2003-12-01 Michael Chastain <mec.gnu@mindspring.com>
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / defs.h
1 /* *INDENT-OFF* */ /* ATTR_FORMAT confuses indent, avoid running it for now */
2 /* Basic, host-specific, and target-specific definitions for GDB.
3 Copyright 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996,
4 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003
5 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 2 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, write to the Free Software
21 Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
22 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
23
24 #ifndef DEFS_H
25 #define DEFS_H
26
27 #include "config.h" /* Generated by configure. */
28
29 #include <stdio.h>
30 #include <errno.h> /* System call error return status. */
31 #include <limits.h>
32
33 #ifdef HAVE_STDDEF_H
34 #include <stddef.h>
35 #else
36 #include <sys/types.h> /* For size_t. */
37 #endif
38
39 #ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H
40 #include <unistd.h>
41 #endif
42
43 /* First include ansidecl.h so we can use the various macro definitions
44 here and in all subsequent file inclusions. */
45
46 #include "ansidecl.h"
47
48 #include "gdb_locale.h"
49
50 /* For ``enum target_signal''. */
51 #include "gdb/signals.h"
52
53 /* Just in case they're not defined in stdio.h. */
54
55 #ifndef SEEK_SET
56 #define SEEK_SET 0
57 #endif
58 #ifndef SEEK_CUR
59 #define SEEK_CUR 1
60 #endif
61
62 #include <stdarg.h> /* For va_list. */
63
64 #include "libiberty.h"
65
66 #include "progress.h"
67
68 /* For BFD64 and bfd_vma. */
69 #include "bfd.h"
70
71
72 /* The target is partially multi-arched. Both "tm.h" and the
73 multi-arch vector provide definitions. "tm.h" normally overrides
74 the multi-arch vector (but there are a few exceptions). */
75
76 #define GDB_MULTI_ARCH_PARTIAL 1
77
78 /* The target is partially multi-arched. Both the multi-arch vector
79 and "tm.h" provide definitions. "tm.h" cannot override a definition
80 provided by the multi-arch vector. It is detected as a compilation
81 error.
82
83 This setting is only useful during a multi-arch conversion. */
84
85 #define GDB_MULTI_ARCH_TM 2
86
87 /* The target is pure multi-arch. The MULTI-ARCH vector provides all
88 definitions. "tm.h" is linked to an empty file. */
89
90 #define GDB_MULTI_ARCH_PURE 3
91
92
93
94 /* An address in the program being debugged. Host byte order. Rather
95 than duplicate all the logic in BFD which figures out what type
96 this is (long, long long, etc.) and whether it needs to be 64
97 bits (the host/target interactions are subtle), we just use
98 bfd_vma. */
99
100 typedef bfd_vma CORE_ADDR;
101
102 /* This is to make sure that LONGEST is at least as big as CORE_ADDR. */
103
104 #ifndef LONGEST
105
106 #ifdef BFD64
107
108 #define LONGEST BFD_HOST_64_BIT
109 #define ULONGEST BFD_HOST_U_64_BIT
110
111 #else /* No BFD64 */
112
113 #ifdef CC_HAS_LONG_LONG
114 #define LONGEST long long
115 #define ULONGEST unsigned long long
116 #else
117 #ifdef BFD_HOST_64_BIT
118 /* BFD_HOST_64_BIT is defined for some hosts that don't have long long
119 (e.g. i386-windows) so try it. */
120 #define LONGEST BFD_HOST_64_BIT
121 #define ULONGEST BFD_HOST_U_64_BIT
122 #else
123 #define LONGEST long
124 #define ULONGEST unsigned long
125 #endif
126 #endif
127
128 #endif /* No BFD64 */
129
130 #endif /* ! LONGEST */
131
132 #ifndef min
133 #define min(a, b) ((a) < (b) ? (a) : (b))
134 #endif
135 #ifndef max
136 #define max(a, b) ((a) > (b) ? (a) : (b))
137 #endif
138
139 /* Macros to do string compares.
140
141 NOTE: cagney/2000-03-14:
142
143 While old code can continue to refer to these macros, new code is
144 probably better off using strcmp() directly vis: ``strcmp() == 0''
145 and ``strcmp() != 0''.
146
147 This is because modern compilers can directly inline strcmp()
148 making the original justification for these macros - avoid function
149 call overhead by pre-testing the first characters
150 (``*X==*Y?...:0'') - redundant.
151
152 ``Even if [...] testing the first character does have a modest
153 performance improvement, I'd rather that whenever a performance
154 issue is found that we spend the effort on algorithmic
155 optimizations than micro-optimizing.'' J.T. */
156
157 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-11-23: All instances of STREQ[N] covered by
158 testing GDB on a stabs system have been replaced by equivalent
159 str[n]cmp calls. To avoid the possability of introducing bugs when
160 making untested changes, the remaining references were deprecated
161 rather than replaced. */
162
163 #define DEPRECATED_STREQ(a,b) (*(a) == *(b) ? !strcmp ((a), (b)) : 0)
164 #define DEPRECATED_STREQN(a,b,c) (*(a) == *(b) ? !strncmp ((a), (b), (c)) : 0)
165
166 /* Check if a character is one of the commonly used C++ marker characters. */
167 extern int is_cplus_marker (int);
168
169 /* enable xdb commands if set */
170 extern int xdb_commands;
171
172 /* enable dbx commands if set */
173 extern int dbx_commands;
174
175 /* System root path, used to find libraries etc. */
176 extern char *gdb_sysroot;
177
178 extern int quit_flag;
179 extern int immediate_quit;
180 extern int sevenbit_strings;
181
182 extern void quit (void);
183
184 /* FIXME: cagney/2000-03-13: It has been suggested that the peformance
185 benefits of having a ``QUIT'' macro rather than a function are
186 marginal. If the overhead of a QUIT function call is proving
187 significant then its calling frequency should probably be reduced
188 [kingdon]. A profile analyzing the current situtation is
189 needed. */
190
191 #ifdef QUIT
192 /* do twice to force compiler warning */
193 #define QUIT_FIXME "FIXME"
194 #define QUIT_FIXME "ignoring redefinition of QUIT"
195 #else
196 #define QUIT { \
197 if (quit_flag) quit (); \
198 if (interactive_hook) interactive_hook (); \
199 PROGRESS (1); \
200 }
201 #endif
202
203 /* Languages represented in the symbol table and elsewhere.
