2004-01-18 Michael Chastain <mec.gnu@mindspring.com>
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / utils.c
1 /* General utility routines for GDB, the GNU debugger.
2
3 Copyright 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995,
4 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 Free Software
5 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 #include "defs.h"
25 #include "gdb_assert.h"
26 #include <ctype.h>
27 #include "gdb_string.h"
28 #include "event-top.h"
29
30 #ifdef __GO32__
31 #include <pc.h>
32 #endif
33
34 /* SunOS's curses.h has a '#define reg register' in it. Thank you Sun. */
35 #ifdef reg
36 #undef reg
37 #endif
38
39 #include <signal.h>
40 #include "gdbcmd.h"
41 #include "serial.h"
42 #include "bfd.h"
43 #include "target.h"
44 #include "demangle.h"
45 #include "expression.h"
46 #include "language.h"
47 #include "charset.h"
48 #include "annotate.h"
49 #include "filenames.h"
50
51 #include "inferior.h" /* for signed_pointer_to_address */
52
53 #include <sys/param.h> /* For MAXPATHLEN */
54
55 #ifdef HAVE_CURSES_H
56 #include <curses.h>
57 #endif
58 #ifdef HAVE_TERM_H
59 #include <term.h>
60 #endif
61
62 #include <readline/readline.h>
63
64 #ifdef USE_MMALLOC
65 #include "mmalloc.h"
66 #endif
67
68 #ifdef NEED_DECLARATION_MALLOC
69 extern PTR malloc (); /* OK: PTR */
70 #endif
71 #ifdef NEED_DECLARATION_REALLOC
72 extern PTR realloc (); /* OK: PTR */
73 #endif
74 #ifdef NEED_DECLARATION_FREE
75 extern void free ();
76 #endif
77 /* Actually, we'll never have the decl, since we don't define _GNU_SOURCE. */
78 #if defined(HAVE_CANONICALIZE_FILE_NAME) \
79 && defined(NEED_DECLARATION_CANONICALIZE_FILE_NAME)
80 extern char *canonicalize_file_name (const char *);
81 #endif
82
83 /* readline defines this. */
84 #undef savestring
85
86 void (*error_begin_hook) (void);
87
88 /* Holds the last error message issued by gdb */
89
90 static struct ui_file *gdb_lasterr;
91
92 /* Prototypes for local functions */
93
94 static void vfprintf_maybe_filtered (struct ui_file *, const char *,
95 va_list, int);
96
97 static void fputs_maybe_filtered (const char *, struct ui_file *, int);
98
99 static void do_my_cleanups (struct cleanup **, struct cleanup *);
100
101 #if defined (USE_MMALLOC) && !defined (NO_MMCHECK)
102 static void malloc_botch (void);
103 #endif
104
105 static void prompt_for_continue (void);
106
107 static void set_screen_size (void);
108 static void set_width (void);
109
110 /* Chain of cleanup actions established with make_cleanup,
111 to be executed if an error happens. */
112
113 static struct cleanup *cleanup_chain; /* cleaned up after a failed command */
114 static struct cleanup *final_cleanup_chain; /* cleaned up when gdb exits */
115 static struct cleanup *run_cleanup_chain; /* cleaned up on each 'run' */
116 static struct cleanup *exec_cleanup_chain; /* cleaned up on each execution command */
117 /* cleaned up on each error from within an execution command */
118 static struct cleanup *exec_error_cleanup_chain;
119
120 /* Pointer to what is left to do for an execution command after the
121 target stops. Used only in asynchronous mode, by targets that
122 support async execution. The finish and until commands use it. So
123 does the target extended-remote command. */
124 struct continuation *cmd_continuation;
125 struct continuation *intermediate_continuation;
126
127 /* Nonzero if we have job control. */
128
129 int job_control;
130
131 /* Nonzero means a quit has been requested. */
132
133 int quit_flag;
134
135 /* Nonzero means quit immediately if Control-C is typed now, rather
136 than waiting until QUIT is executed. Be careful in setting this;
137 code which executes with immediate_quit set has to be very careful
138 about being able to deal with being interrupted at any time. It is
139 almost always better to use QUIT; the only exception I can think of
140 is being able to quit out of a system call (using EINTR loses if
141 the SIGINT happens between the previous QUIT and the system call).
142 To immediately quit in the case in which a SIGINT happens between
143 the previous QUIT and setting immediate_quit (desirable anytime we
144 expect to block), call QUIT after setting immediate_quit. */
145
146 int immediate_quit;
147
148 /* Nonzero means that encoded C++/ObjC names should be printed out in their
149 C++/ObjC form rather than raw. */
150
151 int demangle = 1;
152
153 /* Nonzero means that encoded C++/ObjC names should be printed out in their
154 C++/ObjC form even in assembler language displays. If this is set, but
155 DEMANGLE is zero, names are printed raw, i.e. DEMANGLE controls. */
156
157 int asm_demangle = 0;
158
159 /* Nonzero means that strings with character values >0x7F should be printed
160 as octal escapes. Zero means just print the value (e.g. it's an
161 international character, and the terminal or window can cope.) */
162
163 int sevenbit_strings = 0;
164
165 /* String to be printed before error messages, if any. */
166
167 char *error_pre_print;
168
169 /* String to be printed before quit messages, if any. */
170
171 char *quit_pre_print;
172
173 /* String to be printed before warning messages, if any. */
174
175 char *warning_pre_print = "\nwarning: ";
176
177 int pagination_enabled = 1;
178 \f
179
180 /* Add a new cleanup to the cleanup_chain,
181 and return the previous chain pointer
182 to be passed later to do_cleanups or discard_cleanups.
183 Args are FUNCTION to clean up with, and ARG to pass to it. */
184
185 struct cleanup *
186 make_cleanup (make_cleanup_ftype *function, void *arg)
187 {
188 return make_my_cleanup (&cleanup_chain, function, arg);
189 }
190
191 struct cleanup *
192 make_final_cleanup (make_cleanup_ftype *function, void *arg)
193 {
194 return make_my_cleanup (&final_cleanup_chain, function, arg);
195 }
196
197 struct cleanup *
198 make_run_cleanup (make_cleanup_ftype *function, void *arg)
199 {
200 return make_my_cleanup (&run_cleanup_chain, function, arg);
201 }
202
203 struct cleanup *
204 make_exec_cleanup (make_cleanup_ftype *function, void *arg)
205 {
206 return make_my_cleanup (&exec_cleanup_chain, function, arg);
207 }
208
209 struct cleanup *
210 make_exec_error_cleanup (make_cleanup_ftype *function, void *arg)
211 {
212 return make_my_cleanup (&exec_error_cleanup_chain, function, arg);
213 }
214
215 static void
216 do_freeargv (void *arg)
217 {
218 freeargv ((char **) arg);
219 }
220
221 struct cleanup *
222 make_cleanup_freeargv (char **arg)
223 {
224 return make_my_cleanup (&cleanup_chain, do_freeargv, arg);
225 }
226
227 static void
228 do_bfd_close_cleanup (void *arg)
229 {
230 bfd_close (arg);
231 }
232
233 struct cleanup *
234 make_cleanup_bfd_close (bfd *abfd)
235 {
236 return make_cleanup (do_bfd_close_cleanup, abfd);
237 }
238
239 static void
240 do_close_cleanup (void *arg)
241 {
242 int *fd = arg;
243 close (*fd);
244 xfree (fd);
245 }
246
247 struct cleanup *
248 make_cleanup_close (int fd)
249 {
250 int *saved_fd = xmalloc (sizeof (fd));
251 *saved_fd = fd;
252 return make_cleanup (do_close_cleanup, saved_fd);
253 }
254
255 static void
256 do_ui_file_delete (void *arg)
257 {
258 ui_file_delete (arg);
259 }
260
261 struct cleanup *
262 make_cleanup_ui_file_delete (struct ui_file *arg)
263 {
264 return make_my_cleanup (&cleanup_chain, do_ui_file_delete, arg);
265 }
266
267 struct cleanup *
268 make_my_cleanup (struct cleanup **pmy_chain, make_cleanup_ftype *function,
269 void *arg)
270 {
271 struct cleanup *new
272 = (struct cleanup *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct cleanup));
273 struct cleanup *old_chain = *pmy_chain;
274
275 new->next = *pmy_chain;
276 new->function = function;
277 new->arg = arg;
278 *pmy_chain = new;
279
280 return old_chain;
281 }
282
283 /* Discard cleanups and do the actions they describe
284 until we get back to the point OLD_CHAIN in the cleanup_chain. */
285
286 void
287 do_cleanups (struct cleanup *old_chain)
288 {
289 do_my_cleanups (&cleanup_chain, old_chain);
290 }
291
292 void
293 do_final_cleanups (struct cleanup *old_chain)
294 {
295 do_my_cleanups (&final_cleanup_chain, old_chain);
296 }
297
298 void
299 do_run_cleanups (struct cleanup *old_chain)
300 {
301 do_my_cleanups (&run_cleanup_chain, old_chain);
302 }
303
304 void
305 do_exec_cleanups (struct cleanup *old_chain)
306 {
307 do_my_cleanups (&exec_cleanup_chain, old_chain);
308 }
309
310 void
311 do_exec_error_cleanups (struct cleanup *old_chain)
312 {
313 do_my_cleanups (&exec_error_cleanup_chain, old_chain);
314 }
315
316 static void
317 do_my_cleanups (struct cleanup **pmy_chain,
318 struct cleanup *old_chain)
319 {
320 struct cleanup *ptr;
321 while ((ptr = *pmy_chain) != old_chain)
322 {
323 *pmy_chain = ptr->next; /* Do this first incase recursion */
324 (*ptr->function) (ptr->arg);
325 xfree (ptr);
326 }
327 }
328
329 /* Discard cleanups, not doing the actions they describe,
330 until we get back to the point OLD_CHAIN in the cleanup_chain. */
331
332 void
333 discard_cleanups (struct cleanup *old_chain)
334 {
335 discard_my_cleanups (&cleanup_chain, old_chain);
336 }
337
338 void
339 discard_final_cleanups (struct cleanup *old_chain)
340 {
341 discard_my_cleanups (&final_cleanup_chain, old_chain);
342 }
343
344 void
345 discard_exec_error_cleanups (struct cleanup *old_chain)
346 {
347 discard_my_cleanups (&exec_error_cleanup_chain, old_chain);
348 }
349
350 void
351 discard_my_cleanups (struct cleanup **pmy_chain,
352 struct cleanup *old_chain)
353 {
354 struct cleanup *ptr;
355 while ((ptr = *pmy_chain) != old_chain)
356 {
357 *pmy_chain = ptr->next;
358 xfree (ptr);
359 }
360 }
361
362 /* Set the cleanup_chain to 0, and return the old cleanup chain. */
363 struct cleanup *
364 save_cleanups (void)
365 {
366 return save_my_cleanups (&cleanup_chain);
367 }
368
369 struct cleanup *
370 save_final_cleanups (void)
371 {
372 return save_my_cleanups (&final_cleanup_chain);
373 }
374
375 struct cleanup *
376 save_my_cleanups (struct cleanup **pmy_chain)
377 {
378 struct cleanup *old_chain = *pmy_chain;
379
380 *pmy_chain = 0;
381 return old_chain;
382 }
383
384 /* Restore the cleanup chain from a previously saved chain. */
385 void
386 restore_cleanups (struct cleanup *chain)
387 {
388 restore_my_cleanups (&cleanup_chain, chain);
389 }
390
391 void
392 restore_final_cleanups (struct cleanup *chain)
393 {
394 restore_my_cleanups (&final_cleanup_chain, chain);
395 }
396
397 void
398 restore_my_cleanups (struct cleanup **pmy_chain, struct cleanup *chain)
399 {
400 *pmy_chain = chain;
401 }
402
403 /* This function is useful for cleanups.
