
6527 && breakpoint_enabled (b))
6528 {
6529 b->enable_state = bp_startup_disabled;
6530 found = 1;
6531 }
6532 }
6533
6534 if (found)
6535 update_global_location_list (0);
6536
6537 current_program_space->executing_startup = 1;
6538 }
6539
6540 void
6541 enable_breakpoints_after_startup (void)
6542 {
6543 struct breakpoint *b;
6544 int found = 0;
6545
6546 current_program_space->executing_startup = 0;
6547
6548 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
6549 {
6550 if (b->pspace != current_program_space)
6551 continue;
6552
6553 if ((b->type == bp_breakpoint
6554 || b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
6555 && b->enable_state == bp_startup_disabled)
6556 {
6557 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
6558 found = 1;
6559 }
6560 }
6561
6562 if (found)
6563 breakpoint_re_set ();
6564 }
6565
6566
6567 /* Set a breakpoint that will evaporate an end of command
6568 at address specified by SAL.
6569 Restrict it to frame FRAME if FRAME is nonzero. */
6570
6571 struct breakpoint *
6572 set_momentary_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct symtab_and_line sal,
6573 struct frame_id frame_id, enum bptype type)
6574 {
6575 struct breakpoint *b;
6576
6577 /* If FRAME_ID is valid, it should be a real frame, not an inlined
6578 one. */
6579 gdb_assert (!frame_id_inlined_p (frame_id));
6580
6581 b = set_raw_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, type);
6582 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
6583 b->disposition = disp_donttouch;
6584 b->frame_id = frame_id;
6585
6586 /* If we're debugging a multi-threaded program, then we
6587 want momentary breakpoints to be active in only a
6588 single thread of control. */
6589 if (in_thread_list (inferior_ptid))
6590 b->thread = pid_to_thread_id (inferior_ptid);
6591
6592 update_global_location_list_nothrow (1);
6593
6594 return b;
6595 }
6596
6597 /* Make a deep copy of momentary breakpoint ORIG. Returns NULL if
6598 ORIG is NULL. */
6599
6600 struct breakpoint *
6601 clone_momentary_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *orig)
6602 {
6603 struct breakpoint *copy;
6604
6605 /* If there's nothing to clone, then return nothing. */
6606 if (orig == NULL)
6607 return NULL;
6608
6609 copy = set_raw_breakpoint_without_location (orig->gdbarch, orig->type);
6610 copy->loc = allocate_bp_location (copy);
6611 set_breakpoint_location_function (copy->loc);
6612
6613 copy->loc->gdbarch = orig->loc->gdbarch;
6614 copy->loc->requested_address = orig->loc->requested_address;
6615 copy->loc->address = orig->loc->address;
6616 copy->loc->section = orig->loc->section;
6617 copy->loc->pspace = orig->loc->pspace;
6618
6619 if (orig->source_file == NULL)
6620 copy->source_file = NULL;
6621 else
6622 copy->source_file = xstrdup (orig->source_file);
6623
6624 copy->line_number = orig->line_number;
6625 copy->frame_id = orig->frame_id;
6626 copy->thread = orig->thread;
6627 copy->pspace = orig->pspace;
6628
6629 copy->enable_state = bp_enabled;
6630 copy->disposition = disp_donttouch;
6631 copy->number = internal_breakpoint_number--;
6632
6633 update_global_location_list_nothrow (0);
6634 return copy;
6635 }
6636
6637 struct breakpoint *
6638 set_momentary_breakpoint_at_pc (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR pc,
6639 enum bptype type)
6640 {
6641 struct symtab_and_line sal;
6642
6643 sal = find_pc_line (pc, 0);
6644 sal.pc = pc;
6645 sal.section = find_pc_overlay (pc);
6646 sal.explicit_pc = 1;
6647
6648 return set_momentary_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, null_frame_id, type);
6649 }
6650 \f
6651
6652 /* Tell the user we have just set a breakpoint B. */
6653
6654 static void
6655 mention (struct breakpoint *b)
6656 {
6657 int say_where = 0;
6658 struct cleanup *ui_out_chain;
6659 struct value_print_options opts;
6660
6661 get_user_print_options (&opts);
6662
6663 /* FIXME: This is misplaced; mention() is called by things (like
6664 hitting a watchpoint) other than breakpoint creation. It should
6665 be possible to clean this up and at the same time replace the
6666 random calls to breakpoint_changed with this hook. */
6667 observer_notify_breakpoint_created (b->number);
6668
6669 if (b->ops != NULL && b->ops->print_mention != NULL)
6670 b->ops->print_mention (b);
6671 else
6672 switch (b->type)
6673 {
6674 case bp_none:
6675 printf_filtered (_("(apparently deleted?) Eventpoint %d: "), b->number);
6676 break;
6677 case bp_watchpoint:
6678 ui_out_text (uiout, "Watchpoint ");
6679 ui_out_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "wpt");
6680 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "number", b->number);
6681 ui_out_text (uiout, ": ");
6682 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "exp", b->exp_string);
6683 do_cleanups (ui_out_chain);
6684 break;
6685 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
6686 ui_out_text (uiout, "Hardware watchpoint ");
6687 ui_out_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "wpt");
6688 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "number", b->number);
6689 ui_out_text (uiout, ": ");
6690 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "exp", b->exp_string);
6691 do_cleanups (ui_out_chain);
6692 break;
6693 case bp_read_watchpoint:
6694 ui_out_text (uiout, "Hardware read watchpoint ");
6695 ui_out_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "hw-rwpt");
6696 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "number", b->number);
6697 ui_out_text (uiout, ": ");
6698 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "exp", b->exp_string);
6699 do_cleanups (ui_out_chain);
6700 break;
6701 case bp_access_watchpoint:
6702 ui_out_text (uiout, "Hardware access (read/write) watchpoint ");
6703 ui_out_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "hw-awpt");
6704 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "number", b->number);
6705 ui_out_text (uiout, ": ");
6706 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "exp", b->exp_string);
6707 do_cleanups (ui_out_chain);
6708 break;
6709 case bp_breakpoint:
6710 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
6711 {
6712 say_where = 0;
6713 break;
6714 }
6715 if (b->disposition == disp_del)
6716 printf_filtered (_("Temporary breakpoint"));
6717 else
6718 printf_filtered (_("Breakpoint"));
6719 printf_filtered (_(" %d"), b->number);
6720 say_where = 1;
6721 break;
6722 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
6723 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
6724 {
6725 say_where = 0;
6726 break;
6727 }
6728 printf_filtered (_("Hardware assisted breakpoint %d"), b->number);
6729 say_where = 1;
6730 break;
6731 case bp_tracepoint:
6732 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
6733 {
6734 say_where = 0;
6735 break;
6736 }
6737 printf_filtered (_("Tracepoint"));
6738 printf_filtered (_(" %d"), b->number);
6739 say_where = 1;
6740 break;
6741 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
6742 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
6743 {
6744 say_where = 0;
6745 break;
6746 }
6747 printf_filtered (_("Fast tracepoint"));
6748 printf_filtered (_(" %d"), b->number);
6749 say_where = 1;
6750 break;
6751
6752 case bp_until:
6753 case bp_finish:
6754 case bp_longjmp:
6755 case bp_longjmp_resume:
6756 case bp_step_resume:
6757 case bp_call_dummy:
6758 case bp_std_terminate:
6759 case bp_watchpoint_scope:
6760 case bp_shlib_event:
6761 case bp_thread_event:
6762 case bp_overlay_event:
6763 case bp_jit_event:
6764 case bp_longjmp_master:
6765 case bp_std_terminate_master:
6766 break;
6767 }
6768
6769 if (say_where)
6770 {
6771 /* i18n: cagney/2005-02-11: Below needs to be merged into a
6772 single string. */
6773 if (b->loc == NULL)
6774 {
6775 printf_filtered (_(" (%s) pending."), b->addr_string);
6776 }
6777 else
6778 {
6779 if (opts.addressprint || b->source_file == NULL)
6780 {
6781 printf_filtered (" at ");
6782 fputs_filtered (paddress (b->loc->gdbarch, b->loc->address),
6783 gdb_stdout);
6784 }
6785 if (b->source_file)
6786 printf_filtered (": file %s, line %d.",
6787 b->source_file, b->line_number);
6788
6789 if (b->loc->next)
6790 {
6791 struct bp_location *loc = b->loc;
6792 int n = 0;
6793 for (; loc; loc = loc->next)
6794 ++n;
6795 printf_filtered (" (%d locations)", n);
6796 }
6797
6798 }
6799 }
6800 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
6801 return;
6802 printf_filtered ("\n");
6803 }
6804 \f
6805
6806 static struct bp_location *
6807 add_location_to_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *b,
6808 const struct symtab_and_line *sal)
6809 {
6810 struct bp_location *loc, **tmp;
6811
6812 loc = allocate_bp_location (b);
6813 for (tmp = &(b->loc); *tmp != NULL; tmp = &((*tmp)->next))
6814 ;
6815 *tmp = loc;
6816 loc->gdbarch = get_sal_arch (*sal);
6817 if (!loc->gdbarch)
6818 loc->gdbarch = b->gdbarch;
6819 loc->requested_address = sal->pc;
6820 loc->address = adjust_breakpoint_address (loc->gdbarch,
6821 loc->requested_address, b->type);
6822 loc->pspace = sal->pspace;
6823 gdb_assert (loc->pspace != NULL);
6824 loc->section = sal->section;
6825
6826 set_breakpoint_location_function (loc);
6827 return loc;
6828 }
6829 \f
6830
6831 /* Return 1 if LOC is pointing to a permanent breakpoint,
6832 return 0 otherwise. */
6833
6834 static int
6835 bp_loc_is_permanent (struct bp_location *loc)
6836 {
6837 int len;
6838 CORE_ADDR addr;
6839 const gdb_byte *brk;
6840 gdb_byte *target_mem;
6841 struct cleanup *cleanup;
6842 int retval = 0;
6843
6844 gdb_assert (loc != NULL);
6845
6846 addr = loc->address;
6847 brk = gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc (loc->gdbarch, &addr, &len);
6848
6849 /* Software breakpoints unsupported? */
6850 if (brk == NULL)
6851 return 0;
6852
6853 target_mem = alloca (len);
6854
6855 /* Enable the automatic memory restoration from breakpoints while
6856 we read the memory. Otherwise we could say about our temporary
6857 breakpoints they are permanent. */
6858 cleanup = save_current_space_and_thread ();
6859
6860 switch_to_program_space_and_thread (loc->pspace);
6861 make_show_memory_breakpoints_cleanup (0);
6862
6863 if (target_read_memory (loc->address, target_mem, len) == 0
6864 && memcmp (target_mem, brk, len) == 0)
6865 retval = 1;
6866
6867 do_cleanups (cleanup);
6868
6869 return retval;
6870 }
6871
6872
6873
6874 /* Create a breakpoint with SAL as location. Use ADDR_STRING
6875 as textual description of the location, and COND_STRING
6876 as condition expression. */
6877
6878 static void
6879 create_breakpoint_sal (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
6880 struct symtabs_and_lines sals, char *addr_string,
6881 char *cond_string,
6882 enum bptype type, enum bpdisp disposition,
6883 int thread, int task, int ignore_count,
6884 struct breakpoint_ops *ops, int from_tty, int enabled)
6885 {
6886 struct breakpoint *b = NULL;
6887 int i;
6888
6889 if (type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
6890 {
6891 int i = hw_breakpoint_used_count ();
6892 int target_resources_ok =
6893 target_can_use_hardware_watchpoint (bp_hardware_breakpoint,
6894 i + 1, 0);
6895 if (target_resources_ok == 0)
6896 error (_("No hardware breakpoint support in the target."));
6897 else if (target_resources_ok < 0)
6898 error (_("Hardware breakpoints used exceeds limit."));
6899 }
6900
6901 gdb_assert (sals.nelts > 0);
6902
6903 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; ++i)
6904 {
6905 struct symtab_and_line sal = sals.sals[i];
6906 struct bp_location *loc;
6907
6908 if (from_tty)
6909 {
6910 struct gdbarch *loc_gdbarch = get_sal_arch (sal);
6911 if (!loc_gdbarch)
6912 loc_gdbarch = gdbarch;
6913
6914 describe_other_breakpoints (loc_gdbarch,
6915 sal.pspace, sal.pc, sal.section, thread);
6916 }
6917
6918 if (i == 0)
6919 {
6920 b = set_raw_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, type);
6921 set_breakpoint_count (breakpoint_count + 1);
6922 b->number = breakpoint_count;
6923 b->thread = thread;
6924 b->task = task;
6925
6926 b->cond_string = cond_string;
6927 b->ignore_count = ignore_count;
6928 b->enable_state = enabled ? bp_enabled : bp_disabled;
6929 b->disposition = disposition;
6930
6931 b->pspace = sals.sals[0].pspace;
6932
6933 if (enabled && b->pspace->executing_startup
6934 && (b->type == bp_breakpoint
6935 || b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint))
6936 b->enable_state = bp_startup_disabled;
6937
6938 loc = b->loc;
6939 }
6940 else
6941 {
6942 loc = add_location_to_breakpoint (b, &sal);
6943 }
6944
6945 if (bp_loc_is_permanent (loc))
6946 make_breakpoint_permanent (b);
6947
6948 if (b->cond_string)
6949 {
6950 char *arg = b->cond_string;
6951 loc->cond = parse_exp_1 (&arg, block_for_pc (loc->address), 0);
6952 if (*arg)
6953 error (_("Garbage %s follows condition"), arg);
6954 }
6955 }
6956
6957 if (addr_string)
6958 b->addr_string = addr_string;
6959 else
6960 /* addr_string has to be used or breakpoint_re_set will delete
6961 me. */
6962 b->addr_string
6963 = xstrprintf ("*%s", paddress (b->loc->gdbarch, b->loc->address));
6964
6965 b->ops = ops;
6966 mention (b);
6967 }
6968
6969 /* Remove element at INDEX_TO_REMOVE from SAL, shifting other
6970 elements to fill the void space. */
6971 static void
6972 remove_sal (struct symtabs_and_lines *sal, int index_to_remove)
6973 {
6974 int i = index_to_remove+1;
6975 int last_index = sal->nelts-1;
6976
6977 for (;i <= last_index; ++i)
6978 sal->sals[i-1] = sal->sals[i];
6979
6980 --(sal->nelts);
6981 }
6982
6983 /* If appropriate, obtains all sals that correspond to the same file
6984 and line as SAL, in all program spaces. Users debugging with IDEs,
6985 will want to set a breakpoint at foo.c:line, and not really care
6986 about program spaces. This is done only if SAL does not have
6987 explicit PC and has line and file information. If we got just a
6988 single expanded sal, return the original.
6989
6990 Otherwise, if SAL.explicit_line is not set, filter out all sals for
6991 which the name of enclosing function is different from SAL. This
6992 makes sure that if we have breakpoint originally set in template
6993 instantiation, say foo<int>(), we won't expand SAL to locations at
6994 the same line in all existing instantiations of 'foo'. */
6995
6996 static struct symtabs_and_lines
6997 expand_line_sal_maybe (struct symtab_and_line sal)
6998 {
6999 struct symtabs_and_lines expanded;
7000 CORE_ADDR original_pc = sal.pc;
7001 char *original_function = NULL;
7002 int found;
7003 int i;
7004 struct cleanup *old_chain;
7005
7006 /* If we have explicit pc, don't expand.
7007 If we have no line number, we can't expand. */
7008 if (sal.explicit_pc || sal.line == 0 || sal.symtab == NULL)
7009 {
7010 expanded.nelts = 1;
7011 expanded.sals = xmalloc (sizeof (struct symtab_and_line));
7012 expanded.sals[0] = sal;
7013 return expanded;
7014 }
7015
7016 sal.pc = 0;
7017
7018 old_chain = save_current_space_and_thread ();
7019
7020 switch_to_program_space_and_thread (sal.pspace);
7021
7022 find_pc_partial_function (original_pc, &original_function, NULL, NULL);
7023
7024 /* Note that expand_line_sal visits *all* program spaces. */
7025 expanded = expand_line_sal (sal);
7026
7027 if (expanded.nelts == 1)
7028 {
7029 /* We had one sal, we got one sal. Return that sal, adjusting it
7030 past the function prologue if necessary. */
7031 xfree (expanded.sals);
7032 expanded.nelts = 1;
7033 expanded.sals = xmalloc (sizeof (struct symtab_and_line));
7034 sal.pc = original_pc;
7035 expanded.sals[0] = sal;
7036 skip_prologue_sal (&expanded.sals[0]);
7037 do_cleanups (old_chain);
7038 return expanded;
7039 }
7040
7041 if (!sal.explicit_line)
7042 {
7043 CORE_ADDR func_addr, func_end;
7044 for (i = 0; i < expanded.nelts; ++i)
7045 {
7046 CORE_ADDR pc = expanded.sals[i].pc;
7047 char *this_function;
7048
7049 /* We need to switch threads as well since we're about to
7050 read memory. */
7051 switch_to_program_space_and_thread (expanded.sals[i].pspace);
7052
7053 if (find_pc_partial_function (pc, &this_function,
7054 &func_addr, &func_end))
7055 {
7056 if (this_function
7057 && strcmp (this_function, original_function) != 0)
7058 {
7059 remove_sal (&expanded, i);
7060 --i;
7061 }
7062 }
7063 }
7064 }
7065
7066 /* Skip the function prologue if necessary. */
7067 for (i = 0; i < expanded.nelts; ++i)
7068 skip_prologue_sal (&expanded.sals[i]);
7069
7070 do_cleanups (old_chain);
7071
7072 if (expanded.nelts <= 1)
7073 {
7074 /* This is un ugly workaround. If we get zero
7075 expanded sals then something is really wrong.
7076 Fix that by returnign the original sal. */
7077 xfree (expanded.sals);
7078 expanded.nelts = 1;
7079 expanded.sals = xmalloc (sizeof (struct symtab_and_line));
7080 sal.pc = original_pc;
7081 expanded.sals[0] = sal;
7082 return expanded;
7083 }
7084
7085 if (original_pc)
7086 {
7087 found = 0;
7088 for (i = 0; i < expanded.nelts; ++i)
7089 if (expanded.sals[i].pc == original_pc)
7090 {
7091 found = 1;
7092 break;
7093 }
7094 gdb_assert (found);
7095 }
7096
7097 return expanded;
7098 }
7099
7100 /* Add SALS.nelts breakpoints to the breakpoint table. For each
7101 SALS.sal[i] breakpoint, include the corresponding ADDR_STRING[i]
7102 value. COND_STRING, if not NULL, specified the condition to be
7103 used for all breakpoints. Essentially the only case where
7104 SALS.nelts is not 1 is when we set a breakpoint on an overloaded
7105 function. In that case, it's still not possible to specify
7106 separate conditions for different overloaded functions, so
7107 we take just a single condition string.
7108
7109 NOTE: If the function succeeds, the caller is expected to cleanup
7110 the arrays ADDR_STRING, COND_STRING, and SALS (but not the
7111 array contents). If the function fails (error() is called), the
7112 caller is expected to cleanups both the ADDR_STRING, COND_STRING,
7113 COND and SALS arrays and each of those arrays contents. */
7114
7115 static void
7116 create_breakpoints_sal (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
7117 struct symtabs_and_lines sals, char **addr_string,
7118 char *cond_string,
7119 enum bptype type, enum bpdisp disposition,
7120 int thread, int task, int ignore_count,
7121 struct breakpoint_ops *ops, int from_tty,
7122 int enabled)
7123 {
7124 int i;
7125
7126 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; ++i)
7127 {
7128 struct symtabs_and_lines expanded =
7129 expand_line_sal_maybe (sals.sals[i]);
7130
7131 create_breakpoint_sal (gdbarch, expanded, addr_string[i],
7132 cond_string, type, disposition,
7133 thread, task, ignore_count, ops, from_tty, enabled);
7134 }
7135 }
7136
7137 /* Parse ARG which is assumed to be a SAL specification possibly
7138 followed by conditionals. On return, SALS contains an array of SAL
7139 addresses found. ADDR_STRING contains a vector of (canonical)
7140 address strings. ARG points to the end of the SAL. */
7141
7142 static void
7143 parse_breakpoint_sals (char **address,
7144 struct symtabs_and_lines *sals,
7145 char ***addr_string,
7146 int *not_found_ptr)
7147 {
7148 char *addr_start = *address;
7149
7150 *addr_string = NULL;
7151 /* If no arg given, or if first arg is 'if ', use the default
7152 breakpoint. */
7153 if ((*address) == NULL
7154 || (strncmp ((*address), "if", 2) == 0 && isspace ((*address)[2])))
7155 {
7156 if (default_breakpoint_valid)
7157 {
7158 struct symtab_and_line sal;
7159
7160 init_sal (&sal); /* initialize to zeroes */
7161 sals->sals = (struct symtab_and_line *)
7162 xmalloc (sizeof (struct symtab_and_line));
7163 sal.pc = default_breakpoint_address;
7164 sal.line = default_breakpoint_line;
7165 sal.symtab = default_breakpoint_symtab;
7166 sal.pspace = default_breakpoint_pspace;
7167 sal.section = find_pc_overlay (sal.pc);
7168
7169 /* "break" without arguments is equivalent to "break *PC" where PC is
7170 the default_breakpoint_address. So make sure to set
7171 sal.explicit_pc to prevent GDB from trying to expand the list of
7172 sals to include all other instances with the same symtab and line.
7173 */
7174 sal.explicit_pc = 1;
7175
7176 sals->sals[0] = sal;
7177 sals->nelts = 1;
7178 }
7179 else
7180 error (_("No default breakpoint address now."));
7181 }
7182 else
7183 {
7184 /* Force almost all breakpoints to be in terms of the
7185 current_source_symtab (which is decode_line_1's default). This
7186 should produce the results we want almost all of the time while
7187 leaving default_breakpoint_* alone.