204 This should probably be in language.h, but since enum's can't
205 be forward declared to satisfy opaque references before their
206 actual definition, needs to be here. */
207
208 enum language
209 {
210 language_unknown, /* Language not known */
211 language_auto, /* Placeholder for automatic setting */
212 language_c, /* C */
213 language_cplus, /* C++ */
214 language_objc, /* Objective-C */
215 language_java, /* Java */
216 language_fortran, /* Fortran */
217 language_m2, /* Modula-2 */
218 language_asm, /* Assembly language */
219 language_scm, /* Scheme / Guile */
220 language_pascal, /* Pascal */
221 language_minimal /* All other languages, minimal support only */
222 };
223
224 enum precision_type
225 {
226 single_precision,
227 double_precision,
228 unspecified_precision
229 };
230
231 /* A generic, not quite boolean, enumeration. */
232 enum auto_boolean
233 {
234 AUTO_BOOLEAN_TRUE,
235 AUTO_BOOLEAN_FALSE,
236 AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO
237 };
238
239 /* Potential ways that a function can return a value of a given type. */
240 enum return_value_convention
241 {
242 /* Where the return value has been squeezed into one or more
243 registers. */
244 RETURN_VALUE_REGISTER_CONVENTION,
245 /* Commonly known as the "struct return convention". The caller
246 passes an additional hidden first parameter to the caller. That
247 parameter contains the address at which the value being returned
248 should be stored. While typically, and historically, used for
249 large structs, this is convention is applied to values of many
250 different types. */
251 RETURN_VALUE_STRUCT_CONVENTION
252 };
253
254 /* the cleanup list records things that have to be undone
255 if an error happens (descriptors to be closed, memory to be freed, etc.)
256 Each link in the chain records a function to call and an
257 argument to give it.
258
259 Use make_cleanup to add an element to the cleanup chain.
260 Use do_cleanups to do all cleanup actions back to a given
261 point in the chain. Use discard_cleanups to remove cleanups
262 from the chain back to a given point, not doing them. */
263
264 struct cleanup
265 {
266 struct cleanup *next;
267 void (*function) (void *);
268 void *arg;
269 };
270
271
272 /* The ability to declare that a function never returns is useful, but
273 not really required to compile GDB successfully, so the NORETURN and
274 ATTR_NORETURN macros normally expand into nothing. */
275
276 /* If compiling with older versions of GCC, a function may be declared
277 "volatile" to indicate that it does not return. */
278
279 #ifndef NORETURN
280 #if defined(__GNUC__) \
281 && (__GNUC__ == 1 || (__GNUC__ == 2 && __GNUC_MINOR__ < 7))
282 #define NORETURN volatile
283 #else
284 #define NORETURN /* nothing */
285 #endif
286 #endif
287
288 /* GCC 2.5 and later versions define a function attribute "noreturn",
289 which is the preferred way to declare that a function never returns.
290 However GCC 2.7 appears to be the first version in which this fully
291 works everywhere we use it. */
292
293 #ifndef ATTR_NORETURN
294 #if defined(__GNUC__) && (__GNUC__ > 2 || (__GNUC__ == 2 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 7))
295 #define ATTR_NORETURN __attribute__ ((noreturn))
296 #else
297 #define ATTR_NORETURN /* nothing */
298 #endif
299 #endif
300
301 #ifndef ATTR_FORMAT
302 #if defined(__GNUC__) && (__GNUC__ > 2 || (__GNUC__ == 2 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 4))
303 #define ATTR_FORMAT(type, x, y) __attribute__ ((format(type, x, y)))
304 #else
305 #define ATTR_FORMAT(type, x, y) /* nothing */
306 #endif
307 #endif
308
309 /* Be conservative and use enum bitfields only with GCC.
310 This is copied from gcc 3.3.1, system.h. */
311
312 #if defined(__GNUC__) && (__GNUC__ >= 2)
313 #define ENUM_BITFIELD(TYPE) enum TYPE
314 #else
315 #define ENUM_BITFIELD(TYPE) unsigned int
316 #endif
317
318 /* Needed for various prototypes */
319
320 struct symtab;
321 struct breakpoint;
322
323 /* From blockframe.c */
324
325 extern int inside_entry_func (CORE_ADDR);
326
327 extern int deprecated_inside_entry_file (CORE_ADDR addr);
328
329 extern int inside_main_func (CORE_ADDR pc);
330
331 /* From utils.c */
332
333 extern void initialize_utils (void);
334
335 extern void notice_quit (void);
336
337 extern int strcmp_iw (const char *, const char *);
338
339 extern int strcmp_iw_ordered (const char *, const char *);
340
341 extern int streq (const char *, const char *);
342
343 extern int subset_compare (char *, char *);
344
345 extern char *safe_strerror (int);
346
347 extern void init_malloc (void *);
348
349 extern void request_quit (int);
350
351 extern void do_cleanups (struct cleanup *);
352 extern void do_final_cleanups (struct cleanup *);
353 extern void do_my_cleanups (struct cleanup **, struct cleanup *);
354 extern void do_run_cleanups (struct cleanup *);
355 extern void do_exec_cleanups (struct cleanup *);
356 extern void do_exec_error_cleanups (struct cleanup *);
357
358 extern void discard_cleanups (struct cleanup *);
359 extern void discard_final_cleanups (struct cleanup *);
360 extern void discard_exec_error_cleanups (struct cleanup *);
361 extern void discard_my_cleanups (struct cleanup **, struct cleanup *);
362
363 /* NOTE: cagney/2000-03-04: This typedef is strictly for the
364 make_cleanup function declarations below. Do not use this typedef
365 as a cast when passing functions into the make_cleanup() code.