404 Do
405
406 foo = xmalloc (...);
407 old_chain = make_cleanup (free_current_contents, &foo);
408
409 to arrange to free the object thus allocated. */
410
411 void
412 free_current_contents (void *ptr)
413 {
414 void **location = ptr;
415 if (location == NULL)
416 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
417 "free_current_contents: NULL pointer");
418 if (*location != NULL)
419 {
420 xfree (*location);
421 *location = NULL;
422 }
423 }
424
425 /* Provide a known function that does nothing, to use as a base for
426 for a possibly long chain of cleanups. This is useful where we
427 use the cleanup chain for handling normal cleanups as well as dealing
428 with cleanups that need to be done as a result of a call to error().
429 In such cases, we may not be certain where the first cleanup is, unless
430 we have a do-nothing one to always use as the base. */
431
432 void
433 null_cleanup (void *arg)
434 {
435 }
436
437 /* Add a continuation to the continuation list, the global list
438 cmd_continuation. The new continuation will be added at the front.*/
439 void
440 add_continuation (void (*continuation_hook) (struct continuation_arg *),
441 struct continuation_arg *arg_list)
442 {
443 struct continuation *continuation_ptr;
444
445 continuation_ptr =
446 (struct continuation *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct continuation));
447 continuation_ptr->continuation_hook = continuation_hook;
448 continuation_ptr->arg_list = arg_list;
449 continuation_ptr->next = cmd_continuation;
450 cmd_continuation = continuation_ptr;
451 }
452
453 /* Walk down the cmd_continuation list, and execute all the
454 continuations. There is a problem though. In some cases new
455 continuations may be added while we are in the middle of this
456 loop. If this happens they will be added in the front, and done
457 before we have a chance of exhausting those that were already
458 there. We need to then save the beginning of the list in a pointer
459 and do the continuations from there on, instead of using the
460 global beginning of list as our iteration pointer.*/
461 void
462 do_all_continuations (void)
463 {
464 struct continuation *continuation_ptr;
465 struct continuation *saved_continuation;
466
467 /* Copy the list header into another pointer, and set the global
468 list header to null, so that the global list can change as a side
469 effect of invoking the continuations and the processing of
470 the preexisting continuations will not be affected. */
471 continuation_ptr = cmd_continuation;
472 cmd_continuation = NULL;
473
474 /* Work now on the list we have set aside. */
475 while (continuation_ptr)
476 {
477 (continuation_ptr->continuation_hook) (continuation_ptr->arg_list);
478 saved_continuation = continuation_ptr;
479 continuation_ptr = continuation_ptr->next;
480 xfree (saved_continuation);
481 }
482 }
483
484 /* Walk down the cmd_continuation list, and get rid of all the
485 continuations. */
486 void
487 discard_all_continuations (void)
488 {
489 struct continuation *continuation_ptr;
490
491 while (cmd_continuation)
492 {
493 continuation_ptr = cmd_continuation;
494 cmd_continuation = continuation_ptr->next;
495 xfree (continuation_ptr);
496 }
497 }
498
499 /* Add a continuation to the continuation list, the global list
500 intermediate_continuation. The new continuation will be added at the front.*/
501 void
502 add_intermediate_continuation (void (*continuation_hook)
503 (struct continuation_arg *),
504 struct continuation_arg *arg_list)
505 {
506 struct continuation *continuation_ptr;
507
508 continuation_ptr =
509 (struct continuation *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct continuation));
510 continuation_ptr->continuation_hook = continuation_hook;
511 continuation_ptr->arg_list = arg_list;
512 continuation_ptr->next = intermediate_continuation;
513 intermediate_continuation = continuation_ptr;
514 }
515
516 /* Walk down the cmd_continuation list, and execute all the
517 continuations. There is a problem though. In some cases new
518 continuations may be added while we are in the middle of this
519 loop. If this happens they will be added in the front, and done
520 before we have a chance of exhausting those that were already
521 there. We need to then save the beginning of the list in a pointer
522 and do the continuations from there on, instead of using the
523 global beginning of list as our iteration pointer.*/
524 void
525 do_all_intermediate_continuations (void)
526 {
527 struct continuation *continuation_ptr;
528 struct continuation *saved_continuation;
529
530 /* Copy the list header into another pointer, and set the global
531 list header to null, so that the global list can change as a side
532 effect of invoking the continuations and the processing of
533 the preexisting continuations will not be affected. */
534 continuation_ptr = intermediate_continuation;
535 intermediate_continuation = NULL;
536
537 /* Work now on the list we have set aside. */
538 while (continuation_ptr)
539 {
540 (continuation_ptr->continuation_hook) (continuation_ptr->arg_list);
541 saved_continuation = continuation_ptr;
542 continuation_ptr = continuation_ptr->next;
543 xfree (saved_continuation);
544 }
545 }
546
547 /* Walk down the cmd_continuation list, and get rid of all the
548 continuations. */
549 void
550 discard_all_intermediate_continuations (void)
551 {
552 struct continuation *continuation_ptr;
553
554 while (intermediate_continuation)
555 {
556 continuation_ptr = intermediate_continuation;
557 intermediate_continuation = continuation_ptr->next;
558 xfree (continuation_ptr);
559 }
560 }
561 \f
562
563
564 /* Print a warning message. The first argument STRING is the warning
565 message, used as an fprintf format string, the second is the
566 va_list of arguments for that string. A warning is unfiltered (not
567 paginated) so that the user does not need to page through each
568 screen full of warnings when there are lots of them. */
569
570 void
571 vwarning (const char *string, va_list args)
572 {
573 if (warning_hook)
574 (*warning_hook) (string, args);
575 else
576 {
577 target_terminal_ours ();
578 wrap_here (""); /* Force out any buffered output */
579 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
580 if (warning_pre_print)
581 fputs_unfiltered (warning_pre_print, gdb_stderr);
582 vfprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, string, args);
583 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "\n");
584 va_end (args);
585 }
586 }
587
588 /* Print a warning message.
589 The first argument STRING is the warning message, used as a fprintf string,
590 and the remaining args are passed as arguments to it.
591 The primary difference between warnings and errors is that a warning
592 does not force the return to command level. */
593
594 void
595 warning (const char *string, ...)
596 {
597 va_list args;
598 va_start (args, string);
599 vwarning (string, args);
600 va_end (args);
601 }
602
603 /* Print an error message and return to command level.
604 The first argument STRING is the error message, used as a fprintf string,
605 and the remaining args are passed as arguments to it. */
606
607 NORETURN void
608 verror (const char *string, va_list args)
609 {
610 struct ui_file *tmp_stream = mem_fileopen ();
611 make_cleanup_ui_file_delete (tmp_stream);
612 vfprintf_unfiltered (tmp_stream, string, args);
613 error_stream (tmp_stream);
614 }
615
616 NORETURN void
617 error (const char *string, ...)
618 {
619 va_list args;
620 va_start (args, string);
621 verror (string, args);
622 va_end (args);
623 }
624
625 static void
626 do_write (void *data, const char *buffer, long length_buffer)
627 {
628 ui_file_write (data, buffer, length_buffer);
629 }
630
631 NORETURN void
632 error_stream (struct ui_file *stream)
633 {
634 if (error_begin_hook)
635 error_begin_hook ();
636
637 /* Copy the stream into the GDB_LASTERR buffer. */
638 ui_file_rewind (gdb_lasterr);
639 ui_file_put (stream, do_write, gdb_lasterr);
640
641 /* Write the message plus any error_pre_print to gdb_stderr. */
642 target_terminal_ours ();
643 wrap_here (""); /* Force out any buffered output */
644 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
645 annotate_error_begin ();
646 if (error_pre_print)
647 fputs_filtered (error_pre_print, gdb_stderr);
648 ui_file_put (stream, do_write, gdb_stderr);
649 fprintf_filtered (gdb_stderr, "\n");
650
651 throw_exception (RETURN_ERROR);
652 }
653
654 /* Get the last error message issued by gdb */
655
656 char *
657 error_last_message (void)
658 {
659 long len;
660 return ui_file_xstrdup (gdb_lasterr, &len);
661 }
662
663 /* This is to be called by main() at the very beginning */
664
665 void
666 error_init (void)
667 {
668 gdb_lasterr = mem_fileopen ();
669 }
670
671 /* Print a message reporting an internal error/warning. Ask the user
672 if they want to continue, dump core, or just exit. Return
673 something to indicate a quit. */
674
675 struct internal_problem
676 {
677 const char *name;
678 /* FIXME: cagney/2002-08-15: There should be ``maint set/show''
679 commands available for controlling these variables. */
680 enum auto_boolean should_quit;
681 enum auto_boolean should_dump_core;
682 };
683
684 /* Report a problem, internal to GDB, to the user. Once the problem
685 has been reported, and assuming GDB didn't quit, the caller can
686 either allow execution to resume or throw an error. */
687
688 static void
689 internal_vproblem (struct internal_problem *problem,
690 const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
691 {
692 static int dejavu;
693 int quit_p;
694 int dump_core_p;
695 char *reason;
696
697 /* Don't allow infinite error/warning recursion. */
698 {
699 static char msg[] = "Recursive internal problem.\n";
700 switch (dejavu)
701 {
702 case 0:
703 dejavu = 1;
704 break;
705 case 1:
706 dejavu = 2;
707 fputs_unfiltered (msg, gdb_stderr);
708 abort (); /* NOTE: GDB has only three calls to abort(). */
709 default:
710 dejavu = 3;
711 write (STDERR_FILENO, msg, sizeof (msg));
712 exit (1);
713 }
714 }
715
716 /* Try to get the message out and at the start of a new line. */
717 target_terminal_ours ();
718 begin_line ();
719
720 /* Create a string containing the full error/warning message. Need
721 to call query with this full string, as otherwize the reason
722 (error/warning) and question become separated. Format using a
723 style similar to a compiler error message. Include extra detail
724 so that the user knows that they are living on the edge. */
725 {
726 char *msg;
727 xvasprintf (&msg, fmt, ap);
728 xasprintf (&reason, "\
729 %s:%d: %s: %s\n\
730 A problem internal to GDB has been detected,\n\
731 further debugging may prove unreliable.", file, line, problem->name, msg);
732 xfree (msg);
733 make_cleanup (xfree, reason);
734 }
735
736 switch (problem->should_quit)
737 {
738 case AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO:
739 /* Default (yes/batch case) is to quit GDB. When in batch mode
740 this lessens the likelhood of GDB going into an infinate
741 loop. */
742 quit_p = query ("%s\nQuit this debugging session? ", reason);
743 break;
744 case AUTO_BOOLEAN_TRUE:
745 quit_p = 1;
746 break;
747 case AUTO_BOOLEAN_FALSE:
748 quit_p = 0;
749 break;
750 default:
751 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "bad switch");
752 }
753
754 switch (problem->should_dump_core)
755 {
756 case AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO:
757 /* Default (yes/batch case) is to dump core. This leaves a GDB
758 `dropping' so that it is easier to see that something went
759 wrong in GDB. */
760 dump_core_p = query ("%s\nCreate a core file of GDB? ", reason);
761 break;
762 break;
763 case AUTO_BOOLEAN_TRUE:
764 dump_core_p = 1;
765 break;
766 case AUTO_BOOLEAN_FALSE:
767 dump_core_p = 0;
768 break;
769 default:
770 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "bad switch");
771 }
772
773 if (quit_p)
774 {
775 if (dump_core_p)
776 abort (); /* NOTE: GDB has only three calls to abort(). */
777 else
778 exit (1);
779 }
780 else
781 {
782 if (dump_core_p)
783 {
784 if (fork () == 0)
785 abort (); /* NOTE: GDB has only three calls to abort(). */
786 }
787 }
788
789 dejavu = 0;
790 }
791
792 static struct internal_problem internal_error_problem = {
793 "internal-error", AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO, AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO
794 };
795
796 NORETURN void
797 internal_verror (const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
798 {
799 internal_vproblem (&internal_error_problem, file, line, fmt, ap);
800 throw_exception (RETURN_ERROR);
801 }
802
803 NORETURN void
804 internal_error (const char *file, int line, const char *string, ...)
