/* Remote target communications for serial-line targets in custom GDB protocol
- Copyright 1988, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+ Copyright 1988, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GDB.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
-Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
+Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
/* Remote communication protocol.
$ <data> # CSUM1 CSUM2
<data> must be ASCII alphanumeric and cannot include characters
- '$' or '#'
+ '$' or '#'. If <data> starts with two characters followed by
+ ':', then the existing stubs interpret this as a sequence number.
CSUM1 and CSUM2 are ascii hex representation of an 8-bit
checksum of <data>, the most significant nibble is sent first.
- - if CSUM is incorrect
<data> is as follows:
- All values are encoded in ascii hex digits.
+ Most values are encoded in ascii hex digits. Signal numbers are according
+ to the numbering in target.h.
Request Packet
+ set thread Hct... Set thread for subsequent operations.
+ c = 'c' for thread used in step and
+ continue; t... can be -1 for all
+ threads.
+ c = 'g' for thread used in other
+ operations. If zero, pick a thread,
+ any thread.
+ reply OK for success
+ ENN for an error.
+
read registers g
reply XX....X Each byte of register data
is described by two hex digits.
reply OK for success
ENN for an error
+ write reg Pn...=r... Write register n... with value r...,
+ which contains two hex digits for each
+ byte in the register (target byte
+ order).
+ reply OK for success
+ ENN for an error
+ (not supported by all stubs).
+
read mem mAA..AA,LLLL AA..AA is address, LLLL is length.
reply XX..XX XX..XX is mem contents
Can be fewer bytes than requested
where only part of the data was
written).
- cont cAA..AA AA..AA is address to resume
+ continue cAA..AA AA..AA is address to resume
If AA..AA is omitted,
resume at same address.
If AA..AA is omitted,
resume at same address.
+ continue with Csig;AA..AA Continue with signal sig (hex signal
+ signal number). If ;AA..AA is omitted, resume
+ at same address.
+
+ step with Ssig;AA..AA Like 'C' but step not continue.
+ signal
+
last signal ? Reply the current reason for stopping.
This is the same reply as is generated
for step or cont : SAA where AA is the
signal number.
+ detach D Reply OK.
+
There is no immediate reply to step or cont.
The reply comes when the machine stops.
- It is SAA AA is the "signal number"
+ It is SAA AA is the signal number.
- or... TAAn...:r...;n:r...;n...:r...;
+ or... TAAn...:r...;n...:r...;n...:r...;
AA = signal number
- n... = register number
- r... = register contents
- or... WAA The process extited, and AA is
+ n... = register number (hex)
+ r... = register contents
+ n... = `thread'
+ r... = thread process ID. This is
+ a hex integer.
+ n... = other string not starting
+ with valid hex digit.
+ gdb should ignore this n,r pair
+ and go on to the next. This way
+ we can extend the protocol.
+ or... WAA The process exited, and AA is
the exit status. This is only
applicable for certains sorts of
targets.
- or... NAATT;DD;BB Relocate the object file.
- AA = signal number
- TT = text address
- DD = data address
- BB = bss address
- This is used by the NLM stub,
- which is why it only has three
- addresses rather than one per
- section: the NLM stub always
- sees only three sections, even
- though gdb may see more.
+ or... XAA The process terminated with signal
+ AA.
+ or... OXX..XX XX..XX is hex encoding of ASCII data. This
+ can happen at any time while the program is
+ running and the debugger should
+ continue to wait for 'W', 'T', etc.
+
+ thread alive TXX Find out if the thread XX is alive.
+ reply OK thread is still alive
+ ENN thread is dead
+
+ remote restart RXX Restart the remote server
+
+ extended ops ! Use the extended remote protocol.
+ Sticky -- only needs to be set once.
kill request k
we can extend the protocol and GDB
can tell whether the stub it is
talking to uses the old or the new.
- search tAA:PP,MM Search backward starting at address
+ search tAA:PP,MM Search backwards starting at address
AA for a match with pattern PP and
mask MM. PP and MM are 4 bytes.
Not supported by all stubs.
+ general query qXXXX Request info about XXXX.
+ general set QXXXX=yyyy Set value of XXXX to yyyy.
+ query sect offs qOffsets Get section offsets. Reply is
+ Text=xxx;Data=yyy;Bss=zzz
+
Responses can be run-length encoded to save space. A '*' means that
- the next two characters are hex digits giving a repeat count which
+ the next character is an ASCII encoding giving a repeat count which
stands for that many repititions of the character preceding the '*'.
- Note that this means that responses cannot contain '*'. Example:
- "0*03" means the same as "0000". */
+ The encoding is n+29, yielding a printable character where n >=3
+ (which is where rle starts to win). Don't use an n > 126.
+
+ So
+ "0* " means the same as "0000". */
#include "defs.h"
-#include <string.h>
+#include "gdb_string.h"
#include <fcntl.h>
#include "frame.h"
#include "inferior.h"
#include "symfile.h"
#include "target.h"
#include "wait.h"
-#include "terminal.h"
+/*#include "terminal.h"*/
#include "gdbcmd.h"
#include "objfiles.h"
#include "gdb-stabs.h"
+#include "gdbthread.h"
#include "dcache.h"
-#if !defined(DONT_USE_REMOTE)
#ifdef USG
#include <sys/types.h>
#endif
/* Prototypes for local functions */
-static int
-remote_write_bytes PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR memaddr, unsigned char *myaddr, int len));
+static int remote_write_bytes PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR memaddr,
+ char *myaddr, int len));
-static int
-remote_read_bytes PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR memaddr, unsigned char *myaddr, int len));
+static int remote_read_bytes PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR memaddr,
+ char *myaddr, int len));
-static void
-remote_files_info PARAMS ((struct target_ops *ignore));
+static void remote_files_info PARAMS ((struct target_ops *ignore));
-static int
-remote_xfer_memory PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR memaddr, char *myaddr, int len,
- int should_write, struct target_ops *target));
+static int remote_xfer_memory PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR memaddr, char *myaddr,
+ int len, int should_write,
+ struct target_ops *target));
-static void
-remote_prepare_to_store PARAMS ((void));
+static void remote_prepare_to_store PARAMS ((void));
-static void
-remote_fetch_registers PARAMS ((int regno));
+static void remote_fetch_registers PARAMS ((int regno));
-static void
-remote_resume PARAMS ((int pid, int step, enum target_signal siggnal));
+static void remote_resume PARAMS ((int pid, int step,
+ enum target_signal siggnal));
-static int
-remote_start_remote PARAMS ((char *dummy));
+static int remote_start_remote PARAMS ((char *dummy));
-static void
-remote_open PARAMS ((char *name, int from_tty));
+static void remote_open PARAMS ((char *name, int from_tty));
-static void
-remote_close PARAMS ((int quitting));
+static void extended_remote_open PARAMS ((char *name, int from_tty));
-static void
-remote_store_registers PARAMS ((int regno));
+static void remote_open_1 PARAMS ((char *, int, struct target_ops *, int extended_p));
-static void
-getpkt PARAMS ((char *buf, int forever));
+static void remote_close PARAMS ((int quitting));
-static void
-putpkt PARAMS ((char *buf));
+static void remote_store_registers PARAMS ((int regno));
-static void
-remote_send PARAMS ((char *buf));
+static void remote_mourn PARAMS ((void));
-static int
-readchar PARAMS ((void));
+static void extended_remote_restart PARAMS ((void));
+
+static void extended_remote_mourn PARAMS ((void));
+
+static void extended_remote_create_inferior PARAMS ((char *, char *, char **));
+
+static void remote_mourn_1 PARAMS ((struct target_ops *));
+
+static void remote_send PARAMS ((char *buf));
+
+static int readchar PARAMS ((int timeout));
static int remote_wait PARAMS ((int pid, struct target_waitstatus *status));
-static int
-tohex PARAMS ((int nib));
+static void remote_kill PARAMS ((void));
-static int
-fromhex PARAMS ((int a));
+static int tohex PARAMS ((int nib));
-static void
-remote_detach PARAMS ((char *args, int from_tty));
+static void remote_detach PARAMS ((char *args, int from_tty));
-static void
-remote_interrupt PARAMS ((int signo));
+static void remote_interrupt PARAMS ((int signo));
-static void
-remote_interrupt_twice PARAMS ((int signo));
+static void remote_interrupt_twice PARAMS ((int signo));
-static void
-interrupt_query PARAMS ((void));
+static void interrupt_query PARAMS ((void));
+
+static void set_thread PARAMS ((int, int));
+
+static int remote_thread_alive PARAMS ((int));
+
+static void get_offsets PARAMS ((void));
+
+static int read_frame PARAMS ((char *));
+
+static int remote_insert_breakpoint PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR, char *));
+
+static int remote_remove_breakpoint PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR, char *));
+
+static int hexnumlen PARAMS ((ULONGEST num));
+
+static void init_remote_ops PARAMS ((void));
+
+static void init_extended_remote_ops PARAMS ((void));
+
+/* exported functions */
+
+extern int fromhex PARAMS ((int a));
+extern void getpkt PARAMS ((char *buf, int forever));
+extern int putpkt PARAMS ((char *buf));
-extern struct target_ops remote_ops; /* Forward decl */
+static struct target_ops remote_ops ;
+
+static struct target_ops extended_remote_ops ;
/* This was 5 seconds, which is a long time to sit and wait.