366 Instead either use a bounce function or add a wrapper function.
367 Calling a f(char*) function with f(void*) is non-portable. */
368 typedef void (make_cleanup_ftype) (void *);
369
370 extern struct cleanup *make_cleanup (make_cleanup_ftype *, void *);
371
372 extern struct cleanup *make_cleanup_freeargv (char **);
373
374 struct ui_file;
375 extern struct cleanup *make_cleanup_ui_file_delete (struct ui_file *);
376
377 extern struct cleanup *make_cleanup_close (int fd);
378
379 extern struct cleanup *make_cleanup_bfd_close (bfd *abfd);
380
381 extern struct cleanup *make_final_cleanup (make_cleanup_ftype *, void *);
382
383 extern struct cleanup *make_my_cleanup (struct cleanup **,
384 make_cleanup_ftype *, void *);
385
386 extern struct cleanup *make_run_cleanup (make_cleanup_ftype *, void *);
387
388 extern struct cleanup *make_exec_cleanup (make_cleanup_ftype *, void *);
389 extern struct cleanup *make_exec_error_cleanup (make_cleanup_ftype *, void *);
390
391 extern struct cleanup *save_cleanups (void);
392 extern struct cleanup *save_final_cleanups (void);
393 extern struct cleanup *save_my_cleanups (struct cleanup **);
394
395 extern void restore_cleanups (struct cleanup *);
396 extern void restore_final_cleanups (struct cleanup *);
397 extern void restore_my_cleanups (struct cleanup **, struct cleanup *);
398
399 extern void free_current_contents (void *);
400
401 extern void null_cleanup (void *);
402
403 extern int myread (int, char *, int);
404
405 extern int query (const char *, ...) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 1, 2);
406
407 extern void init_page_info (void);
408
409 extern char *gdb_realpath (const char *);
410 extern char *xfullpath (const char *);
411
412 extern unsigned long gnu_debuglink_crc32 (unsigned long crc,
413 unsigned char *buf, size_t len);
414
415 /* From demangle.c */
416
417 extern void set_demangling_style (char *);
418
419 /* From tm.h */
420
421 struct type;
422 typedef int (use_struct_convention_fn) (int gcc_p, struct type * value_type);
423 extern use_struct_convention_fn generic_use_struct_convention;
424
425 \f
426 /* Annotation stuff. */
427
428 extern int annotation_level; /* in stack.c */
429 \f
430 extern void begin_line (void);
431
432 extern void wrap_here (char *);
433
434 extern void reinitialize_more_filter (void);
435
436 /* Normal results */
437 extern struct ui_file *gdb_stdout;
438 /* Input stream */
439 extern struct ui_file *gdb_stdin;
440 /* Serious error notifications */
441 extern struct ui_file *gdb_stderr;
442 /* Log/debug/trace messages that should bypass normal stdout/stderr
443 filtering. For momement, always call this stream using
444 *_unfiltered. In the very near future that restriction shall be
445 removed - either call shall be unfiltered. (cagney 1999-06-13). */
446 extern struct ui_file *gdb_stdlog;
447 /* Target output that should bypass normal stdout/stderr filtering.
448 For momement, always call this stream using *_unfiltered. In the
449 very near future that restriction shall be removed - either call
450 shall be unfiltered. (cagney 1999-07-02). */
451 extern struct ui_file *gdb_stdtarg;
452 extern struct ui_file *gdb_stdtargerr;
453 extern struct ui_file *gdb_stdtargin;
454
455 #if defined(TUI)
456 #include "tui.h"
457 #endif
458
459 #include "ui-file.h"
460
461 /* More generic printf like operations. Filtered versions may return
462 non-locally on error. */
463
464 extern void fputs_filtered (const char *, struct ui_file *);
465
466 extern void fputs_unfiltered (const char *, struct ui_file *);
467
468 extern int fputc_filtered (int c, struct ui_file *);
469
470 extern int fputc_unfiltered (int c, struct ui_file *);
471
472 extern int putchar_filtered (int c);
473
474 extern int putchar_unfiltered (int c);
475
476 extern void puts_filtered (const char *);
477
478 extern void puts_unfiltered (const char *);
479
480 extern void puts_filtered_tabular (char *string, int width, int right);
481
482 extern void puts_debug (char *prefix, char *string, char *suffix);
483
484 extern void vprintf_filtered (const char *, va_list) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 1, 0);
485
486 extern void vfprintf_filtered (struct ui_file *, const char *, va_list) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 2, 0);
487
488 extern void fprintf_filtered (struct ui_file *, const char *, ...) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 2, 3);
489
490 extern void fprintfi_filtered (int, struct ui_file *, const char *, ...) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 3, 4);
491
492 extern void printf_filtered (const char *, ...) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 1, 2);
493
494 extern void printfi_filtered (int, const char *, ...) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 2, 3);
495
496 extern void vprintf_unfiltered (const char *, va_list) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 1, 0);
497
498 extern void vfprintf_unfiltered (struct ui_file *, const char *, va_list) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 2, 0);
499
500 extern void fprintf_unfiltered (struct ui_file *, const char *, ...) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 2, 3);
501
502 extern void printf_unfiltered (const char *, ...) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 1, 2);
503
504 extern void print_spaces (int, struct ui_file *);
505
506 extern void print_spaces_filtered (int, struct ui_file *);
507
508 extern char *n_spaces (int);
509
510 extern void fputstr_filtered (const char *str, int quotr, struct ui_file * stream);
511
512 extern void fputstr_unfiltered (const char *str, int quotr, struct ui_file * stream);
513
514 extern void fputstrn_unfiltered (const char *str, int n, int quotr, struct ui_file * stream);
515
516 /* Display the host ADDR on STREAM formatted as ``0x%x''. */
517 extern void gdb_print_host_address (const void *addr, struct ui_file *stream);
518
519 /* Convert a CORE_ADDR into a HEX string. paddr() is like %08lx.