805 {
806 va_list ap;
807 va_start (ap, string);
808 internal_verror (file, line, string, ap);
809 va_end (ap);
810 }
811
812 static struct internal_problem internal_warning_problem = {
813 "internal-error", AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO, AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO
814 };
815
816 void
817 internal_vwarning (const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, va_list ap)
818 {
819 internal_vproblem (&internal_warning_problem, file, line, fmt, ap);
820 }
821
822 void
823 internal_warning (const char *file, int line, const char *string, ...)
824 {
825 va_list ap;
826 va_start (ap, string);
827 internal_vwarning (file, line, string, ap);
828 va_end (ap);
829 }
830
831 /* The strerror() function can return NULL for errno values that are
832 out of range. Provide a "safe" version that always returns a
833 printable string. */
834
835 char *
836 safe_strerror (int errnum)
837 {
838 char *msg;
839 static char buf[32];
840
841 msg = strerror (errnum);
842 if (msg == NULL)
843 {
844 sprintf (buf, "(undocumented errno %d)", errnum);
845 msg = buf;
846 }
847 return (msg);
848 }
849
850 /* Print the system error message for errno, and also mention STRING
851 as the file name for which the error was encountered.
852 Then return to command level. */
853
854 NORETURN void
855 perror_with_name (const char *string)
856 {
857 char *err;
858 char *combined;
859
860 err = safe_strerror (errno);
861 combined = (char *) alloca (strlen (err) + strlen (string) + 3);
862 strcpy (combined, string);
863 strcat (combined, ": ");
864 strcat (combined, err);
865
866 /* I understand setting these is a matter of taste. Still, some people
867 may clear errno but not know about bfd_error. Doing this here is not
868 unreasonable. */
869 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_no_error);
870 errno = 0;
871
872 error ("%s.", combined);
873 }
874
875 /* Print the system error message for ERRCODE, and also mention STRING
876 as the file name for which the error was encountered. */
877
878 void
879 print_sys_errmsg (const char *string, int errcode)
880 {
881 char *err;
882 char *combined;
883
884 err = safe_strerror (errcode);
885 combined = (char *) alloca (strlen (err) + strlen (string) + 3);
886 strcpy (combined, string);
887 strcat (combined, ": ");
888 strcat (combined, err);
889
890 /* We want anything which was printed on stdout to come out first, before
891 this message. */
892 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
893 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "%s.\n", combined);
894 }
895
896 /* Control C eventually causes this to be called, at a convenient time. */
897
898 void
899 quit (void)
900 {
901 struct serial *gdb_stdout_serial = serial_fdopen (1);
902
903 target_terminal_ours ();
904
905 /* We want all output to appear now, before we print "Quit". We
906 have 3 levels of buffering we have to flush (it's possible that
907 some of these should be changed to flush the lower-level ones
908 too): */
909
910 /* 1. The _filtered buffer. */
911 wrap_here ((char *) 0);
912
913 /* 2. The stdio buffer. */
914 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
915 gdb_flush (gdb_stderr);
916
917 /* 3. The system-level buffer. */
918 serial_drain_output (gdb_stdout_serial);
919 serial_un_fdopen (gdb_stdout_serial);
920
921 annotate_error_begin ();
922
923 /* Don't use *_filtered; we don't want to prompt the user to continue. */
924 if (quit_pre_print)
925 fputs_unfiltered (quit_pre_print, gdb_stderr);
926
927 #ifdef __MSDOS__
928 /* No steenking SIGINT will ever be coming our way when the
929 program is resumed. Don't lie. */
930 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "Quit\n");
931 #else
932 if (job_control
933 /* If there is no terminal switching for this target, then we can't
934 possibly get screwed by the lack of job control. */
935 || current_target.to_terminal_ours == NULL)
936 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "Quit\n");
937 else
938 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr,
939 "Quit (expect signal SIGINT when the program is resumed)\n");
940 #endif
941 throw_exception (RETURN_QUIT);
942 }
943
944 /* Control C comes here */
945 void
946 request_quit (int signo)
947 {
948 quit_flag = 1;
949 /* Restore the signal handler. Harmless with BSD-style signals, needed
950 for System V-style signals. So just always do it, rather than worrying
951 about USG defines and stuff like that. */
952 signal (signo, request_quit);
953
954 #ifdef REQUEST_QUIT
955 REQUEST_QUIT;
956 #else
957 if (immediate_quit)
958 quit ();
959 #endif
960 }
961 \f
962 /* Memory management stuff (malloc friends). */
963
964 #if !defined (USE_MMALLOC)
965
966 static void *
967 mmalloc (void *md, size_t size)
968 {
969 return malloc (size); /* NOTE: GDB's only call to malloc() */
970 }
971
972 static void *
973 mrealloc (void *md, void *ptr, size_t size)
974 {
975 if (ptr == 0) /* Guard against old realloc's */
976 return mmalloc (md, size);
977 else
978 return realloc (ptr, size); /* NOTE: GDB's only call to ralloc() */
979 }
980
981 static void *
982 mcalloc (void *md, size_t number, size_t size)
983 {
984 return calloc (number, size); /* NOTE: GDB's only call to calloc() */
985 }
986
987 static void
988 mfree (void *md, void *ptr)
989 {
990 free (ptr); /* NOTE: GDB's only call to free() */
991 }
992
993 #endif /* USE_MMALLOC */
994
995 #if !defined (USE_MMALLOC) || defined (NO_MMCHECK)
996
997 void
998 init_malloc (void *md)
999 {
1000 }
1001
1002 #else /* Have mmalloc and want corruption checking */
1003
1004 static void
1005 malloc_botch (void)
1006 {
1007 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "Memory corruption\n");
1008 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "failed internal consistency check");
1009 }
1010
1011 /* Attempt to install hooks in mmalloc/mrealloc/mfree for the heap specified
1012 by MD, to detect memory corruption. Note that MD may be NULL to specify
1013 the default heap that grows via sbrk.
1014
1015 Note that for freshly created regions, we must call mmcheckf prior to any
1016 mallocs in the region. Otherwise, any region which was allocated prior to
1017 installing the checking hooks, which is later reallocated or freed, will
1018 fail the checks! The mmcheck function only allows initial hooks to be
1019 installed before the first mmalloc. However, anytime after we have called
1020 mmcheck the first time to install the checking hooks, we can call it again
1021 to update the function pointer to the memory corruption handler.
1022
1023 Returns zero on failure, non-zero on success. */
1024
1025 #ifndef MMCHECK_FORCE
1026 #define MMCHECK_FORCE 0
1027 #endif
1028
1029 void
1030 init_malloc (void *md)
1031 {
1032 if (!mmcheckf (md, malloc_botch, MMCHECK_FORCE))
1033 {
1034 /* Don't use warning(), which relies on current_target being set
1035 to something other than dummy_target, until after
1036 initialize_all_files(). */
1037
1038 fprintf_unfiltered
1039 (gdb_stderr,
1040 "warning: failed to install memory consistency checks; ");
1041 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr,
1042 "configuration should define NO_MMCHECK or MMCHECK_FORCE\n");
1043 }
1044
1045 mmtrace ();
1046 }
1047
1048 #endif /* Have mmalloc and want corruption checking */
1049
1050 /* Called when a memory allocation fails, with the number of bytes of
1051 memory requested in SIZE. */
1052
1053 NORETURN void
1054 nomem (long size)
1055 {
1056 if (size > 0)
1057 {
1058 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1059 "virtual memory exhausted: can't allocate %ld bytes.",
1060 size);
1061 }
1062 else
1063 {
1064 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "virtual memory exhausted.");
1065 }
1066 }
1067
1068 /* The xmmalloc() family of memory management routines.
1069
1070 These are are like the mmalloc() family except that they implement
1071 consistent semantics and guard against typical memory management
1072 problems: if a malloc fails, an internal error is thrown; if
1073 free(NULL) is called, it is ignored; if *alloc(0) is called, NULL
1074 is returned.
1075
1076 All these routines are implemented using the mmalloc() family. */
1077
1078 void *
1079 xmmalloc (void *md, size_t size)
1080 {
1081 void *val;
1082
1083 /* See libiberty/xmalloc.c. This function need's to match that's
1084 semantics. It never returns NULL. */
1085 if (size == 0)
1086 size = 1;
1087
1088 val = mmalloc (md, size);
1089 if (val == NULL)
1090 nomem (size);
1091
1092 return (val);
1093 }
1094
1095 void *
1096 xmrealloc (void *md, void *ptr, size_t size)
1097 {
1098 void *val;
1099
1100 /* See libiberty/xmalloc.c. This function need's to match that's
1101 semantics. It never returns NULL. */
1102 if (size == 0)
1103 size = 1;
1104
1105 if (ptr != NULL)
1106 val = mrealloc (md, ptr, size);
1107 else
1108 val = mmalloc (md, size);
1109 if (val == NULL)
1110 nomem (size);
1111
1112 return (val);
1113 }
1114
1115 void *
1116 xmcalloc (void *md, size_t number, size_t size)
1117 {
1118 void *mem;
1119
1120 /* See libiberty/xmalloc.c. This function need's to match that's
1121 semantics. It never returns NULL. */
1122 if (number == 0 || size == 0)
1123 {
1124 number = 1;
1125 size = 1;
1126 }
1127
1128 mem = mcalloc (md, number, size);
1129 if (mem == NULL)
1130 nomem (number * size);
1131
1132 return mem;
1133 }
1134
1135 void
1136 xmfree (void *md, void *ptr)
1137 {
1138 if (ptr != NULL)
1139 mfree (md, ptr);
1140 }
1141
1142 /* The xmalloc() (libiberty.h) family of memory management routines.
1143
1144 These are like the ISO-C malloc() family except that they implement
1145 consistent semantics and guard against typical memory management
1146 problems. See xmmalloc() above for further information.
1147
1148 All these routines are wrappers to the xmmalloc() family. */
1149
1150 /* NOTE: These are declared using PTR to ensure consistency with
1151 "libiberty.h". xfree() is GDB local. */
1152
1153 PTR /* OK: PTR */
1154 xmalloc (size_t size)
1155 {
1156 return xmmalloc (NULL, size);
1157 }
1158
1159 PTR /* OK: PTR */
1160 xrealloc (PTR ptr, size_t size) /* OK: PTR */
1161 {
1162 return xmrealloc (NULL, ptr, size);
1163 }
1164
1165 PTR /* OK: PTR */
1166 xcalloc (size_t number, size_t size)
1167 {
1168 return xmcalloc (NULL, number, size);
1169 }
1170
1171 void
1172 xfree (void *ptr)
1173 {
1174 xmfree (NULL, ptr);
1175 }
1176 \f
1177
1178 /* Like asprintf/vasprintf but get an internal_error if the call
1179 fails. */
1180
1181 char *
1182 xstrprintf (const char *format, ...)
1183 {
1184 char *ret;
1185 va_list args;
1186 va_start (args, format);
1187 xvasprintf (&ret, format, args);
1188 va_end (args);
1189 return ret;
1190 }
1191
1192 void
1193 xasprintf (char **ret, const char *format, ...)
1194 {
1195 va_list args;
1196 va_start (args, format);
1197 xvasprintf (ret, format, args);
1198 va_end (args);
1199 }
1200
1201 void
1202 xvasprintf (char **ret, const char *format, va_list ap)
1203 {
1204 int status = vasprintf (ret, format, ap);
1205 /* NULL could be returned due to a memory allocation problem; a
1206 badly format string; or something else. */
1207 if ((*ret) == NULL)
1208 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1209 "vasprintf returned NULL buffer (errno %d)", errno);
1210 /* A negative status with a non-NULL buffer shouldn't never
1211 happen. But to be sure. */
1212 if (status < 0)
1213 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1214 "vasprintf call failed (errno %d)", errno);
1215 }
1216
1217
1218 /* My replacement for the read system call.
1219 Used like `read' but keeps going if `read' returns too soon. */
1220
1221 int
1222 myread (int desc, char *addr, int len)
1223 {
1224 int val;
1225 int orglen = len;
1226
1227 while (len > 0)
1228 {
1229 val = read (desc, addr, len);
1230 if (val < 0)
1231 return val;
1232 if (val == 0)
1233 return orglen - len;
1234 len -= val;
1235 addr += val;
1236 }
1237 return orglen;
1238 }
1239 \f
1240 /* Make a copy of the string at PTR with SIZE characters
1241 (and add a null character at the end in the copy).