Unless this is going though some terminal server or multiplexer or
other form of hairy serial connection, I would think 2 seconds would
be plenty. */
-static int timeout = 2;
-#if 0
-int icache;
-#endif
+/* Changed to allow option to set timeout value.
+ was static int remote_timeout = 2; */
+extern int remote_timeout;
+
+/* This variable chooses whether to send a ^C or a break when the user
+ requests program interruption. Although ^C is usually what remote
+ systems expect, and that is the default here, sometimes a break is
+ preferable instead. */
+
+static int remote_break;
/* Descriptor for I/O to remote machine. Initialize it to NULL so that
remote_open knows that we don't have a file open when the program
starts. */
-serial_t remote_desc = NULL;
+static serial_t remote_desc = NULL;
/* Having this larger than 400 causes us to be incompatible with m68k-stub.c
and i386-stub.c. Normally, no one would notice because it only matters
#define MAXBUFBYTES ((PBUFSIZ-32)/2)
/* Round up PBUFSIZ to hold all the registers, at least. */
+/* The blank line after the #if seems to be required to work around a
+ bug in HP's PA compiler. */
#if REGISTER_BYTES > MAXBUFBYTES
-#undef PBUFSIZ
+
+#undef PBUFSIZ
#define PBUFSIZ (REGISTER_BYTES * 2 + 32)
#endif
+
+/* This variable sets the number of bytes to be written to the target
+ in a single packet. Normally PBUFSIZ is satisfactory, but some
+ targets need smaller values (perhaps because the receiving end
+ is slow). */
+
+static int remote_write_size = PBUFSIZ;
+
+/* This is the size (in chars) of the first response to the `g' command. This
+ is used to limit the size of the memory read and write commands to prevent
+ stub buffers from overflowing. The size does not include headers and
+ trailers, it is only the payload size. */
+
+static int remote_register_buf_size = 0;
+
+/* Should we try the 'P' request? If this is set to one when the stub
+ doesn't support 'P', the only consequence is some unnecessary traffic. */
+static int stub_supports_P = 1;
+
+/* These are pointers to hook functions that may be set in order to
+ modify resume/wait behavior for a particular architecture. */
+
+void (*target_resume_hook) PARAMS ((void));
+void (*target_wait_loop_hook) PARAMS ((void));
+
+\f
+/* These are the threads which we last sent to the remote system. -1 for all
+ or -2 for not sent yet. */
+int general_thread;
+int cont_thread;
+
+static void
+set_thread (th, gen)
+ int th;
+ int gen;
+{
+ char buf[PBUFSIZ];
+ int state = gen ? general_thread : cont_thread;
+ if (state == th)
+ return;
+ buf[0] = 'H';
+ buf[1] = gen ? 'g' : 'c';
+ if (th == 42000)
+ {
+ buf[2] = '0';
+ buf[3] = '\0';
+ }
+ else if (th < 0)
+ sprintf (&buf[2], "-%x", -th);
+ else
+ sprintf (&buf[2], "%x", th);
+ putpkt (buf);
+ getpkt (buf, 0);
+ if (gen)
+ general_thread = th;
+ else
+ cont_thread = th;
+}
+\f
+/* Return nonzero if the thread TH is still alive on the remote system. */
+
+static int
+remote_thread_alive (th)
+ int th;
+{
+ char buf[PBUFSIZ];
+
+ buf[0] = 'T';
+ if (th < 0)
+ sprintf (&buf[1], "-%x", -th);
+ else
+ sprintf (&buf[1], "%x", th);
+ putpkt (buf);
+ getpkt (buf, 0);
+ return (buf[0] == 'O' && buf[1] == 'K');
+}
+
+/* Restart the remote side; this is an extended protocol operation. */
+
+static void
+extended_remote_restart ()
+{
+ char buf[PBUFSIZ];
+
+ /* Send the restart command; for reasons I don't understand the
+ remote side really expects a number after the "R". */
+ buf[0] = 'R';
+ sprintf (&buf[1], "%x", 0);
+ putpkt (buf);
+
+ /* Now query for status so this looks just like we restarted
+ gdbserver from scratch. */
+ putpkt ("?");
+ getpkt (buf, 0);
+}
\f
/* Clean up connection to a remote debugger. */
remote_desc = NULL;
}
+/* Query the remote side for the text, data and bss offsets. */
+
+static void
+get_offsets ()
+{
+ char buf[PBUFSIZ], *ptr;
+ int lose;
+ CORE_ADDR text_addr, data_addr, bss_addr;
+ struct section_offsets *offs;
+
+ putpkt ("qOffsets");
+
+ getpkt (buf, 0);
+
+ if (buf[0] == '\000')
+ return; /* Return silently. Stub doesn't support this
+ command. */
+ if (buf[0] == 'E')
+ {
+ warning ("Remote failure reply: %s", buf);
+ return;
+ }
+
+ /* Pick up each field in turn. This used to be done with scanf, but
+ scanf will make trouble if CORE_ADDR size doesn't match
+ conversion directives correctly. The following code will work
+ with any size of CORE_ADDR. */
+ text_addr = data_addr = bss_addr = 0;
+ ptr = buf;
+ lose = 0;
+
+ if (strncmp (ptr, "Text=", 5) == 0)
+ {
+ ptr += 5;
+ /* Don't use strtol, could lose on big values. */
+ while (*ptr && *ptr != ';')
+ text_addr = (text_addr << 4) + fromhex (*ptr++);
+ }
+ else
+ lose = 1;
+
+ if (!lose && strncmp (ptr, ";Data=", 6) == 0)
+ {
+ ptr += 6;
+ while (*ptr && *ptr != ';')
+ data_addr = (data_addr << 4) + fromhex (*ptr++);
+ }
+ else
+ lose = 1;
+
+ if (!lose && strncmp (ptr, ";Bss=", 5) == 0)
+ {
+ ptr += 5;
+ while (*ptr && *ptr != ';')
+ bss_addr = (bss_addr << 4) + fromhex (*ptr++);
+ }
+ else
+ lose = 1;
+
+ if (lose)
+ error ("Malformed response to offset query, %s", buf);
+
+ if (symfile_objfile == NULL)
+ return;
+
+ offs = (struct section_offsets *) alloca (sizeof (struct section_offsets)
+ + symfile_objfile->num_sections
+ * sizeof (offs->offsets));
+ memcpy (offs, symfile_objfile->section_offsets,
+ sizeof (struct section_offsets)
+ + symfile_objfile->num_sections
+ * sizeof (offs->offsets));
+
+ ANOFFSET (offs, SECT_OFF_TEXT) = text_addr;
+
+ /* This is a temporary kludge to force data and bss to use the same offsets
+ because that's what nlmconv does now. The real solution requires changes
+ to the stub and remote.c that I don't have time to do right now. */
+
+ ANOFFSET (offs, SECT_OFF_DATA) = data_addr;
+ ANOFFSET (offs, SECT_OFF_BSS) = data_addr;
+
+ objfile_relocate (symfile_objfile, offs);
+}
+
/* Stub for catch_errors. */
static int
immediate_quit = 1; /* Allow user to interrupt it */
/* Ack any packet which the remote side has already sent. */
- /* I'm not sure this \r is needed; we don't use it any other time we
- send an ack. */
- SERIAL_WRITE (remote_desc, "+\r", 2);
+ SERIAL_WRITE (remote_desc, "+", 1);
+
+ /* Let the stub know that we want it to return the thread. */
+ set_thread (-1, 0);
+
+ get_offsets (); /* Get text, data & bss offsets */
+
putpkt ("?"); /* initiate a query from remote machine */
immediate_quit = 0;
/* Open a connection to a remote debugger.