520 paddr_nz() is like %lx. paddr_u() is like %lu. paddr_width() is
521 for ``%*''. */
522 extern int strlen_paddr (void);
523 extern char *paddr (CORE_ADDR addr);
524 extern char *paddr_nz (CORE_ADDR addr);
525 extern char *paddr_u (CORE_ADDR addr);
526 extern char *paddr_d (LONGEST addr);
527
528 extern char *phex (ULONGEST l, int sizeof_l);
529 extern char *phex_nz (ULONGEST l, int sizeof_l);
530
531 /* Like paddr() only print/scan raw CORE_ADDR. The output from
532 core_addr_to_string() can be passed direct to
533 string_to_core_addr(). */
534 extern const char *core_addr_to_string (const CORE_ADDR addr);
535 extern const char *core_addr_to_string_nz (const CORE_ADDR addr);
536 extern CORE_ADDR string_to_core_addr (const char *my_string);
537
538 extern void fprintf_symbol_filtered (struct ui_file *, char *,
539 enum language, int);
540
541 extern NORETURN void perror_with_name (const char *) ATTR_NORETURN;
542
543 extern void print_sys_errmsg (const char *, int);
544
545 /* From regex.c or libc. BSD 4.4 declares this with the argument type as
546 "const char *" in unistd.h, so we can't declare the argument
547 as "char *". */
548
549 extern char *re_comp (const char *);
550
551 /* From symfile.c */
552
553 extern void symbol_file_command (char *, int);
554
555 /* Remote targets may wish to use this as their load function. */
556 extern void generic_load (char *name, int from_tty);
557
558 /* Summarise a download */
559 extern void print_transfer_performance (struct ui_file *stream,
560 unsigned long data_count,
561 unsigned long write_count,
562 unsigned long time_count);
563
564 /* From top.c */
565
566 typedef void initialize_file_ftype (void);
567
568 extern char *skip_quoted (char *);
569
570 extern char *gdb_readline (char *);
571
572 extern char *gdb_readline_wrapper (char *);
573
574 extern char *command_line_input (char *, int, char *);
575
576 extern void print_prompt (void);
577
578 extern int input_from_terminal_p (void);
579
580 extern int info_verbose;
581
582 /* From printcmd.c */
583
584 extern void set_next_address (CORE_ADDR);
585
586 extern void print_address_symbolic (CORE_ADDR, struct ui_file *, int,
587 char *);
588
589 extern int build_address_symbolic (CORE_ADDR addr,
590 int do_demangle,
591 char **name,
592 int *offset,
593 char **filename,
594 int *line,
595 int *unmapped);
596
597 extern void print_address_numeric (CORE_ADDR, int, struct ui_file *);
598
599 extern void print_address (CORE_ADDR, struct ui_file *);
600
601 /* From source.c */
602
603 extern int openp (const char *, int, const char *, int, int, char **);
604
605 extern int source_full_path_of (char *, char **);
606
607 extern void mod_path (char *, char **);
608
609 extern void add_path (char *, char **, int);
610
611 extern void directory_command (char *, int);
612
613 extern char *source_path;
614
615 extern void init_source_path (void);
616
617 extern void init_last_source_visited (void);
618
619 extern char *symtab_to_filename (struct symtab *);
620
621 /* From exec.c */
622
623 extern void exec_set_section_offsets (bfd_signed_vma text_off,
624 bfd_signed_vma data_off,
625 bfd_signed_vma bss_off);
626
627 /* Take over the 'find_mapped_memory' vector from exec.c. */
628 extern void exec_set_find_memory_regions (int (*) (int (*) (CORE_ADDR,
629 unsigned long,
630 int, int, int,
631 void *),
632 void *));
633
634 /* Possible lvalue types. Like enum language, this should be in
635 value.h, but needs to be here for the same reason. */
636
637 enum lval_type
638 {
639 /* Not an lval. */
640 not_lval,
641 /* In memory. Could be a saved register. */
642 lval_memory,
643 /* In a register. */
644 lval_register,
645 /* In a gdb internal variable. */
646 lval_internalvar,
647 /* Part of a gdb internal variable (structure field). */
648 lval_internalvar_component,
649 /* In a register series in a frame not the current one, which may have been
650 partially saved or saved in different places (otherwise would be
651 lval_register or lval_memory). */
652 lval_reg_frame_relative
653 };
654
655 struct frame_info;
656
657 /* Control types for commands */
658
659 enum misc_command_type
660 {
661 ok_command,
662 end_command,
663 else_command,
664 nop_command
665 };
666
667 enum command_control_type
668 {
669 simple_control,
670 break_control,
671 continue_control,
672 while_control,
673 if_control,
674 invalid_control
675 };
676
677 /* Structure for saved commands lines
678 (for breakpoints, defined commands, etc). */
679
680 struct command_line
681 {
682 struct command_line *next;
683 char *line;
684 enum command_control_type control_type;
685 int body_count;
686 struct command_line **body_list;
687 };
688
689 extern struct command_line *read_command_lines (char *, int);
690
691 extern void free_command_lines (struct command_line **);
692
693 /* To continue the execution commands when running gdb asynchronously.