1242 Uses malloc to get the space. Returns the address of the copy. */
1243
1244 char *
1245 savestring (const char *ptr, size_t size)
1246 {
1247 char *p = (char *) xmalloc (size + 1);
1248 memcpy (p, ptr, size);
1249 p[size] = 0;
1250 return p;
1251 }
1252
1253 char *
1254 msavestring (void *md, const char *ptr, size_t size)
1255 {
1256 char *p = (char *) xmmalloc (md, size + 1);
1257 memcpy (p, ptr, size);
1258 p[size] = 0;
1259 return p;
1260 }
1261
1262 char *
1263 mstrsave (void *md, const char *ptr)
1264 {
1265 return (msavestring (md, ptr, strlen (ptr)));
1266 }
1267
1268 void
1269 print_spaces (int n, struct ui_file *file)
1270 {
1271 fputs_unfiltered (n_spaces (n), file);
1272 }
1273
1274 /* Print a host address. */
1275
1276 void
1277 gdb_print_host_address (const void *addr, struct ui_file *stream)
1278 {
1279
1280 /* We could use the %p conversion specifier to fprintf if we had any
1281 way of knowing whether this host supports it. But the following
1282 should work on the Alpha and on 32 bit machines. */
1283
1284 fprintf_filtered (stream, "0x%lx", (unsigned long) addr);
1285 }
1286
1287 /* Ask user a y-or-n question and return 1 iff answer is yes.
1288 Takes three args which are given to printf to print the question.
1289 The first, a control string, should end in "? ".
1290 It should not say how to answer, because we do that. */
1291
1292 /* VARARGS */
1293 int
1294 query (const char *ctlstr, ...)
1295 {
1296 va_list args;
1297 int answer;
1298 int ans2;
1299 int retval;
1300
1301 va_start (args, ctlstr);
1302
1303 if (query_hook)
1304 {
1305 return query_hook (ctlstr, args);
1306 }
1307
1308 /* Automatically answer "yes" if input is not from a terminal. */
1309 if (!input_from_terminal_p ())
1310 return 1;
1311
1312 while (1)
1313 {
1314 wrap_here (""); /* Flush any buffered output */
1315 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
1316
1317 if (annotation_level > 1)
1318 printf_filtered ("\n\032\032pre-query\n");
1319
1320 vfprintf_filtered (gdb_stdout, ctlstr, args);
1321 printf_filtered ("(y or n) ");
1322
1323 if (annotation_level > 1)
1324 printf_filtered ("\n\032\032query\n");
1325
1326 wrap_here ("");
1327 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
1328
1329 answer = fgetc (stdin);
1330 clearerr (stdin); /* in case of C-d */
1331 if (answer == EOF) /* C-d */
1332 {
1333 retval = 1;
1334 break;
1335 }
1336 /* Eat rest of input line, to EOF or newline */
1337 if (answer != '\n')
1338 do
1339 {
1340 ans2 = fgetc (stdin);
1341 clearerr (stdin);
1342 }
1343 while (ans2 != EOF && ans2 != '\n' && ans2 != '\r');
1344
1345 if (answer >= 'a')
1346 answer -= 040;
1347 if (answer == 'Y')
1348 {
1349 retval = 1;
1350 break;
1351 }
1352 if (answer == 'N')
1353 {
1354 retval = 0;
1355 break;
1356 }
1357 printf_filtered ("Please answer y or n.\n");
1358 }
1359
1360 if (annotation_level > 1)
1361 printf_filtered ("\n\032\032post-query\n");
1362 return retval;
1363 }
1364 \f
1365
1366 /* Print an error message saying that we couldn't make sense of a
1367 \^mumble sequence in a string or character constant. START and END
1368 indicate a substring of some larger string that contains the
1369 erroneous backslash sequence, missing the initial backslash. */
1370 static NORETURN int
1371 no_control_char_error (const char *start, const char *end)
1372 {
1373 int len = end - start;
1374 char *copy = alloca (end - start + 1);
1375
1376 memcpy (copy, start, len);
1377 copy[len] = '\0';
1378
1379 error ("There is no control character `\\%s' in the `%s' character set.",
1380 copy, target_charset ());
1381 }
1382
1383 /* Parse a C escape sequence. STRING_PTR points to a variable
1384 containing a pointer to the string to parse. That pointer
1385 should point to the character after the \. That pointer
1386 is updated past the characters we use. The value of the
1387 escape sequence is returned.
1388
1389 A negative value means the sequence \ newline was seen,
1390 which is supposed to be equivalent to nothing at all.
1391
1392 If \ is followed by a null character, we return a negative
1393 value and leave the string pointer pointing at the null character.
1394
1395 If \ is followed by 000, we return 0 and leave the string pointer
1396 after the zeros. A value of 0 does not mean end of string. */
1397
1398 int
1399 parse_escape (char **string_ptr)
1400 {
1401 int target_char;
1402 int c = *(*string_ptr)++;
1403 if (c_parse_backslash (c, &target_char))
1404 return target_char;
1405 else
1406 switch (c)
1407 {
1408 case '\n':
1409 return -2;
1410 case 0:
1411 (*string_ptr)--;
1412 return 0;
1413 case '^':
1414 {
1415 /* Remember where this escape sequence started, for reporting
1416 errors. */
1417 char *sequence_start_pos = *string_ptr - 1;
1418
1419 c = *(*string_ptr)++;
1420
1421 if (c == '?')
1422 {
1423 /* XXXCHARSET: What is `delete' in the host character set? */
1424 c = 0177;
1425
1426 if (!host_char_to_target (c, &target_char))
1427 error ("There is no character corresponding to `Delete' "
1428 "in the target character set `%s'.", host_charset ());
1429
1430 return target_char;
1431 }
1432 else if (c == '\\')
1433 target_char = parse_escape (string_ptr);
1434 else
1435 {
1436 if (!host_char_to_target (c, &target_char))
1437 no_control_char_error (sequence_start_pos, *string_ptr);
1438 }
1439
1440 /* Now target_char is something like `c', and we want to find
1441 its control-character equivalent. */
1442 if (!target_char_to_control_char (target_char, &target_char))
1443 no_control_char_error (sequence_start_pos, *string_ptr);
1444
1445 return target_char;
1446 }
1447
1448 /* XXXCHARSET: we need to use isdigit and value-of-digit
1449 methods of the host character set here. */
1450
1451 case '0':
1452 case '1':
1453 case '2':
1454 case '3':
1455 case '4':
1456 case '5':
1457 case '6':
1458 case '7':
1459 {
1460 int i = c - '0';
1461 int count = 0;
1462 while (++count < 3)
1463 {
1464 c = (**string_ptr);
1465 if (c >= '0' && c <= '7')
1466 {
1467 (*string_ptr)++;
1468 i *= 8;
1469 i += c - '0';
1470 }
1471 else
1472 {
1473 break;
1474 }
1475 }
1476 return i;
1477 }
1478 default:
1479 if (!host_char_to_target (c, &target_char))
1480 error
1481 ("The escape sequence `\%c' is equivalent to plain `%c', which"
1482 " has no equivalent\n" "in the `%s' character set.", c, c,
1483 target_charset ());
1484 return target_char;
1485 }
1486 }
1487 \f
1488 /* Print the character C on STREAM as part of the contents of a literal
1489 string whose delimiter is QUOTER. Note that this routine should only
1490 be call for printing things which are independent of the language
1491 of the program being debugged. */
1492
1493 static void
1494 printchar (int c, void (*do_fputs) (const char *, struct ui_file *),
1495 void (*do_fprintf) (struct ui_file *, const char *, ...),
1496 struct ui_file *stream, int quoter)
1497 {
1498
1499 c &= 0xFF; /* Avoid sign bit follies */
1500
1501 if (c < 0x20 || /* Low control chars */
1502 (c >= 0x7F && c < 0xA0) || /* DEL, High controls */
1503 (sevenbit_strings && c >= 0x80))
1504 { /* high order bit set */
1505 switch (c)
1506 {
1507 case '\n':
1508 do_fputs ("\\n", stream);
1509 break;
1510 case '\b':
1511 do_fputs ("\\b", stream);
1512 break;
1513 case '\t':
1514 do_fputs ("\\t", stream);
1515 break;
1516 case '\f':
1517 do_fputs ("\\f", stream);
1518 break;
1519 case '\r':
1520 do_fputs ("\\r", stream);
1521 break;
1522 case '\033':
1523 do_fputs ("\\e", stream);
1524 break;
1525 case '\007':
1526 do_fputs ("\\a", stream);
1527 break;
1528 default:
1529 do_fprintf (stream, "\\%.3o", (unsigned int) c);
1530 break;
1531 }
1532 }
1533 else
1534 {
1535 if (c == '\\' || c == quoter)
1536 do_fputs ("\\", stream);
1537 do_fprintf (stream, "%c", c);
1538 }
1539 }
1540
1541 /* Print the character C on STREAM as part of the contents of a
1542 literal string whose delimiter is QUOTER. Note that these routines
1543 should only be call for printing things which are independent of
1544 the language of the program being debugged. */
1545
1546 void
1547 fputstr_filtered (const char *str, int quoter, struct ui_file *stream)
1548 {
1549 while (*str)
1550 printchar (*str++, fputs_filtered, fprintf_filtered, stream, quoter);
1551 }
1552
1553 void
1554 fputstr_unfiltered (const char *str, int quoter, struct ui_file *stream)
1555 {
1556 while (*str)
1557 printchar (*str++, fputs_unfiltered, fprintf_unfiltered, stream, quoter);
1558 }
1559
1560 void
1561 fputstrn_unfiltered (const char *str, int n, int quoter,
1562 struct ui_file *stream)
1563 {
1564 int i;
1565 for (i = 0; i < n; i++)
1566 printchar (str[i], fputs_unfiltered, fprintf_unfiltered, stream, quoter);
1567 }
1568 \f
1569
1570 /* Number of lines per page or UINT_MAX if paging is disabled. */
1571 static unsigned int lines_per_page;
1572
1573 /* Number of chars per line or UINT_MAX if line folding is disabled. */
1574 static unsigned int chars_per_line;
1575
1576 /* Current count of lines printed on this page, chars on this line. */
1577 static unsigned int lines_printed, chars_printed;
1578
1579 /* Buffer and start column of buffered text, for doing smarter word-
1580 wrapping. When someone calls wrap_here(), we start buffering output
1581 that comes through fputs_filtered(). If we see a newline, we just
1582 spit it out and forget about the wrap_here(). If we see another
1583 wrap_here(), we spit it out and remember the newer one. If we see
1584 the end of the line, we spit out a newline, the indent, and then
1585 the buffered output. */
1586
1587 /* Malloc'd buffer with chars_per_line+2 bytes. Contains characters which
1588 are waiting to be output (they have already been counted in chars_printed).