7188 ObjC: However, don't match an Objective-C method name which
7189 may have a '+' or '-' succeeded by a '[' */
7190
7191 struct symtab_and_line cursal = get_current_source_symtab_and_line ();
7192
7193 if (default_breakpoint_valid
7194 && (!cursal.symtab
7195 || ((strchr ("+-", (*address)[0]) != NULL)
7196 && ((*address)[1] != '['))))
7197 *sals = decode_line_1 (address, 1, default_breakpoint_symtab,
7198 default_breakpoint_line, addr_string,
7199 not_found_ptr);
7200 else
7201 *sals = decode_line_1 (address, 1, (struct symtab *) NULL, 0,
7202 addr_string, not_found_ptr);
7203 }
7204 /* For any SAL that didn't have a canonical string, fill one in. */
7205 if (sals->nelts > 0 && *addr_string == NULL)
7206 *addr_string = xcalloc (sals->nelts, sizeof (char **));
7207 if (addr_start != (*address))
7208 {
7209 int i;
7210
7211 for (i = 0; i < sals->nelts; i++)
7212 {
7213 /* Add the string if not present. */
7214 if ((*addr_string)[i] == NULL)
7215 (*addr_string)[i] = savestring (addr_start,
7216 (*address) - addr_start);
7217 }
7218 }
7219 }
7220
7221
7222 /* Convert each SAL into a real PC. Verify that the PC can be
7223 inserted as a breakpoint. If it can't throw an error. */
7224
7225 static void
7226 breakpoint_sals_to_pc (struct symtabs_and_lines *sals,
7227 char *address)
7228 {
7229 int i;
7230
7231 for (i = 0; i < sals->nelts; i++)
7232 resolve_sal_pc (&sals->sals[i]);
7233 }
7234
7235 /* Fast tracepoints may have restrictions on valid locations. For
7236 instance, a fast tracepoint using a jump instead of a trap will
7237 likely have to overwrite more bytes than a trap would, and so can
7238 only be placed where the instruction is longer than the jump, or a
7239 multi-instruction sequence does not have a jump into the middle of
7240 it, etc. */
7241
7242 static void
7243 check_fast_tracepoint_sals (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
7244 struct symtabs_and_lines *sals)
7245 {
7246 int i, rslt;
7247 struct symtab_and_line *sal;
7248 char *msg;
7249 struct cleanup *old_chain;
7250
7251 for (i = 0; i < sals->nelts; i++)
7252 {
7253 sal = &sals->sals[i];
7254
7255 rslt = gdbarch_fast_tracepoint_valid_at (gdbarch, sal->pc,
7256 NULL, &msg);
7257 old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, msg);
7258
7259 if (!rslt)
7260 error (_("May not have a fast tracepoint at 0x%s%s"),
7261 paddress (gdbarch, sal->pc), (msg ? msg : ""));
7262
7263 do_cleanups (old_chain);
7264 }
7265 }
7266
7267 static void
7268 do_captured_parse_breakpoint (struct ui_out *ui, void *data)
7269 {
7270 struct captured_parse_breakpoint_args *args = data;
7271
7272 parse_breakpoint_sals (args->arg_p, args->sals_p, args->addr_string_p,
7273 args->not_found_ptr);
7274 }
7275
7276 /* Given TOK, a string specification of condition and thread, as
7277 accepted by the 'break' command, extract the condition
7278 string and thread number and set *COND_STRING and *THREAD.
7279 PC identifies the context at which the condition should be parsed.
7280 If no condition is found, *COND_STRING is set to NULL.
7281 If no thread is found, *THREAD is set to -1. */
7282 static void
7283 find_condition_and_thread (char *tok, CORE_ADDR pc,
7284 char **cond_string, int *thread, int *task)
7285 {
7286 *cond_string = NULL;
7287 *thread = -1;
7288 while (tok && *tok)
7289 {
7290 char *end_tok;
7291 int toklen;
7292 char *cond_start = NULL;
7293 char *cond_end = NULL;
7294
7295 while (*tok == ' ' || *tok == '\t')
7296 tok++;
7297
7298 end_tok = tok;
7299
7300 while (*end_tok != ' ' && *end_tok != '\t' && *end_tok != '\000')
7301 end_tok++;
7302
7303 toklen = end_tok - tok;
7304
7305 if (toklen >= 1 && strncmp (tok, "if", toklen) == 0)
7306 {
7307 struct expression *expr;
7308
7309 tok = cond_start = end_tok + 1;
7310 expr = parse_exp_1 (&tok, block_for_pc (pc), 0);
7311 xfree (expr);
7312 cond_end = tok;
7313 *cond_string = savestring (cond_start,
7314 cond_end - cond_start);
7315 }
7316 else if (toklen >= 1 && strncmp (tok, "thread", toklen) == 0)
7317 {
7318 char *tmptok;
7319
7320 tok = end_tok + 1;
7321 tmptok = tok;
7322 *thread = strtol (tok, &tok, 0);
7323 if (tok == tmptok)
7324 error (_("Junk after thread keyword."));
7325 if (!valid_thread_id (*thread))
7326 error (_("Unknown thread %d."), *thread);
7327 }
7328 else if (toklen >= 1 && strncmp (tok, "task", toklen) == 0)
7329 {
7330 char *tmptok;
7331
7332 tok = end_tok + 1;
7333 tmptok = tok;
7334 *task = strtol (tok, &tok, 0);
7335 if (tok == tmptok)
7336 error (_("Junk after task keyword."));
7337 if (!valid_task_id (*task))
7338 error (_("Unknown task %d."), *task);
7339 }
7340 else
7341 error (_("Junk at end of arguments."));
7342 }
7343 }
7344
7345 /* Set a breakpoint. This function is shared between CLI and MI
7346 functions for setting a breakpoint. This function has two major
7347 modes of operations, selected by the PARSE_CONDITION_AND_THREAD
7348 parameter. If non-zero, the function will parse arg, extracting
7349 breakpoint location, address and thread. Otherwise, ARG is just the
7350 location of breakpoint, with condition and thread specified by the
7351 COND_STRING and THREAD parameters. Returns true if any breakpoint
7352 was created; false otherwise. */
7353
7354 int
7355 create_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
7356 char *arg, char *cond_string, int thread,
7357 int parse_condition_and_thread,
7358 int tempflag, int hardwareflag, int traceflag,
7359 int ignore_count,
7360 enum auto_boolean pending_break_support,
7361 struct breakpoint_ops *ops,
7362 int from_tty,
7363 int enabled)
7364 {
7365 struct gdb_exception e;
7366 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
7367 struct symtab_and_line pending_sal;
7368 char *copy_arg;
7369 char *addr_start = arg;
7370 char **addr_string;
7371 struct cleanup *old_chain;
7372 struct cleanup *bkpt_chain = NULL;
7373 struct captured_parse_breakpoint_args parse_args;
7374 int i;
7375 int pending = 0;
7376 int not_found = 0;
7377 enum bptype type_wanted;
7378 int task = 0;
7379 int prev_bkpt_count = breakpoint_count;
7380
7381 sals.sals = NULL;
7382 sals.nelts = 0;
7383 addr_string = NULL;
7384
7385 parse_args.arg_p = &arg;
7386 parse_args.sals_p = &sals;
7387 parse_args.addr_string_p = &addr_string;
7388 parse_args.not_found_ptr = &not_found;
7389
7390 e = catch_exception (uiout, do_captured_parse_breakpoint,
7391 &parse_args, RETURN_MASK_ALL);
7392
7393 /* If caller is interested in rc value from parse, set value. */
7394 switch (e.reason)
7395 {
7396 case RETURN_QUIT:
7397 throw_exception (e);
7398 case RETURN_ERROR:
7399 switch (e.error)
7400 {
7401 case NOT_FOUND_ERROR:
7402
7403 /* If pending breakpoint support is turned off, throw
7404 error. */
7405
7406 if (pending_break_support == AUTO_BOOLEAN_FALSE)
7407 throw_exception (e);
7408
7409 exception_print (gdb_stderr, e);
7410
7411 /* If pending breakpoint support is auto query and the user
7412 selects no, then simply return the error code. */
7413 if (pending_break_support == AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO
7414 && !nquery ("Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? "))
7415 return 0;
7416
7417 /* At this point, either the user was queried about setting
7418 a pending breakpoint and selected yes, or pending
7419 breakpoint behavior is on and thus a pending breakpoint
7420 is defaulted on behalf of the user. */
7421 copy_arg = xstrdup (addr_start);
7422 addr_string = &copy_arg;
7423 sals.nelts = 1;
7424 sals.sals = &pending_sal;
7425 pending_sal.pc = 0;
7426 pending = 1;
7427 break;
7428 default:
7429 throw_exception (e);
7430 }
7431 default:
7432 if (!sals.nelts)
7433 return 0;
7434 }
7435
7436 /* Create a chain of things that always need to be cleaned up. */
7437 old_chain = make_cleanup (null_cleanup, 0);
7438
7439 if (!pending)
7440 {
7441 /* Make sure that all storage allocated to SALS gets freed. */
7442 make_cleanup (xfree, sals.sals);
7443
7444 /* Cleanup the addr_string array but not its contents. */
7445 make_cleanup (xfree, addr_string);
7446 }
7447
7448 /* ----------------------------- SNIP -----------------------------
7449 Anything added to the cleanup chain beyond this point is assumed
7450 to be part of a breakpoint. If the breakpoint create succeeds
7451 then the memory is not reclaimed. */
7452 bkpt_chain = make_cleanup (null_cleanup, 0);
7453
7454 /* Mark the contents of the addr_string for cleanup. These go on
7455 the bkpt_chain and only occur if the breakpoint create fails. */
7456 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; i++)
7457 {
7458 if (addr_string[i] != NULL)
7459 make_cleanup (xfree, addr_string[i]);
7460 }
7461
7462 /* Resolve all line numbers to PC's and verify that the addresses
7463 are ok for the target. */
7464 if (!pending)
7465 breakpoint_sals_to_pc (&sals, addr_start);
7466
7467 type_wanted = (traceflag
7468 ? (hardwareflag ? bp_fast_tracepoint : bp_tracepoint)
7469 : (hardwareflag ? bp_hardware_breakpoint : bp_breakpoint));
7470
7471 /* Fast tracepoints may have additional restrictions on location. */
7472 if (type_wanted == bp_fast_tracepoint)
7473 check_fast_tracepoint_sals (gdbarch, &sals);
7474
7475 /* Verify that condition can be parsed, before setting any
7476 breakpoints. Allocate a separate condition expression for each
7477 breakpoint. */
7478 if (!pending)
7479 {
7480 if (parse_condition_and_thread)
7481 {
7482 /* Here we only parse 'arg' to separate condition
7483 from thread number, so parsing in context of first
7484 sal is OK. When setting the breakpoint we'll
7485 re-parse it in context of each sal. */
7486 cond_string = NULL;
7487 thread = -1;
7488 find_condition_and_thread (arg, sals.sals[0].pc, &cond_string,
7489 &thread, &task);
7490 if (cond_string)
7491 make_cleanup (xfree, cond_string);
7492 }
7493 else
7494 {
7495 /* Create a private copy of condition string. */
7496 if (cond_string)
7497 {
7498 cond_string = xstrdup (cond_string);
7499 make_cleanup (xfree, cond_string);
7500 }
7501 }
7502 create_breakpoints_sal (gdbarch, sals, addr_string, cond_string,
7503 type_wanted, tempflag ? disp_del : disp_donttouch,
7504 thread, task, ignore_count, ops, from_tty,
7505 enabled);
7506 }
7507 else
7508 {
7509 struct breakpoint *b;
7510
7511 make_cleanup (xfree, copy_arg);
7512
7513 b = set_raw_breakpoint_without_location (gdbarch, type_wanted);
7514 set_breakpoint_count (breakpoint_count + 1);
7515 b->number = breakpoint_count;
7516 b->thread = -1;
7517 b->addr_string = addr_string[0];
7518 b->cond_string = NULL;
7519 b->ignore_count = ignore_count;
7520 b->disposition = tempflag ? disp_del : disp_donttouch;
7521 b->condition_not_parsed = 1;
7522 b->ops = ops;
7523 b->enable_state = enabled ? bp_enabled : bp_disabled;
7524 b->pspace = current_program_space;
7525
7526 if (enabled && b->pspace->executing_startup
7527 && (b->type == bp_breakpoint
7528 || b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint))
7529 b->enable_state = bp_startup_disabled;
7530
7531 mention (b);
7532 }
7533
7534 if (sals.nelts > 1)
7535 {
7536 warning (_("Multiple breakpoints were set.\n"
7537 "Use the \"delete\" command to delete unwanted breakpoints."));
7538 prev_breakpoint_count = prev_bkpt_count;
7539 }
7540
7541 /* That's it. Discard the cleanups for data inserted into the
7542 breakpoint. */
7543 discard_cleanups (bkpt_chain);
7544 /* But cleanup everything else. */
7545 do_cleanups (old_chain);
7546
7547 /* error call may happen here - have BKPT_CHAIN already discarded. */
7548 update_global_location_list (1);
7549
7550 return 1;
7551 }
7552
7553 /* Set a breakpoint.
7554 ARG is a string describing breakpoint address,
7555 condition, and thread.
7556 FLAG specifies if a breakpoint is hardware on,
7557 and if breakpoint is temporary, using BP_HARDWARE_FLAG
7558 and BP_TEMPFLAG. */
7559
7560 static void
7561 break_command_1 (char *arg, int flag, int from_tty)
7562 {
7563 int hardwareflag = flag & BP_HARDWAREFLAG;
7564 int tempflag = flag & BP_TEMPFLAG;
7565
7566 create_breakpoint (get_current_arch (),
7567 arg,
7568 NULL, 0, 1 /* parse arg */,
7569 tempflag, hardwareflag, 0 /* traceflag */,
7570 0 /* Ignore count */,
7571 pending_break_support,
7572 NULL /* breakpoint_ops */,
7573 from_tty,
7574 1 /* enabled */);
7575 }
7576
7577
7578 /* Helper function for break_command_1 and disassemble_command. */
7579
7580 void
7581 resolve_sal_pc (struct symtab_and_line *sal)
7582 {
7583 CORE_ADDR pc;
7584
7585 if (sal->pc == 0 && sal->symtab != NULL)
7586 {
7587 if (!find_line_pc (sal->symtab, sal->line, &pc))
7588 error (_("No line %d in file \"%s\"."),
7589 sal->line, sal->symtab->filename);
7590 sal->pc = pc;
7591
7592 /* If this SAL corresponds to a breakpoint inserted using
7593 a line number, then skip the function prologue if necessary. */
7594 if (sal->explicit_line)
7595 skip_prologue_sal (sal);
7596 }
7597
7598 if (sal->section == 0 && sal->symtab != NULL)
7599 {
7600 struct blockvector *bv;
7601 struct block *b;
7602 struct symbol *sym;
7603
7604 bv = blockvector_for_pc_sect (sal->pc, 0, &b, sal->symtab);
7605 if (bv != NULL)
7606 {
7607 sym = block_linkage_function (b);
7608 if (sym != NULL)
7609 {
7610 fixup_symbol_section (sym, sal->symtab->objfile);
7611 sal->section = SYMBOL_OBJ_SECTION (sym);
7612 }
7613 else
7614 {
7615 /* It really is worthwhile to have the section, so we'll just
7616 have to look harder. This case can be executed if we have
7617 line numbers but no functions (as can happen in assembly
7618 source). */
7619
7620 struct minimal_symbol *msym;
7621 struct cleanup *old_chain = save_current_space_and_thread ();
7622
7623 switch_to_program_space_and_thread (sal->pspace);
7624
7625 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (sal->pc);
7626 if (msym)
7627 sal->section = SYMBOL_OBJ_SECTION (msym);
7628
7629 do_cleanups (old_chain);
7630 }
7631 }
7632 }
7633 }
7634
7635 void
7636 break_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7637 {
7638 break_command_1 (arg, 0, from_tty);
7639 }
7640
7641 void
7642 tbreak_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7643 {
7644 break_command_1 (arg, BP_TEMPFLAG, from_tty);
7645 }
7646
7647 static void
7648 hbreak_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7649 {
7650 break_command_1 (arg, BP_HARDWAREFLAG, from_tty);
7651 }
7652
7653 static void
7654 thbreak_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7655 {
7656 break_command_1 (arg, (BP_TEMPFLAG | BP_HARDWAREFLAG), from_tty);
7657 }
7658
7659 static void
7660 stop_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7661 {
7662 printf_filtered (_("Specify the type of breakpoint to set.\n\
7663 Usage: stop in <function | address>\n\
7664 stop at <line>\n"));
7665 }
7666
7667 static void
7668 stopin_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7669 {
7670 int badInput = 0;
7671
7672 if (arg == (char *) NULL)
7673 badInput = 1;
7674 else if (*arg != '*')
7675 {
7676 char *argptr = arg;
7677 int hasColon = 0;
7678
7679 /* look for a ':'. If this is a line number specification, then
7680 say it is bad, otherwise, it should be an address or
7681 function/method name */
7682 while (*argptr && !hasColon)
7683 {
7684 hasColon = (*argptr == ':');
7685 argptr++;
7686 }
7687
7688 if (hasColon)
7689 badInput = (*argptr != ':'); /* Not a class::method */
7690 else
7691 badInput = isdigit (*arg); /* a simple line number */
7692 }
7693
7694 if (badInput)
7695 printf_filtered (_("Usage: stop in <function | address>\n"));
7696 else
7697 break_command_1 (arg, 0, from_tty);
7698 }
7699
7700 static void
7701 stopat_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7702 {
7703 int badInput = 0;
7704
7705 if (arg == (char *) NULL || *arg == '*') /* no line number */
7706 badInput = 1;
7707 else
7708 {
7709 char *argptr = arg;
7710 int hasColon = 0;
7711
7712 /* look for a ':'. If there is a '::' then get out, otherwise
7713 it is probably a line number. */
7714 while (*argptr && !hasColon)
7715 {
7716 hasColon = (*argptr == ':');
7717 argptr++;
7718 }
7719
7720 if (hasColon)
7721 badInput = (*argptr == ':'); /* we have class::method */
7722 else
7723 badInput = !isdigit (*arg); /* not a line number */
7724 }
7725
7726 if (badInput)
7727 printf_filtered (_("Usage: stop at <line>\n"));
7728 else
7729 break_command_1 (arg, 0, from_tty);
7730 }
7731
7732 /* Return non-zero if EXP is verified as constant. Returned zero means EXP is
7733 variable. Also the constant detection may fail for some constant
7734 expressions and in such case still falsely return zero. */
7735 static int
7736 watchpoint_exp_is_const (const struct expression *exp)
7737 {
7738 int i = exp->nelts;
7739
7740 while (i > 0)
7741 {
7742 int oplenp, argsp;
7743
7744 /* We are only interested in the descriptor of each element. */
7745 operator_length (exp, i, &oplenp, &argsp);
7746 i -= oplenp;
7747
7748 switch (exp->elts[i].opcode)
7749 {
7750 case BINOP_ADD:
7751 case BINOP_SUB:
7752 case BINOP_MUL:
7753 case BINOP_DIV:
7754 case BINOP_REM:
7755 case BINOP_MOD:
7756 case BINOP_LSH:
7757 case BINOP_RSH:
7758 case BINOP_LOGICAL_AND:
7759 case BINOP_LOGICAL_OR:
7760 case BINOP_BITWISE_AND:
7761 case BINOP_BITWISE_IOR:
7762 case BINOP_BITWISE_XOR:
7763 case BINOP_EQUAL:
7764 case BINOP_NOTEQUAL:
7765 case BINOP_LESS:
7766 case BINOP_GTR:
7767 case BINOP_LEQ:
7768 case BINOP_GEQ:
7769 case BINOP_REPEAT:
7770 case BINOP_COMMA:
7771 case BINOP_EXP:
7772 case BINOP_MIN:
7773 case BINOP_MAX:
7774 case BINOP_INTDIV:
7775 case BINOP_CONCAT:
7776 case BINOP_IN:
7777 case BINOP_RANGE:
7778 case TERNOP_COND:
7779 case TERNOP_SLICE:
7780 case TERNOP_SLICE_COUNT:
7781
7782 case OP_LONG:
7783 case OP_DOUBLE:
7784 case OP_DECFLOAT:
7785 case OP_LAST:
7786 case OP_COMPLEX:
7787 case OP_STRING:
7788 case OP_BITSTRING:
7789 case OP_ARRAY:
7790 case OP_TYPE:
7791 case OP_NAME:
7792 case OP_OBJC_NSSTRING:
7793
7794 case UNOP_NEG:
7795 case UNOP_LOGICAL_NOT:
7796 case UNOP_COMPLEMENT:
7797 case UNOP_ADDR:
7798 case UNOP_HIGH:
7799 /* Unary, binary and ternary operators: We have to check their
7800 operands. If they are constant, then so is the result of
7801 that operation. For instance, if A and B are determined to be
7802 constants, then so is "A + B".
7803
7804 UNOP_IND is one exception to the rule above, because the value
7805 of *ADDR is not necessarily a constant, even when ADDR is. */
7806 break;
7807
7808 case OP_VAR_VALUE:
7809 /* Check whether the associated symbol is a constant.
7810 We use SYMBOL_CLASS rather than TYPE_CONST because it's
7811 possible that a buggy compiler could mark a variable as constant
7812 even when it is not, and TYPE_CONST would return true in this
7813 case, while SYMBOL_CLASS wouldn't.
7814 We also have to check for function symbols because they are
7815 always constant. */
7816 {
7817 struct symbol *s = exp->elts[i + 2].symbol;
7818
7819 if (SYMBOL_CLASS (s) != LOC_BLOCK
7820 && SYMBOL_CLASS (s) != LOC_CONST
7821 && SYMBOL_CLASS (s) != LOC_CONST_BYTES)
7822 return 0;
7823 break;
7824 }
7825
7826 /* The default action is to return 0 because we are using
7827 the optimistic approach here: If we don't know something,
7828 then it is not a constant. */
7829 default:
7830 return 0;
7831 }
7832 }
7833
7834 return 1;
7835 }
7836
7837 /* accessflag: hw_write: watch write,
7838 hw_read: watch read,
7839 hw_access: watch access (read or write) */
7840 static void
7841 watch_command_1 (char *arg, int accessflag, int from_tty)
7842 {
7843 struct breakpoint *b, *scope_breakpoint = NULL;
7844 struct expression *exp;
7845 struct block *exp_valid_block = NULL, *cond_exp_valid_block = NULL;
7846 struct value *val, *mark;
7847 struct frame_info *frame;
7848 char *exp_start = NULL;
7849 char *exp_end = NULL;
7850 char *tok, *id_tok_start, *end_tok;
7851 int toklen;
7852 char *cond_start = NULL;
7853 char *cond_end = NULL;
7854 int i, other_type_used, target_resources_ok = 0;
7855 enum bptype bp_type;
7856 int mem_cnt = 0;
7857 int thread = -1;
7858
7859 /* Make sure that we actually have parameters to parse. */
7860 if (arg != NULL && arg[0] != '\0')
7861 {
7862 toklen = strlen (arg); /* Size of argument list. */
7863
7864 /* Points tok to the end of the argument list. */
7865 tok = arg + toklen - 1;
7866
7867 /* Go backwards in the parameters list. Skip the last parameter.