694 A continuation structure contains a pointer to a function to be called
695 to finish the command, once the target has stopped. Such mechanism is
696 used bt the finish and until commands, and in the remote protocol
697 when opening an extended-remote connection. */
698
699 struct continuation_arg
700 {
701 struct continuation_arg *next;
702 union continuation_data {
703 void *pointer;
704 int integer;
705 long longint;
706 } data;
707 };
708
709 struct continuation
710 {
711 void (*continuation_hook) (struct continuation_arg *);
712 struct continuation_arg *arg_list;
713 struct continuation *next;
714 };
715
716 /* In infrun.c. */
717 extern struct continuation *cmd_continuation;
718 /* Used only by the step_1 function. */
719 extern struct continuation *intermediate_continuation;
720
721 /* From utils.c */
722 extern void add_continuation (void (*)(struct continuation_arg *),
723 struct continuation_arg *);
724 extern void do_all_continuations (void);
725 extern void discard_all_continuations (void);
726
727 extern void add_intermediate_continuation (void (*)(struct continuation_arg *),
728 struct continuation_arg *);
729 extern void do_all_intermediate_continuations (void);
730 extern void discard_all_intermediate_continuations (void);
731
732 /* String containing the current directory (what getwd would return). */
733
734 extern char *current_directory;
735
736 /* Default radixes for input and output. Only some values supported. */
737 extern unsigned input_radix;
738 extern unsigned output_radix;
739
740 /* Possibilities for prettyprint parameters to routines which print
741 things. Like enum language, this should be in value.h, but needs
742 to be here for the same reason. FIXME: If we can eliminate this
743 as an arg to LA_VAL_PRINT, then we can probably move it back to
744 value.h. */
745
746 enum val_prettyprint
747 {
748 Val_no_prettyprint = 0,
749 Val_prettyprint,
750 /* Use the default setting which the user has specified. */
751 Val_pretty_default
752 };
753
754 /* The ptid struct is a collection of the various "ids" necessary
755 for identifying the inferior. This consists of the process id
756 (pid), thread id (tid), and other fields necessary for uniquely
757 identifying the inferior process/thread being debugged. When
758 manipulating ptids, the constructors, accessors, and predicate
759 declared in inferior.h should be used. These are as follows:
760
761 ptid_build - Make a new ptid from a pid, lwp, and tid.
762 pid_to_ptid - Make a new ptid from just a pid.
763 ptid_get_pid - Fetch the pid component of a ptid.
764 ptid_get_lwp - Fetch the lwp component of a ptid.
765 ptid_get_tid - Fetch the tid component of a ptid.
766 ptid_equal - Test to see if two ptids are equal.
767
768 Please do NOT access the struct ptid members directly (except, of
769 course, in the implementation of the above ptid manipulation
770 functions). */
771
772 struct ptid
773 {
774 /* Process id */
775 int pid;
776
777 /* Lightweight process id */
778 long lwp;
779
780 /* Thread id */
781 long tid;
782 };
783
784 typedef struct ptid ptid_t;
785
786 \f
787
788 /* Optional host machine definition. Pure autoconf targets will not
789 need a "xm.h" file. This will be a symlink to one of the xm-*.h
790 files, built by the `configure' script. */
791
792 #ifdef GDB_XM_FILE
793 #include "xm.h"
794 #endif
795
796 /* Optional native machine support. Non-native (and possibly pure
797 multi-arch) targets do not need a "nm.h" file. This will be a
798 symlink to one of the nm-*.h files, built by the `configure'
799 script. */
800
801 #ifdef GDB_NM_FILE
802 #include "nm.h"
803 #endif
804
805 /* Optional target machine definition. Pure multi-arch configurations
806 do not need a "tm.h" file. This will be a symlink to one of the
807 tm-*.h files, built by the `configure' script. */
808
809 #ifdef GDB_TM_FILE
810 #include "tm.h"
811 #endif
812
813 /* If the xm.h file did not define the mode string used to open the
814 files, assume that binary files are opened the same way as text
815 files */
816 #ifndef FOPEN_RB
817 #include "fopen-same.h"
818 #endif
819
820 /* Defaults for system-wide constants (if not defined by xm.h, we fake it).
821 FIXME: Assumes 2's complement arithmetic */
822
823 #if !defined (UINT_MAX)
824 #define UINT_MAX ((unsigned int)(~0)) /* 0xFFFFFFFF for 32-bits */
825 #endif
826
827 #if !defined (INT_MAX)
828 #define INT_MAX ((int)(UINT_MAX >> 1)) /* 0x7FFFFFFF for 32-bits */
829 #endif
830
831 #if !defined (INT_MIN)
832 #define INT_MIN ((int)((int) ~0 ^ INT_MAX)) /* 0x80000000 for 32-bits */
833 #endif
834
835 #if !defined (ULONG_MAX)
836 #define ULONG_MAX ((unsigned long)(~0L)) /* 0xFFFFFFFF for 32-bits */
837 #endif
838
839 #if !defined (LONG_MAX)
840 #define LONG_MAX ((long)(ULONG_MAX >> 1)) /* 0x7FFFFFFF for 32-bits */
841 #endif
842
843 #if !defined (ULONGEST_MAX)
844 #define ULONGEST_MAX (~(ULONGEST)0) /* 0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF for 64-bits */
845 #endif
846
847 #if !defined (LONGEST_MAX) /* 0x7FFFFFFFFFFFFFFF for 64-bits */
848 #define LONGEST_MAX ((LONGEST)(ULONGEST_MAX >> 1))
849 #endif
850
851 /* Convert a LONGEST to an int. This is used in contexts (e.g. number of
852 arguments to a function, number in a value history, register number, etc.)