1589 When wrap_buffer[0] is null, the buffer is empty. */
1590 static char *wrap_buffer;
1591
1592 /* Pointer in wrap_buffer to the next character to fill. */
1593 static char *wrap_pointer;
1594
1595 /* String to indent by if the wrap occurs. Must not be NULL if wrap_column
1596 is non-zero. */
1597 static char *wrap_indent;
1598
1599 /* Column number on the screen where wrap_buffer begins, or 0 if wrapping
1600 is not in effect. */
1601 static int wrap_column;
1602 \f
1603
1604 /* Inialize the number of lines per page and chars per line. */
1605
1606 void
1607 init_page_info (void)
1608 {
1609 #if defined(TUI)
1610 if (!tui_get_command_dimension (&chars_per_line, &lines_per_page))
1611 #endif
1612 {
1613 #if defined(__GO32__)
1614 lines_per_page = ScreenRows ();
1615 chars_per_line = ScreenCols ();
1616 #else
1617 int rows, cols;
1618
1619 /* Make sure Readline has initialized its terminal settings. */
1620 rl_reset_terminal (NULL);
1621
1622 /* Get the screen size from Readline. */
1623 rl_get_screen_size (&rows, &cols);
1624 lines_per_page = rows;
1625 chars_per_line = cols;
1626
1627 /* Readline should have fetched the termcap entry for us. */
1628 if (tgetnum ("li") < 0 || getenv ("EMACS"))
1629 {
1630 /* The number of lines per page is not mentioned in the
1631 terminal description. This probably means that paging is
1632 not useful (e.g. emacs shell window), so disable paging. */
1633 lines_per_page = UINT_MAX;
1634 }
1635
1636 /* FIXME: Get rid of this junk. */
1637 #if defined(SIGWINCH) && defined(SIGWINCH_HANDLER)
1638 SIGWINCH_HANDLER (SIGWINCH);
1639 #endif
1640
1641 /* If the output is not a terminal, don't paginate it. */
1642 if (!ui_file_isatty (gdb_stdout))
1643 lines_per_page = UINT_MAX;
1644 }
1645 #endif
1646
1647 set_screen_size ();
1648 set_width ();
1649 }
1650
1651 /* Set the screen size based on LINES_PER_PAGE and CHARS_PER_LINE. */
1652
1653 static void
1654 set_screen_size (void)
1655 {
1656 int rows = lines_per_page;
1657 int cols = chars_per_line;
1658
1659 if (rows <= 0)
1660 rows = INT_MAX;
1661
1662 if (cols <= 0)
1663 rl_get_screen_size (NULL, &cols);
1664
1665 /* Update Readline's idea of the terminal size. */
1666 rl_set_screen_size (rows, cols);
1667 }
1668
1669 /* Reinitialize WRAP_BUFFER according to the current value of
1670 CHARS_PER_LINE. */
1671
1672 static void
1673 set_width (void)
1674 {
1675 if (chars_per_line == 0)
1676 init_page_info ();
1677
1678 if (!wrap_buffer)
1679 {
1680 wrap_buffer = (char *) xmalloc (chars_per_line + 2);
1681 wrap_buffer[0] = '\0';
1682 }
1683 else
1684 wrap_buffer = (char *) xrealloc (wrap_buffer, chars_per_line + 2);
1685 wrap_pointer = wrap_buffer; /* Start it at the beginning. */
1686 }
1687
1688 static void
1689 set_width_command (char *args, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c)
1690 {
1691 set_screen_size ();
1692 set_width ();
1693 }
1694
1695 static void
1696 set_height_command (char *args, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c)
1697 {
1698 set_screen_size ();
1699 }
1700
1701 /* Wait, so the user can read what's on the screen. Prompt the user
1702 to continue by pressing RETURN. */
1703
1704 static void
1705 prompt_for_continue (void)
1706 {
1707 char *ignore;
1708 char cont_prompt[120];
1709
1710 if (annotation_level > 1)
1711 printf_unfiltered ("\n\032\032pre-prompt-for-continue\n");
1712
1713 strcpy (cont_prompt,
1714 "---Type <return> to continue, or q <return> to quit---");
1715 if (annotation_level > 1)
1716 strcat (cont_prompt, "\n\032\032prompt-for-continue\n");
1717
1718 /* We must do this *before* we call gdb_readline, else it will eventually
1719 call us -- thinking that we're trying to print beyond the end of the
1720 screen. */
1721 reinitialize_more_filter ();
1722
1723 immediate_quit++;
1724 /* On a real operating system, the user can quit with SIGINT.
1725 But not on GO32.
1726
1727 'q' is provided on all systems so users don't have to change habits
1728 from system to system, and because telling them what to do in
1729 the prompt is more user-friendly than expecting them to think of
1730 SIGINT. */
1731 /* Call readline, not gdb_readline, because GO32 readline handles control-C
1732 whereas control-C to gdb_readline will cause the user to get dumped
1733 out to DOS. */
1734 ignore = gdb_readline_wrapper (cont_prompt);
1735
1736 if (annotation_level > 1)
1737 printf_unfiltered ("\n\032\032post-prompt-for-continue\n");
1738
1739 if (ignore)
1740 {
1741 char *p = ignore;
1742 while (*p == ' ' || *p == '\t')
1743 ++p;
1744 if (p[0] == 'q')
1745 {
1746 if (!event_loop_p)
1747 request_quit (SIGINT);
1748 else
1749 async_request_quit (0);
1750 }
1751 xfree (ignore);
1752 }
1753 immediate_quit--;
1754
1755 /* Now we have to do this again, so that GDB will know that it doesn't
1756 need to save the ---Type <return>--- line at the top of the screen. */
1757 reinitialize_more_filter ();
1758
1759 dont_repeat (); /* Forget prev cmd -- CR won't repeat it. */
1760 }
1761
1762 /* Reinitialize filter; ie. tell it to reset to original values. */
1763
1764 void
1765 reinitialize_more_filter (void)
1766 {
1767 lines_printed = 0;
1768 chars_printed = 0;
1769 }
1770
1771 /* Indicate that if the next sequence of characters overflows the line,
1772 a newline should be inserted here rather than when it hits the end.
1773 If INDENT is non-null, it is a string to be printed to indent the
1774 wrapped part on the next line. INDENT must remain accessible until
1775 the next call to wrap_here() or until a newline is printed through
1776 fputs_filtered().
1777
1778 If the line is already overfull, we immediately print a newline and
1779 the indentation, and disable further wrapping.
1780
1781 If we don't know the width of lines, but we know the page height,
1782 we must not wrap words, but should still keep track of newlines
1783 that were explicitly printed.
1784
1785 INDENT should not contain tabs, as that will mess up the char count
1786 on the next line. FIXME.
1787
1788 This routine is guaranteed to force out any output which has been
1789 squirreled away in the wrap_buffer, so wrap_here ((char *)0) can be
1790 used to force out output from the wrap_buffer. */
1791
1792 void
1793 wrap_here (char *indent)
1794 {
1795 /* This should have been allocated, but be paranoid anyway. */
1796 if (!wrap_buffer)
1797 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "failed internal consistency check");
1798
1799 if (wrap_buffer[0])
1800 {
1801 *wrap_pointer = '\0';
1802 fputs_unfiltered (wrap_buffer, gdb_stdout);
1803 }
1804 wrap_pointer = wrap_buffer;
1805 wrap_buffer[0] = '\0';
1806 if (chars_per_line == UINT_MAX) /* No line overflow checking */
1807 {
1808 wrap_column = 0;
1809 }
1810 else if (chars_printed >= chars_per_line)
1811 {
1812 puts_filtered ("\n");
1813 if (indent != NULL)
1814 puts_filtered (indent);
1815 wrap_column = 0;
1816 }
1817 else
1818 {
1819 wrap_column = chars_printed;
1820 if (indent == NULL)
1821 wrap_indent = "";
1822 else
1823 wrap_indent = indent;
1824 }
1825 }
1826
1827 /* Print input string to gdb_stdout, filtered, with wrap,
1828 arranging strings in columns of n chars. String can be
1829 right or left justified in the column. Never prints
1830 trailing spaces. String should never be longer than
1831 width. FIXME: this could be useful for the EXAMINE
1832 command, which currently doesn't tabulate very well */
1833
1834 void
1835 puts_filtered_tabular (char *string, int width, int right)
1836 {
1837 int spaces = 0;
1838 int stringlen;
1839 char *spacebuf;
1840
1841 gdb_assert (chars_per_line > 0);
1842 if (chars_per_line == UINT_MAX)
1843 {
1844 fputs_filtered (string, gdb_stdout);
1845 fputs_filtered ("\n", gdb_stdout);
1846 return;
1847 }
1848
1849 if (((chars_printed - 1) / width + 2) * width >= chars_per_line)
1850 fputs_filtered ("\n", gdb_stdout);
1851
1852 if (width >= chars_per_line)
1853 width = chars_per_line - 1;
1854
1855 stringlen = strlen (string);
1856
1857 if (chars_printed > 0)
1858 spaces = width - (chars_printed - 1) % width - 1;
1859 if (right)
1860 spaces += width - stringlen;
1861
1862 spacebuf = alloca (spaces + 1);
1863 spacebuf[spaces] = '\0';
1864 while (spaces--)
1865 spacebuf[spaces] = ' ';
1866
1867 fputs_filtered (spacebuf, gdb_stdout);
1868 fputs_filtered (string, gdb_stdout);
1869 }
1870
1871
1872 /* Ensure that whatever gets printed next, using the filtered output
1873 commands, starts at the beginning of the line. I.E. if there is
1874 any pending output for the current line, flush it and start a new
1875 line. Otherwise do nothing. */
1876
1877 void
1878 begin_line (void)
1879 {
1880 if (chars_printed > 0)
1881 {
1882 puts_filtered ("\n");
1883 }
1884 }
1885
1886
1887 /* Like fputs but if FILTER is true, pause after every screenful.
1888
1889 Regardless of FILTER can wrap at points other than the final
1890 character of a line.
1891
1892 Unlike fputs, fputs_maybe_filtered does not return a value.
1893 It is OK for LINEBUFFER to be NULL, in which case just don't print
1894 anything.
1895
1896 Note that a longjmp to top level may occur in this routine (only if
1897 FILTER is true) (since prompt_for_continue may do so) so this
1898 routine should not be called when cleanups are not in place. */
1899
1900 static void
1901 fputs_maybe_filtered (const char *linebuffer, struct ui_file *stream,
1902 int filter)
1903 {
1904 const char *lineptr;
1905
1906 if (linebuffer == 0)
1907 return;
1908
1909 /* Don't do any filtering if it is disabled. */
1910 if ((stream != gdb_stdout) || !pagination_enabled
1911 || (lines_per_page == UINT_MAX && chars_per_line == UINT_MAX))
1912 {
1913 fputs_unfiltered (linebuffer, stream);
1914 return;
1915 }
1916
1917 /* Go through and output each character. Show line extension
1918 when this is necessary; prompt user for new page when this is
1919 necessary. */
1920
1921 lineptr = linebuffer;
1922 while (*lineptr)
1923 {
1924 /* Possible new page. */
1925 if (filter && (lines_printed >= lines_per_page - 1))
1926 prompt_for_continue ();
1927
1928 while (*lineptr && *lineptr != '\n')
1929 {
1930 /* Print a single line. */
1931 if (*lineptr == '\t')
1932 {
1933 if (wrap_column)
1934 *wrap_pointer++ = '\t';
1935 else
1936 fputc_unfiltered ('\t', stream);
1937 /* Shifting right by 3 produces the number of tab stops
1938 we have already passed, and then adding one and
1939 shifting left 3 advances to the next tab stop. */
1940 chars_printed = ((chars_printed >> 3) + 1) << 3;
1941 lineptr++;
1942 }
1943 else
1944 {
1945 if (wrap_column)
1946 *wrap_pointer++ = *lineptr;
1947 else
1948 fputc_unfiltered (*lineptr, stream);
1949 chars_printed++;
1950 lineptr++;
1951 }
1952
1953 if (chars_printed >= chars_per_line)
1954 {
1955 unsigned int save_chars = chars_printed;
1956
1957 chars_printed = 0;
1958 lines_printed++;
1959 /* If we aren't actually wrapping, don't output newline --
1960 if chars_per_line is right, we probably just overflowed
1961 anyway; if it's wrong, let us keep going. */
1962 if (wrap_column)
1963 fputc_unfiltered ('\n', stream);
1964
1965 /* Possible new page. */
1966 if (lines_printed >= lines_per_page - 1)
1967 prompt_for_continue ();
1968
1969 /* Now output indentation and wrapped string */
1970 if (wrap_column)
1971 {
1972 fputs_unfiltered (wrap_indent, stream);
1973 *wrap_pointer = '\0'; /* Null-terminate saved stuff */
1974 fputs_unfiltered (wrap_buffer, stream); /* and eject it */
1975 /* FIXME, this strlen is what prevents wrap_indent from
1976 containing tabs. However, if we recurse to print it
1977 and count its chars, we risk trouble if wrap_indent is
1978 longer than (the user settable) chars_per_line.