7868 If we're expecting a 'thread <thread_num>' parameter, this should
7869 be the thread identifier. */
7870 while (tok > arg && (*tok == ' ' || *tok == '\t'))
7871 tok--;
7872 while (tok > arg && (*tok != ' ' && *tok != '\t'))
7873 tok--;
7874
7875 /* Points end_tok to the beginning of the last token. */
7876 id_tok_start = tok + 1;
7877
7878 /* Go backwards in the parameters list. Skip one more parameter.
7879 If we're expecting a 'thread <thread_num>' parameter, we should
7880 reach a "thread" token. */
7881 while (tok > arg && (*tok == ' ' || *tok == '\t'))
7882 tok--;
7883
7884 end_tok = tok;
7885
7886 while (tok > arg && (*tok != ' ' && *tok != '\t'))
7887 tok--;
7888
7889 /* Move the pointer forward to skip the whitespace and
7890 calculate the length of the token. */
7891 tok++;
7892 toklen = end_tok - tok;
7893
7894 if (toklen >= 1 && strncmp (tok, "thread", toklen) == 0)
7895 {
7896 /* At this point we've found a "thread" token, which means
7897 the user is trying to set a watchpoint that triggers
7898 only in a specific thread. */
7899 char *endp;
7900
7901 /* Extract the thread ID from the next token. */
7902 thread = strtol (id_tok_start, &endp, 0);
7903
7904 /* Check if the user provided a valid numeric value for the
7905 thread ID. */
7906 if (*endp != ' ' && *endp != '\t' && *endp != '\0')
7907 error (_("Invalid thread ID specification %s."), id_tok_start);
7908
7909 /* Check if the thread actually exists. */
7910 if (!valid_thread_id (thread))
7911 error (_("Unknown thread %d."), thread);
7912
7913 /* Truncate the string and get rid of the thread <thread_num>
7914 parameter before the parameter list is parsed by the
7915 evaluate_expression() function. */
7916 *tok = '\0';
7917 }
7918 }
7919
7920 /* Parse the rest of the arguments. */
7921 innermost_block = NULL;
7922 exp_start = arg;
7923 exp = parse_exp_1 (&arg, 0, 0);
7924 exp_end = arg;
7925 /* Remove trailing whitespace from the expression before saving it.
7926 This makes the eventual display of the expression string a bit
7927 prettier. */
7928 while (exp_end > exp_start && (exp_end[-1] == ' ' || exp_end[-1] == '\t'))
7929 --exp_end;
7930
7931 /* Checking if the expression is not constant. */
7932 if (watchpoint_exp_is_const (exp))
7933 {
7934 int len;
7935
7936 len = exp_end - exp_start;
7937 while (len > 0 && isspace (exp_start[len - 1]))
7938 len--;
7939 error (_("Cannot watch constant value `%.*s'."), len, exp_start);
7940 }
7941
7942 exp_valid_block = innermost_block;
7943 mark = value_mark ();
7944 fetch_watchpoint_value (exp, &val, NULL, NULL);
7945 if (val != NULL)
7946 release_value (val);
7947
7948 tok = arg;
7949 while (*tok == ' ' || *tok == '\t')
7950 tok++;
7951 end_tok = tok;
7952
7953 while (*end_tok != ' ' && *end_tok != '\t' && *end_tok != '\000')
7954 end_tok++;
7955
7956 toklen = end_tok - tok;
7957 if (toklen >= 1 && strncmp (tok, "if", toklen) == 0)
7958 {
7959 struct expression *cond;
7960
7961 innermost_block = NULL;
7962 tok = cond_start = end_tok + 1;
7963 cond = parse_exp_1 (&tok, 0, 0);
7964
7965 /* The watchpoint expression may not be local, but the condition
7966 may still be. E.g.: `watch global if local > 0'. */
7967 cond_exp_valid_block = innermost_block;
7968
7969 xfree (cond);
7970 cond_end = tok;
7971 }
7972 if (*tok)
7973 error (_("Junk at end of command."));
7974
7975 if (accessflag == hw_read)
7976 bp_type = bp_read_watchpoint;
7977 else if (accessflag == hw_access)
7978 bp_type = bp_access_watchpoint;
7979 else
7980 bp_type = bp_hardware_watchpoint;
7981
7982 mem_cnt = can_use_hardware_watchpoint (val);
7983 if (mem_cnt == 0 && bp_type != bp_hardware_watchpoint)
7984 error (_("Expression cannot be implemented with read/access watchpoint."));
7985 if (mem_cnt != 0)
7986 {
7987 i = hw_watchpoint_used_count (bp_type, &other_type_used);
7988 target_resources_ok =
7989 target_can_use_hardware_watchpoint (bp_type, i + mem_cnt,
7990 other_type_used);
7991 if (target_resources_ok == 0 && bp_type != bp_hardware_watchpoint)
7992 error (_("Target does not support this type of hardware watchpoint."));
7993
7994 if (target_resources_ok < 0 && bp_type != bp_hardware_watchpoint)
7995 error (_("Target can only support one kind of HW watchpoint at a time."));
7996 }
7997
7998 /* Change the type of breakpoint to an ordinary watchpoint if a hardware
7999 watchpoint could not be set. */
8000 if (!mem_cnt || target_resources_ok <= 0)
8001 bp_type = bp_watchpoint;
8002
8003 frame = block_innermost_frame (exp_valid_block);
8004
8005 /* If the expression is "local", then set up a "watchpoint scope"
8006 breakpoint at the point where we've left the scope of the watchpoint
8007 expression. Create the scope breakpoint before the watchpoint, so
8008 that we will encounter it first in bpstat_stop_status. */
8009 if (exp_valid_block && frame)
8010 {
8011 if (frame_id_p (frame_unwind_caller_id (frame)))
8012 {
8013 scope_breakpoint
8014 = create_internal_breakpoint (frame_unwind_caller_arch (frame),
8015 frame_unwind_caller_pc (frame),
8016 bp_watchpoint_scope);
8017
8018 scope_breakpoint->enable_state = bp_enabled;
8019
8020 /* Automatically delete the breakpoint when it hits. */
8021 scope_breakpoint->disposition = disp_del;
8022
8023 /* Only break in the proper frame (help with recursion). */
8024 scope_breakpoint->frame_id = frame_unwind_caller_id (frame);
8025
8026 /* Set the address at which we will stop. */
8027 scope_breakpoint->loc->gdbarch
8028 = frame_unwind_caller_arch (frame);
8029 scope_breakpoint->loc->requested_address
8030 = frame_unwind_caller_pc (frame);
8031 scope_breakpoint->loc->address
8032 = adjust_breakpoint_address (scope_breakpoint->loc->gdbarch,
8033 scope_breakpoint->loc->requested_address,
8034 scope_breakpoint->type);
8035 }
8036 }
8037
8038 /* Now set up the breakpoint. */
8039 b = set_raw_breakpoint_without_location (NULL, bp_type);
8040 set_breakpoint_count (breakpoint_count + 1);
8041 b->number = breakpoint_count;
8042 b->thread = thread;
8043 b->disposition = disp_donttouch;
8044 b->exp = exp;
8045 b->exp_valid_block = exp_valid_block;
8046 b->cond_exp_valid_block = cond_exp_valid_block;
8047 b->exp_string = savestring (exp_start, exp_end - exp_start);
8048 b->val = val;
8049 b->val_valid = 1;
8050 if (cond_start)
8051 b->cond_string = savestring (cond_start, cond_end - cond_start);
8052 else
8053 b->cond_string = 0;
8054
8055 if (frame)
8056 {
8057 b->watchpoint_frame = get_frame_id (frame);
8058 b->watchpoint_thread = inferior_ptid;
8059 }
8060 else
8061 {
8062 b->watchpoint_frame = null_frame_id;
8063 b->watchpoint_thread = null_ptid;
8064 }
8065
8066 if (scope_breakpoint != NULL)
8067 {
8068 /* The scope breakpoint is related to the watchpoint. We will
8069 need to act on them together. */
8070 b->related_breakpoint = scope_breakpoint;
8071 scope_breakpoint->related_breakpoint = b;
8072 }
8073
8074 value_free_to_mark (mark);
8075
8076 /* Finally update the new watchpoint. This creates the locations
8077 that should be inserted. */
8078 update_watchpoint (b, 1);
8079
8080 mention (b);
8081 update_global_location_list (1);
8082 }
8083
8084 /* Return count of locations need to be watched and can be handled
8085 in hardware. If the watchpoint can not be handled
8086 in hardware return zero. */
8087
8088 static int
8089 can_use_hardware_watchpoint (struct value *v)
8090 {
8091 int found_memory_cnt = 0;
8092 struct value *head = v;
8093
8094 /* Did the user specifically forbid us to use hardware watchpoints? */
8095 if (!can_use_hw_watchpoints)
8096 return 0;
8097
8098 /* Make sure that the value of the expression depends only upon
8099 memory contents, and values computed from them within GDB. If we
8100 find any register references or function calls, we can't use a
8101 hardware watchpoint.
8102
8103 The idea here is that evaluating an expression generates a series
8104 of values, one holding the value of every subexpression. (The
8105 expression a*b+c has five subexpressions: a, b, a*b, c, and
8106 a*b+c.) GDB's values hold almost enough information to establish
8107 the criteria given above --- they identify memory lvalues,
8108 register lvalues, computed values, etcetera. So we can evaluate
8109 the expression, and then scan the chain of values that leaves
8110 behind to decide whether we can detect any possible change to the
8111 expression's final value using only hardware watchpoints.
8112
8113 However, I don't think that the values returned by inferior
8114 function calls are special in any way. So this function may not
8115 notice that an expression involving an inferior function call
8116 can't be watched with hardware watchpoints. FIXME. */
8117 for (; v; v = value_next (v))
8118 {
8119 if (VALUE_LVAL (v) == lval_memory)
8120 {
8121 if (value_lazy (v))
8122 /* A lazy memory lvalue is one that GDB never needed to fetch;
8123 we either just used its address (e.g., `a' in `a.b') or
8124 we never needed it at all (e.g., `a' in `a,b'). */
8125 ;
8126 else
8127 {
8128 /* Ahh, memory we actually used! Check if we can cover
8129 it with hardware watchpoints. */
8130 struct type *vtype = check_typedef (value_type (v));
8131
8132 /* We only watch structs and arrays if user asked for it
8133 explicitly, never if they just happen to appear in a
8134 middle of some value chain. */
8135 if (v == head
8136 || (TYPE_CODE (vtype) != TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
8137 && TYPE_CODE (vtype) != TYPE_CODE_ARRAY))
8138 {
8139 CORE_ADDR vaddr = value_address (v);
8140 int len = TYPE_LENGTH (value_type (v));
8141
8142 if (!target_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint (vaddr, len))
8143 return 0;
8144 else
8145 found_memory_cnt++;
8146 }
8147 }
8148 }
8149 else if (VALUE_LVAL (v) != not_lval
8150 && deprecated_value_modifiable (v) == 0)
8151 return 0; /* ??? What does this represent? */
8152 else if (VALUE_LVAL (v) == lval_register)
8153 return 0; /* cannot watch a register with a HW watchpoint */
8154 }
8155
8156 /* The expression itself looks suitable for using a hardware
8157 watchpoint, but give the target machine a chance to reject it. */
8158 return found_memory_cnt;
8159 }
8160
8161 void
8162 watch_command_wrapper (char *arg, int from_tty)
8163 {
8164 watch_command (arg, from_tty);
8165 }
8166
8167 static void
8168 watch_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
8169 {
8170 watch_command_1 (arg, hw_write, from_tty);
8171 }
8172
8173 void
8174 rwatch_command_wrapper (char *arg, int from_tty)
8175 {
8176 rwatch_command (arg, from_tty);
8177 }
8178
8179 static void
8180 rwatch_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
8181 {
8182 watch_command_1 (arg, hw_read, from_tty);
8183 }
8184
8185 void
8186 awatch_command_wrapper (char *arg, int from_tty)
8187 {
8188 awatch_command (arg, from_tty);
8189 }
8190
8191 static void
8192 awatch_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
8193 {
8194 watch_command_1 (arg, hw_access, from_tty);
8195 }
8196 \f
8197
8198 /* Helper routines for the until_command routine in infcmd.c. Here
8199 because it uses the mechanisms of breakpoints. */
8200
8201 struct until_break_command_continuation_args
8202 {
8203 struct breakpoint *breakpoint;
8204 struct breakpoint *breakpoint2;
8205 };
8206
8207 /* This function is called by fetch_inferior_event via the
8208 cmd_continuation pointer, to complete the until command. It takes
8209 care of cleaning up the temporary breakpoints set up by the until
8210 command. */
8211 static void
8212 until_break_command_continuation (void *arg)
8213 {
8214 struct until_break_command_continuation_args *a = arg;
8215
8216 delete_breakpoint (a->breakpoint);
8217 if (a->breakpoint2)
8218 delete_breakpoint (a->breakpoint2);
8219 }
8220
8221 void
8222 until_break_command (char *arg, int from_tty, int anywhere)
8223 {
8224 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
8225 struct symtab_and_line sal;
8226 struct frame_info *frame = get_selected_frame (NULL);
8227 struct breakpoint *breakpoint;
8228 struct breakpoint *breakpoint2 = NULL;
8229 struct cleanup *old_chain;
8230
8231 clear_proceed_status ();
8232
8233 /* Set a breakpoint where the user wants it and at return from
8234 this function */
8235
8236 if (default_breakpoint_valid)
8237 sals = decode_line_1 (&arg, 1, default_breakpoint_symtab,
8238 default_breakpoint_line, (char ***) NULL, NULL);
8239 else
8240 sals = decode_line_1 (&arg, 1, (struct symtab *) NULL,
8241 0, (char ***) NULL, NULL);
8242
8243 if (sals.nelts != 1)
8244 error (_("Couldn't get information on specified line."));
8245
8246 sal = sals.sals[0];
8247 xfree (sals.sals); /* malloc'd, so freed */
8248
8249 if (*arg)
8250 error (_("Junk at end of arguments."));
8251
8252 resolve_sal_pc (&sal);
8253
8254 if (anywhere)
8255 /* If the user told us to continue until a specified location,
8256 we don't specify a frame at which we need to stop. */
8257 breakpoint = set_momentary_breakpoint (get_frame_arch (frame), sal,
8258 null_frame_id, bp_until);
8259 else
8260 /* Otherwise, specify the selected frame, because we want to stop only
8261 at the very same frame. */
8262 breakpoint = set_momentary_breakpoint (get_frame_arch (frame), sal,
8263 get_stack_frame_id (frame),
8264 bp_until);
8265
8266 old_chain = make_cleanup_delete_breakpoint (breakpoint);
8267
8268 /* Keep within the current frame, or in frames called by the current
8269 one. */
8270
8271 if (frame_id_p (frame_unwind_caller_id (frame)))
8272 {
8273 sal = find_pc_line (frame_unwind_caller_pc (frame), 0);
8274 sal.pc = frame_unwind_caller_pc (frame);
8275 breakpoint2 = set_momentary_breakpoint (frame_unwind_caller_arch (frame),
8276 sal,
8277 frame_unwind_caller_id (frame),
8278 bp_until);
8279 make_cleanup_delete_breakpoint (breakpoint2);
8280 }
8281
8282 proceed (-1, TARGET_SIGNAL_DEFAULT, 0);
8283
8284 /* If we are running asynchronously, and proceed call above has actually
8285 managed to start the target, arrange for breakpoints to be
8286 deleted when the target stops. Otherwise, we're already stopped and
8287 delete breakpoints via cleanup chain. */
8288
8289 if (target_can_async_p () && is_running (inferior_ptid))
8290 {
8291 struct until_break_command_continuation_args *args;
8292 args = xmalloc (sizeof (*args));
8293
8294 args->breakpoint = breakpoint;
8295 args->breakpoint2 = breakpoint2;
8296
8297 discard_cleanups (old_chain);
8298 add_continuation (inferior_thread (),
8299 until_break_command_continuation, args,
8300 xfree);
8301 }
8302 else
8303 do_cleanups (old_chain);
8304 }
8305
8306 static void
8307 ep_skip_leading_whitespace (char **s)
8308 {
8309 if ((s == NULL) || (*s == NULL))
8310 return;
8311 while (isspace (**s))
8312 *s += 1;
8313 }
8314
8315 /* This function attempts to parse an optional "if <cond>" clause
8316 from the arg string. If one is not found, it returns NULL.
8317
8318 Else, it returns a pointer to the condition string. (It does not
8319 attempt to evaluate the string against a particular block.) And,
8320 it updates arg to point to the first character following the parsed
8321 if clause in the arg string. */
8322
8323 static char *
8324 ep_parse_optional_if_clause (char **arg)
8325 {
8326 char *cond_string;
8327
8328 if (((*arg)[0] != 'i') || ((*arg)[1] != 'f') || !isspace ((*arg)[2]))
8329 return NULL;
8330
8331 /* Skip the "if" keyword. */
8332 (*arg) += 2;
8333
8334 /* Skip any extra leading whitespace, and record the start of the
8335 condition string. */
8336 ep_skip_leading_whitespace (arg);
8337 cond_string = *arg;
8338
8339 /* Assume that the condition occupies the remainder of the arg string. */
8340 (*arg) += strlen (cond_string);
8341
8342 return cond_string;
8343 }
8344
8345 /* Commands to deal with catching events, such as signals, exceptions,
8346 process start/exit, etc. */
8347
8348 typedef enum
8349 {
8350 catch_fork_temporary, catch_vfork_temporary,
8351 catch_fork_permanent, catch_vfork_permanent
8352 }
8353 catch_fork_kind;
8354
8355 static void
8356 catch_fork_command_1 (char *arg, int from_tty,
8357 struct cmd_list_element *command)
8358 {
8359 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_current_arch ();
8360 char *cond_string = NULL;
8361 catch_fork_kind fork_kind;
8362 int tempflag;
8363
8364 fork_kind = (catch_fork_kind) (uintptr_t) get_cmd_context (command);
8365 tempflag = (fork_kind == catch_fork_temporary
8366 || fork_kind == catch_vfork_temporary);
8367
8368 if (!arg)
8369 arg = "";
8370 ep_skip_leading_whitespace (&arg);
8371
8372 /* The allowed syntax is:
8373 catch [v]fork
8374 catch [v]fork if <cond>
8375
8376 First, check if there's an if clause. */
8377 cond_string = ep_parse_optional_if_clause (&arg);
8378
8379 if ((*arg != '\0') && !isspace (*arg))
8380 error (_("Junk at end of arguments."));
8381
8382 /* If this target supports it, create a fork or vfork catchpoint
8383 and enable reporting of such events. */
8384 switch (fork_kind)
8385 {
8386 case catch_fork_temporary:
8387 case catch_fork_permanent:
8388 create_fork_vfork_event_catchpoint (gdbarch, tempflag, cond_string,
8389 &catch_fork_breakpoint_ops);
8390 break;
8391 case catch_vfork_temporary:
8392 case catch_vfork_permanent:
8393 create_fork_vfork_event_catchpoint (gdbarch, tempflag, cond_string,
8394 &catch_vfork_breakpoint_ops);
8395 break;
8396 default:
8397 error (_("unsupported or unknown fork kind; cannot catch it"));
8398 break;
8399 }
8400 }
8401
8402 static void
8403 catch_exec_command_1 (char *arg, int from_tty,
8404 struct cmd_list_element *command)
8405 {
8406 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_current_arch ();
8407 int tempflag;
8408 char *cond_string = NULL;
8409
8410 tempflag = get_cmd_context (command) == CATCH_TEMPORARY;
8411
8412 if (!arg)
8413 arg = "";
8414 ep_skip_leading_whitespace (&arg);
8415
8416 /* The allowed syntax is:
8417 catch exec
8418 catch exec if <cond>
8419
8420 First, check if there's an if clause. */
8421 cond_string = ep_parse_optional_if_clause (&arg);
8422
8423 if ((*arg != '\0') && !isspace (*arg))
8424 error (_("Junk at end of arguments."));
8425
8426 /* If this target supports it, create an exec catchpoint
8427 and enable reporting of such events. */
8428 create_catchpoint (gdbarch, tempflag, cond_string,
8429 &catch_exec_breakpoint_ops);
8430 }
8431
8432 static enum print_stop_action
8433 print_exception_catchpoint (struct breakpoint *b)
8434 {
8435 int bp_temp, bp_throw;
8436
8437 annotate_catchpoint (b->number);
8438
8439 bp_throw = strstr (b->addr_string, "throw") != NULL;
8440 if (b->loc->address != b->loc->requested_address)
8441 breakpoint_adjustment_warning (b->loc->requested_address,
8442 b->loc->address,
8443 b->number, 1);
8444 bp_temp = b->disposition == disp_del;
8445 ui_out_text (uiout,
8446 bp_temp ? "Temporary catchpoint "
8447 : "Catchpoint ");
8448 if (!ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
8449 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "bkptno", b->number);
8450 ui_out_text (uiout,
8451 bp_throw ? " (exception thrown), "
8452 : " (exception caught), ");
8453 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
8454 {
8455 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "reason",
8456 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_BREAKPOINT_HIT));
8457 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "disp", bpdisp_text (b->disposition));
8458 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "bkptno", b->number);
8459 }
8460 return PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC;
8461 }
8462
8463 static void
8464 print_one_exception_catchpoint (struct breakpoint *b,
8465 struct bp_location **last_loc)
8466 {
8467 struct value_print_options opts;
8468
8469 get_user_print_options (&opts);
8470 if (opts.addressprint)
8471 {
8472 annotate_field (4);
8473 if (b->loc == NULL || b->loc->shlib_disabled)
8474 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "addr", "<PENDING>");
8475 else
8476 ui_out_field_core_addr (uiout, "addr",
8477 b->loc->gdbarch, b->loc->address);
8478 }
8479 annotate_field (5);
8480 if (b->loc)
8481 *last_loc = b->loc;
8482 if (strstr (b->addr_string, "throw") != NULL)
8483 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", "exception throw");
8484 else
8485 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", "exception catch");
8486 }
8487
8488 static void
8489 print_mention_exception_catchpoint (struct breakpoint *b)
8490 {
8491 int bp_temp;
8492 int bp_throw;
8493
8494 bp_temp = b->disposition == disp_del;
8495 bp_throw = strstr (b->addr_string, "throw") != NULL;
8496 ui_out_text (uiout, bp_temp ? _("Temporary catchpoint ")
8497 : _("Catchpoint "));
8498 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "bkptno", b->number);
8499 ui_out_text (uiout, bp_throw ? _(" (throw)")
8500 : _(" (catch)"));
8501 }
8502
8503 /* Implement the "print_recreate" breakpoint_ops method for throw and
8504 catch catchpoints. */
8505
8506 static void
8507 print_recreate_exception_catchpoint (struct breakpoint *b, struct ui_file *fp)
8508 {
8509 int bp_temp;
8510 int bp_throw;
8511
8512 bp_temp = b->disposition == disp_del;
8513 bp_throw = strstr (b->addr_string, "throw") != NULL;
8514 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, bp_temp ? "tcatch " : "catch ");
8515 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, bp_throw ? "throw" : "catch");
8516 }
8517
8518 static struct breakpoint_ops gnu_v3_exception_catchpoint_ops = {
8519 NULL, /* insert */
8520 NULL, /* remove */
8521 NULL, /* breakpoint_hit */
8522 print_exception_catchpoint,
8523 print_one_exception_catchpoint,
8524 print_mention_exception_catchpoint,
8525 print_recreate_exception_catchpoint
8526 };
8527
8528 static int
8529 handle_gnu_v3_exceptions (int tempflag, char *cond_string,
8530 enum exception_event_kind ex_event, int from_tty)
8531 {
8532 char *trigger_func_name;
8533
8534 if (ex_event == EX_EVENT_CATCH)
8535 trigger_func_name = "__cxa_begin_catch";
8536 else
8537 trigger_func_name = "__cxa_throw";
8538
8539 create_breakpoint (get_current_arch (),
8540 trigger_func_name, cond_string, -1,
8541 0 /* condition and thread are valid. */,
8542 tempflag, 0, 0,
8543 0,
8544 AUTO_BOOLEAN_TRUE /* pending */,
8545 &gnu_v3_exception_catchpoint_ops, from_tty,
8546 1 /* enabled */);
8547
8548 return 1;
8549 }
8550
8551 /* Deal with "catch catch" and "catch throw" commands */
8552
8553 static void
8554 catch_exception_command_1 (enum exception_event_kind ex_event, char *arg,
8555 int tempflag, int from_tty)
8556 {
8557 char *cond_string = NULL;
8558
8559 if (!arg)
8560 arg = "";
8561 ep_skip_leading_whitespace (&arg);
8562
8563 cond_string = ep_parse_optional_if_clause (&arg);
8564
8565 if ((*arg != '\0') && !isspace (*arg))
8566 error (_("Junk at end of arguments."));
8567
8568 if (ex_event != EX_EVENT_THROW
8569 && ex_event != EX_EVENT_CATCH)
8570 error (_("Unsupported or unknown exception event; cannot catch it"));
8571
8572 if (handle_gnu_v3_exceptions (tempflag, cond_string, ex_event, from_tty))
8573 return;
8574
8575 warning (_("Unsupported with this platform/compiler combination."));
8576 }
8577
8578 /* Implementation of "catch catch" command. */
8579
8580 static void
8581 catch_catch_command (char *arg, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *command)
8582 {
8583 int tempflag = get_cmd_context (command) == CATCH_TEMPORARY;
8584
8585 catch_exception_command_1 (EX_EVENT_CATCH, arg, tempflag, from_tty);
8586 }
8587
8588 /* Implementation of "catch throw" command. */
8589
8590 static void
8591 catch_throw_command (char *arg, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *command)
8592 {
8593 int tempflag = get_cmd_context (command) == CATCH_TEMPORARY;
8594
8595 catch_exception_command_1 (EX_EVENT_THROW, arg, tempflag, from_tty);
8596 }
8597
8598 /* Create a breakpoint struct for Ada exception catchpoints. */
8599
8600 static void
8601 create_ada_exception_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
8602 struct symtab_and_line sal,
8603 char *addr_string,
8604 char *exp_string,
8605 char *cond_string,
8606 struct expression *cond,
8607 struct breakpoint_ops *ops,
8608 int tempflag,
8609 int from_tty)
8610 {
8611 struct breakpoint *b;
8612
8613 if (from_tty)
8614 {
8615 struct gdbarch *loc_gdbarch = get_sal_arch (sal);
8616 if (!loc_gdbarch)
8617 loc_gdbarch = gdbarch;
8618
8619 describe_other_breakpoints (loc_gdbarch,
8620 sal.pspace, sal.pc, sal.section, -1);
8621 /* FIXME: brobecker/2006-12-28: Actually, re-implement a special
8622 version for exception catchpoints, because two catchpoints
8623 used for different exception names will use the same address.