NAME is the filename used for communication. */
+static void
+remote_open (name, from_tty)
+ char *name;
+ int from_tty;
+{
+ remote_open_1 (name, from_tty, &remote_ops, 0);
+}
+
+/* Open a connection to a remote debugger using the extended
+ remote gdb protocol. NAME is the filename used for communication. */
+
+static void
+extended_remote_open (name, from_tty)
+ char *name;
+ int from_tty;
+{
+ remote_open_1 (name, from_tty, &extended_remote_ops, 1/*extended_p*/);
+}
+
+/* Generic code for opening a connection to a remote target. */
static DCACHE *remote_dcache;
static void
-remote_open (name, from_tty)
+remote_open_1 (name, from_tty, target, extended_p)
char *name;
int from_tty;
+ struct target_ops *target;
+ int extended_p;
{
if (name == 0)
- error (
-"To open a remote debug connection, you need to specify what serial\n\
+ error ("To open a remote debug connection, you need to specify what serial\n\
device is attached to the remote system (e.g. /dev/ttya).");
target_preopen (from_tty);
- unpush_target (&remote_ops);
+ unpush_target (target);
remote_dcache = dcache_init (remote_read_bytes, remote_write_bytes);
}
}
+
SERIAL_RAW (remote_desc);
/* If there is something sitting in the buffer we might take it as a
puts_filtered (name);
puts_filtered ("\n");
}
- push_target (&remote_ops); /* Switch to using remote target now */
+ push_target (target); /* Switch to using remote target now */
+
+ /* Start out by trying the 'P' request to set registers. We set this each
+ time that we open a new target so that if the user switches from one
+ stub to another, we can (if the target is closed and reopened) cope. */
+ stub_supports_P = 1;
+ general_thread = -2;
+ cont_thread = -2;
+
+ /* Without this, some commands which require an active target (such as kill)
+ won't work. This variable serves (at least) double duty as both the pid
+ of the target process (if it has such), and as a flag indicating that a
+ target is active. These functions should be split out into seperate
+ variables, especially since GDB will someday have a notion of debugging
+ several processes. */
+
+ inferior_pid = 42000;
/* Start the remote connection; if error (0), discard this target.
In particular, if the user quits, be sure to discard it
(we'd be in an inconsistent state otherwise). */
if (!catch_errors (remote_start_remote, (char *)0,
- "Couldn't establish connection to remote target\n", RETURN_MASK_ALL))
- pop_target();
+ "Couldn't establish connection to remote target\n", RETURN_MASK_ALL))
+ {
+ pop_target();
+ return;
+ }
+
+ if (extended_p)
+ {
+ /* tell the remote that we're using the extended protocol. */
+ char buf[PBUFSIZ];
+ putpkt ("!");
+ getpkt (buf, 0);
+ }
}
-/* remote_detach()
- takes a program previously attached to and detaches it.
- We better not have left any breakpoints
- in the program or it'll die when it hits one.
- Close the open connection to the remote debugger.
- Use this when you want to detach and do something else
- with your gdb. */
+/* This takes a program previously attached to and detaches it. After
+ this is done, GDB can be used to debug some other program. We
+ better not have left any breakpoints in the target program or it'll
+ die when it hits one. */
static void
remote_detach (args, from_tty)
char *args;
int from_tty;
{
+ char buf[PBUFSIZ];
+
if (args)
error ("Argument given to \"detach\" when remotely debugging.");
-
+
+ /* Tell the remote target to detach. */
+ strcpy (buf, "D");
+ remote_send (buf);
+
pop_target ();
if (from_tty)
puts_filtered ("Ending remote debugging.\n");
/* Convert hex digit A to a number. */
-static int
+int
fromhex (a)
int a;
{
return a - '0';
else if (a >= 'a' && a <= 'f')
return a - 'a' + 10;
- else
- error ("Reply contains invalid hex digit");
- return -1;
+ else if (a >= 'A' && a <= 'F')
+ return a - 'A' + 10;
+ else
+ error ("Reply contains invalid hex digit %d", a);
}
/* Convert number NIB to a hex digit. */
\f
/* Tell the remote machine to resume. */
+static enum target_signal last_sent_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0;
+int last_sent_step;
+
static void
remote_resume (pid, step, siggnal)
int pid, step;
{
char buf[PBUFSIZ];
- if (siggnal)
- {
- char *name;
- target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
- printf_filtered
- ("Can't send signals to a remote system. %s not sent.\n",
- target_signal_to_name (siggnal));
- target_terminal_inferior ();
- }
+ if (pid == -1)
+ set_thread (inferior_pid, 0);
+ else
+ set_thread (pid, 0);
dcache_flush (remote_dcache);
- strcpy (buf, step ? "s": "c");
+ last_sent_signal = siggnal;
+ last_sent_step = step;
+
+ /* A hook for when we need to do something at the last moment before
+ resumption. */
+ if (target_resume_hook)
+ (*target_resume_hook) ();
+
+ if (siggnal != TARGET_SIGNAL_0)
+ {
+ buf[0] = step ? 'S' : 'C';
+ buf[1] = tohex (((int)siggnal >> 4) & 0xf);
+ buf[2] = tohex ((int)siggnal & 0xf);
+ buf[3] = '\0';
+ }
+ else
+ strcpy (buf, step ? "s": "c");
putpkt (buf);
}
if (remote_debug)
printf_unfiltered ("remote_interrupt called\n");
- SERIAL_WRITE (remote_desc, "\003", 1); /* Send a ^C */
+ /* Send a break or a ^C, depending on user preference. */
+ if (remote_break)
+ SERIAL_SEND_BREAK (remote_desc);
+ else
+ SERIAL_WRITE (remote_desc, "\003", 1);
}
static void (*ofunc)();
target_terminal_inferior ();
}
+/* If nonzero, ignore the next kill. */
+int kill_kludge;
+
+void
+remote_console_output (msg)
+ char *msg;
+{
+ char *p;
+
+ for (p = msg; *p; p +=2)
+ {
+ char tb[2];
+ char c = fromhex (p[0]) * 16 + fromhex (p[1]);
+ tb[0] = c;
+ tb[1] = 0;
+ if (target_output_hook)
+ target_output_hook (tb);
+ else
+ fputs_filtered (tb, gdb_stdout);
+ }
+}
+
/* Wait until the remote machine stops, then return,
storing status in STATUS just as `wait' would.
Returns "pid" (though it's not clear what, if anything, that
struct target_waitstatus *status;
{
unsigned char buf[PBUFSIZ];
+ int thread_num = -1;
status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED;
status->value.integer = 0;
getpkt ((char *) buf, 1);
signal (SIGINT, ofunc);
- if (buf[0] == 'E')
- warning ("Remote failure reply: %s", buf);
- else if (buf[0] == 'T')
- {
- int i;
- long regno;
- char regs[MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE];
-
- /* Expedited reply, containing Signal, {regno, reg} repeat */
- /* format is: 'Tssn...:r...;n...:r...;n...:r...;#cc', where
- ss = signal number
- n... = register number
- r... = register contents
- */
-
- p = &buf[3]; /* after Txx */
-
- while (*p)
- {
- unsigned char *p1;
-
- regno = strtol (p, &p1, 16); /* Read the register number */
+ /* This is a hook for when we need to do something (perhaps the
+ collection of trace data) every time the target stops. */
+ if (target_wait_loop_hook)
+ (*target_wait_loop_hook) ();
- if (p1 == p)
- warning ("Remote sent badly formed register number: %s\nPacket: '%s'\n",
- p1, buf);
-
- p = p1;
-
- if (*p++ != ':')
- warning ("Malformed packet (missing colon): %s\nPacket: '%s'\n",
- p, buf);
-
- if (regno >= NUM_REGS)
- warning ("Remote sent bad register number %d: %s\nPacket: '%s'\n",
- regno, p, buf);
-
- for (i = 0; i < REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regno); i++)
- {
- if (p[0] == 0 || p[1] == 0)
- warning ("Remote reply is too short: %s", buf);
- regs[i] = fromhex (p[0]) * 16 + fromhex (p[1]);
- p += 2;
- }
-
- if (*p++ != ';')
- warning ("Remote register badly formatted: %s", buf);
-
- supply_register (regno, regs);
- }
- break;
- }
- else if (buf[0] == 'N')
+ switch (buf[0])
{
- unsigned char *p1;
- bfd_vma text_addr, data_addr, bss_addr;
-
- /* Relocate object file. Format is NAATT;DD;BB where AA is
- the signal number, TT is the new text address, DD is the
- new data address, and BB is the new bss address. This is
- used by the NLM stub; gdb may see more sections. */
- p = &buf[3];
- text_addr = strtoul (p, &p1, 16);
- if (p1 == p || *p1 != ';')
- warning ("Malformed relocation packet: Packet '%s'", buf);
- p = p1 + 1;
- data_addr = strtoul (p, &p1, 16);
- if (p1 == p || *p1 != ';')
- warning ("Malformed relocation packet: Packet '%s'", buf);
- p = p1 + 1;