1979 Note also that this can set chars_printed > chars_per_line
1980 if we are printing a long string. */
1981 chars_printed = strlen (wrap_indent)
1982 + (save_chars - wrap_column);
1983 wrap_pointer = wrap_buffer; /* Reset buffer */
1984 wrap_buffer[0] = '\0';
1985 wrap_column = 0; /* And disable fancy wrap */
1986 }
1987 }
1988 }
1989
1990 if (*lineptr == '\n')
1991 {
1992 chars_printed = 0;
1993 wrap_here ((char *) 0); /* Spit out chars, cancel further wraps */
1994 lines_printed++;
1995 fputc_unfiltered ('\n', stream);
1996 lineptr++;
1997 }
1998 }
1999 }
2000
2001 void
2002 fputs_filtered (const char *linebuffer, struct ui_file *stream)
2003 {
2004 fputs_maybe_filtered (linebuffer, stream, 1);
2005 }
2006
2007 int
2008 putchar_unfiltered (int c)
2009 {
2010 char buf = c;
2011 ui_file_write (gdb_stdout, &buf, 1);
2012 return c;
2013 }
2014
2015 /* Write character C to gdb_stdout using GDB's paging mechanism and return C.
2016 May return nonlocally. */
2017
2018 int
2019 putchar_filtered (int c)
2020 {
2021 return fputc_filtered (c, gdb_stdout);
2022 }
2023
2024 int
2025 fputc_unfiltered (int c, struct ui_file *stream)
2026 {
2027 char buf = c;
2028 ui_file_write (stream, &buf, 1);
2029 return c;
2030 }
2031
2032 int
2033 fputc_filtered (int c, struct ui_file *stream)
2034 {
2035 char buf[2];
2036
2037 buf[0] = c;
2038 buf[1] = 0;
2039 fputs_filtered (buf, stream);
2040 return c;
2041 }
2042
2043 /* puts_debug is like fputs_unfiltered, except it prints special
2044 characters in printable fashion. */
2045
2046 void
2047 puts_debug (char *prefix, char *string, char *suffix)
2048 {
2049 int ch;
2050
2051 /* Print prefix and suffix after each line. */
2052 static int new_line = 1;
2053 static int return_p = 0;
2054 static char *prev_prefix = "";
2055 static char *prev_suffix = "";
2056
2057 if (*string == '\n')
2058 return_p = 0;
2059
2060 /* If the prefix is changing, print the previous suffix, a new line,
2061 and the new prefix. */
2062 if ((return_p || (strcmp (prev_prefix, prefix) != 0)) && !new_line)
2063 {
2064 fputs_unfiltered (prev_suffix, gdb_stdlog);
2065 fputs_unfiltered ("\n", gdb_stdlog);
2066 fputs_unfiltered (prefix, gdb_stdlog);
2067 }
2068
2069 /* Print prefix if we printed a newline during the previous call. */
2070 if (new_line)
2071 {
2072 new_line = 0;
2073 fputs_unfiltered (prefix, gdb_stdlog);
2074 }
2075
2076 prev_prefix = prefix;
2077 prev_suffix = suffix;
2078
2079 /* Output characters in a printable format. */
2080 while ((ch = *string++) != '\0')
2081 {
2082 switch (ch)
2083 {
2084 default:
2085 if (isprint (ch))
2086 fputc_unfiltered (ch, gdb_stdlog);
2087
2088 else
2089 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "\\x%02x", ch & 0xff);
2090 break;
2091
2092 case '\\':
2093 fputs_unfiltered ("\\\\", gdb_stdlog);
2094 break;
2095 case '\b':
2096 fputs_unfiltered ("\\b", gdb_stdlog);
2097 break;
2098 case '\f':
2099 fputs_unfiltered ("\\f", gdb_stdlog);
2100 break;
2101 case '\n':
2102 new_line = 1;
2103 fputs_unfiltered ("\\n", gdb_stdlog);
2104 break;
2105 case '\r':
2106 fputs_unfiltered ("\\r", gdb_stdlog);
2107 break;
2108 case '\t':
2109 fputs_unfiltered ("\\t", gdb_stdlog);
2110 break;
2111 case '\v':
2112 fputs_unfiltered ("\\v", gdb_stdlog);
2113 break;
2114 }
2115
2116 return_p = ch == '\r';
2117 }
2118
2119 /* Print suffix if we printed a newline. */
2120 if (new_line)
2121 {
2122 fputs_unfiltered (suffix, gdb_stdlog);
2123 fputs_unfiltered ("\n", gdb_stdlog);
2124 }
2125 }
2126
2127
2128 /* Print a variable number of ARGS using format FORMAT. If this
2129 information is going to put the amount written (since the last call
2130 to REINITIALIZE_MORE_FILTER or the last page break) over the page size,
2131 call prompt_for_continue to get the users permision to continue.
2132
2133 Unlike fprintf, this function does not return a value.
2134
2135 We implement three variants, vfprintf (takes a vararg list and stream),
2136 fprintf (takes a stream to write on), and printf (the usual).
2137
2138 Note also that a longjmp to top level may occur in this routine
2139 (since prompt_for_continue may do so) so this routine should not be
2140 called when cleanups are not in place. */
2141
2142 static void
2143 vfprintf_maybe_filtered (struct ui_file *stream, const char *format,
2144 va_list args, int filter)
2145 {
2146 char *linebuffer;
2147 struct cleanup *old_cleanups;
2148
2149 xvasprintf (&linebuffer, format, args);
2150 old_cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, linebuffer);
2151 fputs_maybe_filtered (linebuffer, stream, filter);
2152 do_cleanups (old_cleanups);
2153 }
2154
2155
2156 void
2157 vfprintf_filtered (struct ui_file *stream, const char *format, va_list args)
2158 {
2159 vfprintf_maybe_filtered (stream, format, args, 1);
2160 }
2161
2162 void
2163 vfprintf_unfiltered (struct ui_file *stream, const char *format, va_list args)
2164 {
2165 char *linebuffer;
2166 struct cleanup *old_cleanups;
2167
2168 xvasprintf (&linebuffer, format, args);
2169 old_cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, linebuffer);
2170 fputs_unfiltered (linebuffer, stream);
2171 do_cleanups (old_cleanups);
2172 }
2173
2174 void
2175 vprintf_filtered (const char *format, va_list args)
2176 {
2177 vfprintf_maybe_filtered (gdb_stdout, format, args, 1);
2178 }
2179
2180 void
2181 vprintf_unfiltered (const char *format, va_list args)
2182 {
2183 vfprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdout, format, args);
2184 }
2185
2186 void
2187 fprintf_filtered (struct ui_file *stream, const char *format, ...)
2188 {
2189 va_list args;
2190 va_start (args, format);
2191 vfprintf_filtered (stream, format, args);
2192 va_end (args);
2193 }
2194
2195 void
2196 fprintf_unfiltered (struct ui_file *stream, const char *format, ...)
2197 {
2198 va_list args;
2199 va_start (args, format);
2200 vfprintf_unfiltered (stream, format, args);
2201 va_end (args);
2202 }
2203
2204 /* Like fprintf_filtered, but prints its result indented.
2205 Called as fprintfi_filtered (spaces, stream, format, ...); */
2206
2207 void
2208 fprintfi_filtered (int spaces, struct ui_file *stream, const char *format,
2209 ...)
2210 {
2211 va_list args;
2212 va_start (args, format);
2213 print_spaces_filtered (spaces, stream);
2214
2215 vfprintf_filtered (stream, format, args);
2216 va_end (args);
2217 }
2218
2219
2220 void
2221 printf_filtered (const char *format, ...)
2222 {
2223 va_list args;
2224 va_start (args, format);
2225 vfprintf_filtered (gdb_stdout, format, args);
2226 va_end (args);
2227 }
2228
2229
2230 void
2231 printf_unfiltered (const char *format, ...)
2232 {
2233 va_list args;
2234 va_start (args, format);
2235 vfprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdout, format, args);
2236 va_end (args);
2237 }
2238
2239 /* Like printf_filtered, but prints it's result indented.
2240 Called as printfi_filtered (spaces, format, ...); */
2241
2242 void
2243 printfi_filtered (int spaces, const char *format, ...)
2244 {
2245 va_list args;
2246 va_start (args, format);
2247 print_spaces_filtered (spaces, gdb_stdout);
2248 vfprintf_filtered (gdb_stdout, format, args);
2249 va_end (args);
2250 }
2251
2252 /* Easy -- but watch out!
2253
2254 This routine is *not* a replacement for puts()! puts() appends a newline.
2255 This one doesn't, and had better not! */
2256
2257 void
2258 puts_filtered (const char *string)
2259 {
2260 fputs_filtered (string, gdb_stdout);
2261 }
2262
2263 void
2264 puts_unfiltered (const char *string)
2265 {
2266 fputs_unfiltered (string, gdb_stdout);
2267 }
2268
2269 /* Return a pointer to N spaces and a null. The pointer is good
2270 until the next call to here. */
2271 char *
2272 n_spaces (int n)
2273 {
2274 char *t;
2275 static char *spaces = 0;
2276 static int max_spaces = -1;
2277
2278 if (n > max_spaces)
2279 {
2280 if (spaces)
2281 xfree (spaces);
2282 spaces = (char *) xmalloc (n + 1);
2283 for (t = spaces + n; t != spaces;)
2284 *--t = ' ';
2285 spaces[n] = '\0';
2286 max_spaces = n;
2287 }
2288
2289 return spaces + max_spaces - n;
2290 }
2291
2292 /* Print N spaces. */
2293 void
2294 print_spaces_filtered (int n, struct ui_file *stream)
2295 {
2296 fputs_filtered (n_spaces (n), stream);
2297 }
2298 \f
2299 /* C++/ObjC demangler stuff. */
2300
2301 /* fprintf_symbol_filtered attempts to demangle NAME, a symbol in language
2302 LANG, using demangling args ARG_MODE, and print it filtered to STREAM.
2303 If the name is not mangled, or the language for the name is unknown, or
2304 demangling is off, the name is printed in its "raw" form. */
2305
2306 void
2307 fprintf_symbol_filtered (struct ui_file *stream, char *name,
2308 enum language lang, int arg_mode)
2309 {
2310 char *demangled;
2311
2312 if (name != NULL)
2313 {
2314 /* If user wants to see raw output, no problem. */
2315 if (!demangle)
2316 {
2317 fputs_filtered (name, stream);
2318 }
2319 else
2320 {
2321 demangled = language_demangle (language_def (lang), name, arg_mode);
2322 fputs_filtered (demangled ? demangled : name, stream);
2323 if (demangled != NULL)
2324 {
2325 xfree (demangled);
2326 }
2327 }
2328 }
2329 }
2330
2331 /* Do a strcmp() type operation on STRING1 and STRING2, ignoring any
2332 differences in whitespace. Returns 0 if they match, non-zero if they
2333 don't (slightly different than strcmp()'s range of return values).
2334
2335 As an extra hack, string1=="FOO(ARGS)" matches string2=="FOO".
2336 This "feature" is useful when searching for matching C++ function names
2337 (such as if the user types 'break FOO', where FOO is a mangled C++
2338 function). */
2339
2340 int
2341 strcmp_iw (const char *string1, const char *string2)
2342 {
2343 while ((*string1 != '\0') && (*string2 != '\0'))
2344 {
2345 while (isspace (*string1))
2346 {
2347 string1++;
2348 }
2349 while (isspace (*string2))
2350 {
2351 string2++;
2352 }
2353 if (*string1 != *string2)
2354 {
2355 break;
2356 }
2357 if (*string1 != '\0')
2358 {
2359 string1++;
2360 string2++;
2361 }
2362 }
2363 return (*string1 != '\0' && *string1 != '(') || (*string2 != '\0');
2364 }
2365
2366 /* This is like strcmp except that it ignores whitespace and treats
2367 '(' as the first non-NULL character in terms of ordering. Like
2368 strcmp (and unlike strcmp_iw), it returns negative if STRING1 <
2369 STRING2, 0 if STRING2 = STRING2, and positive if STRING1 > STRING2
2370 according to that ordering.