853 where the value must not be larger than can fit in an int. */
854
855 extern int longest_to_int (LONGEST);
856
857 /* Assorted functions we can declare, now that const and volatile are
858 defined. */
859
860 extern char *savestring (const char *, size_t);
861
862 extern char *msavestring (void *, const char *, size_t);
863
864 extern char *mstrsave (void *, const char *);
865
866 /* Robust versions of same. Throw an internal error when no memory,
867 guard against stray NULL arguments. */
868 extern void *xmmalloc (void *md, size_t size);
869 extern void *xmrealloc (void *md, void *ptr, size_t size);
870 extern void *xmcalloc (void *md, size_t number, size_t size);
871 extern void xmfree (void *md, void *ptr);
872
873 /* xmalloc(), xrealloc() and xcalloc() have already been declared in
874 "libiberty.h". */
875 extern void xfree (void *);
876
877 /* Utility macros to allocate typed memory. Avoids errors like:
878 struct foo *foo = xmalloc (sizeof struct bar); and memset (foo,
879 sizeof (struct foo), 0). */
880 #define XZALLOC(TYPE) ((TYPE*) memset (xmalloc (sizeof (TYPE)), 0, sizeof (TYPE)))
881 #define XMALLOC(TYPE) ((TYPE*) xmalloc (sizeof (TYPE)))
882 #define XCALLOC(NMEMB, TYPE) ((TYPE*) xcalloc ((NMEMB), sizeof (TYPE)))
883
884 /* Like asprintf/vasprintf but get an internal_error if the call
885 fails. */
886 extern void xasprintf (char **ret, const char *format, ...) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 2, 3);
887 extern void xvasprintf (char **ret, const char *format, va_list ap);
888
889 /* Like asprintf, but return the string, throw an error if no memory. */
890 extern char *xstrprintf (const char *format, ...) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 1, 2);
891
892 extern int parse_escape (char **);
893
894 /* Message to be printed before the error message, when an error occurs. */
895
896 extern char *error_pre_print;
897
898 /* Message to be printed before the error message, when an error occurs. */
899
900 extern char *quit_pre_print;
901
902 /* Message to be printed before the warning message, when a warning occurs. */
903
904 extern char *warning_pre_print;
905
906 extern NORETURN void verror (const char *fmt, va_list ap) ATTR_NORETURN;
907
908 extern NORETURN void error (const char *fmt, ...) ATTR_NORETURN ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 1, 2);
909
910 extern NORETURN void error_stream (struct ui_file *) ATTR_NORETURN;
911
912 /* Initialize the error buffer. */
913 extern void error_init (void);
914
915 /* Returns a freshly allocate buffer containing the last error
916 message. */
917 extern char *error_last_message (void);
918
919 extern NORETURN void internal_verror (const char *file, int line,
920 const char *, va_list ap) ATTR_NORETURN;
921
922 extern NORETURN void internal_error (const char *file, int line,
923 const char *, ...) ATTR_NORETURN ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 3, 4);
924
925 extern void internal_vwarning (const char *file, int line,
926 const char *, va_list ap);
927
928 extern void internal_warning (const char *file, int line,
929 const char *, ...) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 3, 4);
930
931 extern NORETURN void nomem (long) ATTR_NORETURN;
932
933 /* Reasons for calling throw_exception(). NOTE: all reason values
934 must be less than zero. enum value 0 is reserved for internal use
935 as the return value from an initial setjmp(). The function
936 catch_exceptions() reserves values >= 0 as legal results from its
937 wrapped function. */
938
939 enum return_reason
940 {
941 /* User interrupt. */
942 RETURN_QUIT = -2,
943 /* Any other error. */
944 RETURN_ERROR
945 };
946
947 #define ALL_CLEANUPS ((struct cleanup *)0)
948
949 #define RETURN_MASK(reason) (1 << (int)(-reason))
950 #define RETURN_MASK_QUIT RETURN_MASK (RETURN_QUIT)
951 #define RETURN_MASK_ERROR RETURN_MASK (RETURN_ERROR)
952 #define RETURN_MASK_ALL (RETURN_MASK_QUIT | RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
953 typedef int return_mask;
954
955 /* Throw an exception of type RETURN_REASON. Will execute a LONG JUMP
956 to the inner most containing exception handler established using
957 catch_exceptions() (or the legacy catch_errors()).
958
959 Code normally throws an exception using error() et.al. For various
960 reaons, GDB also contains code that throws an exception directly.
961 For instance, the remote*.c targets contain CNTRL-C signal handlers
962 that propogate the QUIT event up the exception chain. ``This could
963 be a good thing or a dangerous thing.'' -- the Existential Wombat. */
964
965 extern NORETURN void throw_exception (enum return_reason) ATTR_NORETURN;
966
967 /* Call FUNC(UIOUT, FUNC_ARGS) but wrapped within an exception
968 handler. If an exception (enum return_reason) is thrown using
969 throw_exception() than all cleanups installed since
970 catch_exceptions() was entered are invoked, the (-ve) exception
971 value is then returned by catch_exceptions. If FUNC() returns
972 normally (with a postive or zero return value) then that value is
973 returned by catch_exceptions(). It is an internal_error() for
974 FUNC() to return a negative value.
975
976 For the period of the FUNC() call: UIOUT is installed as the output
977 builder; ERRSTRING is installed as the error/quit message; and a
978 new cleanup_chain is established. The old values are restored
979 before catch_exceptions() returns.
980
981 FIXME; cagney/2001-08-13: The need to override the global UIOUT
982 builder variable should just go away.
983
984 This function superseeds catch_errors().
985
986 This function uses SETJMP() and LONGJUMP(). */
987
988 struct ui_out;
989 typedef int (catch_exceptions_ftype) (struct ui_out *ui_out, void *args);
990 extern int catch_exceptions (struct ui_out *uiout,
991 catch_exceptions_ftype *func, void *func_args,
992 char *errstring, return_mask mask);
993
994 /* If CATCH_ERRORS_FTYPE throws an error, catch_errors() returns zero
995 otherwize the result from CATCH_ERRORS_FTYPE is returned. It is
996 probably useful for CATCH_ERRORS_FTYPE to always return a non-zero
997 value. It's unfortunate that, catch_errors() does not return an
998 indication of the exact exception that it caught - quit_flag might
999 help.