8624 In this case, a "breakpoint ... also set at..." warning is
8625 unproductive. Besides. the warning phrasing is also a bit
8626 inapropriate, we should use the word catchpoint, and tell
8627 the user what type of catchpoint it is. The above is good
8628 enough for now, though. */
8629 }
8630
8631 b = set_raw_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, bp_breakpoint);
8632 set_breakpoint_count (breakpoint_count + 1);
8633
8634 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
8635 b->disposition = tempflag ? disp_del : disp_donttouch;
8636 b->number = breakpoint_count;
8637 b->ignore_count = 0;
8638 b->loc->cond = cond;
8639 b->addr_string = addr_string;
8640 b->language = language_ada;
8641 b->cond_string = cond_string;
8642 b->exp_string = exp_string;
8643 b->thread = -1;
8644 b->ops = ops;
8645
8646 mention (b);
8647 update_global_location_list (1);
8648 }
8649
8650 /* Implement the "catch exception" command. */
8651
8652 static void
8653 catch_ada_exception_command (char *arg, int from_tty,
8654 struct cmd_list_element *command)
8655 {
8656 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_current_arch ();
8657 int tempflag;
8658 struct symtab_and_line sal;
8659 char *addr_string = NULL;
8660 char *exp_string = NULL;
8661 char *cond_string = NULL;
8662 struct expression *cond = NULL;
8663 struct breakpoint_ops *ops = NULL;
8664
8665 tempflag = get_cmd_context (command) == CATCH_TEMPORARY;
8666
8667 if (!arg)
8668 arg = "";
8669 sal = ada_decode_exception_location (arg, &addr_string, &exp_string,
8670 &cond_string, &cond, &ops);
8671 create_ada_exception_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, addr_string, exp_string,
8672 cond_string, cond, ops, tempflag,
8673 from_tty);
8674 }
8675
8676 /* Cleanup function for a syscall filter list. */
8677 static void
8678 clean_up_filters (void *arg)
8679 {
8680 VEC(int) *iter = *(VEC(int) **) arg;
8681 VEC_free (int, iter);
8682 }
8683
8684 /* Splits the argument using space as delimiter. Returns an xmalloc'd
8685 filter list, or NULL if no filtering is required. */
8686 static VEC(int) *
8687 catch_syscall_split_args (char *arg)
8688 {
8689 VEC(int) *result = NULL;
8690 struct cleanup *cleanup = make_cleanup (clean_up_filters, &result);
8691
8692 while (*arg != '\0')
8693 {
8694 int i, syscall_number;
8695 char *endptr;
8696 char cur_name[128];
8697 struct syscall s;
8698
8699 /* Skip whitespace. */
8700 while (isspace (*arg))
8701 arg++;
8702
8703 for (i = 0; i < 127 && arg[i] && !isspace (arg[i]); ++i)
8704 cur_name[i] = arg[i];
8705 cur_name[i] = '\0';
8706 arg += i;
8707
8708 /* Check if the user provided a syscall name or a number. */
8709 syscall_number = (int) strtol (cur_name, &endptr, 0);
8710 if (*endptr == '\0')
8711 get_syscall_by_number (syscall_number, &s);
8712 else
8713 {
8714 /* We have a name. Let's check if it's valid and convert it
8715 to a number. */
8716 get_syscall_by_name (cur_name, &s);
8717
8718 if (s.number == UNKNOWN_SYSCALL)
8719 /* Here we have to issue an error instead of a warning, because
8720 GDB cannot do anything useful if there's no syscall number to
8721 be caught. */
8722 error (_("Unknown syscall name '%s'."), cur_name);
8723 }
8724
8725 /* Ok, it's valid. */
8726 VEC_safe_push (int, result, s.number);
8727 }
8728
8729 discard_cleanups (cleanup);
8730 return result;
8731 }
8732
8733 /* Implement the "catch syscall" command. */
8734
8735 static void
8736 catch_syscall_command_1 (char *arg, int from_tty,
8737 struct cmd_list_element *command)
8738 {
8739 int tempflag;
8740 VEC(int) *filter;
8741 struct syscall s;
8742 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_current_arch ();
8743
8744 /* Checking if the feature if supported. */
8745 if (gdbarch_get_syscall_number_p (gdbarch) == 0)
8746 error (_("The feature 'catch syscall' is not supported on \
8747 this architeture yet."));
8748
8749 tempflag = get_cmd_context (command) == CATCH_TEMPORARY;
8750
8751 ep_skip_leading_whitespace (&arg);
8752
8753 /* We need to do this first "dummy" translation in order
8754 to get the syscall XML file loaded or, most important,
8755 to display a warning to the user if there's no XML file
8756 for his/her architecture. */
8757 get_syscall_by_number (0, &s);
8758
8759 /* The allowed syntax is:
8760 catch syscall
8761 catch syscall <name | number> [<name | number> ... <name | number>]
8762
8763 Let's check if there's a syscall name. */
8764
8765 if (arg != NULL)
8766 filter = catch_syscall_split_args (arg);
8767 else
8768 filter = NULL;
8769
8770 create_syscall_event_catchpoint (tempflag, filter,
8771 &catch_syscall_breakpoint_ops);
8772 }
8773
8774 /* Implement the "catch assert" command. */
8775
8776 static void
8777 catch_assert_command (char *arg, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *command)
8778 {
8779 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_current_arch ();
8780 int tempflag;
8781 struct symtab_and_line sal;
8782 char *addr_string = NULL;
8783 struct breakpoint_ops *ops = NULL;
8784
8785 tempflag = get_cmd_context (command) == CATCH_TEMPORARY;
8786
8787 if (!arg)
8788 arg = "";
8789 sal = ada_decode_assert_location (arg, &addr_string, &ops);
8790 create_ada_exception_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, addr_string, NULL, NULL, NULL,
8791 ops, tempflag, from_tty);
8792 }
8793
8794 static void
8795 catch_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
8796 {
8797 error (_("Catch requires an event name."));
8798 }
8799 \f
8800
8801 static void
8802 tcatch_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
8803 {
8804 error (_("Catch requires an event name."));
8805 }
8806
8807 /* Delete breakpoints by address or line. */
8808
8809 static void
8810 clear_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
8811 {
8812 struct breakpoint *b;
8813 VEC(breakpoint_p) *found = 0;
8814 int ix;
8815 int default_match;
8816 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
8817 struct symtab_and_line sal;
8818 int i;
8819
8820 if (arg)
8821 {
8822 sals = decode_line_spec (arg, 1);
8823 default_match = 0;
8824 }
8825 else
8826 {
8827 sals.sals = (struct symtab_and_line *)
8828 xmalloc (sizeof (struct symtab_and_line));
8829 make_cleanup (xfree, sals.sals);
8830 init_sal (&sal); /* initialize to zeroes */
8831 sal.line = default_breakpoint_line;
8832 sal.symtab = default_breakpoint_symtab;
8833 sal.pc = default_breakpoint_address;
8834 sal.pspace = default_breakpoint_pspace;
8835 if (sal.symtab == 0)
8836 error (_("No source file specified."));
8837
8838 sals.sals[0] = sal;
8839 sals.nelts = 1;
8840
8841 default_match = 1;
8842 }
8843
8844 /* We don't call resolve_sal_pc here. That's not
8845 as bad as it seems, because all existing breakpoints
8846 typically have both file/line and pc set. So, if
8847 clear is given file/line, we can match this to existing
8848 breakpoint without obtaining pc at all.
8849
8850 We only support clearing given the address explicitly
8851 present in breakpoint table. Say, we've set breakpoint
8852 at file:line. There were several PC values for that file:line,
8853 due to optimization, all in one block.
8854 We've picked one PC value. If "clear" is issued with another
8855 PC corresponding to the same file:line, the breakpoint won't
8856 be cleared. We probably can still clear the breakpoint, but
8857 since the other PC value is never presented to user, user
8858 can only find it by guessing, and it does not seem important
8859 to support that. */
8860
8861 /* For each line spec given, delete bps which correspond
8862 to it. Do it in two passes, solely to preserve the current
8863 behavior that from_tty is forced true if we delete more than
8864 one breakpoint. */
8865
8866 found = NULL;
8867 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; i++)
8868 {
8869 /* If exact pc given, clear bpts at that pc.
8870 If line given (pc == 0), clear all bpts on specified line.
8871 If defaulting, clear all bpts on default line
8872 or at default pc.
8873
8874 defaulting sal.pc != 0 tests to do
8875
8876 0 1 pc
8877 1 1 pc _and_ line
8878 0 0 line
8879 1 0 <can't happen> */
8880
8881 sal = sals.sals[i];
8882
8883 /* Find all matching breakpoints and add them to
8884 'found'. */
8885 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
8886 {
8887 int match = 0;
8888 /* Are we going to delete b? */
8889 if (b->type != bp_none && !is_watchpoint (b))
8890 {
8891 struct bp_location *loc = b->loc;
8892 for (; loc; loc = loc->next)
8893 {
8894 int pc_match = sal.pc
8895 && (loc->pspace == sal.pspace)
8896 && (loc->address == sal.pc)
8897 && (!section_is_overlay (loc->section)
8898 || loc->section == sal.section);
8899 int line_match = ((default_match || (0 == sal.pc))
8900 && b->source_file != NULL
8901 && sal.symtab != NULL
8902 && sal.pspace == loc->pspace
8903 && strcmp (b->source_file, sal.symtab->filename) == 0
8904 && b->line_number == sal.line);
8905 if (pc_match || line_match)
8906 {
8907 match = 1;
8908 break;
8909 }
8910 }
8911 }
8912
8913 if (match)
8914 VEC_safe_push(breakpoint_p, found, b);
8915 }
8916 }
8917 /* Now go thru the 'found' chain and delete them. */
8918 if (VEC_empty(breakpoint_p, found))
8919 {
8920 if (arg)
8921 error (_("No breakpoint at %s."), arg);
8922 else
8923 error (_("No breakpoint at this line."));
8924 }
8925
8926 if (VEC_length(breakpoint_p, found) > 1)
8927 from_tty = 1; /* Always report if deleted more than one */
8928 if (from_tty)
8929 {
8930 if (VEC_length(breakpoint_p, found) == 1)
8931 printf_unfiltered (_("Deleted breakpoint "));
8932 else
8933 printf_unfiltered (_("Deleted breakpoints "));
8934 }
8935 breakpoints_changed ();
8936
8937 for (ix = 0; VEC_iterate(breakpoint_p, found, ix, b); ix++)
8938 {
8939 if (from_tty)
8940 printf_unfiltered ("%d ", b->number);
8941 delete_breakpoint (b);
8942 }
8943 if (from_tty)
8944 putchar_unfiltered ('\n');
8945 }
8946 \f
8947 /* Delete breakpoint in BS if they are `delete' breakpoints and
8948 all breakpoints that are marked for deletion, whether hit or not.
8949 This is called after any breakpoint is hit, or after errors. */
8950
8951 void
8952 breakpoint_auto_delete (bpstat bs)
8953 {
8954 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
8955
8956 for (; bs; bs = bs->next)
8957 if (bs->breakpoint_at
8958 && bs->breakpoint_at->owner
8959 && bs->breakpoint_at->owner->disposition == disp_del
8960 && bs->stop)
8961 delete_breakpoint (bs->breakpoint_at->owner);
8962
8963 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
8964 {
8965 if (b->disposition == disp_del_at_next_stop)
8966 delete_breakpoint (b);
8967 }
8968 }
8969
8970 /* A comparison function for bp_location AP and BP being interfaced to qsort.
8971 Sort elements primarily by their ADDRESS (no matter what does
8972 breakpoint_address_is_meaningful say for its OWNER), secondarily by ordering
8973 first bp_permanent OWNERed elements and terciarily just ensuring the array
8974 is sorted stable way despite qsort being an instable algorithm. */
8975
8976 static int
8977 bp_location_compare (const void *ap, const void *bp)
8978 {
8979 struct bp_location *a = *(void **) ap;
8980 struct bp_location *b = *(void **) bp;
8981 /* A and B come from existing breakpoints having non-NULL OWNER. */
8982 int a_perm = a->owner->enable_state == bp_permanent;
8983 int b_perm = b->owner->enable_state == bp_permanent;
8984
8985 if (a->address != b->address)
8986 return (a->address > b->address) - (a->address < b->address);
8987
8988 /* Sort permanent breakpoints first. */
8989 if (a_perm != b_perm)
8990 return (a_perm < b_perm) - (a_perm > b_perm);
8991
8992 /* Make the user-visible order stable across GDB runs. Locations of the same
8993 breakpoint can be sorted in arbitrary order. */
8994
8995 if (a->owner->number != b->owner->number)
8996 return (a->owner->number > b->owner->number)
8997 - (a->owner->number < b->owner->number);
8998
8999 return (a > b) - (a < b);
9000 }
9001
9002 /* Set bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max and
9003 bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max according to the current content of
9004 the bp_location array. */
9005
9006 static void
9007 bp_location_target_extensions_update (void)
9008 {
9009 struct bp_location *bl, **blp_tmp;
9010
9011 bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max = 0;
9012 bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max = 0;
9013
9014 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bl, blp_tmp)
9015 {
9016 CORE_ADDR start, end, addr;
9017
9018 if (!bp_location_has_shadow (bl))
9019 continue;
9020
9021 start = bl->target_info.placed_address;
9022 end = start + bl->target_info.shadow_len;
9023
9024 gdb_assert (bl->address >= start);
9025 addr = bl->address - start;
9026 if (addr > bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max)
9027 bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max = addr;
9028
9029 /* Zero SHADOW_LEN would not pass bp_location_has_shadow. */
9030
9031 gdb_assert (bl->address < end);
9032 addr = end - bl->address;
9033 if (addr > bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max)
9034 bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max = addr;
9035 }
9036 }
9037
9038 /* If SHOULD_INSERT is false, do not insert any breakpoint locations
9039 into the inferior, only remove already-inserted locations that no
9040 longer should be inserted. Functions that delete a breakpoint or
9041 breakpoints should pass false, so that deleting a breakpoint
9042 doesn't have the side effect of inserting the locations of other
9043 breakpoints that are marked not-inserted, but should_be_inserted
9044 returns true on them.
9045
9046 This behaviour is useful is situations close to tear-down -- e.g.,
9047 after an exec, while the target still has execution, but breakpoint
9048 shadows of the previous executable image should *NOT* be restored
9049 to the new image; or before detaching, where the target still has
9050 execution and wants to delete breakpoints from GDB's lists, and all
9051 breakpoints had already been removed from the inferior. */
9052
9053 static void
9054 update_global_location_list (int should_insert)
9055 {
9056 struct breakpoint *b;
9057 struct bp_location **locp, *loc;
9058 struct cleanup *cleanups;
9059
9060 /* Used in the duplicates detection below. When iterating over all
9061 bp_locations, points to the first bp_location of a given address.
9062 Breakpoints and watchpoints of different types are never
9063 duplicates of each other. Keep one pointer for each type of
9064 breakpoint/watchpoint, so we only need to loop over all locations
9065 once. */
9066 struct bp_location *bp_loc_first; /* breakpoint */
9067 struct bp_location *wp_loc_first; /* hardware watchpoint */
9068 struct bp_location *awp_loc_first; /* access watchpoint */
9069 struct bp_location *rwp_loc_first; /* read watchpoint */
9070
9071 /* Saved former bp_location array which we compare against the newly built
9072 bp_location from the current state of ALL_BREAKPOINTS. */
9073 struct bp_location **old_location, **old_locp;
9074 unsigned old_location_count;
9075
9076 old_location = bp_location;
9077 old_location_count = bp_location_count;
9078 bp_location = NULL;
9079 bp_location_count = 0;
9080 cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, old_location);
9081
9082 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
9083 for (loc = b->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
9084 bp_location_count++;
9085
9086 bp_location = xmalloc (sizeof (*bp_location) * bp_location_count);
9087 locp = bp_location;
9088 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
9089 for (loc = b->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
9090 *locp++ = loc;
9091 qsort (bp_location, bp_location_count, sizeof (*bp_location),
9092 bp_location_compare);
9093
9094 bp_location_target_extensions_update ();
9095
9096 /* Identify bp_location instances that are no longer present in the new
9097 list, and therefore should be freed. Note that it's not necessary that
9098 those locations should be removed from inferior -- if there's another
9099 location at the same address (previously marked as duplicate),
9100 we don't need to remove/insert the location.
9101
9102 LOCP is kept in sync with OLD_LOCP, each pointing to the current and
9103 former bp_location array state respectively. */
9104
9105 locp = bp_location;
9106 for (old_locp = old_location; old_locp < old_location + old_location_count;
9107 old_locp++)
9108 {
9109 struct bp_location *old_loc = *old_locp;
9110 struct bp_location **loc2p;
9111
9112 /* Tells if 'old_loc' is found amoung the new locations. If not, we
9113 have to free it. */
9114 int found_object = 0;
9115 /* Tells if the location should remain inserted in the target. */
9116 int keep_in_target = 0;
9117 int removed = 0;
9118
9119 /* Skip LOCP entries which will definitely never be needed. Stop either
9120 at or being the one matching OLD_LOC. */
9121 while (locp < bp_location + bp_location_count
9122 && (*locp)->address < old_loc->address)
9123 locp++;
9124
9125 for (loc2p = locp;
9126 (loc2p < bp_location + bp_location_count
9127 && (*loc2p)->address == old_loc->address);
9128 loc2p++)
9129 {
9130 if (*loc2p == old_loc)
9131 {
9132 found_object = 1;
9133 break;
9134 }
9135 }
9136
9137 /* If this location is no longer present, and inserted, look if there's
9138 maybe a new location at the same address. If so, mark that one
9139 inserted, and don't remove this one. This is needed so that we
9140 don't have a time window where a breakpoint at certain location is not
9141 inserted. */
9142
9143 if (old_loc->inserted)
9144 {
9145 /* If the location is inserted now, we might have to remove it. */
9146
9147 if (found_object && should_be_inserted (old_loc))
9148 {
9149 /* The location is still present in the location list, and still
9150 should be inserted. Don't do anything. */
9151 keep_in_target = 1;
9152 }
9153 else
9154 {
9155 /* The location is either no longer present, or got disabled.