- bss_addr = strtoul (p, &p1, 16);
- if (p1 == p)
- warning ("Malformed relocation packet: Packet '%s'", buf);
-
- if (symfile_objfile != NULL
- && (ANOFFSET (symfile_objfile->section_offsets,
- SECT_OFF_TEXT) != text_addr
- || ANOFFSET (symfile_objfile->section_offsets,
- SECT_OFF_DATA) != data_addr
- || ANOFFSET (symfile_objfile->section_offsets,
- SECT_OFF_BSS) != bss_addr))
- {
- struct section_offsets *offs;
-
- /* FIXME: This code assumes gdb-stabs.h is being used;
- it's broken for xcoff, dwarf, sdb-coff, etc. But
- there is no simple canonical representation for this
- stuff. (Just what does "text" as seen by the stub
- mean, anyway?). */
-
- offs = ((struct section_offsets *)
- alloca (sizeof (struct section_offsets)
- + (symfile_objfile->num_sections
- * sizeof (offs->offsets))));
- memcpy (offs, symfile_objfile->section_offsets,
- (sizeof (struct section_offsets)
- + (symfile_objfile->num_sections
- * sizeof (offs->offsets))));
- ANOFFSET (offs, SECT_OFF_TEXT) = text_addr;
- ANOFFSET (offs, SECT_OFF_DATA) = data_addr;
- ANOFFSET (offs, SECT_OFF_BSS) = bss_addr;
-
- objfile_relocate (symfile_objfile, offs);
+ case 'E': /* Error of some sort */
+ warning ("Remote failure reply: %s", buf);
+ continue;
+ case 'T': /* Status with PC, SP, FP, ... */
+ {
+ int i;
+ long regno;
+ char regs[MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE];
+
+ /* Expedited reply, containing Signal, {regno, reg} repeat */
+ /* format is: 'Tssn...:r...;n...:r...;n...:r...;#cc', where
+ ss = signal number
+ n... = register number
+ r... = register contents
+ */
+ p = &buf[3]; /* after Txx */
+
+ while (*p)
{
- struct obj_section *s;
- bfd *abfd;
+ unsigned char *p1;
+ char *p_temp;
- abfd = symfile_objfile->obfd;
+ regno = strtol ((const char *) p, &p_temp, 16); /* Read the register number */
+ p1 = (unsigned char *)p_temp;
- for (s = symfile_objfile->sections;
- s < symfile_objfile->sections_end; ++s)
+ if (p1 == p)
{
- flagword flags;
-
- flags = bfd_get_section_flags (abfd, s->the_bfd_section);
-
- if (flags & SEC_CODE)
- {
- s->addr += text_addr;
- s->endaddr += text_addr;
- }
- else if (flags & (SEC_DATA | SEC_LOAD))
+ p1 = (unsigned char *) strchr ((const char *) p, ':');
+ if (p1 == NULL)
+ warning ("Malformed packet (missing colon): %s\n\
+Packet: '%s'\n",
+ p, buf);
+ if (strncmp ((const char *) p, "thread", p1 - p) == 0)
{
- s->addr += data_addr;
- s->endaddr += data_addr;
+ thread_num = strtol ((const char *) ++p1, &p_temp, 16);
+ p = (unsigned char *)p_temp;
}
- else if (flags & SEC_ALLOC)
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ p = p1;
+
+ if (*p++ != ':')
+ warning ("Malformed packet (missing colon): %s\n\
+Packet: '%s'\n",
+ p, buf);
+
+ if (regno >= NUM_REGS)
+ warning ("Remote sent bad register number %ld: %s\n\
+Packet: '%s'\n",
+ regno, p, buf);
+
+ for (i = 0; i < REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regno); i++)
{
- s->addr += bss_addr;
- s->endaddr += bss_addr;
+ if (p[0] == 0 || p[1] == 0)
+ warning ("Remote reply is too short: %s", buf);
+ regs[i] = fromhex (p[0]) * 16 + fromhex (p[1]);
+ p += 2;
}
+ supply_register (regno, regs);
}
+
+ if (*p++ != ';')
+ warning ("Remote register badly formatted: %s", buf);
}
+ }
+ /* fall through */
+ case 'S': /* Old style status, just signal only */
+ status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED;
+ status->value.sig = (enum target_signal)
+ (((fromhex (buf[1])) << 4) + (fromhex (buf[2])));
+
+ goto got_status;
+ case 'W': /* Target exited */
+ {
+ /* The remote process exited. */
+ status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED;
+ status->value.integer = (fromhex (buf[1]) << 4) + fromhex (buf[2]);
+ goto got_status;
+ }
+ case 'X':
+ status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED;
+ status->value.sig = (enum target_signal)
+ (((fromhex (buf[1])) << 4) + (fromhex (buf[2])));
+ kill_kludge = 1;
+
+ goto got_status;
+ case 'O': /* Console output */
+ remote_console_output (buf + 1);
+ continue;
+ case '\0':
+ if (last_sent_signal != TARGET_SIGNAL_0)
+ {
+ /* Zero length reply means that we tried 'S' or 'C' and
+ the remote system doesn't support it. */
+ target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
+ printf_filtered
+ ("Can't send signals to this remote system. %s not sent.\n",
+ target_signal_to_name (last_sent_signal));
+ last_sent_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0;
+ target_terminal_inferior ();
+
+ strcpy ((char *) buf, last_sent_step ? "s" : "c");
+ putpkt ((char *) buf);
+ continue;
}
- break;
+ /* else fallthrough */
+ default:
+ warning ("Invalid remote reply: %s", buf);
+ continue;
}
- else if (buf[0] == 'W')
+ }
+ got_status:
+ if (thread_num != -1)
+ {
+ /* Initial thread value can only be acquired via wait, so deal with
+ this marker which is used before the first thread value is
+ acquired. */
+ if (inferior_pid == 42000)
{
- /* The remote process exited. */
- status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED;
- status->value.integer = (fromhex (buf[1]) << 4) + fromhex (buf[2]);
- return 0;
+ inferior_pid = thread_num;
+ add_thread (inferior_pid);
}
- else if (buf[0] == 'S')
- break;
- else
- warning ("Invalid remote reply: %s", buf);
+ return thread_num;
}
-
- status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED;
- status->value.sig = (enum target_signal)
- (((fromhex (buf[1])) << 4) + (fromhex (buf[2])));
-
- return 0;
+ return inferior_pid;
}
/* Number of bytes of registers this stub implements. */
char *p;
char regs[REGISTER_BYTES];
+ set_thread (inferior_pid, 1);
+
sprintf (buf, "g");
remote_send (buf);
+ if (remote_register_buf_size == 0)
+ remote_register_buf_size = strlen (buf);
+
/* Unimplemented registers read as all bits zero. */
memset (regs, 0, REGISTER_BYTES);
supply_register (i, ®s[REGISTER_BYTE(i)]);
}
-/* Prepare to store registers. Since we send them all, we have to
- read out the ones we don't want to change first. */
+/* Prepare to store registers. Since we may send them all (using a
+ 'G' request), we have to read out the ones we don't want to change
+ first. */
static void
remote_prepare_to_store ()
read_register_bytes (0, (char *)NULL, REGISTER_BYTES);
}
-/* Store the remote registers from the contents of the block REGISTERS.
- FIXME, eventually just store one register if that's all that is needed. */
+/* Store register REGNO, or all registers if REGNO == -1, from the contents
+ of REGISTERS. FIXME: ignores errors. */
-/* ARGSUSED */
static void
remote_store_registers (regno)
int regno;
int i;
char *p;
+ set_thread (inferior_pid, 1);
+
+ if (regno >= 0 && stub_supports_P)
+ {
+ /* Try storing a single register. */
+ char *regp;
+
+ sprintf (buf, "P%x=", regno);
+ p = buf + strlen (buf);
+ regp = ®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (regno)];
+ for (i = 0; i < REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regno); ++i)
+ {
+ *p++ = tohex ((regp[i] >> 4) & 0xf);
+ *p++ = tohex (regp[i] & 0xf);
+ }
+ *p = '\0';
+ remote_send (buf);
+ if (buf[0] != '\0')
+ {
+ /* The stub understands the 'P' request. We are done. */
+ return;
+ }
+
+ /* The stub does not support the 'P' request. Use 'G' instead,
+ and don't try using 'P' in the future (it will just waste our
+ time). */
+ stub_supports_P = 0;
+ }
+
buf[0] = 'G';
-
+
/* Command describes registers byte by byte,
each byte encoded as two hex characters. */
remote_send (buf);
}
-#if 0
-
-/* Use of the data cache is disabled because it loses for looking at
+/*
+ Use of the data cache *used* to be disabled because it loses for looking at
and changing hardware I/O ports and the like. Accepting `volatile'
- would perhaps be one way to fix it, but a better way which would
- win for more cases would be to use the executable file for the text
- segment, like the `icache' code below but done cleanly (in some
- target-independent place, perhaps in target_xfer_memory, perhaps
- based on assigning each target a speed or perhaps by some simpler
- mechanism). */
+ would perhaps be one way to fix it. Another idea would be to use the
+ executable file for the text segment (for all SEC_CODE sections?