2371
2372 If a list is sorted according to this function and if you want to
2373 find names in the list that match some fixed NAME according to
2374 strcmp_iw(LIST_ELT, NAME), then the place to start looking is right
2375 where this function would put NAME.
2376
2377 Here are some examples of why using strcmp to sort is a bad idea:
2378
2379 Whitespace example:
2380
2381 Say your partial symtab contains: "foo<char *>", "goo". Then, if
2382 we try to do a search for "foo<char*>", strcmp will locate this
2383 after "foo<char *>" and before "goo". Then lookup_partial_symbol
2384 will start looking at strings beginning with "goo", and will never
2385 see the correct match of "foo<char *>".
2386
2387 Parenthesis example:
2388
2389 In practice, this is less like to be an issue, but I'll give it a
2390 shot. Let's assume that '$' is a legitimate character to occur in
2391 symbols. (Which may well even be the case on some systems.) Then
2392 say that the partial symbol table contains "foo$" and "foo(int)".
2393 strcmp will put them in this order, since '$' < '('. Now, if the
2394 user searches for "foo", then strcmp will sort "foo" before "foo$".
2395 Then lookup_partial_symbol will notice that strcmp_iw("foo$",
2396 "foo") is false, so it won't proceed to the actual match of
2397 "foo(int)" with "foo". */
2398
2399 int
2400 strcmp_iw_ordered (const char *string1, const char *string2)
2401 {
2402 while ((*string1 != '\0') && (*string2 != '\0'))
2403 {
2404 while (isspace (*string1))
2405 {
2406 string1++;
2407 }
2408 while (isspace (*string2))
2409 {
2410 string2++;
2411 }
2412 if (*string1 != *string2)
2413 {
2414 break;
2415 }
2416 if (*string1 != '\0')
2417 {
2418 string1++;
2419 string2++;
2420 }
2421 }
2422
2423 switch (*string1)
2424 {
2425 /* Characters are non-equal unless they're both '\0'; we want to
2426 make sure we get the comparison right according to our
2427 comparison in the cases where one of them is '\0' or '('. */
2428 case '\0':
2429 if (*string2 == '\0')
2430 return 0;
2431 else
2432 return -1;
2433 case '(':
2434 if (*string2 == '\0')
2435 return 1;
2436 else
2437 return -1;
2438 default:
2439 if (*string2 == '(')
2440 return 1;
2441 else
2442 return *string1 - *string2;
2443 }
2444 }
2445
2446 /* A simple comparison function with opposite semantics to strcmp. */
2447
2448 int
2449 streq (const char *lhs, const char *rhs)
2450 {
2451 return !strcmp (lhs, rhs);
2452 }
2453 \f
2454
2455 /*
2456 ** subset_compare()
2457 ** Answer whether string_to_compare is a full or partial match to
2458 ** template_string. The partial match must be in sequence starting
2459 ** at index 0.
2460 */
2461 int
2462 subset_compare (char *string_to_compare, char *template_string)
2463 {
2464 int match;
2465 if (template_string != (char *) NULL && string_to_compare != (char *) NULL
2466 && strlen (string_to_compare) <= strlen (template_string))
2467 match =
2468 (strncmp
2469 (template_string, string_to_compare, strlen (string_to_compare)) == 0);
2470 else
2471 match = 0;
2472 return match;
2473 }
2474
2475
2476 static void pagination_on_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
2477 static void
2478 pagination_on_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
2479 {
2480 pagination_enabled = 1;
2481 }
2482
2483 static void pagination_on_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
2484 static void
2485 pagination_off_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
2486 {
2487 pagination_enabled = 0;
2488 }
2489 \f
2490
2491 void
2492 initialize_utils (void)
2493 {
2494 struct cmd_list_element *c;
2495
2496 c = add_set_cmd ("width", class_support, var_uinteger, &chars_per_line,
2497 "Set number of characters gdb thinks are in a line.",
2498 &setlist);
2499 add_show_from_set (c, &showlist);
2500 set_cmd_sfunc (c, set_width_command);
2501
2502 c = add_set_cmd ("height", class_support, var_uinteger, &lines_per_page,
2503 "Set number of lines gdb thinks are in a page.", &setlist);
2504 add_show_from_set (c, &showlist);
2505 set_cmd_sfunc (c, set_height_command);
2506
2507 init_page_info ();
2508
2509 add_show_from_set
2510 (add_set_cmd ("demangle", class_support, var_boolean,
2511 (char *) &demangle,
2512 "Set demangling of encoded C++/ObjC names when displaying symbols.",
2513 &setprintlist), &showprintlist);
2514
2515 add_show_from_set
2516 (add_set_cmd ("pagination", class_support,
2517 var_boolean, (char *) &pagination_enabled,
2518 "Set state of pagination.", &setlist), &showlist);
2519
2520 if (xdb_commands)
2521 {
2522 add_com ("am", class_support, pagination_on_command,
2523 "Enable pagination");
2524 add_com ("sm", class_support, pagination_off_command,
2525 "Disable pagination");
2526 }
2527
2528 add_show_from_set
2529 (add_set_cmd ("sevenbit-strings", class_support, var_boolean,
2530 (char *) &sevenbit_strings,
2531 "Set printing of 8-bit characters in strings as \\nnn.",
2532 &setprintlist), &showprintlist);
2533
2534 add_show_from_set
2535 (add_set_cmd ("asm-demangle", class_support, var_boolean,
2536 (char *) &asm_demangle,
2537 "Set demangling of C++/ObjC names in disassembly listings.",
2538 &setprintlist), &showprintlist);
2539 }
2540
2541 /* Machine specific function to handle SIGWINCH signal. */
2542
2543 #ifdef SIGWINCH_HANDLER_BODY
2544 SIGWINCH_HANDLER_BODY
2545 #endif
2546 /* print routines to handle variable size regs, etc. */
2547 /* temporary storage using circular buffer */
2548 #define NUMCELLS 16
2549 #define CELLSIZE 32
2550 static char *
2551 get_cell (void)
2552 {
2553 static char buf[NUMCELLS][CELLSIZE];
2554 static int cell = 0;
2555 if (++cell >= NUMCELLS)
2556 cell = 0;
2557 return buf[cell];
2558 }
2559
2560 int
2561 strlen_paddr (void)
2562 {
2563 return (TARGET_ADDR_BIT / 8 * 2);
2564 }
2565
2566 char *
2567 paddr (CORE_ADDR addr)
2568 {
2569 return phex (addr, TARGET_ADDR_BIT / 8);
2570 }
2571
2572 char *
2573 paddr_nz (CORE_ADDR addr)
2574 {
2575 return phex_nz (addr, TARGET_ADDR_BIT / 8);
2576 }
2577
2578 static void
2579 decimal2str (char *paddr_str, char *sign, ULONGEST addr)
2580 {
2581 /* steal code from valprint.c:print_decimal(). Should this worry
2582 about the real size of addr as the above does? */
2583 unsigned long temp[3];
2584 int i = 0;
2585 do
2586 {
2587 temp[i] = addr % (1000 * 1000 * 1000);
2588 addr /= (1000 * 1000 * 1000);
2589 i++;
2590 }
2591 while (addr != 0 && i < (sizeof (temp) / sizeof (temp[0])));
2592 switch (i)
2593 {
2594 case 1:
2595 sprintf (paddr_str, "%s%lu", sign, temp[0]);
2596 break;
2597 case 2:
2598 sprintf (paddr_str, "%s%lu%09lu", sign, temp[1], temp[0]);
2599 break;
2600 case 3:
2601 sprintf (paddr_str, "%s%lu%09lu%09lu", sign, temp[2], temp[1], temp[0]);
2602 break;
2603 default:
2604 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
2605 "failed internal consistency check");
2606 }
2607 }
2608
2609 char *
2610 paddr_u (CORE_ADDR addr)
2611 {
2612 char *paddr_str = get_cell ();
2613 decimal2str (paddr_str, "", addr);
2614 return paddr_str;
2615 }
2616
2617 char *
2618 paddr_d (LONGEST addr)
2619 {
2620 char *paddr_str = get_cell ();
2621 if (addr < 0)
2622 decimal2str (paddr_str, "-", -addr);
2623 else
2624 decimal2str (paddr_str, "", addr);
2625 return paddr_str;
2626 }
2627
2628 /* eliminate warning from compiler on 32-bit systems */
2629 static int thirty_two = 32;
2630
2631 char *
2632 phex (ULONGEST l, int sizeof_l)
2633 {
2634 char *str;
2635 switch (sizeof_l)
2636 {
2637 case 8:
2638 str = get_cell ();
2639 sprintf (str, "%08lx%08lx",
2640 (unsigned long) (l >> thirty_two),
2641 (unsigned long) (l & 0xffffffff));
2642 break;
2643 case 4:
2644 str = get_cell ();
2645 sprintf (str, "%08lx", (unsigned long) l);
2646 break;
2647 case 2:
2648 str = get_cell ();
2649 sprintf (str, "%04x", (unsigned short) (l & 0xffff));
2650 break;
2651 default:
2652 str = phex (l, sizeof (l));
2653 break;
2654 }
2655 return str;
2656 }
2657
2658 char *
2659 phex_nz (ULONGEST l, int sizeof_l)
2660 {
2661 char *str;
2662 switch (sizeof_l)
2663 {
2664 case 8:
2665 {
2666 unsigned long high = (unsigned long) (l >> thirty_two);
2667 str = get_cell ();
2668 if (high == 0)
2669 sprintf (str, "%lx", (unsigned long) (l & 0xffffffff));
2670 else
2671 sprintf (str, "%lx%08lx", high, (unsigned long) (l & 0xffffffff));
2672 break;
2673 }
2674 case 4:
2675 str = get_cell ();
2676 sprintf (str, "%lx", (unsigned long) l);
2677 break;
2678 case 2:
2679 str = get_cell ();
2680 sprintf (str, "%x", (unsigned short) (l & 0xffff));
2681 break;
2682 default:
2683 str = phex_nz (l, sizeof (l));
2684 break;
2685 }
2686 return str;
2687 }
2688
2689
2690 /* Convert a CORE_ADDR into a string. */
2691 const char *
2692 core_addr_to_string (const CORE_ADDR addr)
2693 {
2694 char *str = get_cell ();
2695 strcpy (str, "0x");
2696 strcat (str, phex (addr, sizeof (addr)));
2697 return str;
2698 }
2699
2700 const char *
2701 core_addr_to_string_nz (const CORE_ADDR addr)
2702 {
2703 char *str = get_cell ();
2704 strcpy (str, "0x");
2705 strcat (str, phex_nz (addr, sizeof (addr)));
2706 return str;
2707 }
2708
2709 /* Convert a string back into a CORE_ADDR. */
2710 CORE_ADDR
2711 string_to_core_addr (const char *my_string)
2712 {
2713 CORE_ADDR addr = 0;
2714 if (my_string[0] == '0' && tolower (my_string[1]) == 'x')
2715 {