9156 See if there's another location at the same address, in which
9157 case we don't need to remove this one from the target. */
9158
9159 /* OLD_LOC comes from existing struct breakpoint. */
9160 if (breakpoint_address_is_meaningful (old_loc->owner))
9161 {
9162 for (loc2p = locp;
9163 (loc2p < bp_location + bp_location_count
9164 && (*loc2p)->address == old_loc->address);
9165 loc2p++)
9166 {
9167 struct bp_location *loc2 = *loc2p;
9168
9169 if (breakpoint_locations_match (loc2, old_loc))
9170 {
9171 /* For the sake of should_be_inserted.
9172 Duplicates check below will fix up this later. */
9173 loc2->duplicate = 0;
9174
9175 /* Read watchpoint locations are switched to
9176 access watchpoints, if the former are not
9177 supported, but the latter are. */
9178 if (is_hardware_watchpoint (old_loc->owner))
9179 {
9180 gdb_assert (is_hardware_watchpoint (loc2->owner));
9181 loc2->watchpoint_type = old_loc->watchpoint_type;
9182 }
9183
9184 if (loc2 != old_loc && should_be_inserted (loc2))
9185 {
9186 loc2->inserted = 1;
9187 loc2->target_info = old_loc->target_info;
9188 keep_in_target = 1;
9189 break;
9190 }
9191 }
9192 }
9193 }
9194 }
9195
9196 if (!keep_in_target)
9197 {
9198 if (remove_breakpoint (old_loc, mark_uninserted))
9199 {
9200 /* This is just about all we can do. We could keep this
9201 location on the global list, and try to remove it next
9202 time, but there's no particular reason why we will
9203 succeed next time.
9204
9205 Note that at this point, old_loc->owner is still valid,
9206 as delete_breakpoint frees the breakpoint only
9207 after calling us. */
9208 printf_filtered (_("warning: Error removing breakpoint %d\n"),
9209 old_loc->owner->number);
9210 }
9211 removed = 1;
9212 }
9213 }
9214
9215 if (!found_object)
9216 {
9217 if (removed && non_stop
9218 && breakpoint_address_is_meaningful (old_loc->owner)
9219 && !is_hardware_watchpoint (old_loc->owner))
9220 {
9221 /* This location was removed from the target. In
9222 non-stop mode, a race condition is possible where
9223 we've removed a breakpoint, but stop events for that
9224 breakpoint are already queued and will arrive later.
9225 We apply an heuristic to be able to distinguish such
9226 SIGTRAPs from other random SIGTRAPs: we keep this
9227 breakpoint location for a bit, and will retire it
9228 after we see some number of events. The theory here
9229 is that reporting of events should, "on the average",
9230 be fair, so after a while we'll see events from all
9231 threads that have anything of interest, and no longer
9232 need to keep this breakpoint location around. We
9233 don't hold locations forever so to reduce chances of
9234 mistaking a non-breakpoint SIGTRAP for a breakpoint
9235 SIGTRAP.
9236
9237 The heuristic failing can be disastrous on
9238 decr_pc_after_break targets.
9239
9240 On decr_pc_after_break targets, like e.g., x86-linux,
9241 if we fail to recognize a late breakpoint SIGTRAP,
9242 because events_till_retirement has reached 0 too
9243 soon, we'll fail to do the PC adjustment, and report
9244 a random SIGTRAP to the user. When the user resumes
9245 the inferior, it will most likely immediately crash
9246 with SIGILL/SIGBUS/SIGSEGV, or worse, get silently
9247 corrupted, because of being resumed e.g., in the
9248 middle of a multi-byte instruction, or skipped a
9249 one-byte instruction. This was actually seen happen
9250 on native x86-linux, and should be less rare on
9251 targets that do not support new thread events, like
9252 remote, due to the heuristic depending on
9253 thread_count.
9254
9255 Mistaking a random SIGTRAP for a breakpoint trap
9256 causes similar symptoms (PC adjustment applied when
9257 it shouldn't), but then again, playing with SIGTRAPs
9258 behind the debugger's back is asking for trouble.
9259
9260 Since hardware watchpoint traps are always
9261 distinguishable from other traps, so we don't need to
9262 apply keep hardware watchpoint moribund locations
9263 around. We simply always ignore hardware watchpoint
9264 traps we can no longer explain. */
9265
9266 old_loc->events_till_retirement = 3 * (thread_count () + 1);
9267 old_loc->owner = NULL;
9268
9269 VEC_safe_push (bp_location_p, moribund_locations, old_loc);
9270 }
9271 else
9272 free_bp_location (old_loc);
9273 }
9274 }
9275
9276 /* Rescan breakpoints at the same address and section, marking the
9277 first one as "first" and any others as "duplicates". This is so
9278 that the bpt instruction is only inserted once. If we have a
9279 permanent breakpoint at the same place as BPT, make that one the
9280 official one, and the rest as duplicates. Permanent breakpoints
9281 are sorted first for the same address.
9282
9283 Do the same for hardware watchpoints, but also considering the
9284 watchpoint's type (regular/access/read) and length. */
9285
9286 bp_loc_first = NULL;
9287 wp_loc_first = NULL;
9288 awp_loc_first = NULL;
9289 rwp_loc_first = NULL;
9290 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (loc, locp)
9291 {
9292 /* ALL_BP_LOCATIONS bp_location has LOC->OWNER always non-NULL. */
9293 struct breakpoint *b = loc->owner;
9294 struct bp_location **loc_first_p;
9295
9296 if (b->enable_state == bp_disabled
9297 || b->enable_state == bp_call_disabled
9298 || b->enable_state == bp_startup_disabled
9299 || !loc->enabled
9300 || loc->shlib_disabled
9301 || !breakpoint_address_is_meaningful (b)
9302 || is_tracepoint (b))
9303 continue;
9304
9305 /* Permanent breakpoint should always be inserted. */
9306 if (b->enable_state == bp_permanent && ! loc->inserted)
9307 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
9308 _("allegedly permanent breakpoint is not "
9309 "actually inserted"));
9310
9311 if (b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint)
9312 loc_first_p = &wp_loc_first;
9313 else if (b->type == bp_read_watchpoint)
9314 loc_first_p = &rwp_loc_first;
9315 else if (b->type == bp_access_watchpoint)
9316 loc_first_p = &awp_loc_first;
9317 else
9318 loc_first_p = &bp_loc_first;
9319
9320 if (*loc_first_p == NULL
9321 || (overlay_debugging && loc->section != (*loc_first_p)->section)
9322 || !breakpoint_locations_match (loc, *loc_first_p))
9323 {
9324 *loc_first_p = loc;
9325 loc->duplicate = 0;
9326 continue;
9327 }
9328
9329 loc->duplicate = 1;
9330
9331 if ((*loc_first_p)->owner->enable_state == bp_permanent && loc->inserted
9332 && b->enable_state != bp_permanent)
9333 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
9334 _("another breakpoint was inserted on top of "
9335 "a permanent breakpoint"));
9336 }
9337
9338 if (breakpoints_always_inserted_mode () && should_insert
9339 && (have_live_inferiors ()
9340 || (gdbarch_has_global_breakpoints (target_gdbarch))))
9341 insert_breakpoint_locations ();
9342
9343 do_cleanups (cleanups);
9344 }
9345
9346 void
9347 breakpoint_retire_moribund (void)
9348 {
9349 struct bp_location *loc;
9350 int ix;
9351
9352 for (ix = 0; VEC_iterate (bp_location_p, moribund_locations, ix, loc); ++ix)
9353 if (--(loc->events_till_retirement) == 0)
9354 {
9355 free_bp_location (loc);
9356 VEC_unordered_remove (bp_location_p, moribund_locations, ix);
9357 --ix;
9358 }
9359 }
9360
9361 static void
9362 update_global_location_list_nothrow (int inserting)
9363 {
9364 struct gdb_exception e;
9365
9366 TRY_CATCH (e, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
9367 update_global_location_list (inserting);
9368 }
9369
9370 /* Clear LOC from a BPS. */
9371 static void
9372 bpstat_remove_bp_location (bpstat bps, struct bp_location *loc)
9373 {
9374 bpstat bs;
9375
9376 for (bs = bps; bs; bs = bs->next)
9377 if (bs->breakpoint_at == loc)
9378 {
9379 bs->breakpoint_at = NULL;
9380 bs->old_val = NULL;
9381 /* bs->commands will be freed later. */
9382 }
9383 }
9384
9385 /* Callback for iterate_over_threads. */
9386 static int
9387 bpstat_remove_bp_location_callback (struct thread_info *th, void *data)
9388 {
9389 struct bp_location *loc = data;
9390
9391 bpstat_remove_bp_location (th->stop_bpstat, loc);
9392 return 0;
9393 }
9394
9395 /* Delete a breakpoint and clean up all traces of it in the data
9396 structures. */
9397
9398 void
9399 delete_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *bpt)
9400 {
9401 struct breakpoint *b;
9402
9403 gdb_assert (bpt != NULL);
9404
9405 /* Has this bp already been deleted? This can happen because multiple
9406 lists can hold pointers to bp's. bpstat lists are especial culprits.
9407
9408 One example of this happening is a watchpoint's scope bp. When the
9409 scope bp triggers, we notice that the watchpoint is out of scope, and
9410 delete it. We also delete its scope bp. But the scope bp is marked
9411 "auto-deleting", and is already on a bpstat. That bpstat is then
9412 checked for auto-deleting bp's, which are deleted.
9413
9414 A real solution to this problem might involve reference counts in bp's,
9415 and/or giving them pointers back to their referencing bpstat's, and
9416 teaching delete_breakpoint to only free a bp's storage when no more
9417 references were extent. A cheaper bandaid was chosen. */
9418 if (bpt->type == bp_none)
9419 return;
9420
9421 /* At least avoid this stale reference until the reference counting of
9422 breakpoints gets resolved. */
9423 if (bpt->related_breakpoint != NULL)
9424 {
9425 gdb_assert (bpt->related_breakpoint->related_breakpoint == bpt);
9426 bpt->related_breakpoint->disposition = disp_del_at_next_stop;
9427 bpt->related_breakpoint->related_breakpoint = NULL;
9428 bpt->related_breakpoint = NULL;
9429 }
9430
9431 observer_notify_breakpoint_deleted (bpt->number);
9432
9433 if (breakpoint_chain == bpt)
9434 breakpoint_chain = bpt->next;
9435
9436 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
9437 if (b->next == bpt)
9438 {
9439 b->next = bpt->next;
9440 break;
9441 }
9442
9443 decref_counted_command_line (&bpt->commands);
9444 xfree (bpt->cond_string);
9445 xfree (bpt->cond_exp);
9446 xfree (bpt->addr_string);
9447 xfree (bpt->exp);
9448 xfree (bpt->exp_string);
9449 value_free (bpt->val);
9450 xfree (bpt->source_file);
9451 xfree (bpt->exec_pathname);
9452 clean_up_filters (&bpt->syscalls_to_be_caught);
9453
9454 /* Now that breakpoint is removed from breakpoint
9455 list, update the global location list. This
9456 will remove locations that used to belong to
9457 this breakpoint. Do this before freeing
9458 the breakpoint itself, since remove_breakpoint
9459 looks at location's owner. It might be better
9460 design to have location completely self-contained,
9461 but it's not the case now. */
9462 update_global_location_list (0);
9463
9464
9465 /* On the chance that someone will soon try again to delete this same
9466 bp, we mark it as deleted before freeing its storage. */
9467 bpt->type = bp_none;
9468
9469 xfree (bpt);
9470 }
9471
9472 static void
9473 do_delete_breakpoint_cleanup (void *b)
9474 {
9475 delete_breakpoint (b);
9476 }
9477
9478 struct cleanup *
9479 make_cleanup_delete_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *b)
9480 {
9481 return make_cleanup (do_delete_breakpoint_cleanup, b);
9482 }
9483
9484 /* A callback for map_breakpoint_numbers that calls
9485 delete_breakpoint. */
9486
9487 static void
9488 do_delete_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *b, void *ignore)
9489 {
9490 delete_breakpoint (b);
9491 }
9492
9493 void
9494 delete_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
9495 {
9496 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
9497
9498 dont_repeat ();
9499
9500 if (arg == 0)
9501 {
9502 int breaks_to_delete = 0;
9503
9504 /* Delete all breakpoints if no argument.
9505 Do not delete internal or call-dummy breakpoints, these
9506 have to be deleted with an explicit breakpoint number argument. */
9507 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
9508 {
9509 if (b->type != bp_call_dummy
9510 && b->type != bp_std_terminate
9511 && b->type != bp_shlib_event
9512 && b->type != bp_jit_event
9513 && b->type != bp_thread_event
9514 && b->type != bp_overlay_event
9515 && b->type != bp_longjmp_master
9516 && b->type != bp_std_terminate_master
9517 && b->number >= 0)
9518 {
9519 breaks_to_delete = 1;
9520 break;
9521 }
9522 }
9523
9524 /* Ask user only if there are some breakpoints to delete. */
9525 if (!from_tty
9526 || (breaks_to_delete && query (_("Delete all breakpoints? "))))
9527 {
9528 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
9529 {
9530 if (b->type != bp_call_dummy
9531 && b->type != bp_std_terminate
9532 && b->type != bp_shlib_event
9533 && b->type != bp_thread_event
9534 && b->type != bp_jit_event
9535 && b->type != bp_overlay_event
9536 && b->type != bp_longjmp_master
9537 && b->type != bp_std_terminate_master
9538 && b->number >= 0)
9539 delete_breakpoint (b);
9540 }
9541 }
9542 }
9543 else
9544 map_breakpoint_numbers (arg, do_delete_breakpoint, NULL);
9545 }
9546
9547 static int
9548 all_locations_are_pending (struct bp_location *loc)
9549 {
9550 for (; loc; loc = loc->next)
9551 if (!loc->shlib_disabled)
9552 return 0;
9553 return 1;
9554 }
9555
9556 /* Subroutine of update_breakpoint_locations to simplify it.
9557 Return non-zero if multiple fns in list LOC have the same name.
9558 Null names are ignored. */
9559
9560 static int
9561 ambiguous_names_p (struct bp_location *loc)
9562 {
9563 struct bp_location *l;
9564 htab_t htab = htab_create_alloc (13, htab_hash_string,
9565 (int (*) (const void *,
9566 const void *)) streq,
9567 NULL, xcalloc, xfree);
9568
9569 for (l = loc; l != NULL; l = l->next)
9570 {
9571 const char **slot;
9572 const char *name = l->function_name;
9573
9574 /* Allow for some names to be NULL, ignore them. */
9575 if (name == NULL)
9576 continue;
9577
9578 slot = (const char **) htab_find_slot (htab, (const void *) name,
9579 INSERT);
9580 /* NOTE: We can assume slot != NULL here because xcalloc never returns
9581 NULL. */
9582 if (*slot != NULL)
9583 {
9584 htab_delete (htab);
9585 return 1;
9586 }
9587 *slot = name;
9588 }
9589
9590 htab_delete (htab);
9591 return 0;
9592 }
9593
9594 static void
9595 update_breakpoint_locations (struct breakpoint *b,
9596 struct symtabs_and_lines sals)
9597 {
9598 int i;
9599 char *s;
9600 struct bp_location *existing_locations = b->loc;
9601
9602 /* If there's no new locations, and all existing locations
9603 are pending, don't do anything. This optimizes
9604 the common case where all locations are in the same
9605 shared library, that was unloaded. We'd like to
9606 retain the location, so that when the library
9607 is loaded again, we don't loose the enabled/disabled
9608 status of the individual locations. */
9609 if (all_locations_are_pending (existing_locations) && sals.nelts == 0)
9610 return;
9611
9612 b->loc = NULL;
9613
9614 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; ++i)
9615 {
9616 struct bp_location *new_loc =
9617 add_location_to_breakpoint (b, &(sals.sals[i]));
9618
9619 /* Reparse conditions, they might contain references to the
9620 old symtab. */
9621 if (b->cond_string != NULL)
9622 {
9623 struct gdb_exception e;
9624
9625 s = b->cond_string;
9626 TRY_CATCH (e, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
9627 {
9628 new_loc->cond = parse_exp_1 (&s, block_for_pc (sals.sals[i].pc),
9629 0);
9630 }
9631 if (e.reason < 0)
9632 {
9633 warning (_("failed to reevaluate condition for breakpoint %d: %s"),
9634 b->number, e.message);
9635 new_loc->enabled = 0;
9636 }
9637 }
9638
9639 if (b->source_file != NULL)
9640 xfree (b->source_file);
9641 if (sals.sals[i].symtab == NULL)
9642 b->source_file = NULL;
9643 else
9644 b->source_file = xstrdup (sals.sals[i].symtab->filename);
9645
9646 if (b->line_number == 0)
9647 b->line_number = sals.sals[i].line;
9648 }
9649
9650 /* Update locations of permanent breakpoints. */
9651 if (b->enable_state == bp_permanent)
9652 make_breakpoint_permanent (b);
9653
9654 /* If possible, carry over 'disable' status from existing breakpoints. */
9655 {
9656 struct bp_location *e = existing_locations;
9657 /* If there are multiple breakpoints with the same function name,
9658 e.g. for inline functions, comparing function names won't work.
9659 Instead compare pc addresses; this is just a heuristic as things
9660 may have moved, but in practice it gives the correct answer
9661 often enough until a better solution is found. */
9662 int have_ambiguous_names = ambiguous_names_p (b->loc);
9663
9664 for (; e; e = e->next)
9665 {
9666 if (!e->enabled && e->function_name)
9667 {
9668 struct bp_location *l = b->loc;
9669 if (have_ambiguous_names)
9670 {
9671 for (; l; l = l->next)
9672 if (breakpoint_address_match (e->pspace->aspace, e->address,
9673 l->pspace->aspace, l->address))
9674 {
9675 l->enabled = 0;
9676 break;
9677 }
9678 }
9679 else
9680 {
9681 for (; l; l = l->next)
9682 if (l->function_name
9683 && strcmp (e->function_name, l->function_name) == 0)
9684 {
9685 l->enabled = 0;
9686 break;
9687 }
9688 }
9689 }
9690 }
9691 }
9692
9693 update_global_location_list (1);
9694 }
9695
9696
9697 /* Reset a breakpoint given it's struct breakpoint * BINT.
9698 The value we return ends up being the return value from catch_errors.
9699 Unused in this case. */
9700
9701 static int
9702 breakpoint_re_set_one (void *bint)
9703 {
9704 /* get past catch_errs */
9705 struct breakpoint *b = (struct breakpoint *) bint;
9706 int not_found = 0;
9707 int *not_found_ptr = &not_found;
9708 struct symtabs_and_lines sals = {0};
9709 struct symtabs_and_lines expanded = {0};
9710 char *s;
9711 struct gdb_exception e;
9712 struct cleanup *cleanups = make_cleanup (null_cleanup, NULL);
9713
9714 switch (b->type)
9715 {
9716 case bp_none:
9717 warning (_("attempted to reset apparently deleted breakpoint #%d?"),
9718 b->number);
9719 return 0;
9720 case bp_breakpoint:
9721 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
9722 case bp_tracepoint:
9723 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
9724 /* Do not attempt to re-set breakpoints disabled during startup. */
9725 if (b->enable_state == bp_startup_disabled)
9726 return 0;
9727
9728 if (b->addr_string == NULL)
9729 {
9730 /* Anything without a string can't be re-set. */
9731 delete_breakpoint (b);
9732 return 0;
9733 }
9734
9735 set_language (b->language);
9736 input_radix = b->input_radix;
9737 s = b->addr_string;
9738
9739 save_current_space_and_thread ();
9740 switch_to_program_space_and_thread (b->pspace);
9741
9742 TRY_CATCH (e, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
9743 {
9744 sals = decode_line_1 (&s, 1, (struct symtab *) NULL, 0, (char ***) NULL,
9745 not_found_ptr);
9746 }
9747 if (e.reason < 0)
9748 {
9749 int not_found_and_ok = 0;
9750 /* For pending breakpoints, it's expected that parsing
9751 will fail until the right shared library is loaded.
9752 User has already told to create pending breakpoints and
9753 don't need extra messages. If breakpoint is in bp_shlib_disabled
9754 state, then user already saw the message about that breakpoint
9755 being disabled, and don't want to see more errors. */
9756 if (not_found
9757 && (b->condition_not_parsed
9758 || (b->loc && b->loc->shlib_disabled)
9759 || b->enable_state == bp_disabled))
9760 not_found_and_ok = 1;
9761
9762 if (!not_found_and_ok)
9763 {
9764 /* We surely don't want to warn about the same breakpoint
9765 10 times. One solution, implemented here, is disable
9766 the breakpoint on error. Another solution would be to
9767 have separate 'warning emitted' flag. Since this
9768 happens only when a binary has changed, I don't know
9769 which approach is better. */
9770 b->enable_state = bp_disabled;
9771 throw_exception (e);
9772 }
9773 }
9774
9775 if (!not_found)
9776 {
9777 gdb_assert (sals.nelts == 1);
9778
9779 resolve_sal_pc (&sals.sals[0]);
9780 if (b->condition_not_parsed && s && s[0])
9781 {
9782 char *cond_string = 0;
9783 int thread = -1;
9784 int task = 0;
9785
9786 find_condition_and_thread (s, sals.sals[0].pc,
9787 &cond_string, &thread, &task);
9788 if (cond_string)
9789 b->cond_string = cond_string;
9790 b->thread = thread;
9791 b->task = task;
9792 b->condition_not_parsed = 0;
9793 }
9794
9795 expanded = expand_line_sal_maybe (sals.sals[0]);
9796 }
9797
9798 make_cleanup (xfree, sals.sals);
9799 update_breakpoint_locations (b, expanded);
9800 break;
9801
9802 case bp_watchpoint:
9803 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
9804 case bp_read_watchpoint:
9805 case bp_access_watchpoint:
9806 /* Watchpoint can be either on expression using entirely global variables,
9807 or it can be on local variables.
9808
9809 Watchpoints of the first kind are never auto-deleted, and even persist
9810 across program restarts. Since they can use variables from shared
9811 libraries, we need to reparse expression as libraries are loaded
9812 and unloaded.
9813
9814 Watchpoints on local variables can also change meaning as result
9815 of solib event. For example, if a watchpoint uses both a local and
9816 a global variables in expression, it's a local watchpoint, but
9817 unloading of a shared library will make the expression invalid.