+ For all SEC_READONLY sections?). This has problems if you want to
+ actually see what the memory contains (e.g. self-modifying code,
+ clobbered memory, user downloaded the wrong thing).
+
+ Because it speeds so much up, it's now enabled, if you're playing
+ with registers you turn it of (set remotecache 0)
+*/
/* Read a word from remote address ADDR and return it.
This goes through the data cache. */
+#if 0 /* unused? */
static int
remote_fetch_word (addr)
CORE_ADDR addr;
{
-#if 0
- if (icache)
- {
- extern CORE_ADDR text_start, text_end;
-
- if (addr >= text_start && addr < text_end)
- {
- int buffer;
- xfer_core_file (addr, &buffer, sizeof (int));
- return buffer;
- }
- }
-#endif
return dcache_fetch (remote_dcache, addr);
}
{
dcache_poke (remote_dcache, addr, word);
}
-#endif /* 0 */
+#endif /* 0 (unused?) */
+
\f
-/* Write memory data directly to the remote machine.
- This does not inform the data cache; the data cache uses this.
+
+/* Return the number of hex digits in num. */
+
+static int
+hexnumlen (num)
+ ULONGEST num;
+{
+ int i;
+
+ for (i = 0; num != 0; i++)
+ num >>= 4;
+
+ return max (i, 1);
+}
+
+/* Write memory data directly to the remote machine.
+ This does not inform the data cache; the data cache uses this.
MEMADDR is the address in the remote memory space.
MYADDR is the address of the buffer in our space.
LEN is the number of bytes.
static int
remote_write_bytes (memaddr, myaddr, len)
CORE_ADDR memaddr;
- unsigned char *myaddr;
+ char *myaddr;
int len;
{
- char buf[PBUFSIZ];
- int i;
- char *p;
+ int max_buf_size; /* Max size of packet output buffer */
+ int origlen;
- sprintf (buf, "M%x,%x:", memaddr, len);
+ /* Chop the transfer down if necessary */
- /* We send target system values byte by byte, in increasing byte addresses,
- each byte encoded as two hex characters. */
+ max_buf_size = min (remote_write_size, PBUFSIZ);
+ if (remote_register_buf_size != 0)
+ max_buf_size = min (max_buf_size, remote_register_buf_size);
+
+ /* Subtract header overhead from max payload size - $M<memaddr>,<len>:#nn */
+ max_buf_size -= 2 + hexnumlen (memaddr + len - 1) + 1 + hexnumlen (len) + 4;
- p = buf + strlen (buf);
- for (i = 0; i < len; i++)
+ origlen = len;
+ while (len > 0)
{
- *p++ = tohex ((myaddr[i] >> 4) & 0xf);
- *p++ = tohex (myaddr[i] & 0xf);
- }
- *p = '\0';
+ char buf[PBUFSIZ];
+ char *p;
+ int todo;
+ int i;
- putpkt (buf);
- getpkt (buf, 0);
+ todo = min (len, max_buf_size / 2); /* num bytes that will fit */
- if (buf[0] == 'E')
- {
- /* There is no correspondance between what the remote protocol uses
- for errors and errno codes. We would like a cleaner way of
- representing errors (big enough to include errno codes, bfd_error
- codes, and others). But for now just return EIO. */
- errno = EIO;
- return 0;
+ /* FIXME-32x64: Need a version of print_address_numeric which puts the
+ result in a buffer like sprintf. */
+ sprintf (buf, "M%lx,%x:", (unsigned long) memaddr, todo);
+
+ /* We send target system values byte by byte, in increasing byte addresses,
+ each byte encoded as two hex characters. */
+
+ p = buf + strlen (buf);
+ for (i = 0; i < todo; i++)
+ {
+ *p++ = tohex ((myaddr[i] >> 4) & 0xf);
+ *p++ = tohex (myaddr[i] & 0xf);
+ }
+ *p = '\0';
+
+ putpkt (buf);
+ getpkt (buf, 0);
+
+ if (buf[0] == 'E')
+ {
+ /* There is no correspondance between what the remote protocol uses
+ for errors and errno codes. We would like a cleaner way of
+ representing errors (big enough to include errno codes, bfd_error
+ codes, and others). But for now just return EIO. */
+ errno = EIO;
+ return 0;
+ }
+ myaddr += todo;
+ memaddr += todo;
+ len -= todo;
}
- return len;
+ return origlen;
}
/* Read memory data directly from the remote machine.
static int
remote_read_bytes (memaddr, myaddr, len)
CORE_ADDR memaddr;
- unsigned char *myaddr;
+ char *myaddr;
int len;
{
- char buf[PBUFSIZ];
- int i;
- char *p;
+ int max_buf_size; /* Max size of packet output buffer */
+ int origlen;
- if (len > PBUFSIZ / 2 - 1)
- abort ();
+ /* Chop the transfer down if necessary */
- sprintf (buf, "m%x,%x", memaddr, len);
- putpkt (buf);
- getpkt (buf, 0);
+ max_buf_size = min (remote_write_size, PBUFSIZ);
+ if (remote_register_buf_size != 0)
+ max_buf_size = min (max_buf_size, remote_register_buf_size);
- if (buf[0] == 'E')
+ origlen = len;
+ while (len > 0)
{
- /* There is no correspondance between what the remote protocol uses
- for errors and errno codes. We would like a cleaner way of
- representing errors (big enough to include errno codes, bfd_error
- codes, and others). But for now just return EIO. */
- errno = EIO;
- return 0;
- }
+ char buf[PBUFSIZ];
+ char *p;
+ int todo;
+ int i;
+
+ todo = min (len, max_buf_size / 2); /* num bytes that will fit */
+
+ /* FIXME-32x64: Need a version of print_address_numeric which puts the
+ result in a buffer like sprintf. */
+ sprintf (buf, "m%lx,%x", (unsigned long) memaddr, todo);
+ putpkt (buf);
+ getpkt (buf, 0);
+
+ if (buf[0] == 'E')
+ {
+ /* There is no correspondance between what the remote protocol uses
+ for errors and errno codes. We would like a cleaner way of
+ representing errors (big enough to include errno codes, bfd_error
+ codes, and others). But for now just return EIO. */
+ errno = EIO;
+ return 0;
+ }
/* Reply describes memory byte by byte,
each byte encoded as two hex characters. */
- p = buf;
- for (i = 0; i < len; i++)
- {
- if (p[0] == 0 || p[1] == 0)
- /* Reply is short. This means that we were able to read only part
- of what we wanted to. */
- break;
- myaddr[i] = fromhex (p[0]) * 16 + fromhex (p[1]);
- p += 2;
+ p = buf;
+ for (i = 0; i < todo; i++)
+ {
+ if (p[0] == 0 || p[1] == 0)
+ /* Reply is short. This means that we were able to read only part
+ of what we wanted to. */
+ return i + (origlen - len);
+ myaddr[i] = fromhex (p[0]) * 16 + fromhex (p[1]);
+ p += 2;
+ }
+ myaddr += todo;
+ memaddr += todo;
+ len -= todo;
}
- return i;
+ return origlen;
}
\f
/* Read or write LEN bytes from inferior memory at MEMADDR, transferring
int should_write;
struct target_ops *target; /* ignored */
{
- int xfersize;
- int bytes_xferred;
- int total_xferred = 0;
-
- while (len > 0)
- {
- if (len > MAXBUFBYTES)
- xfersize = MAXBUFBYTES;
- else
- xfersize = len;
-
- if (should_write)
- bytes_xferred = remote_write_bytes (memaddr,
- (unsigned char *)myaddr, xfersize);
- else
- bytes_xferred = remote_read_bytes (memaddr,
- (unsigned char *)myaddr, xfersize);
-
- /* If we get an error, we are done xferring. */
- if (bytes_xferred == 0)
- break;
+#ifdef REMOTE_TRANSLATE_XFER_ADDRESS
+ CORE_ADDR targaddr;
+ int targlen;
+ REMOTE_TRANSLATE_XFER_ADDRESS (memaddr, len, targaddr, targlen);
+ if (targlen == 0)
+ return 0;
+ memaddr = targaddr;
+ len = targlen;
+#endif
- memaddr += bytes_xferred;
- myaddr += bytes_xferred;
- len -= bytes_xferred;
- total_xferred += bytes_xferred;
- }
- return total_xferred;
+ return dcache_xfer_memory (remote_dcache, memaddr, myaddr, len, should_write);
}
+
#if 0
/* Enable after 4.12. */
/* Read a single character from the remote end, masking it down to 7 bits. */
static int
-readchar ()
+readchar (timeout)
+ int timeout;
{
int ch;
ch = SERIAL_READCHAR (remote_desc, timeout);
- if (ch < 0)
- return ch;
-
- return ch & 0x7f;
+ switch (ch)
+ {
+ case SERIAL_EOF:
+ error ("Remote connection closed");
+ case SERIAL_ERROR:
+ perror_with_name ("Remote communication error");
+ case SERIAL_TIMEOUT:
+ return ch;
+ default:
+ return ch & 0x7f;
+ }
}
/* Send the command in BUF to the remote machine,
remote_send (buf)
char *buf;
{
-
putpkt (buf);
getpkt (buf, 0);
error ("Remote failure reply: %s", buf);
}
+/* Display a null-terminated packet on stdout, for debugging, using C
+ string notation. */
+static void
+print_packet (char *buf)
+{
+ puts_filtered ("\"");
+ while (*buf)
+ gdb_printchar (*buf++, gdb_stdout, '"');
+ puts_filtered ("\"");
+}
+
+
/* Send a packet to the remote machine, with error checking.