2716 /* Assume that it is in decimal. */
2717 int i;
2718 for (i = 2; my_string[i] != '\0'; i++)
2719 {
2720 if (isdigit (my_string[i]))
2721 addr = (my_string[i] - '0') + (addr * 16);
2722 else if (isxdigit (my_string[i]))
2723 addr = (tolower (my_string[i]) - 'a' + 0xa) + (addr * 16);
2724 else
2725 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "invalid hex");
2726 }
2727 }
2728 else
2729 {
2730 /* Assume that it is in decimal. */
2731 int i;
2732 for (i = 0; my_string[i] != '\0'; i++)
2733 {
2734 if (isdigit (my_string[i]))
2735 addr = (my_string[i] - '0') + (addr * 10);
2736 else
2737 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "invalid decimal");
2738 }
2739 }
2740 return addr;
2741 }
2742
2743 char *
2744 gdb_realpath (const char *filename)
2745 {
2746 /* Method 1: The system has a compile time upper bound on a filename
2747 path. Use that and realpath() to canonicalize the name. This is
2748 the most common case. Note that, if there isn't a compile time
2749 upper bound, you want to avoid realpath() at all costs. */
2750 #if defined(HAVE_REALPATH)
2751 {
2752 # if defined (PATH_MAX)
2753 char buf[PATH_MAX];
2754 # define USE_REALPATH
2755 # elif defined (MAXPATHLEN)
2756 char buf[MAXPATHLEN];
2757 # define USE_REALPATH
2758 # endif
2759 # if defined (USE_REALPATH)
2760 const char *rp = realpath (filename, buf);
2761 if (rp == NULL)
2762 rp = filename;
2763 return xstrdup (rp);
2764 # endif
2765 }
2766 #endif /* HAVE_REALPATH */
2767
2768 /* Method 2: The host system (i.e., GNU) has the function
2769 canonicalize_file_name() which malloc's a chunk of memory and
2770 returns that, use that. */
2771 #if defined(HAVE_CANONICALIZE_FILE_NAME)
2772 {
2773 char *rp = canonicalize_file_name (filename);
2774 if (rp == NULL)
2775 return xstrdup (filename);
2776 else
2777 return rp;
2778 }
2779 #endif
2780
2781 /* FIXME: cagney/2002-11-13:
2782
2783 Method 2a: Use realpath() with a NULL buffer. Some systems, due
2784 to the problems described in in method 3, have modified their
2785 realpath() implementation so that it will allocate a buffer when
2786 NULL is passed in. Before this can be used, though, some sort of
2787 configure time test would need to be added. Otherwize the code
2788 will likely core dump. */
2789
2790 /* Method 3: Now we're getting desperate! The system doesn't have a
2791 compile time buffer size and no alternative function. Query the
2792 OS, using pathconf(), for the buffer limit. Care is needed
2793 though, some systems do not limit PATH_MAX (return -1 for
2794 pathconf()) making it impossible to pass a correctly sized buffer
2795 to realpath() (it could always overflow). On those systems, we
2796 skip this. */
2797 #if defined (HAVE_REALPATH) && defined (HAVE_UNISTD_H) && defined(HAVE_ALLOCA)
2798 {
2799 /* Find out the max path size. */
2800 long path_max = pathconf ("/", _PC_PATH_MAX);
2801 if (path_max > 0)
2802 {
2803 /* PATH_MAX is bounded. */
2804 char *buf = alloca (path_max);
2805 char *rp = realpath (filename, buf);
2806 return xstrdup (rp ? rp : filename);
2807 }
2808 }
2809 #endif
2810
2811 /* This system is a lost cause, just dup the buffer. */
2812 return xstrdup (filename);
2813 }
2814
2815 /* Return a copy of FILENAME, with its directory prefix canonicalized
2816 by gdb_realpath. */
2817
2818 char *
2819 xfullpath (const char *filename)
2820 {
2821 const char *base_name = lbasename (filename);
2822 char *dir_name;
2823 char *real_path;
2824 char *result;
2825
2826 /* Extract the basename of filename, and return immediately
2827 a copy of filename if it does not contain any directory prefix. */
2828 if (base_name == filename)
2829 return xstrdup (filename);
2830
2831 dir_name = alloca ((size_t) (base_name - filename + 2));
2832 /* Allocate enough space to store the dir_name + plus one extra
2833 character sometimes needed under Windows (see below), and
2834 then the closing \000 character */
2835 strncpy (dir_name, filename, base_name - filename);
2836 dir_name[base_name - filename] = '\000';
2837
2838 #ifdef HAVE_DOS_BASED_FILE_SYSTEM
2839 /* We need to be careful when filename is of the form 'd:foo', which
2840 is equivalent of d:./foo, which is totally different from d:/foo. */
2841 if (strlen (dir_name) == 2 && isalpha (dir_name[0]) && dir_name[1] == ':')
2842 {
2843 dir_name[2] = '.';
2844 dir_name[3] = '\000';
2845 }
2846 #endif
2847
2848 /* Canonicalize the directory prefix, and build the resulting
2849 filename. If the dirname realpath already contains an ending
2850 directory separator, avoid doubling it. */
2851 real_path = gdb_realpath (dir_name);
2852 if (IS_DIR_SEPARATOR (real_path[strlen (real_path) - 1]))
2853 result = concat (real_path, base_name, NULL);
2854 else
2855 result = concat (real_path, SLASH_STRING, base_name, NULL);
2856
2857 xfree (real_path);
2858 return result;
2859 }
2860
2861
2862 /* This is the 32-bit CRC function used by the GNU separate debug
2863 facility. An executable may contain a section named
2864 .gnu_debuglink, which holds the name of a separate executable file
2865 containing its debug info, and a checksum of that file's contents,
2866 computed using this function. */
2867 unsigned long
2868 gnu_debuglink_crc32 (unsigned long crc, unsigned char *buf, size_t len)
2869 {
2870 static const unsigned long crc32_table[256] = {
2871 0x00000000, 0x77073096, 0xee0e612c, 0x990951ba, 0x076dc419,
2872 0x706af48f, 0xe963a535, 0x9e6495a3, 0x0edb8832, 0x79dcb8a4,
2873 0xe0d5e91e, 0x97d2d988, 0x09b64c2b, 0x7eb17cbd, 0xe7b82d07,
2874 0x90bf1d91, 0x1db71064, 0x6ab020f2, 0xf3b97148, 0x84be41de,
2875 0x1adad47d, 0x6ddde4eb, 0xf4d4b551, 0x83d385c7, 0x136c9856,
2876 0x646ba8c0, 0xfd62f97a, 0x8a65c9ec, 0x14015c4f, 0x63066cd9,
2877 0xfa0f3d63, 0x8d080df5, 0x3b6e20c8, 0x4c69105e, 0xd56041e4,
2878 0xa2677172, 0x3c03e4d1, 0x4b04d447, 0xd20d85fd, 0xa50ab56b,
2879 0x35b5a8fa, 0x42b2986c, 0xdbbbc9d6, 0xacbcf940, 0x32d86ce3,
2880 0x45df5c75, 0xdcd60dcf, 0xabd13d59, 0x26d930ac, 0x51de003a,
2881 0xc8d75180, 0xbfd06116, 0x21b4f4b5, 0x56b3c423, 0xcfba9599,
2882 0xb8bda50f, 0x2802b89e, 0x5f058808, 0xc60cd9b2, 0xb10be924,
2883 0x2f6f7c87, 0x58684c11, 0xc1611dab, 0xb6662d3d, 0x76dc4190,
2884 0x01db7106, 0x98d220bc, 0xefd5102a, 0x71b18589, 0x06b6b51f,
2885 0x9fbfe4a5, 0xe8b8d433, 0x7807c9a2, 0x0f00f934, 0x9609a88e,
2886 0xe10e9818, 0x7f6a0dbb, 0x086d3d2d, 0x91646c97, 0xe6635c01,
2887 0x6b6b51f4, 0x1c6c6162, 0x856530d8, 0xf262004e, 0x6c0695ed,
2888 0x1b01a57b, 0x8208f4c1, 0xf50fc457, 0x65b0d9c6, 0x12b7e950,
2889 0x8bbeb8ea, 0xfcb9887c, 0x62dd1ddf, 0x15da2d49, 0x8cd37cf3,
2890 0xfbd44c65, 0x4db26158, 0x3ab551ce, 0xa3bc0074, 0xd4bb30e2,
2891 0x4adfa541, 0x3dd895d7, 0xa4d1c46d, 0xd3d6f4fb, 0x4369e96a,
2892 0x346ed9fc, 0xad678846, 0xda60b8d0, 0x44042d73, 0x33031de5,
2893 0xaa0a4c5f, 0xdd0d7cc9, 0x5005713c, 0x270241aa, 0xbe0b1010,
2894 0xc90c2086, 0x5768b525, 0x206f85b3, 0xb966d409, 0xce61e49f,
2895 0x5edef90e, 0x29d9c998, 0xb0d09822, 0xc7d7a8b4, 0x59b33d17,
2896 0x2eb40d81, 0xb7bd5c3b, 0xc0ba6cad, 0xedb88320, 0x9abfb3b6,
2897 0x03b6e20c, 0x74b1d29a, 0xead54739, 0x9dd277af, 0x04db2615,
2898 0x73dc1683, 0xe3630b12, 0x94643b84, 0x0d6d6a3e, 0x7a6a5aa8,
2899 0xe40ecf0b, 0x9309ff9d, 0x0a00ae27, 0x7d079eb1, 0xf00f9344,
2900 0x8708a3d2, 0x1e01f268, 0x6906c2fe, 0xf762575d, 0x806567cb,
2901 0x196c3671, 0x6e6b06e7, 0xfed41b76, 0x89d32be0, 0x10da7a5a,
2902 0x67dd4acc, 0xf9b9df6f, 0x8ebeeff9, 0x17b7be43, 0x60b08ed5,
2903 0xd6d6a3e8, 0xa1d1937e, 0x38d8c2c4, 0x4fdff252, 0xd1bb67f1,
2904 0xa6bc5767, 0x3fb506dd, 0x48b2364b, 0xd80d2bda, 0xaf0a1b4c,
2905 0x36034af6, 0x41047a60, 0xdf60efc3, 0xa867df55, 0x316e8eef,
2906 0x4669be79, 0xcb61b38c, 0xbc66831a, 0x256fd2a0, 0x5268e236,
2907 0xcc0c7795, 0xbb0b4703, 0x220216b9, 0x5505262f, 0xc5ba3bbe,
2908 0xb2bd0b28, 0x2bb45a92, 0x5cb36a04, 0xc2d7ffa7, 0xb5d0cf31,
2909 0x2cd99e8b, 0x5bdeae1d, 0x9b64c2b0, 0xec63f226, 0x756aa39c,
2910 0x026d930a, 0x9c0906a9, 0xeb0e363f, 0x72076785, 0x05005713,
2911 0x95bf4a82, 0xe2b87a14, 0x7bb12bae, 0x0cb61b38, 0x92d28e9b,
2912 0xe5d5be0d, 0x7cdcefb7, 0x0bdbdf21, 0x86d3d2d4, 0xf1d4e242,
2913 0x68ddb3f8, 0x1fda836e, 0x81be16cd, 0xf6b9265b, 0x6fb077e1,
2914 0x18b74777, 0x88085ae6, 0xff0f6a70, 0x66063bca, 0x11010b5c,
2915 0x8f659eff, 0xf862ae69, 0x616bffd3, 0x166ccf45, 0xa00ae278,
2916 0xd70dd2ee, 0x4e048354, 0x3903b3c2, 0xa7672661, 0xd06016f7,
2917 0x4969474d, 0x3e6e77db, 0xaed16a4a, 0xd9d65adc, 0x40df0b66,
2918 0x37d83bf0, 0xa9bcae53, 0xdebb9ec5, 0x47b2cf7f, 0x30b5ffe9,
2919 0xbdbdf21c, 0xcabac28a, 0x53b39330, 0x24b4a3a6, 0xbad03605,
2920 0xcdd70693, 0x54de5729, 0x23d967bf, 0xb3667a2e, 0xc4614ab8,
2921 0x5d681b02, 0x2a6f2b94, 0xb40bbe37, 0xc30c8ea1, 0x5a05df1b,
2922 0x2d02ef8d
2923 };
2924 unsigned char *end;
2925
2926 crc = ~crc & 0xffffffff;
2927 for (end = buf + len; buf < end; ++buf)
2928 crc = crc32_table[(crc ^ *buf) & 0xff] ^ (crc >> 8);
2929 return ~crc & 0xffffffff;;
2930 }
2931
2932 ULONGEST
2933 align_up (ULONGEST v, int n)
2934 {
2935 /* Check that N is really a power of two. */
2936 gdb_assert (n && (n & (n-1)) == 0);
2937 return (v + n - 1) & -n;
2938 }
2939
2940 ULONGEST
2941 align_down (ULONGEST v, int n)
2942 {
2943 /* Check that N is really a power of two. */
2944 gdb_assert (n && (n & (n-1)) == 0);
2945 return (v & -n);
2946 }
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