9818 This is not a very common use case, but we still re-evaluate
9819 expression, to avoid surprises to the user.
9820
9821 Note that for local watchpoints, we re-evaluate it only if
9822 watchpoints frame id is still valid. If it's not, it means
9823 the watchpoint is out of scope and will be deleted soon. In fact,
9824 I'm not sure we'll ever be called in this case.
9825
9826 If a local watchpoint's frame id is still valid, then
9827 b->exp_valid_block is likewise valid, and we can safely use it.
9828
9829 Don't do anything about disabled watchpoints, since they will
9830 be reevaluated again when enabled. */
9831 update_watchpoint (b, 1 /* reparse */);
9832 break;
9833 /* We needn't really do anything to reset these, since the mask
9834 that requests them is unaffected by e.g., new libraries being
9835 loaded. */
9836 case bp_catchpoint:
9837 break;
9838
9839 default:
9840 printf_filtered (_("Deleting unknown breakpoint type %d\n"), b->type);
9841 /* fall through */
9842 /* Delete overlay event and longjmp master breakpoints; they will be
9843 reset later by breakpoint_re_set. */
9844 case bp_overlay_event:
9845 case bp_longjmp_master:
9846 case bp_std_terminate_master:
9847 delete_breakpoint (b);
9848 break;
9849
9850 /* This breakpoint is special, it's set up when the inferior
9851 starts and we really don't want to touch it. */
9852 case bp_shlib_event:
9853
9854 /* Like bp_shlib_event, this breakpoint type is special.
9855 Once it is set up, we do not want to touch it. */
9856 case bp_thread_event:
9857
9858 /* Keep temporary breakpoints, which can be encountered when we step
9859 over a dlopen call and SOLIB_ADD is resetting the breakpoints.
9860 Otherwise these should have been blown away via the cleanup chain
9861 or by breakpoint_init_inferior when we rerun the executable. */
9862 case bp_until:
9863 case bp_finish:
9864 case bp_watchpoint_scope:
9865 case bp_call_dummy:
9866 case bp_std_terminate:
9867 case bp_step_resume:
9868 case bp_longjmp:
9869 case bp_longjmp_resume:
9870 case bp_jit_event:
9871 break;
9872 }
9873
9874 do_cleanups (cleanups);
9875 return 0;
9876 }
9877
9878 /* Re-set all breakpoints after symbols have been re-loaded. */
9879 void
9880 breakpoint_re_set (void)
9881 {
9882 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
9883 enum language save_language;
9884 int save_input_radix;
9885 struct cleanup *old_chain;
9886
9887 save_language = current_language->la_language;
9888 save_input_radix = input_radix;
9889 old_chain = save_current_program_space ();
9890
9891 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
9892 {
9893 /* Format possible error msg */
9894 char *message = xstrprintf ("Error in re-setting breakpoint %d: ",
9895 b->number);
9896 struct cleanup *cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, message);
9897 catch_errors (breakpoint_re_set_one, b, message, RETURN_MASK_ALL);
9898 do_cleanups (cleanups);
9899 }
9900 set_language (save_language);
9901 input_radix = save_input_radix;
9902
9903 jit_breakpoint_re_set ();
9904
9905 do_cleanups (old_chain);
9906
9907 create_overlay_event_breakpoint ("_ovly_debug_event");
9908 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("longjmp");
9909 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("_longjmp");
9910 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("siglongjmp");
9911 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("_siglongjmp");
9912 create_std_terminate_master_breakpoint ("std::terminate()");
9913 }
9914 \f
9915 /* Reset the thread number of this breakpoint:
9916
9917 - If the breakpoint is for all threads, leave it as-is.
9918 - Else, reset it to the current thread for inferior_ptid. */
9919 void
9920 breakpoint_re_set_thread (struct breakpoint *b)
9921 {
9922 if (b->thread != -1)
9923 {
9924 if (in_thread_list (inferior_ptid))
9925 b->thread = pid_to_thread_id (inferior_ptid);
9926
9927 /* We're being called after following a fork. The new fork is
9928 selected as current, and unless this was a vfork will have a
9929 different program space from the original thread. Reset that
9930 as well. */
9931 b->loc->pspace = current_program_space;
9932 }
9933 }
9934
9935 /* Set ignore-count of breakpoint number BPTNUM to COUNT.
9936 If from_tty is nonzero, it prints a message to that effect,
9937 which ends with a period (no newline). */
9938
9939 void
9940 set_ignore_count (int bptnum, int count, int from_tty)
9941 {
9942 struct breakpoint *b;
9943
9944 if (count < 0)
9945 count = 0;
9946
9947 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
9948 if (b->number == bptnum)
9949 {
9950 if (is_tracepoint (b))
9951 {
9952 if (from_tty && count != 0)
9953 printf_filtered (_("Ignore count ignored for tracepoint %d."),
9954 bptnum);
9955 return;
9956 }
9957
9958 b->ignore_count = count;
9959 if (from_tty)
9960 {
9961 if (count == 0)
9962 printf_filtered (_("Will stop next time breakpoint %d is reached."),
9963 bptnum);
9964 else if (count == 1)
9965 printf_filtered (_("Will ignore next crossing of breakpoint %d."),
9966 bptnum);
9967 else
9968 printf_filtered (_("Will ignore next %d crossings of breakpoint %d."),
9969 count, bptnum);
9970 }
9971 breakpoints_changed ();
9972 observer_notify_breakpoint_modified (b->number);
9973 return;
9974 }
9975
9976 error (_("No breakpoint number %d."), bptnum);
9977 }
9978
9979 void
9980 make_breakpoint_silent (struct breakpoint *b)
9981 {
9982 /* Silence the breakpoint. */
9983 b->silent = 1;
9984 }
9985
9986 /* Command to set ignore-count of breakpoint N to COUNT. */
9987
9988 static void
9989 ignore_command (char *args, int from_tty)
9990 {
9991 char *p = args;
9992 int num;
9993
9994 if (p == 0)
9995 error_no_arg (_("a breakpoint number"));
9996
9997 num = get_number (&p);
9998 if (num == 0)
9999 error (_("bad breakpoint number: '%s'"), args);
10000 if (*p == 0)
10001 error (_("Second argument (specified ignore-count) is missing."));
10002
10003 set_ignore_count (num,
10004 longest_to_int (value_as_long (parse_and_eval (p))),
10005 from_tty);
10006 if (from_tty)
10007 printf_filtered ("\n");
10008 }
10009 \f
10010 /* Call FUNCTION on each of the breakpoints
10011 whose numbers are given in ARGS. */
10012
10013 static void
10014 map_breakpoint_numbers (char *args, void (*function) (struct breakpoint *,
10015 void *),
10016 void *data)
10017 {
10018 char *p = args;
10019 char *p1;
10020 int num;
10021 struct breakpoint *b, *tmp;
10022 int match;
10023
10024 if (p == 0)
10025 error_no_arg (_("one or more breakpoint numbers"));
10026
10027 while (*p)
10028 {
10029 match = 0;
10030 p1 = p;
10031
10032 num = get_number_or_range (&p1);
10033 if (num == 0)
10034 {
10035 warning (_("bad breakpoint number at or near '%s'"), p);
10036 }
10037 else
10038 {
10039 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, tmp)
10040 if (b->number == num)
10041 {
10042 struct breakpoint *related_breakpoint = b->related_breakpoint;
10043 match = 1;
10044 function (b, data);
10045 if (related_breakpoint)
10046 function (related_breakpoint, data);
10047 break;
10048 }
10049 if (match == 0)
10050 printf_unfiltered (_("No breakpoint number %d.\n"), num);
10051 }
10052 p = p1;
10053 }
10054 }
10055
10056 static struct bp_location *
10057 find_location_by_number (char *number)
10058 {
10059 char *dot = strchr (number, '.');
10060 char *p1;
10061 int bp_num;
10062 int loc_num;
10063 struct breakpoint *b;
10064 struct bp_location *loc;
10065
10066 *dot = '\0';
10067
10068 p1 = number;
10069 bp_num = get_number_or_range (&p1);
10070 if (bp_num == 0)
10071 error (_("Bad breakpoint number '%s'"), number);
10072
10073 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
10074 if (b->number == bp_num)
10075 {
10076 break;
10077 }
10078
10079 if (!b || b->number != bp_num)
10080 error (_("Bad breakpoint number '%s'"), number);
10081
10082 p1 = dot+1;
10083 loc_num = get_number_or_range (&p1);
10084 if (loc_num == 0)
10085 error (_("Bad breakpoint location number '%s'"), number);
10086
10087 --loc_num;
10088 loc = b->loc;
10089 for (;loc_num && loc; --loc_num, loc = loc->next)
10090 ;
10091 if (!loc)
10092 error (_("Bad breakpoint location number '%s'"), dot+1);
10093
10094 return loc;
10095 }
10096
10097
10098 /* Set ignore-count of breakpoint number BPTNUM to COUNT.
10099 If from_tty is nonzero, it prints a message to that effect,
10100 which ends with a period (no newline). */
10101
10102 void
10103 disable_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *bpt)
10104 {
10105 /* Never disable a watchpoint scope breakpoint; we want to
10106 hit them when we leave scope so we can delete both the
10107 watchpoint and its scope breakpoint at that time. */
10108 if (bpt->type == bp_watchpoint_scope)
10109 return;
10110
10111 /* You can't disable permanent breakpoints. */
10112 if (bpt->enable_state == bp_permanent)
10113 return;
10114
10115 bpt->enable_state = bp_disabled;
10116
10117 update_global_location_list (0);
10118
10119 observer_notify_breakpoint_modified (bpt->number);
10120 }
10121
10122 /* A callback for map_breakpoint_numbers that calls
10123 disable_breakpoint. */
10124
10125 static void
10126 do_map_disable_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *b, void *ignore)
10127 {
10128 disable_breakpoint (b);
10129 }
10130
10131 static void
10132 disable_command (char *args, int from_tty)
10133 {
10134 struct breakpoint *bpt;
10135
10136 if (args == 0)
10137 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bpt)
10138 switch (bpt->type)
10139 {
10140 case bp_none:
10141 warning (_("attempted to disable apparently deleted breakpoint #%d?"),
10142 bpt->number);
10143 continue;
10144 case bp_breakpoint:
10145 case bp_tracepoint:
10146 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
10147 case bp_catchpoint:
10148 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
10149 case bp_watchpoint:
10150 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
10151 case bp_read_watchpoint:
10152 case bp_access_watchpoint:
10153 disable_breakpoint (bpt);
10154 default:
10155 continue;
10156 }
10157 else if (strchr (args, '.'))
10158 {
10159 struct bp_location *loc = find_location_by_number (args);
10160 if (loc)
10161 loc->enabled = 0;
10162 update_global_location_list (0);
10163 }
10164 else
10165 map_breakpoint_numbers (args, do_map_disable_breakpoint, NULL);
10166 }
10167
10168 static void
10169 do_enable_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *bpt, enum bpdisp disposition)
10170 {
10171 int target_resources_ok;
10172
10173 if (bpt->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
10174 {
10175 int i;
10176 i = hw_breakpoint_used_count ();
10177 target_resources_ok =
10178 target_can_use_hardware_watchpoint (bp_hardware_breakpoint,
10179 i + 1, 0);
10180 if (target_resources_ok == 0)
10181 error (_("No hardware breakpoint support in the target."));
10182 else if (target_resources_ok < 0)
10183 error (_("Hardware breakpoints used exceeds limit."));
10184 }
10185
10186 if (is_watchpoint (bpt))
10187 {
10188 struct gdb_exception e;
10189
10190 TRY_CATCH (e, RETURN_MASK_ALL)
10191 {
10192 update_watchpoint (bpt, 1 /* reparse */);
10193 }
10194 if (e.reason < 0)
10195 {
10196 exception_fprintf (gdb_stderr, e, _("Cannot enable watchpoint %d: "),
10197 bpt->number);
10198 return;
10199 }
10200 }
10201
10202 if (bpt->enable_state != bp_permanent)
10203 bpt->enable_state = bp_enabled;
10204 bpt->disposition = disposition;
10205 update_global_location_list (1);
10206 breakpoints_changed ();
10207
10208 observer_notify_breakpoint_modified (bpt->number);
10209 }
10210
10211
10212 void
10213 enable_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *bpt)
10214 {
10215 do_enable_breakpoint (bpt, bpt->disposition);
10216 }
10217
10218 /* A callback for map_breakpoint_numbers that calls
10219 enable_breakpoint. */
10220
10221 static void
10222 do_map_enable_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *b, void *ignore)
10223 {
10224 enable_breakpoint (b);
10225 }
10226
10227 /* The enable command enables the specified breakpoints (or all defined
10228 breakpoints) so they once again become (or continue to be) effective
10229 in stopping the inferior. */
10230
10231 static void
10232 enable_command (char *args, int from_tty)
10233 {
10234 struct breakpoint *bpt;
10235
10236 if (args == 0)
10237 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bpt)
10238 switch (bpt->type)
10239 {
10240 case bp_none:
10241 warning (_("attempted to enable apparently deleted breakpoint #%d?"),
10242 bpt->number);
10243 continue;
10244 case bp_breakpoint:
10245 case bp_tracepoint:
10246 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
10247 case bp_catchpoint:
10248 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
10249 case bp_watchpoint:
10250 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
10251 case bp_read_watchpoint:
10252 case bp_access_watchpoint:
10253 enable_breakpoint (bpt);
10254 default:
10255 continue;
10256 }
10257 else if (strchr (args, '.'))
10258 {
10259 struct bp_location *loc = find_location_by_number (args);
10260 if (loc)
10261 loc->enabled = 1;
10262 update_global_location_list (1);
10263 }
10264 else
10265 map_breakpoint_numbers (args, do_map_enable_breakpoint, NULL);
10266 }
10267
10268 static void
10269 enable_once_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *bpt, void *ignore)
10270 {
10271 do_enable_breakpoint (bpt, disp_disable);
10272 }
10273
10274 static void
10275 enable_once_command (char *args, int from_tty)
10276 {
10277 map_breakpoint_numbers (args, enable_once_breakpoint, NULL);
10278 }
10279
10280 static void
10281 enable_delete_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *bpt, void *ignore)
10282 {
10283 do_enable_breakpoint (bpt, disp_del);
10284 }
10285
10286 static void
10287 enable_delete_command (char *args, int from_tty)
10288 {
10289 map_breakpoint_numbers (args, enable_delete_breakpoint, NULL);
10290 }
10291 \f
10292 static void
10293 set_breakpoint_cmd (char *args, int from_tty)
10294 {
10295 }
10296
10297 static void
10298 show_breakpoint_cmd (char *args, int from_tty)
10299 {
10300 }
10301
10302 /* Invalidate last known value of any hardware watchpoint if
10303 the memory which that value represents has been written to by
10304 GDB itself. */
10305
10306 static void
10307 invalidate_bp_value_on_memory_change (CORE_ADDR addr, int len,
10308 const bfd_byte *data)
10309 {
10310 struct breakpoint *bp;
10311
10312 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bp)
10313 if (bp->enable_state == bp_enabled
10314 && bp->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint
10315 && bp->val_valid && bp->val)
10316 {
10317 struct bp_location *loc;
10318
10319 for (loc = bp->loc; loc != NULL; loc = loc->next)
10320 if (loc->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_watchpoint
10321 && loc->address + loc->length > addr
10322 && addr + len > loc->address)
10323 {
10324 value_free (bp->val);
10325 bp->val = NULL;
10326 bp->val_valid = 0;
10327 }
10328 }
10329 }
10330
10331 /* Use default_breakpoint_'s, or nothing if they aren't valid. */
10332
10333 struct symtabs_and_lines
10334 decode_line_spec_1 (char *string, int funfirstline)
10335 {
10336 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
10337
10338 if (string == 0)
10339 error (_("Empty line specification."));
10340 if (default_breakpoint_valid)
10341 sals = decode_line_1 (&string, funfirstline,
10342 default_breakpoint_symtab,
10343 default_breakpoint_line,
10344 (char ***) NULL, NULL);
10345 else
10346 sals = decode_line_1 (&string, funfirstline,
10347 (struct symtab *) NULL, 0, (char ***) NULL, NULL);
10348 if (*string)
10349 error (_("Junk at end of line specification: %s"), string);
10350 return sals;
10351 }
10352
10353 /* Create and insert a raw software breakpoint at PC. Return an
10354 identifier, which should be used to remove the breakpoint later.
10355 In general, places which call this should be using something on the
10356 breakpoint chain instead; this function should be eliminated
10357 someday. */
10358
10359 void *
10360 deprecated_insert_raw_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
10361 struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc)
10362 {
10363 struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt;
10364
10365 bp_tgt = XZALLOC (struct bp_target_info);
10366
10367 bp_tgt->placed_address_space = aspace;
10368 bp_tgt->placed_address = pc;
10369
10370 if (target_insert_breakpoint (gdbarch, bp_tgt) != 0)
10371 {
10372 /* Could not insert the breakpoint. */
10373 xfree (bp_tgt);
10374 return NULL;
10375 }
10376
10377 return bp_tgt;
10378 }
10379
10380 /* Remove a breakpoint BP inserted by deprecated_insert_raw_breakpoint. */
10381
10382 int
10383 deprecated_remove_raw_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, void *bp)
10384 {
10385 struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt = bp;
10386 int ret;
10387
10388 ret = target_remove_breakpoint (gdbarch, bp_tgt);
10389 xfree (bp_tgt);
10390
10391 return ret;
10392 }
10393
10394 /* One (or perhaps two) breakpoints used for software single stepping. */
10395
10396 static void *single_step_breakpoints[2];
10397 static struct gdbarch *single_step_gdbarch[2];
10398
10399 /* Create and insert a breakpoint for software single step. */
10400
10401 void
10402 insert_single_step_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
10403 struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR next_pc)
10404 {
10405 void **bpt_p;
10406
10407 if (single_step_breakpoints[0] == NULL)
10408 {
10409 bpt_p = &single_step_breakpoints[0];
10410 single_step_gdbarch[0] = gdbarch;
10411 }
10412 else
10413 {
10414 gdb_assert (single_step_breakpoints[1] == NULL);
10415 bpt_p = &single_step_breakpoints[1];
10416 single_step_gdbarch[1] = gdbarch;
10417 }
10418
10419 /* NOTE drow/2006-04-11: A future improvement to this function would be
10420 to only create the breakpoints once, and actually put them on the
10421 breakpoint chain. That would let us use set_raw_breakpoint. We could
10422 adjust the addresses each time they were needed. Doing this requires
10423 corresponding changes elsewhere where single step breakpoints are
10424 handled, however. So, for now, we use this. */
10425
10426 *bpt_p = deprecated_insert_raw_breakpoint (gdbarch, aspace, next_pc);
10427 if (*bpt_p == NULL)
10428 error (_("Could not insert single-step breakpoint at %s"),
10429 paddress (gdbarch, next_pc));
10430 }
10431
10432 /* Remove and delete any breakpoints used for software single step. */
10433
10434 void
10435 remove_single_step_breakpoints (void)
10436 {
10437 gdb_assert (single_step_breakpoints[0] != NULL);
10438
10439 /* See insert_single_step_breakpoint for more about this deprecated
10440 call. */
10441 deprecated_remove_raw_breakpoint (single_step_gdbarch[0],
10442 single_step_breakpoints[0]);
10443 single_step_gdbarch[0] = NULL;
10444 single_step_breakpoints[0] = NULL;
10445
10446 if (single_step_breakpoints[1] != NULL)
10447 {
10448 deprecated_remove_raw_breakpoint (single_step_gdbarch[1],
10449 single_step_breakpoints[1]);
10450 single_step_gdbarch[1] = NULL;
10451 single_step_breakpoints[1] = NULL;
10452 }
10453 }
10454
10455 /* Delete software single step breakpoints without removing them from
10456 the inferior. This is intended to be used if the inferior's address
10457 space where they were inserted is already gone, e.g. after exit or
10458 exec. */
10459
10460 void
10461 cancel_single_step_breakpoints (void)
10462 {
10463 int i;
10464
10465 for (i = 0; i < 2; i++)
10466 if (single_step_breakpoints[i])
10467 {
10468 xfree (single_step_breakpoints[i]);
10469 single_step_breakpoints[i] = NULL;
10470 single_step_gdbarch[i] = NULL;
10471 }
10472 }
10473
10474 /* Detach software single-step breakpoints from INFERIOR_PTID without
10475 removing them. */
10476
10477 static void
10478 detach_single_step_breakpoints (void)
10479 {
10480 int i;
10481
10482 for (i = 0; i < 2; i++)
10483 if (single_step_breakpoints[i])
10484 target_remove_breakpoint (single_step_gdbarch[i],
10485 single_step_breakpoints[i]);
10486 }
10487
10488 /* Check whether a software single-step breakpoint is inserted at PC. */
10489
10490 static int
10491 single_step_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *aspace,
10492 CORE_ADDR pc)
10493 {
10494 int i;
10495
10496 for (i = 0; i < 2; i++)
10497 {
10498 struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt = single_step_breakpoints[i];
10499 if (bp_tgt
10500 && breakpoint_address_match (bp_tgt->placed_address_space,
10501 bp_tgt->placed_address,
10502 aspace, pc))
10503 return 1;
10504 }
10505
10506 return 0;
10507 }
10508
10509 /* Returns 0 if 'bp' is NOT a syscall catchpoint,
10510 non-zero otherwise. */
10511 static int
10512 is_syscall_catchpoint_enabled (struct breakpoint *bp)
10513 {
10514 if (syscall_catchpoint_p (bp)
10515 && bp->enable_state != bp_disabled
10516 && bp->enable_state != bp_call_disabled)
10517 return 1;
10518 else
10519 return 0;
10520 }
10521
10522 int
10523 catch_syscall_enabled (void)
10524 {
10525 struct inferior *inf = current_inferior ();
10526
10527 return inf->total_syscalls_count != 0;
10528 }
10529
10530 int
10531 catching_syscall_number (int syscall_number)
10532 {
10533 struct breakpoint *bp;
10534
10535 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bp)
10536 if (is_syscall_catchpoint_enabled (bp))
10537 {
10538 if (bp->syscalls_to_be_caught)
10539 {
10540 int i, iter;
10541 for (i = 0;
10542 VEC_iterate (int, bp->syscalls_to_be_caught, i, iter);
10543 i++)
10544 if (syscall_number == iter)
10545 return 1;
10546 }
10547 else
10548 return 1;
10549 }
10550
10551 return 0;
10552 }
10553
10554 /* Complete syscall names. Used by "catch syscall". */
10555 static char **
10556 catch_syscall_completer (struct cmd_list_element *cmd,
10557 char *text, char *word)
10558 {
10559 const char **list = get_syscall_names ();
10560
10561 return (list == NULL) ? NULL : complete_on_enum (list, text, word);
10562 }
10563
10564 /* Tracepoint-specific operations. */
10565
10566 /* Set tracepoint count to NUM. */
10567 static void
10568 set_tracepoint_count (int num)
10569 {
10570 tracepoint_count = num;
10571 set_internalvar_integer (lookup_internalvar ("tpnum"), num);
10572 }
10573
10574 void
10575 trace_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
10576 {
10577 if (create_breakpoint (get_current_arch (),
10578 arg,
10579 NULL, 0, 1 /* parse arg */,
10580 0 /* tempflag */, 0 /* hardwareflag */,
10581 1 /* traceflag */,
10582 0 /* Ignore count */,
10583 pending_break_support,
10584 NULL,
10585 from_tty,
10586 1 /* enabled */))
10587 set_tracepoint_count (breakpoint_count);
10588 }
10589
10590 void
10591 ftrace_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
10592 {
10593 if (create_breakpoint (get_current_arch (),
10594 arg,
10595 NULL, 0, 1 /* parse arg */,
10596 0 /* tempflag */, 1 /* hardwareflag */,
10597 1 /* traceflag */,
10598 0 /* Ignore count */,
10599 pending_break_support,
10600 NULL,
10601 from_tty,
10602 1 /* enabled */))
10603 set_tracepoint_count (breakpoint_count);
10604 }
10605
10606 /* Set up a fake reader function that gets command lines from a linked
10607 list that was acquired during tracepoint uploading. */
10608
10609 static struct uploaded_tp *this_utp;
10610 static int next_cmd;
10611
10612 static char *
10613 read_uploaded_action (void)
10614 {
10615 char *rslt;
10616
10617 VEC_iterate (char_ptr, this_utp->cmd_strings, next_cmd, rslt);
10618
10619 next_cmd++;
10620
10621 return rslt;
10622 }
10623
10624 /* Given information about a tracepoint as recorded on a target (which
10625 can be either a live system or a trace file), attempt to create an
10626 equivalent GDB tracepoint. This is not a reliable process, since
10627 the target does not necessarily have all the information used when
10628 the tracepoint was originally defined. */
10629
10630 struct breakpoint *
10631 create_tracepoint_from_upload (struct uploaded_tp *utp)
10632 {
10633 char *addr_str, small_buf[100];
10634 struct breakpoint *tp;
10635
10636 if (utp->at_string)
10637 addr_str = utp->at_string;
10638 else
10639 {
10640 /* In the absence of a source location, fall back to raw
10641 address. Since there is no way to confirm that the address
10642 means the same thing as when the trace was started, warn the
10643 user. */
10644 warning (_("Uploaded tracepoint %d has no source location, using raw address"),
10645 utp->number);
10646 sprintf (small_buf, "*%s", hex_string (utp->addr));
10647 addr_str = small_buf;
10648 }
10649
10650 /* There's not much we can do with a sequence of bytecodes. */
10651 if (utp->cond && !utp->cond_string)
10652 warning (_("Uploaded tracepoint %d condition has no source form, ignoring it"),
10653 utp->number);
10654
10655 if (!create_breakpoint (get_current_arch (),
10656 addr_str,
10657 utp->cond_string, -1, 0 /* parse cond/thread */,
10658 0 /* tempflag */,
10659 (utp->type == bp_fast_tracepoint) /* hardwareflag */,
10660 1 /* traceflag */,
10661 0 /* Ignore count */,
10662 pending_break_support,
10663 NULL,
10664 0 /* from_tty */,
10665 utp->enabled /* enabled */))
10666 return NULL;
10667
10668 set_tracepoint_count (breakpoint_count);
10669
10670 /* Get the tracepoint we just created. */
10671 tp = get_tracepoint (tracepoint_count);
10672 gdb_assert (tp != NULL);
10673
10674 if (utp->pass > 0)
10675 {
10676 sprintf (small_buf, "%d %d", utp->pass, tp->number);
10677
10678 trace_pass_command (small_buf, 0);
10679 }
10680
10681 /* If we have uploaded versions of the original commands, set up a
10682 special-purpose "reader" function and call the usual command line
10683 reader, then pass the result to the breakpoint command-setting
10684 function. */
10685 if (!VEC_empty (char_ptr, utp->cmd_strings))
10686 {
10687 struct command_line *cmd_list;
10688
10689 this_utp = utp;
10690 next_cmd = 0;
10691
10692 cmd_list = read_command_lines_1 (read_uploaded_action, 1, NULL, NULL);
10693
10694 breakpoint_set_commands (tp, cmd_list);
10695 }
10696 else if (!VEC_empty (char_ptr, utp->actions)
10697 || !VEC_empty (char_ptr, utp->step_actions))
10698 warning (_("Uploaded tracepoint %d actions have no source form, ignoring them"),
10699 utp->number);
10700
10701 return tp;
10702 }
10703
10704 /* Print information on tracepoint number TPNUM_EXP, or all if
10705 omitted. */
10706
10707 static void
10708 tracepoints_info (char *tpnum_exp, int from_tty)
10709 {
10710 int tpnum = -1, num_printed;
10711
10712 if (tpnum_exp)
10713 tpnum = parse_and_eval_long (tpnum_exp);
10714
10715 num_printed = breakpoint_1 (tpnum, 0, is_tracepoint);
10716
10717 if (num_printed == 0)
10718 {
10719 if (tpnum == -1)
10720 ui_out_message (uiout, 0, "No tracepoints.\n");
10721 else
10722 ui_out_message (uiout, 0, "No tracepoint number %d.\n", tpnum);
10723 }
10724
10725 default_collect_info ();
10726 }
10727
10728 /* The 'enable trace' command enables tracepoints.