The data of the packet is in BUF. */
-static void
+int
putpkt (buf)
char *buf;
{
char buf2[PBUFSIZ];
int cnt = strlen (buf);
int ch;
+ int tcount = 0;
char *p;
/* Copy the packet into buffer BUF2, encapsulating it
and giving it a checksum. */
- if (cnt > sizeof(buf2) - 5) /* Prosanity check */
+ if (cnt > (int) sizeof (buf2) - 5) /* Prosanity check */
abort();
p = buf2;
while (1)
{
+ int started_error_output = 0;
+
if (remote_debug)
{
*p = '\0';
- printf_unfiltered ("Sending packet: %s...", buf2); gdb_flush(gdb_stdout);
+ printf_unfiltered ("Sending packet: %s...", buf2);
+ gdb_flush(gdb_stdout);
}
if (SERIAL_WRITE (remote_desc, buf2, p - buf2))
perror_with_name ("putpkt: write failed");
/* read until either a timeout occurs (-2) or '+' is read */
while (1)
{
- ch = readchar ();
+ ch = readchar (remote_timeout);
+
+ if (remote_debug)
+ {
+ switch (ch)
+ {
+ case '+':
+ case SERIAL_TIMEOUT:
+ case '$':
+ if (started_error_output)
+ {
+ putchar_unfiltered ('\n');
+ started_error_output = 0;
+ }
+ }
+ }
switch (ch)
{
case '+':
if (remote_debug)
printf_unfiltered("Ack\n");
- return;
+ return 1;
case SERIAL_TIMEOUT:
+ tcount ++;
+ if (tcount > 3)
+ return 0;
break; /* Retransmit buffer */
- case SERIAL_ERROR:
- perror_with_name ("putpkt: couldn't read ACK");
- case SERIAL_EOF:
- error ("putpkt: EOF while trying to read ACK");
+ case '$':
+ {
+ char junkbuf[PBUFSIZ];
+
+ /* It's probably an old response, and we're out of sync. Just
+ gobble up the packet and ignore it. */
+ getpkt (junkbuf, 0);
+ continue; /* Now, go look for + */
+ }
default:
if (remote_debug)
- printf_unfiltered ("%02X %c ", ch&0xFF, ch);
+ {
+ if (!started_error_output)
+ {
+ started_error_output = 1;
+ printf_unfiltered ("putpkt: Junk: ");
+ }
+ putchar_unfiltered (ch & 0177);
+ }
continue;
}
break; /* Here to retransmit */
}
}
+/* Come here after finding the start of the frame. Collect the rest into BUF,
+ verifying the checksum, length, and handling run-length compression.
+ Returns 0 on any error, 1 on success. */
+
+static int
+read_frame (buf)
+ char *buf;
+{
+ unsigned char csum;
+ char *bp;
+ int c;
+
+ csum = 0;
+ bp = buf;
+
+ while (1)
+ {
+ c = readchar (remote_timeout);
+
+ switch (c)
+ {
+ case SERIAL_TIMEOUT:
+ if (remote_debug)
+ puts_filtered ("Timeout in mid-packet, retrying\n");
+ return 0;
+ case '$':
+ if (remote_debug)
+ puts_filtered ("Saw new packet start in middle of old one\n");
+ return 0; /* Start a new packet, count retries */
+ case '#':
+ {
+ unsigned char pktcsum;
+
+ *bp = '\000';
+
+ pktcsum = fromhex (readchar (remote_timeout)) << 4;
+ pktcsum |= fromhex (readchar (remote_timeout));
+
+ if (csum == pktcsum)
+ return 1;
+
+ if (remote_debug)
+ {
+ printf_filtered ("Bad checksum, sentsum=0x%x, csum=0x%x, buf=",
+ pktcsum, csum);
+ puts_filtered (buf);
+ puts_filtered ("\n");
+ }
+ return 0;
+ }
+ case '*': /* Run length encoding */
+ csum += c;
+ c = readchar (remote_timeout);
+ csum += c;
+ c = c - ' ' + 3; /* Compute repeat count */
+
+
+ if (c > 0 && c < 255 && bp + c - 1 < buf + PBUFSIZ - 1)
+ {
+ memset (bp, *(bp - 1), c);
+ bp += c;
+ continue;
+ }
+
+ *bp = '\0';
+ printf_filtered ("Repeat count %d too large for buffer: ", c);
+ puts_filtered (buf);
+ puts_filtered ("\n");
+ return 0;
+
+ default:
+ if (bp < buf + PBUFSIZ - 1)
+ {
+ *bp++ = c;
+ csum += c;
+ continue;
+ }
+
+ *bp = '\0';
+ puts_filtered ("Remote packet too long: ");
+ puts_filtered (buf);
+ puts_filtered ("\n");
+
+ return 0;
+ }
+ }
+}
+
/* Read a packet from the remote machine, with error checking,
and store it in BUF. BUF is expected to be of size PBUFSIZ.
If FOREVER, wait forever rather than timing out; this is used
while the target is executing user code. */
-static void
-getpkt (retbuf, forever)
- char *retbuf;
+void
+getpkt (buf, forever)
+ char *buf;
int forever;
{
- char *bp;
- unsigned char csum;
- int c = 0;
- unsigned char c1, c2;
- int retries = 0;
- char buf[PBUFSIZ];
+ int c;
+ int tries;
+ int timeout;
+ int val;
-#define MAX_RETRIES 10
+ strcpy (buf,"timeout");
- while (1)
+ if (forever)
{
-#if 0
- /* This is wrong. If doing a long backtrace, the user should be
- able to get out time next we call QUIT, without anything as violent
- as interrupt_query. If we want to provide a way out of here
- without getting to the next QUIT, it should be based on hitting
- ^C twice as in remote_wait. */
- if (quit_flag)
- {
- quit_flag = 0;
- interrupt_query ();
- }
+#ifdef MAINTENANCE_CMDS
+ timeout = watchdog > 0 ? watchdog : -1;
+#else
+ timeout = -1;
#endif
+ }
+
+ else
+ timeout = remote_timeout;
+#define MAX_TRIES 3
+
+ for (tries = 1; tries <= MAX_TRIES; tries++)
+ {
/* This can loop forever if the remote side sends us characters
continuously, but if it pauses, we'll get a zero from readchar
because of timeout. Then we'll count that as a retry. */
- c = readchar();
- if (c > 0 && c != '$')
- continue;
+ /* Note that we will only wait forever prior to the start of a packet.