1000
1001 This function is superseeded by catch_exceptions(). */
1002
1003 typedef int (catch_errors_ftype) (void *);
1004 extern int catch_errors (catch_errors_ftype *, void *, char *, return_mask);
1005
1006 /* Template to catch_errors() that wraps calls to command
1007 functions. */
1008
1009 typedef void (catch_command_errors_ftype) (char *, int);
1010 extern int catch_command_errors (catch_command_errors_ftype *func, char *command, int from_tty, return_mask);
1011
1012 extern void warning (const char *, ...) ATTR_FORMAT (printf, 1, 2);
1013
1014 extern void vwarning (const char *, va_list args);
1015
1016 /* List of known OS ABIs. If you change this, make sure to update the
1017 table in osabi.c. */
1018 enum gdb_osabi
1019 {
1020 GDB_OSABI_UNINITIALIZED = -1, /* For struct gdbarch_info. */
1021
1022 GDB_OSABI_UNKNOWN = 0, /* keep this zero */
1023
1024 GDB_OSABI_SVR4,
1025 GDB_OSABI_HURD,
1026 GDB_OSABI_SOLARIS,
1027 GDB_OSABI_OSF1,
1028 GDB_OSABI_LINUX,
1029 GDB_OSABI_FREEBSD_AOUT,
1030 GDB_OSABI_FREEBSD_ELF,
1031 GDB_OSABI_NETBSD_AOUT,
1032 GDB_OSABI_NETBSD_ELF,
1033 GDB_OSABI_WINCE,
1034 GDB_OSABI_GO32,
1035 GDB_OSABI_NETWARE,
1036 GDB_OSABI_IRIX,
1037 GDB_OSABI_LYNXOS,
1038 GDB_OSABI_INTERIX,
1039 GDB_OSABI_HPUX_ELF,
1040 GDB_OSABI_HPUX_SOM,
1041
1042 GDB_OSABI_ARM_EABI_V1,
1043 GDB_OSABI_ARM_EABI_V2,
1044 GDB_OSABI_ARM_APCS,
1045 GDB_OSABI_QNXNTO,
1046
1047 GDB_OSABI_CYGWIN,
1048
1049 GDB_OSABI_INVALID /* keep this last */
1050 };
1051
1052 /* Global functions from other, non-gdb GNU thingies.
1053 Libiberty thingies are no longer declared here. We include libiberty.h
1054 above, instead. */
1055
1056 #ifndef GETENV_PROVIDED
1057 extern char *getenv (const char *);
1058 #endif
1059
1060 /* From other system libraries */
1061
1062 #ifdef HAVE_STDDEF_H
1063 #include <stddef.h>
1064 #endif
1065
1066 #ifdef HAVE_STDLIB_H
1067 #include <stdlib.h>
1068 #endif
1069 #ifndef min
1070 #define min(a, b) ((a) < (b) ? (a) : (b))
1071 #endif
1072 #ifndef max
1073 #define max(a, b) ((a) > (b) ? (a) : (b))
1074 #endif
1075
1076
1077 /* We take the address of fclose later, but some stdio's forget
1078 to declare this. We can't always declare it since there's
1079 no way to declare the parameters without upsetting some compiler
1080 somewhere. */
1081
1082 #ifndef FCLOSE_PROVIDED
1083 extern int fclose (FILE *);
1084 #endif
1085
1086 #ifndef atof
1087 extern double atof (const char *); /* X3.159-1989 4.10.1.1 */
1088 #endif
1089
1090 /* Various possibilities for alloca. */
1091 #ifndef alloca
1092 #ifdef __GNUC__
1093 #define alloca __builtin_alloca
1094 #else /* Not GNU C */
1095 #ifdef HAVE_ALLOCA_H
1096 #include <alloca.h>
1097 #else
1098 #ifdef _AIX
1099 #pragma alloca
1100 #else
1101
1102 /* We need to be careful not to declare this in a way which conflicts with
1103 bison. Bison never declares it as char *, but under various circumstances
1104 (like __hpux) we need to use void *. */
1105 extern void *alloca ();
1106 #endif /* Not _AIX */
1107 #endif /* Not HAVE_ALLOCA_H */
1108 #endif /* Not GNU C */
1109 #endif /* alloca not defined */
1110
1111 /* Is GDB multi-arch? If there's a "tm.h" file, it is not. */
1112 #ifndef GDB_MULTI_ARCH
1113 #ifdef GDB_TM_FILE
1114 #define GDB_MULTI_ARCH GDB_MULTI_ARCH_PARTIAL
1115 #else
1116 #define GDB_MULTI_ARCH GDB_MULTI_ARCH_PURE
1117 #endif
1118 #endif
1119
1120 /* Dynamic target-system-dependent parameters for GDB. */
1121 #include "gdbarch.h"
1122
1123 /* Maximum size of a register. Something small, but large enough for
1124 all known ISAs. If it turns out to be too small, make it bigger. */
1125
1126 enum { MAX_REGISTER_SIZE = 16 };
1127
1128 /* Static target-system-dependent parameters for GDB. */
1129
1130 /* Number of bits in a char or unsigned char for the target machine.