10729 Not supported by all targets. */
10730 static void
10731 enable_trace_command (char *args, int from_tty)
10732 {
10733 enable_command (args, from_tty);
10734 }
10735
10736 /* The 'disable trace' command disables tracepoints.
10737 Not supported by all targets. */
10738 static void
10739 disable_trace_command (char *args, int from_tty)
10740 {
10741 disable_command (args, from_tty);
10742 }
10743
10744 /* Remove a tracepoint (or all if no argument) */
10745 static void
10746 delete_trace_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
10747 {
10748 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
10749
10750 dont_repeat ();
10751
10752 if (arg == 0)
10753 {
10754 int breaks_to_delete = 0;
10755
10756 /* Delete all breakpoints if no argument.
10757 Do not delete internal or call-dummy breakpoints, these
10758 have to be deleted with an explicit breakpoint number argument. */
10759 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (b)
10760 {
10761 if (b->number >= 0)
10762 {
10763 breaks_to_delete = 1;
10764 break;
10765 }
10766 }
10767
10768 /* Ask user only if there are some breakpoints to delete. */
10769 if (!from_tty
10770 || (breaks_to_delete && query (_("Delete all tracepoints? "))))
10771 {
10772 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
10773 {
10774 if (is_tracepoint (b)
10775 && b->number >= 0)
10776 delete_breakpoint (b);
10777 }
10778 }
10779 }
10780 else
10781 map_breakpoint_numbers (arg, do_delete_breakpoint, NULL);
10782 }
10783
10784 /* Set passcount for tracepoint.
10785
10786 First command argument is passcount, second is tracepoint number.
10787 If tracepoint number omitted, apply to most recently defined.
10788 Also accepts special argument "all". */
10789
10790 static void
10791 trace_pass_command (char *args, int from_tty)
10792 {
10793 struct breakpoint *t1 = (struct breakpoint *) -1, *t2;
10794 unsigned int count;
10795 int all = 0;
10796
10797 if (args == 0 || *args == 0)
10798 error (_("passcount command requires an argument (count + optional TP num)"));
10799
10800 count = strtoul (args, &args, 10); /* Count comes first, then TP num. */
10801
10802 while (*args && isspace ((int) *args))
10803 args++;
10804
10805 if (*args && strncasecmp (args, "all", 3) == 0)
10806 {
10807 args += 3; /* Skip special argument "all". */
10808 all = 1;
10809 if (*args)
10810 error (_("Junk at end of arguments."));
10811 }
10812 else
10813 t1 = get_tracepoint_by_number (&args, 1, 1);
10814
10815 do
10816 {
10817 if (t1)
10818 {
10819 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (t2)
10820 if (t1 == (struct breakpoint *) -1 || t1 == t2)
10821 {
10822 t2->pass_count = count;
10823 observer_notify_tracepoint_modified (t2->number);
10824 if (from_tty)
10825 printf_filtered (_("Setting tracepoint %d's passcount to %d\n"),
10826 t2->number, count);
10827 }
10828 if (! all && *args)
10829 t1 = get_tracepoint_by_number (&args, 1, 0);
10830 }
10831 }
10832 while (*args);
10833 }
10834
10835 struct breakpoint *
10836 get_tracepoint (int num)
10837 {
10838 struct breakpoint *t;
10839
10840 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (t)
10841 if (t->number == num)
10842 return t;
10843
10844 return NULL;
10845 }
10846
10847 /* Find the tracepoint with the given target-side number (which may be
10848 different from the tracepoint number after disconnecting and
10849 reconnecting). */
10850
10851 struct breakpoint *
10852 get_tracepoint_by_number_on_target (int num)
10853 {
10854 struct breakpoint *t;
10855
10856 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (t)
10857 if (t->number_on_target == num)
10858 return t;
10859
10860 return NULL;
10861 }
10862
10863 /* Utility: parse a tracepoint number and look it up in the list.
10864 If MULTI_P is true, there might be a range of tracepoints in ARG.
10865 if OPTIONAL_P is true, then if the argument is missing, the most
10866 recent tracepoint (tracepoint_count) is returned. */
10867 struct breakpoint *
10868 get_tracepoint_by_number (char **arg, int multi_p, int optional_p)
10869 {
10870 extern int tracepoint_count;
10871 struct breakpoint *t;
10872 int tpnum;
10873 char *instring = arg == NULL ? NULL : *arg;
10874
10875 if (arg == NULL || *arg == NULL || ! **arg)
10876 {
10877 if (optional_p)
10878 tpnum = tracepoint_count;
10879 else
10880 error_no_arg (_("tracepoint number"));
10881 }
10882 else
10883 tpnum = multi_p ? get_number_or_range (arg) : get_number (arg);
10884
10885 if (tpnum <= 0)
10886 {
10887 if (instring && *instring)
10888 printf_filtered (_("bad tracepoint number at or near '%s'\n"),
10889 instring);
10890 else
10891 printf_filtered (_("Tracepoint argument missing and no previous tracepoint\n"));
10892 return NULL;
10893 }
10894
10895 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (t)
10896 if (t->number == tpnum)
10897 {
10898 return t;
10899 }
10900
10901 /* FIXME: if we are in the middle of a range we don't want to give
10902 a message. The current interface to get_number_or_range doesn't
10903 allow us to discover this. */
10904 printf_unfiltered ("No tracepoint number %d.\n", tpnum);
10905 return NULL;
10906 }
10907
10908 /* Save information on user settable breakpoints (watchpoints, etc) to
10909 a new script file named FILENAME. If FILTER is non-NULL, call it
10910 on each breakpoint and only include the ones for which it returns
10911 non-zero. */
10912
10913 static void
10914 save_breakpoints (char *filename, int from_tty,
10915 int (*filter) (const struct breakpoint *))
10916 {
10917 struct breakpoint *tp;
10918 int any = 0;
10919 char *pathname;
10920 struct cleanup *cleanup;
10921 struct ui_file *fp;
10922 int extra_trace_bits = 0;
10923
10924 if (filename == 0 || *filename == 0)
10925 error (_("Argument required (file name in which to save)"));
10926
10927 /* See if we have anything to save. */
10928 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (tp)
10929 {
10930 /* Skip internal and momentary breakpoints. */
10931 if (!user_settable_breakpoint (tp))
10932 continue;
10933
10934 /* If we have a filter, only save the breakpoints it accepts. */
10935 if (filter && !filter (tp))
10936 continue;
10937
10938 any = 1;
10939
10940 if (is_tracepoint (tp))
10941 {
10942 extra_trace_bits = 1;
10943
10944 /* We can stop searching. */
10945 break;
10946 }
10947 }
10948
10949 if (!any)
10950 {
10951 warning (_("Nothing to save."));
10952 return;
10953 }
10954
10955 pathname = tilde_expand (filename);
10956 cleanup = make_cleanup (xfree, pathname);
10957 fp = gdb_fopen (pathname, "w");
10958 if (!fp)
10959 error (_("Unable to open file '%s' for saving (%s)"),
10960 filename, safe_strerror (errno));
10961 make_cleanup_ui_file_delete (fp);
10962
10963 if (extra_trace_bits)
10964 save_trace_state_variables (fp);
10965
10966 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (tp)
10967 {
10968 /* Skip internal and momentary breakpoints. */
10969 if (!user_settable_breakpoint (tp))
10970 continue;
10971
10972 /* If we have a filter, only save the breakpoints it accepts. */
10973 if (filter && !filter (tp))
10974 continue;
10975
10976 if (tp->ops != NULL)
10977 (tp->ops->print_recreate) (tp, fp);
10978 else
10979 {
10980 if (tp->type == bp_fast_tracepoint)
10981 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "ftrace");
10982 else if (tp->type == bp_tracepoint)
10983 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "trace");
10984 else if (tp->type == bp_breakpoint && tp->disposition == disp_del)
10985 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "tbreak");
10986 else if (tp->type == bp_breakpoint)
10987 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "break");
10988 else if (tp->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint
10989 && tp->disposition == disp_del)
10990 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "thbreak");
10991 else if (tp->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
10992 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "hbreak");
10993 else if (tp->type == bp_watchpoint)
10994 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "watch");
10995 else if (tp->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint)
10996 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "watch");
10997 else if (tp->type == bp_read_watchpoint)
10998 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "rwatch");
10999 else if (tp->type == bp_access_watchpoint)
11000 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "awatch");
11001 else
11002 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
11003 _("unhandled breakpoint type %d"), (int) tp->type);
11004
11005 if (tp->exp_string)
11006 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, " %s", tp->exp_string);
11007 else if (tp->addr_string)
11008 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, " %s", tp->addr_string);
11009 else
11010 {
11011 char tmp[40];
11012
11013 sprintf_vma (tmp, tp->loc->address);
11014 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, " *0x%s", tmp);
11015 }
11016 }
11017
11018 if (tp->thread != -1)
11019 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, " thread %d", tp->thread);
11020
11021 if (tp->task != 0)
11022 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, " task %d", tp->task);
11023
11024 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "\n");
11025
11026 /* Note, we can't rely on tp->number for anything, as we can't
11027 assume the recreated breakpoint numbers will match. Use $bpnum
11028 instead. */
11029
11030 if (tp->cond_string)
11031 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, " condition $bpnum %s\n", tp->cond_string);
11032
11033 if (tp->ignore_count)
11034 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, " ignore $bpnum %d\n", tp->ignore_count);
11035
11036 if (tp->pass_count)
11037 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, " passcount %d\n", tp->pass_count);
11038
11039 if (tp->commands)
11040 {
11041 volatile struct gdb_exception ex;
11042
11043 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, " commands\n");
11044
11045 ui_out_redirect (uiout, fp);
11046 TRY_CATCH (ex, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
11047 {
11048 print_command_lines (uiout, tp->commands->commands, 2);
11049 }
11050 ui_out_redirect (uiout, NULL);
11051
11052 if (ex.reason < 0)
11053 throw_exception (ex);
11054
11055 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, " end\n");
11056 }
11057
11058 if (tp->enable_state == bp_disabled)
11059 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "disable\n");
11060
11061 /* If this is a multi-location breakpoint, check if the locations
11062 should be individually disabled. Watchpoint locations are
11063 special, and not user visible. */
11064 if (!is_watchpoint (tp) && tp->loc && tp->loc->next)
11065 {
11066 struct bp_location *loc;
11067 int n = 1;
11068
11069 for (loc = tp->loc; loc != NULL; loc = loc->next, n++)
11070 if (!loc->enabled)
11071 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "disable $bpnum.%d\n", n);
11072 }
11073 }
11074
11075 if (extra_trace_bits && *default_collect)
11076 fprintf_unfiltered (fp, "set default-collect %s\n", default_collect);
11077
11078 do_cleanups (cleanup);
11079 if (from_tty)
11080 printf_filtered (_("Saved to file '%s'.\n"), filename);
11081 }
11082
11083 /* The `save breakpoints' command. */
11084
11085 static void
11086 save_breakpoints_command (char *args, int from_tty)
11087 {
11088 save_breakpoints (args, from_tty, NULL);
11089 }
11090
11091 /* The `save tracepoints' command. */
11092
11093 static void
11094 save_tracepoints_command (char *args, int from_tty)
11095 {
11096 save_breakpoints (args, from_tty, is_tracepoint);
11097 }
11098
11099 /* Create a vector of all tracepoints. */
11100
11101 VEC(breakpoint_p) *
11102 all_tracepoints ()
11103 {
11104 VEC(breakpoint_p) *tp_vec = 0;
11105 struct breakpoint *tp;
11106
11107 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (tp)
11108 {
11109 VEC_safe_push (breakpoint_p, tp_vec, tp);
11110 }
11111
11112 return tp_vec;
11113 }
11114
11115 \f
11116 /* This help string is used for the break, hbreak, tbreak and thbreak commands.