+ After that, we expect characters to arrive at a brisk pace. They
+ should show up within remote_timeout intervals. */
- if (c == SERIAL_TIMEOUT)
+ do
{
- if (forever)
- continue;
- if (++retries >= MAX_RETRIES)
- if (remote_debug) puts_filtered ("Timed out.\n");
- goto out;
- }
-
- if (c == SERIAL_EOF)
- error ("Remote connection closed");
- if (c == SERIAL_ERROR)
- perror_with_name ("Remote communication error");
-
- /* Force csum to be zero here because of possible error retry. */
- csum = 0;
- bp = buf;
+ c = readchar (timeout);
- while (1)
- {
- c = readchar ();
if (c == SERIAL_TIMEOUT)
{
+#ifdef MAINTENANCE_CMDS
+ if (forever) /* Watchdog went off. Kill the target. */
+ {
+ target_mourn_inferior ();
+ error ("Watchdog has expired. Target detached.\n");
+ }
+#endif
if (remote_debug)
- puts_filtered ("Timeout in mid-packet, retrying\n");
- goto whole; /* Start a new packet, count retries */
- }
- if (c == '$')
- {
- if (remote_debug)
- puts_filtered ("Saw new packet start in middle of old one\n");
- goto whole; /* Start a new packet, count retries */
+ puts_filtered ("Timed out.\n");
+ goto retry;
}
- if (c == '#')
- break;
- if (bp >= buf+PBUFSIZ-1)
- {
- *bp = '\0';
- puts_filtered ("Remote packet too long: ");
- puts_filtered (buf);
- puts_filtered ("\n");
- goto whole;
- }
- *bp++ = c;
- csum += c;
}
- *bp = 0;
+ while (c != '$');
- c1 = fromhex (readchar ());
- c2 = fromhex (readchar ());
- if ((csum & 0xff) == (c1 << 4) + c2)
- break;
- printf_filtered ("Bad checksum, sentsum=0x%x, csum=0x%x, buf=",
- (c1 << 4) + c2, csum & 0xff);
- puts_filtered (buf);
- puts_filtered ("\n");
+ /* We've found the start of a packet, now collect the data. */
- /* Try the whole thing again. */
-whole:
- if (++retries < MAX_RETRIES)
- {
- SERIAL_WRITE (remote_desc, "-", 1);
- }
- else
+ val = read_frame (buf);
+
+ if (val == 1)
{
- printf_unfiltered ("Ignoring packet error, continuing...\n");
- break;
+ if (remote_debug)
+ fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdout, "Packet received: %s\n", buf);
+ SERIAL_WRITE (remote_desc, "+", 1);
+ return;
}
+
+ /* Try the whole thing again. */
+ retry:
+ SERIAL_WRITE (remote_desc, "-", 1);
}
- /* Deal with run-length encoding. */
- {
- char *src = buf;
- char *dest = retbuf;
- int i;
- int repeat;
- do {
- if (*src == '*')
- {
- if (src[1] == '\0' || src[2] == '\0')
- {
- if (remote_debug)
- puts_filtered ("Packet too short, retrying\n");
- goto whole;
- }
- repeat = (fromhex (src[1]) << 4) + fromhex (src[2]);
- for (i = 0; i < repeat; ++i)
- {
- *dest++ = src[-1];
- }
- src += 2;
- }
- else
- {
- *dest++ = *src;
- }
- } while (*src++ != '\0');
- }
+ /* We have tried hard enough, and just can't receive the packet. Give up. */
-out:
+ printf_unfiltered ("Ignoring packet error, continuing...\n");
SERIAL_WRITE (remote_desc, "+", 1);
-
- if (remote_debug)
- fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr,"Packet received: %s\n", buf);
}
\f
static void
remote_kill ()
{
- putpkt ("k");
+ /* For some mysterious reason, wait_for_inferior calls kill instead of
+ mourn after it gets TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED. Work around it. */
+ if (kill_kludge)
+ {
+ kill_kludge = 0;
+ target_mourn_inferior ();
+ return;
+ }
+
+ /* Use catch_errors so the user can quit from gdb even when we aren't on
+ speaking terms with the remote system. */
+ catch_errors (putpkt, "k", "", RETURN_MASK_ERROR);
+
/* Don't wait for it to die. I'm not really sure it matters whether
we do or not. For the existing stubs, kill is a noop. */
target_mourn_inferior ();
static void
remote_mourn ()
{
- unpush_target (&remote_ops);
+ remote_mourn_1 (&remote_ops);
+}
+
+static void
+extended_remote_mourn ()
+{
+ /* We do _not_ want to mourn the target like this; this will
+ remove the extended remote target from the target stack,
+ and the next time the user says "run" it'll fail.
+
+ FIXME: What is the right thing to do here? */
+#if 0
+ remote_mourn_1 (&extended_remote_ops);
+#endif
+}
+
+/* Worker function for remote_mourn. */
+static void
+remote_mourn_1 (target)
+ struct target_ops *target;
+{
+ unpush_target (target);
generic_mourn_inferior ();
}
-\f
-#ifdef REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
+/* In the extended protocol we want to be able to do things like
+ "run" and have them basically work as expected. So we need
+ a special create_inferior function.
+
+ FIXME: One day add support for changing the exec file
+ we're debugging, arguments and an environment. */
+
+static void
+extended_remote_create_inferior (exec_file, args, env)
+ char *exec_file;
+ char *args;
+ char **env;
+{
+ /* Rip out the breakpoints; we'll reinsert them after restarting
+ the remote server. */
+ remove_breakpoints ();
+
+ /* Now restart the remote server. */
+ extended_remote_restart ();
+
+ /* Now put the breakpoints back in. This way we're safe if the
+ restart function works via a unix fork on the remote side. */
+ insert_breakpoints ();
+
+ /* Clean up from the last time we were running. */
+ clear_proceed_status ();
+
+ /* Let the remote process run. */
+ proceed (-1, TARGET_SIGNAL_0, 0);
+}
+
+\f
/* On some machines, e.g. 68k, we may use a different breakpoint instruction
- than other targets. */
-static unsigned char break_insn[] = REMOTE_BREAKPOINT;
+ than other targets; in those use REMOTE_BREAKPOINT instead of just
+ BREAKPOINT. Also, bi-endian targets may define LITTLE_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
+ and BIG_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT. If none of these are defined, we just call
+ the standard routines that are in mem-break.c. */
+
+/* FIXME, these ought to be done in a more dynamic fashion. For instance,
+ the choice of breakpoint instruction affects target program design and
+ vice versa, and by making it user-tweakable, the special code here
+ goes away and we need fewer special GDB configurations. */
+
+#if defined (LITTLE_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT) && defined (BIG_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT) && !defined(REMOTE_BREAKPOINT)
+#define REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
+#endif
-/* Check that it fits in BREAKPOINT_MAX bytes. */
-static unsigned char check_break_insn_size[BREAKPOINT_MAX] = REMOTE_BREAKPOINT;
+#ifdef REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
-#else /* No REMOTE_BREAKPOINT. */
+/* If the target isn't bi-endian, just pretend it is. */
+#if !defined (LITTLE_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT) && !defined (BIG_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT)
+#define LITTLE_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
+#define BIG_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
+#endif
-/* Same old breakpoint instruction. This code does nothing different
- than mem-break.c. */
-static unsigned char break_insn[] = BREAKPOINT;
+static unsigned char big_break_insn[] = BIG_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT;
+static unsigned char little_break_insn[] = LITTLE_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT;
-#endif /* No REMOTE_BREAKPOINT. */
+#endif /* REMOTE_BREAKPOINT */
/* Insert a breakpoint on targets that don't have any better breakpoint
support. We read the contents of the target location and stash it,
CORE_ADDR addr;
char *contents_cache;
{
+#ifdef REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
int val;
- val = target_read_memory (addr, contents_cache, sizeof break_insn);
+ val = target_read_memory (addr, contents_cache, sizeof big_break_insn);
if (val == 0)
- val = target_write_memory (addr, (char *)break_insn, sizeof break_insn);
+ {
+ if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER == BIG_ENDIAN)
+ val = target_write_memory (addr, (char *) big_break_insn,
+ sizeof big_break_insn);
+ else
+ val = target_write_memory (addr, (char *) little_break_insn,
+ sizeof little_break_insn);
+ }
return val;
+#else
+ return memory_insert_breakpoint (addr, contents_cache);
+#endif /* REMOTE_BREAKPOINT */
}
static int
CORE_ADDR addr;
char *contents_cache;
{
- return target_write_memory (addr, contents_cache, sizeof break_insn);
+#ifdef REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
+ return target_write_memory (addr, contents_cache, sizeof big_break_insn);
+#else
+ return memory_remove_breakpoint (addr, contents_cache);
+#endif /* REMOTE_BREAKPOINT */
}
-\f
-/* Define the target subroutine names */
-
-struct target_ops remote_ops = {
- "remote", /* to_shortname */
- "Remote serial target in gdb-specific protocol", /* to_longname */
- "Use a remote computer via a serial line, using a gdb-specific protocol.\n\
-Specify the serial device it is connected to (e.g. /dev/ttya).", /* to_doc */
- remote_open, /* to_open */
- remote_close, /* to_close */
- NULL, /* to_attach */
- remote_detach, /* to_detach */
- remote_resume, /* to_resume */
- remote_wait, /* to_wait */
- remote_fetch_registers, /* to_fetch_registers */
- remote_store_registers, /* to_store_registers */
- remote_prepare_to_store, /* to_prepare_to_store */
- remote_xfer_memory, /* to_xfer_memory */
- remote_files_info, /* to_files_info */
-
- remote_insert_breakpoint, /* to_insert_breakpoint */
- remote_remove_breakpoint, /* to_remove_breakpoint */
-
- NULL, /* to_terminal_init */
- NULL, /* to_terminal_inferior */
- NULL, /* to_terminal_ours_for_output */
- NULL, /* to_terminal_ours */
- NULL, /* to_terminal_info */
- remote_kill, /* to_kill */
- generic_load, /* to_load */
- NULL, /* to_lookup_symbol */
- NULL, /* to_create_inferior */
- remote_mourn, /* to_mourn_inferior */
- 0, /* to_can_run */
- 0, /* to_notice_signals */
- process_stratum, /* to_stratum */
- NULL, /* to_next */
- 1, /* to_has_all_memory */
- 1, /* to_has_memory */
- 1, /* to_has_stack */
- 1, /* to_has_registers */
- 1, /* to_has_execution */
- NULL, /* sections */
- NULL, /* sections_end */
- OPS_MAGIC /* to_magic */
-};
-#endif /* Use remote. */
+
+/* Some targets are only capable of doing downloads, and afterwards they switch
+ to the remote serial protocol. This function provides a clean way to get
+ from the download target to the remote target. It's basically just a
+ wrapper so that we don't have to expose any of the internal workings of
+ remote.c.