1131 Just like CHAR_BIT in <limits.h> but describes the target machine. */
1132 #if !defined (TARGET_CHAR_BIT)
1133 #define TARGET_CHAR_BIT 8
1134 #endif
1135
1136 /* If we picked up a copy of CHAR_BIT from a configuration file
1137 (which may get it by including <limits.h>) then use it to set
1138 the number of bits in a host char. If not, use the same size
1139 as the target. */
1140
1141 #if defined (CHAR_BIT)
1142 #define HOST_CHAR_BIT CHAR_BIT
1143 #else
1144 #define HOST_CHAR_BIT TARGET_CHAR_BIT
1145 #endif
1146
1147 /* The bit byte-order has to do just with numbering of bits in
1148 debugging symbols and such. Conceptually, it's quite separate
1149 from byte/word byte order. */
1150
1151 #if !defined (BITS_BIG_ENDIAN)
1152 #define BITS_BIG_ENDIAN (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG)
1153 #endif
1154
1155 /* In findvar.c. */
1156
1157 extern LONGEST extract_signed_integer (const void *, int);
1158
1159 extern ULONGEST extract_unsigned_integer (const void *, int);
1160
1161 extern int extract_long_unsigned_integer (const void *, int, LONGEST *);
1162
1163 extern CORE_ADDR extract_typed_address (const void *buf, struct type *type);
1164
1165 extern void store_signed_integer (void *, int, LONGEST);
1166
1167 extern void store_unsigned_integer (void *, int, ULONGEST);
1168
1169 extern void store_typed_address (void *buf, struct type *type, CORE_ADDR addr);
1170
1171 \f
1172 /* From valops.c */
1173
1174 extern CORE_ADDR push_bytes (CORE_ADDR, char *, int);
1175
1176 extern CORE_ADDR push_word (CORE_ADDR, ULONGEST);
1177
1178 extern int watchdog;
1179
1180 /* Hooks for alternate command interfaces. */
1181
1182 /* The name of the interpreter if specified on the command line. */
1183 extern char *interpreter_p;
1184
1185 /* If a given interpreter matches INTERPRETER_P then it should update
1186 command_loop_hook and init_ui_hook with the per-interpreter
1187 implementation. */
1188 /* FIXME: command_loop_hook and init_ui_hook should be moved here. */
1189
1190 struct target_waitstatus;
1191 struct cmd_list_element;
1192
1193 /* Should the asynchronous variant of the interpreter (using the
1194 event-loop) be enabled? */
1195 extern int event_loop_p;
1196
1197 extern void (*init_ui_hook) (char *argv0);
1198 extern void (*command_loop_hook) (void);
1199 extern void (*show_load_progress) (const char *section,
1200 unsigned long section_sent,
1201 unsigned long section_size,
1202 unsigned long total_sent,
1203 unsigned long total_size);
1204 extern void (*print_frame_info_listing_hook) (struct symtab * s,
1205 int line, int stopline,
1206 int noerror);
1207 extern struct frame_info *parse_frame_specification (char *frame_exp);
1208 extern int (*query_hook) (const char *, va_list);
1209 extern void (*warning_hook) (const char *, va_list);
1210 extern void (*flush_hook) (struct ui_file * stream);
1211 extern void (*create_breakpoint_hook) (struct breakpoint * b);
1212 extern void (*delete_breakpoint_hook) (struct breakpoint * bpt);
1213 extern void (*modify_breakpoint_hook) (struct breakpoint * bpt);
1214 extern void (*interactive_hook) (void);
1215 extern void (*registers_changed_hook) (void);
1216 extern void (*readline_begin_hook) (char *,...);
1217 extern char *(*readline_hook) (char *);
1218 extern void (*readline_end_hook) (void);
1219 extern void (*register_changed_hook) (int regno);
1220 extern void (*memory_changed_hook) (CORE_ADDR addr, int len);
1221 extern void (*context_hook) (int);
1222 extern ptid_t (*target_wait_hook) (ptid_t ptid,
1223 struct target_waitstatus * status);
1224
1225 extern void (*attach_hook) (void);
1226 extern void (*detach_hook) (void);
1227 extern void (*call_command_hook) (struct cmd_list_element * c,
1228 char *cmd, int from_tty);
1229
1230 extern void (*set_hook) (struct cmd_list_element * c);
1231
1232 extern NORETURN void (*error_hook) (void) ATTR_NORETURN;
1233
1234 extern void (*error_begin_hook) (void);
1235
1236 extern int (*ui_load_progress_hook) (const char *section, unsigned long num);
1237
1238
1239 /* Inhibit window interface if non-zero. */
1240
1241 extern int use_windows;
1242
1243 /* Symbolic definitions of filename-related things. */
1244 /* FIXME, this doesn't work very well if host and executable
1245 filesystems conventions are different. */
1246
1247 #ifndef DIRNAME_SEPARATOR
1248 #define DIRNAME_SEPARATOR ':'
1249 #endif
1250
1251 #ifndef SLASH_STRING
1252 #define SLASH_STRING "/"
1253 #endif
1254
1255 #ifdef __MSDOS__
1256 # define CANT_FORK
1257 # define GLOBAL_CURDIR
1258 #endif
1259
1260 /* Provide default definitions of PIDGET, TIDGET, and MERGEPID.
1261 The name ``TIDGET'' is a historical accident. Many uses of TIDGET
1262 in the code actually refer to a lightweight process id, i.e,
1263 something that can be considered a process id in its own right for
1264 certain purposes. */
1265
1266 #ifndef PIDGET
1267 #define PIDGET(PTID) (ptid_get_pid (PTID))
1268 #define TIDGET(PTID) (ptid_get_lwp (PTID))
1269 #define MERGEPID(PID, TID) ptid_build (PID, TID, 0)
1270 #endif
1271
1272 /* Define well known filenos if the system does not define them. */
1273 #ifndef STDIN_FILENO
1274 #define STDIN_FILENO 0
1275 #endif
1276 #ifndef STDOUT_FILENO
1277 #define STDOUT_FILENO 1
1278 #endif
1279 #ifndef STDERR_FILENO
1280 #define STDERR_FILENO 2
1281 #endif
1282
1283 /* If this definition isn't overridden by the header files, assume
1284 that isatty and fileno exist on this system. */
1285 #ifndef ISATTY
1286 #define ISATTY(FP) (isatty (fileno (FP)))
1287 #endif
1288
1289 /* Ensure that V is aligned to an N byte boundary (B's assumed to be a
1290 power of 2). Round up/down when necessary. Examples of correct
1291 use include:
1292
1293 addr = align_up (addr, 8); -- VALUE needs 8 byte alignment
1294 write_memory (addr, value, len);
1295 addr += len;
1296
1297 and:
1298
1299 sp = align_down (sp - len, 16); -- Keep SP 16 byte aligned
1300 write_memory (sp, value, len);
1301
1302 Note that uses such as:
1303
1304 write_memory (addr, value, len);
1305 addr += align_up (len, 8);
1306
1307 and:
1308
1309 sp -= align_up (len, 8);
1310 write_memory (sp, value, len);
1311
1312 are typically not correct as they don't ensure that the address (SP
1313 or ADDR) is correctly aligned (relying on previous alignment to
1314 keep things right). This is also why the methods are called
1315 "align_..." instead of "round_..." as the latter reads better with
1316 this incorrect coding style. */
1317
1318 extern ULONGEST align_up (ULONGEST v, int n);
1319 extern ULONGEST align_down (ULONGEST v, int n);
1320
1321 #endif /* #ifndef DEFS_H */
This page took 0.058306 seconds and 4 git commands to generate.