11117 It is defined as a macro to prevent duplication.
11118 COMMAND should be a string constant containing the name of the command. */
11119 #define BREAK_ARGS_HELP(command) \
11120 command" [LOCATION] [thread THREADNUM] [if CONDITION]\n\
11121 LOCATION may be a line number, function name, or \"*\" and an address.\n\
11122 If a line number is specified, break at start of code for that line.\n\
11123 If a function is specified, break at start of code for that function.\n\
11124 If an address is specified, break at that exact address.\n\
11125 With no LOCATION, uses current execution address of selected stack frame.\n\
11126 This is useful for breaking on return to a stack frame.\n\
11127 \n\
11128 THREADNUM is the number from \"info threads\".\n\
11129 CONDITION is a boolean expression.\n\
11130 \n\
11131 Multiple breakpoints at one place are permitted, and useful if conditional.\n\
11132 \n\
11133 Do \"help breakpoints\" for info on other commands dealing with breakpoints."
11134
11135 /* List of subcommands for "catch". */
11136 static struct cmd_list_element *catch_cmdlist;
11137
11138 /* List of subcommands for "tcatch". */
11139 static struct cmd_list_element *tcatch_cmdlist;
11140
11141 /* Like add_cmd, but add the command to both the "catch" and "tcatch"
11142 lists, and pass some additional user data to the command function. */
11143 static void
11144 add_catch_command (char *name, char *docstring,
11145 void (*sfunc) (char *args, int from_tty,
11146 struct cmd_list_element *command),
11147 char **(*completer) (struct cmd_list_element *cmd,
11148 char *text, char *word),
11149 void *user_data_catch,
11150 void *user_data_tcatch)
11151 {
11152 struct cmd_list_element *command;
11153
11154 command = add_cmd (name, class_breakpoint, NULL, docstring,
11155 &catch_cmdlist);
11156 set_cmd_sfunc (command, sfunc);
11157 set_cmd_context (command, user_data_catch);
11158 set_cmd_completer (command, completer);
11159
11160 command = add_cmd (name, class_breakpoint, NULL, docstring,
11161 &tcatch_cmdlist);
11162 set_cmd_sfunc (command, sfunc);
11163 set_cmd_context (command, user_data_tcatch);
11164 set_cmd_completer (command, completer);
11165 }
11166
11167 static void
11168 clear_syscall_counts (struct inferior *inf)
11169 {
11170 inf->total_syscalls_count = 0;
11171 inf->any_syscall_count = 0;
11172 VEC_free (int, inf->syscalls_counts);
11173 }
11174
11175 static void
11176 save_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
11177 {
11178 printf_unfiltered (_("\
11179 \"save\" must be followed by the name of a save subcommand.\n"));
11180 help_list (save_cmdlist, "save ", -1, gdb_stdout);
11181 }
11182
11183 void
11184 _initialize_breakpoint (void)
11185 {
11186 struct cmd_list_element *c;
11187
11188 observer_attach_solib_unloaded (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib);
11189 observer_attach_inferior_exit (clear_syscall_counts);
11190 observer_attach_memory_changed (invalidate_bp_value_on_memory_change);
11191
11192 breakpoint_chain = 0;
11193 /* Don't bother to call set_breakpoint_count. $bpnum isn't useful
11194 before a breakpoint is set. */
11195 breakpoint_count = 0;
11196
11197 tracepoint_count = 0;
11198
11199 add_com ("ignore", class_breakpoint, ignore_command, _("\
11200 Set ignore-count of breakpoint number N to COUNT.\n\
11201 Usage is `ignore N COUNT'."));
11202 if (xdb_commands)
11203 add_com_alias ("bc", "ignore", class_breakpoint, 1);
11204
11205 add_com ("commands", class_breakpoint, commands_command, _("\
11206 Set commands to be executed when a breakpoint is hit.\n\
11207 Give breakpoint number as argument after \"commands\".\n\
11208 With no argument, the targeted breakpoint is the last one set.\n\
11209 The commands themselves follow starting on the next line.\n\
11210 Type a line containing \"end\" to indicate the end of them.\n\
11211 Give \"silent\" as the first line to make the breakpoint silent;\n\
11212 then no output is printed when it is hit, except what the commands print."));
11213
11214 add_com ("condition", class_breakpoint, condition_command, _("\
11215 Specify breakpoint number N to break only if COND is true.\n\
11216 Usage is `condition N COND', where N is an integer and COND is an\n\
11217 expression to be evaluated whenever breakpoint N is reached."));
11218
11219 c = add_com ("tbreak", class_breakpoint, tbreak_command, _("\
11220 Set a temporary breakpoint.\n\
11221 Like \"break\" except the breakpoint is only temporary,\n\
11222 so it will be deleted when hit. Equivalent to \"break\" followed\n\
11223 by using \"enable delete\" on the breakpoint number.\n\
11224 \n"
11225 BREAK_ARGS_HELP ("tbreak")));
11226 set_cmd_completer (c, location_completer);
11227
11228 c = add_com ("hbreak", class_breakpoint, hbreak_command, _("\
11229 Set a hardware assisted breakpoint.\n\
11230 Like \"break\" except the breakpoint requires hardware support,\n\
11231 some target hardware may not have this support.\n\
11232 \n"
11233 BREAK_ARGS_HELP ("hbreak")));
11234 set_cmd_completer (c, location_completer);
11235
11236 c = add_com ("thbreak", class_breakpoint, thbreak_command, _("\
11237 Set a temporary hardware assisted breakpoint.\n\
11238 Like \"hbreak\" except the breakpoint is only temporary,\n\
11239 so it will be deleted when hit.\n\
11240 \n"
11241 BREAK_ARGS_HELP ("thbreak")));
11242 set_cmd_completer (c, location_completer);
11243
11244 add_prefix_cmd ("enable", class_breakpoint, enable_command, _("\
11245 Enable some breakpoints.\n\
11246 Give breakpoint numbers (separated by spaces) as arguments.\n\
11247 With no subcommand, breakpoints are enabled until you command otherwise.\n\
11248 This is used to cancel the effect of the \"disable\" command.\n\
11249 With a subcommand you can enable temporarily."),
11250 &enablelist, "enable ", 1, &cmdlist);
11251 if (xdb_commands)
11252 add_com ("ab", class_breakpoint, enable_command, _("\
11253 Enable some breakpoints.\n\
11254 Give breakpoint numbers (separated by spaces) as arguments.\n\
11255 With no subcommand, breakpoints are enabled until you command otherwise.\n\
11256 This is used to cancel the effect of the \"disable\" command.\n\
11257 With a subcommand you can enable temporarily."));
11258
11259 add_com_alias ("en", "enable", class_breakpoint, 1);
11260
11261 add_prefix_cmd ("breakpoints", class_breakpoint, enable_command, _("\
11262 Enable some breakpoints.\n\
11263 Give breakpoint numbers (separated by spaces) as arguments.\n\
11264 This is used to cancel the effect of the \"disable\" command.\n\
11265 May be abbreviated to simply \"enable\".\n"),
11266 &enablebreaklist, "enable breakpoints ", 1, &enablelist);
11267
11268 add_cmd ("once", no_class, enable_once_command, _("\
11269 Enable breakpoints for one hit. Give breakpoint numbers.\n\
11270 If a breakpoint is hit while enabled in this fashion, it becomes disabled."),
11271 &enablebreaklist);
11272
11273 add_cmd ("delete", no_class, enable_delete_command, _("\
11274 Enable breakpoints and delete when hit. Give breakpoint numbers.\n\
11275 If a breakpoint is hit while enabled in this fashion, it is deleted."),
11276 &enablebreaklist);
11277
11278 add_cmd ("delete", no_class, enable_delete_command, _("\
11279 Enable breakpoints and delete when hit. Give breakpoint numbers.\n\
11280 If a breakpoint is hit while enabled in this fashion, it is deleted."),
11281 &enablelist);
11282
11283 add_cmd ("once", no_class, enable_once_command, _("\
11284 Enable breakpoints for one hit. Give breakpoint numbers.\n\
11285 If a breakpoint is hit while enabled in this fashion, it becomes disabled."),
11286 &enablelist);
11287
11288 add_prefix_cmd ("disable", class_breakpoint, disable_command, _("\
11289 Disable some breakpoints.\n\
11290 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
11291 To disable all breakpoints, give no argument.\n\
11292 A disabled breakpoint is not forgotten, but has no effect until reenabled."),
11293 &disablelist, "disable ", 1, &cmdlist);
11294 add_com_alias ("dis", "disable", class_breakpoint, 1);
11295 add_com_alias ("disa", "disable", class_breakpoint, 1);
11296 if (xdb_commands)
11297 add_com ("sb", class_breakpoint, disable_command, _("\
11298 Disable some breakpoints.\n\
11299 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
11300 To disable all breakpoints, give no argument.\n\
11301 A disabled breakpoint is not forgotten, but has no effect until reenabled."));
11302
11303 add_cmd ("breakpoints", class_alias, disable_command, _("\
11304 Disable some breakpoints.\n\
11305 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
11306 To disable all breakpoints, give no argument.\n\
11307 A disabled breakpoint is not forgotten, but has no effect until reenabled.\n\
11308 This command may be abbreviated \"disable\"."),
11309 &disablelist);
11310
11311 add_prefix_cmd ("delete", class_breakpoint, delete_command, _("\
11312 Delete some breakpoints or auto-display expressions.\n\
11313 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
11314 To delete all breakpoints, give no argument.\n\
11315 \n\
11316 Also a prefix command for deletion of other GDB objects.\n\
11317 The \"unset\" command is also an alias for \"delete\"."),
11318 &deletelist, "delete ", 1, &cmdlist);
11319 add_com_alias ("d", "delete", class_breakpoint, 1);
11320 add_com_alias ("del", "delete", class_breakpoint, 1);
11321 if (xdb_commands)
11322 add_com ("db", class_breakpoint, delete_command, _("\
11323 Delete some breakpoints.\n\
11324 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
11325 To delete all breakpoints, give no argument.\n"));
11326
11327 add_cmd ("breakpoints", class_alias, delete_command, _("\
11328 Delete some breakpoints or auto-display expressions.\n\
11329 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
11330 To delete all breakpoints, give no argument.\n\
11331 This command may be abbreviated \"delete\"."),
11332 &deletelist);
11333
11334 add_com ("clear", class_breakpoint, clear_command, _("\
11335 Clear breakpoint at specified line or function.\n\
11336 Argument may be line number, function name, or \"*\" and an address.\n\
11337 If line number is specified, all breakpoints in that line are cleared.\n\
11338 If function is specified, breakpoints at beginning of function are cleared.\n\
11339 If an address is specified, breakpoints at that address are cleared.\n\
11340 \n\
11341 With no argument, clears all breakpoints in the line that the selected frame\n\
11342 is executing in.\n\
11343 \n\
11344 See also the \"delete\" command which clears breakpoints by number."));
11345
11346 c = add_com ("break", class_breakpoint, break_command, _("\
11347 Set breakpoint at specified line or function.\n"
11348 BREAK_ARGS_HELP ("break")));
11349 set_cmd_completer (c, location_completer);
11350
11351 add_com_alias ("b", "break", class_run, 1);
11352 add_com_alias ("br", "break", class_run, 1);
11353 add_com_alias ("bre", "break", class_run, 1);
11354 add_com_alias ("brea", "break", class_run, 1);
11355
11356 if (xdb_commands)
11357 add_com_alias ("ba", "break", class_breakpoint, 1);
11358
11359 if (dbx_commands)
11360 {
11361 add_abbrev_prefix_cmd ("stop", class_breakpoint, stop_command, _("\
11362 Break in function/address or break at a line in the current file."),
11363 &stoplist, "stop ", 1, &cmdlist);
11364 add_cmd ("in", class_breakpoint, stopin_command,
11365 _("Break in function or address."), &stoplist);
11366 add_cmd ("at", class_breakpoint, stopat_command,
11367 _("Break at a line in the current file."), &stoplist);
11368 add_com ("status", class_info, breakpoints_info, _("\
11369 Status of user-settable breakpoints, or breakpoint number NUMBER.\n\
11370 The \"Type\" column indicates one of:\n\
11371 \tbreakpoint - normal breakpoint\n\
11372 \twatchpoint - watchpoint\n\
11373 The \"Disp\" column contains one of \"keep\", \"del\", or \"dis\" to indicate\n\
11374 the disposition of the breakpoint after it gets hit. \"dis\" means that the\n\
11375 breakpoint will be disabled. The \"Address\" and \"What\" columns indicate the\n\
11376 address and file/line number respectively.\n\
11377 \n\
11378 Convenience variable \"$_\" and default examine address for \"x\"\n\
11379 are set to the address of the last breakpoint listed unless the command\n\
11380 is prefixed with \"server \".\n\n\
11381 Convenience variable \"$bpnum\" contains the number of the last\n\
11382 breakpoint set."));
11383 }
11384
11385 add_info ("breakpoints", breakpoints_info, _("\
11386 Status of user-settable breakpoints, or breakpoint number NUMBER.\n\
11387 The \"Type\" column indicates one of:\n\
11388 \tbreakpoint - normal breakpoint\n\
11389 \twatchpoint - watchpoint\n\
11390 The \"Disp\" column contains one of \"keep\", \"del\", or \"dis\" to indicate\n\
11391 the disposition of the breakpoint after it gets hit. \"dis\" means that the\n\
11392 breakpoint will be disabled. The \"Address\" and \"What\" columns indicate the\n\
11393 address and file/line number respectively.\n\
11394 \n\
11395 Convenience variable \"$_\" and default examine address for \"x\"\n\
11396 are set to the address of the last breakpoint listed unless the command\n\
11397 is prefixed with \"server \".\n\n\
11398 Convenience variable \"$bpnum\" contains the number of the last\n\
11399 breakpoint set."));
11400
11401 add_info_alias ("b", "breakpoints", 1);
11402
11403 if (xdb_commands)
11404 add_com ("lb", class_breakpoint, breakpoints_info, _("\
11405 Status of user-settable breakpoints, or breakpoint number NUMBER.\n\
11406 The \"Type\" column indicates one of:\n\
11407 \tbreakpoint - normal breakpoint\n\
11408 \twatchpoint - watchpoint\n\
11409 The \"Disp\" column contains one of \"keep\", \"del\", or \"dis\" to indicate\n\
11410 the disposition of the breakpoint after it gets hit. \"dis\" means that the\n\
11411 breakpoint will be disabled. The \"Address\" and \"What\" columns indicate the\n\
11412 address and file/line number respectively.\n\
11413 \n\
11414 Convenience variable \"$_\" and default examine address for \"x\"\n\
11415 are set to the address of the last breakpoint listed unless the command\n\
11416 is prefixed with \"server \".\n\n\
11417 Convenience variable \"$bpnum\" contains the number of the last\n\
11418 breakpoint set."));
11419
11420 add_cmd ("breakpoints", class_maintenance, maintenance_info_breakpoints, _("\
11421 Status of all breakpoints, or breakpoint number NUMBER.\n\
11422 The \"Type\" column indicates one of:\n\
11423 \tbreakpoint - normal breakpoint\n\
11424 \twatchpoint - watchpoint\n\
11425 \tlongjmp - internal breakpoint used to step through longjmp()\n\
11426 \tlongjmp resume - internal breakpoint at the target of longjmp()\n\
11427 \tuntil - internal breakpoint used by the \"until\" command\n\
11428 \tfinish - internal breakpoint used by the \"finish\" command\n\
11429 The \"Disp\" column contains one of \"keep\", \"del\", or \"dis\" to indicate\n\
11430 the disposition of the breakpoint after it gets hit. \"dis\" means that the\n\
11431 breakpoint will be disabled. The \"Address\" and \"What\" columns indicate the\n\
11432 address and file/line number respectively.\n\
11433 \n\
11434 Convenience variable \"$_\" and default examine address for \"x\"\n\
11435 are set to the address of the last breakpoint listed unless the command\n\
11436 is prefixed with \"server \".\n\n\
11437 Convenience variable \"$bpnum\" contains the number of the last\n\
11438 breakpoint set."),
11439 &maintenanceinfolist);
11440
11441 add_prefix_cmd ("catch", class_breakpoint, catch_command, _("\
11442 Set catchpoints to catch events."),
11443 &catch_cmdlist, "catch ",
11444 0/*allow-unknown*/, &cmdlist);
11445
11446 add_prefix_cmd ("tcatch", class_breakpoint, tcatch_command, _("\
11447 Set temporary catchpoints to catch events."),
11448 &tcatch_cmdlist, "tcatch ",
11449 0/*allow-unknown*/, &cmdlist);
11450
11451 /* Add catch and tcatch sub-commands. */
11452 add_catch_command ("catch", _("\
11453 Catch an exception, when caught.\n\
11454 With an argument, catch only exceptions with the given name."),
11455 catch_catch_command,
11456 NULL,
11457 CATCH_PERMANENT,
11458 CATCH_TEMPORARY);
11459 add_catch_command ("throw", _("\
11460 Catch an exception, when thrown.\n\
11461 With an argument, catch only exceptions with the given name."),
11462 catch_throw_command,
11463 NULL,
11464 CATCH_PERMANENT,
11465 CATCH_TEMPORARY);
11466 add_catch_command ("fork", _("Catch calls to fork."),
11467 catch_fork_command_1,
11468 NULL,
11469 (void *) (uintptr_t) catch_fork_permanent,
11470 (void *) (uintptr_t) catch_fork_temporary);
11471 add_catch_command ("vfork", _("Catch calls to vfork."),
11472 catch_fork_command_1,
11473 NULL,
11474 (void *) (uintptr_t) catch_vfork_permanent,
11475 (void *) (uintptr_t) catch_vfork_temporary);
11476 add_catch_command ("exec", _("Catch calls to exec."),
11477 catch_exec_command_1,
11478 NULL,
11479 CATCH_PERMANENT,
11480 CATCH_TEMPORARY);
11481 add_catch_command ("syscall", _("\
11482 Catch system calls by their names and/or numbers.\n\
11483 Arguments say which system calls to catch. If no arguments\n\
11484 are given, every system call will be caught.\n\
11485 Arguments, if given, should be one or more system call names\n\
11486 (if your system supports that), or system call numbers."),
11487 catch_syscall_command_1,
11488 catch_syscall_completer,
11489 CATCH_PERMANENT,
11490 CATCH_TEMPORARY);
11491 add_catch_command ("exception", _("\
11492 Catch Ada exceptions, when raised.\n\
11493 With an argument, catch only exceptions with the given name."),
11494 catch_ada_exception_command,
11495 NULL,
11496 CATCH_PERMANENT,
11497 CATCH_TEMPORARY);
11498 add_catch_command ("assert", _("\
11499 Catch failed Ada assertions, when raised.\n\
11500 With an argument, catch only exceptions with the given name."),
11501 catch_assert_command,
11502 NULL,
11503 CATCH_PERMANENT,
11504 CATCH_TEMPORARY);
11505
11506 c = add_com ("watch", class_breakpoint, watch_command, _("\
11507 Set a watchpoint for an expression.\n\
11508 A watchpoint stops execution of your program whenever the value of\n\
11509 an expression changes."));
11510 set_cmd_completer (c, expression_completer);
11511
11512 c = add_com ("rwatch", class_breakpoint, rwatch_command, _("\
11513 Set a read watchpoint for an expression.\n\
11514 A watchpoint stops execution of your program whenever the value of\n\
11515 an expression is read."));
11516 set_cmd_completer (c, expression_completer);
11517
11518 c = add_com ("awatch", class_breakpoint, awatch_command, _("\
11519 Set a watchpoint for an expression.\n\
11520 A watchpoint stops execution of your program whenever the value of\n\
11521 an expression is either read or written."));
11522 set_cmd_completer (c, expression_completer);
11523
11524 add_info ("watchpoints", watchpoints_info, _("\
11525 Status of watchpoints, or watchpoint number NUMBER."));
11526
11527
11528
11529 /* XXX: cagney/2005-02-23: This should be a boolean, and should
11530 respond to changes - contrary to the description. */
11531 add_setshow_zinteger_cmd ("can-use-hw-watchpoints", class_support,
11532 &can_use_hw_watchpoints, _("\
11533 Set debugger's willingness to use watchpoint hardware."), _("\
11534 Show debugger's willingness to use watchpoint hardware."), _("\
11535 If zero, gdb will not use hardware for new watchpoints, even if\n\
11536 such is available. (However, any hardware watchpoints that were\n\
11537 created before setting this to nonzero, will continue to use watchpoint\n\
11538 hardware.)"),
11539 NULL,
11540 show_can_use_hw_watchpoints,
11541 &setlist, &showlist);
11542
11543 can_use_hw_watchpoints = 1;
11544
11545 /* Tracepoint manipulation commands. */
11546
11547 c = add_com ("trace", class_breakpoint, trace_command, _("\
11548 Set a tracepoint at specified line or function.\n\
11549 \n"
11550 BREAK_ARGS_HELP ("trace") "\n\
11551 Do \"help tracepoints\" for info on other tracepoint commands."));
11552 set_cmd_completer (c, location_completer);
11553
11554 add_com_alias ("tp", "trace", class_alias, 0);
11555 add_com_alias ("tr", "trace", class_alias, 1);
11556 add_com_alias ("tra", "trace", class_alias, 1);
11557 add_com_alias ("trac", "trace", class_alias, 1);
11558
11559 c = add_com ("ftrace", class_breakpoint, ftrace_command, _("\
11560 Set a fast tracepoint at specified line or function.\n\
11561 \n"
11562 BREAK_ARGS_HELP ("ftrace") "\n\
11563 Do \"help tracepoints\" for info on other tracepoint commands."));
11564 set_cmd_completer (c, location_completer);
11565
11566 add_info ("tracepoints", tracepoints_info, _("\
11567 Status of tracepoints, or tracepoint number NUMBER.\n\
11568 Convenience variable \"$tpnum\" contains the number of the\n\
11569 last tracepoint set."));
11570
11571 add_info_alias ("tp", "tracepoints", 1);
11572
11573 add_cmd ("tracepoints", class_trace, delete_trace_command, _("\
11574 Delete specified tracepoints.\n\
11575 Arguments are tracepoint numbers, separated by spaces.\n\
11576 No argument means delete all tracepoints."),
11577 &deletelist);
11578
11579 c = add_cmd ("tracepoints", class_trace, disable_trace_command, _("\
11580 Disable specified tracepoints.\n\
11581 Arguments are tracepoint numbers, separated by spaces.\n\
11582 No argument means disable all tracepoints."),
11583 &disablelist);
11584 deprecate_cmd (c, "disable");
11585
11586 c = add_cmd ("tracepoints", class_trace, enable_trace_command, _("\
11587 Enable specified tracepoints.\n\
11588 Arguments are tracepoint numbers, separated by spaces.\n\
11589 No argument means enable all tracepoints."),
11590 &enablelist);
11591 deprecate_cmd (c, "enable");
11592
11593 add_com ("passcount", class_trace, trace_pass_command, _("\
11594 Set the passcount for a tracepoint.\n\
11595 The trace will end when the tracepoint has been passed 'count' times.\n\
11596 Usage: passcount COUNT TPNUM, where TPNUM may also be \"all\";\n\
11597 if TPNUM is omitted, passcount refers to the last tracepoint defined."));
11598
11599 add_prefix_cmd ("save", class_breakpoint, save_command,
11600 _("Save breakpoint definitions as a script."),
11601 &save_cmdlist, "save ",
11602 0/*allow-unknown*/, &cmdlist);
11603
11604 c = add_cmd ("breakpoints", class_breakpoint, save_breakpoints_command, _("\
11605 Save current breakpoint definitions as a script.\n\
11606 This includes all types of breakpoints (breakpoints, watchpoints, \n\
11607 catchpoints, tracepoints). Use the 'source' command in another debug\n\
11608 session to restore them."),
11609 &save_cmdlist);
11610 set_cmd_completer (c, filename_completer);
11611
11612 c = add_cmd ("tracepoints", class_trace, save_tracepoints_command, _("\
11613 Save current tracepoint definitions as a script.\n\
11614 Use the 'source' command in another debug session to restore them."),
11615 &save_cmdlist);
11616 set_cmd_completer (c, filename_completer);
11617
11618 c = add_com_alias ("save-tracepoints", "save tracepoints", class_trace, 0);
11619 deprecate_cmd (c, "save tracepoints");
11620
11621 add_prefix_cmd ("breakpoint", class_maintenance, set_breakpoint_cmd, _("\
11622 Breakpoint specific settings\n\
11623 Configure various breakpoint-specific variables such as\n\
11624 pending breakpoint behavior"),
11625 &breakpoint_set_cmdlist, "set breakpoint ",
11626 0/*allow-unknown*/, &setlist);
11627 add_prefix_cmd ("breakpoint", class_maintenance, show_breakpoint_cmd, _("\
11628 Breakpoint specific settings\n\
11629 Configure various breakpoint-specific variables such as\n\
11630 pending breakpoint behavior"),
11631 &breakpoint_show_cmdlist, "show breakpoint ",
11632 0/*allow-unknown*/, &showlist);
11633
11634 add_setshow_auto_boolean_cmd ("pending", no_class,
11635 &pending_break_support, _("\
11636 Set debugger's behavior regarding pending breakpoints."), _("\
11637 Show debugger's behavior regarding pending breakpoints."), _("\
11638 If on, an unrecognized breakpoint location will cause gdb to create a\n\
11639 pending breakpoint. If off, an unrecognized breakpoint location results in\n\
11640 an error. If auto, an unrecognized breakpoint location results in a\n\
11641 user-query to see if a pending breakpoint should be created."),
11642 NULL,
11643 show_pending_break_support,
11644 &breakpoint_set_cmdlist,
11645 &breakpoint_show_cmdlist);
11646
11647 pending_break_support = AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO;
11648
11649 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("auto-hw", no_class,
11650 &automatic_hardware_breakpoints, _("\
11651 Set automatic usage of hardware breakpoints."), _("\
11652 Show automatic usage of hardware breakpoints."), _("\
11653 If set, the debugger will automatically use hardware breakpoints for\n\
11654 breakpoints set with \"break\" but falling in read-only memory. If not set,\n\
11655 a warning will be emitted for such breakpoints."),
11656 NULL,
11657 show_automatic_hardware_breakpoints,
11658 &breakpoint_set_cmdlist,
11659 &breakpoint_show_cmdlist);
11660
11661 add_setshow_enum_cmd ("always-inserted", class_support,
11662 always_inserted_enums, &always_inserted_mode, _("\
11663 Set mode for inserting breakpoints."), _("\
11664 Show mode for inserting breakpoints."), _("\
11665 When this mode is off, breakpoints are inserted in inferior when it is\n\
11666 resumed, and removed when execution stops. When this mode is on,\n\
11667 breakpoints are inserted immediately and removed only when the user\n\
11668 deletes the breakpoint. When this mode is auto (which is the default),\n\
11669 the behaviour depends on the non-stop setting (see help set non-stop).\n\
11670 In this case, if gdb is controlling the inferior in non-stop mode, gdb\n\
11671 behaves as if always-inserted mode is on; if gdb is controlling the\n\
11672 inferior in all-stop mode, gdb behaves as if always-inserted mode is off."),
11673 NULL,
11674 &show_always_inserted_mode,
11675 &breakpoint_set_cmdlist,
11676 &breakpoint_show_cmdlist);
11677
11678 automatic_hardware_breakpoints = 1;
11679
11680 observer_attach_about_to_proceed (breakpoint_about_to_proceed);
11681 }
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