+
+ Prior to calling this routine, you should shutdown the current target code,
+ else you will get the "A program is being debugged already..." message.
+ Usually a call to pop_target() suffices.
+*/
+
+void
+push_remote_target (name, from_tty)
+ char *name;
+ int from_tty;
+{
+ printf_filtered ("Switching to remote protocol\n");
+ remote_open (name, from_tty);
+}
+
+/* Other targets want to use the entire remote serial module but with
+ certain remote_ops overridden. */
+
+void
+open_remote_target (name, from_tty, target, extended_p)
+ char *name;
+ int from_tty;
+ struct target_ops *target;
+ int extended_p;
+{
+ printf_filtered ("Selecting the %sremote protocol\n",
+ (extended_p ? "extended-" : ""));
+ remote_open_1 (name, from_tty, target, extended_p);
+}
+
+/* Table used by the crc32 function to calcuate the checksum. */
+static unsigned long crc32_table[256] = {0, 0};
+
+static unsigned long
+crc32 (buf, len, crc)
+ unsigned char *buf;
+ int len;
+ unsigned int crc;
+{
+ if (! crc32_table[1])
+ {
+ /* Initialize the CRC table and the decoding table. */
+ int i, j;
+ unsigned int c;
+
+ for (i = 0; i < 256; i++)
+ {
+ for (c = i << 24, j = 8; j > 0; --j)
+ c = c & 0x80000000 ? (c << 1) ^ 0x04c11db7 : (c << 1);
+ crc32_table[i] = c;
+ }
+ }
+
+ while (len--)
+ {
+ crc = (crc << 8) ^ crc32_table[((crc >> 24) ^ *buf) & 255];
+ buf++;
+ }
+ return crc;
+}
+
+static void
+compare_sections_command (args, from_tty)
+ char *args;
+ int from_tty;
+{
+ asection *s;
+ unsigned long host_crc, target_crc;
+ extern bfd *exec_bfd;
+ struct cleanup *old_chain;
+ char *tmp, *sectdata, *sectname, buf[PBUFSIZ];
+ bfd_size_type size;
+ bfd_vma lma;
+ int matched = 0;
+ int mismatched = 0;
+
+ if (!exec_bfd)
+ error ("command cannot be used without an exec file");
+ if (!current_target.to_shortname ||
+ strcmp (current_target.to_shortname, "remote") != 0)
+ error ("command can only be used with remote target");
+
+ for (s = exec_bfd->sections; s; s = s->next)
+ {
+ if (!(s->flags & SEC_LOAD))
+ continue; /* skip non-loadable section */
+
+ size = bfd_get_section_size_before_reloc (s);
+ if (size == 0)
+ continue; /* skip zero-length section */
+
+ sectname = (char *) bfd_get_section_name (exec_bfd, s);
+ if (args && strcmp (args, sectname) != 0)
+ continue; /* not the section selected by user */
+
+ matched = 1; /* do this section */
+ lma = s->lma;
+ /* FIXME: assumes lma can fit into long */
+ sprintf (buf, "qCRC:%lx,%lx", (long) lma, (long) size);
+ putpkt (buf);
+
+ /* be clever; compute the host_crc before waiting for target reply */
+ sectdata = xmalloc (size);
+ old_chain = make_cleanup (free, sectdata);
+ bfd_get_section_contents (exec_bfd, s, sectdata, 0, size);
+ host_crc = crc32 ((unsigned char *) sectdata, size, 0xffffffff);
+
+ getpkt (buf, 0);
+ if (buf[0] == 'E')
+ error ("target memory fault, section %s, range 0x%08x -- 0x%08x",
+ sectname, lma, lma + size);
+ if (buf[0] != 'C')
+ error ("remote target does not support this operation");
+
+ for (target_crc = 0, tmp = &buf[1]; *tmp; tmp++)
+ target_crc = target_crc * 16 + fromhex (*tmp);
+
+ printf_filtered ("Section %s, range 0x%08x -- 0x%08x: ",
+ sectname, lma, lma + size);
+ if (host_crc == target_crc)
+ printf_filtered ("matched.\n");
+ else
+ {
+ printf_filtered ("MIS-MATCHED!\n");
+ mismatched++;
+ }
+
+ do_cleanups (old_chain);
+ }
+ if (mismatched > 0)
+ warning ("One or more sections of the remote executable does not match\nthe loaded file\n");
+ if (args && !matched)
+ printf_filtered ("No loaded section named '%s'.\n", args);
+}
+
+static void
+packet_command (args, from_tty)
+ char *args;
+ int from_tty;
+
+
+{
+ char buf[PBUFSIZ];
+
+ if (!current_target.to_shortname ||
+ strcmp (current_target.to_shortname, "remote") != 0)
+ error ("command can only be used with remote target");
+
+ if (! args)
+ error ("remote-packet command requires packet text as argument");
+
+ puts_filtered ("sending: ");
+ print_packet (args);
+ puts_filtered ("\n");
+ putpkt (args);
+
+ getpkt (buf, 0);
+ puts_filtered ("received: ");
+ print_packet (buf);
+ puts_filtered ("\n");
+}
+
+static void
+init_remote_ops ()
+{
+ remote_ops.to_shortname = "remote";
+ remote_ops.to_longname = "Remote serial target in gdb-specific protocol";
+ remote_ops.to_doc = "Use a remote computer via a serial line; using a gdb-specific protocol.\n\
+Specify the serial device it is connected to (e.g. /dev/ttya).";
+ remote_ops.to_open = remote_open;
+ remote_ops.to_close = remote_close;
+ remote_ops.to_detach = remote_detach;
+ remote_ops.to_resume = remote_resume;
+ remote_ops.to_wait = remote_wait;
+ remote_ops.to_fetch_registers = remote_fetch_registers;
+ remote_ops.to_store_registers = remote_store_registers;
+ remote_ops.to_prepare_to_store = remote_prepare_to_store;
+ remote_ops.to_xfer_memory = remote_xfer_memory;
+ remote_ops.to_files_info = remote_files_info;
+ remote_ops.to_insert_breakpoint = remote_insert_breakpoint;
+ remote_ops.to_remove_breakpoint = remote_remove_breakpoint;
+ remote_ops.to_kill = remote_kill;
+ remote_ops.to_load = generic_load;
+ remote_ops.to_mourn_inferior = remote_mourn;
+ remote_ops.to_thread_alive = remote_thread_alive;
+ remote_ops.to_stratum = process_stratum;
+ remote_ops.to_has_all_memory = 1;
+ remote_ops.to_has_memory = 1;
+ remote_ops.to_has_stack = 1;
+ remote_ops.to_has_registers = 1;
+ remote_ops.to_has_execution = 1;
+ remote_ops.to_magic = OPS_MAGIC;
+}
+
+static void
+init_extended_remote_ops ()
+{
+ extended_remote_ops = remote_ops;
+
+ extended_remote_ops.to_shortname = "extended-remote";
+ extended_remote_ops.to_longname = "Extended remote serial target in gdb-specific protocol";
+ extended_remote_ops.to_doc = "Use a remote computer via a serial line; using a gdb-specific protocol.\n\
+Specify the serial device it is connected to (e.g. /dev/ttya).",
+ extended_remote_ops.to_open = extended_remote_open;
+ extended_remote_ops.to_create_inferior = extended_remote_create_inferior;
+ extended_remote_ops.to_mourn_inferior = extended_remote_mourn;
+}
void
_initialize_remote ()
{
-#if !defined(DONT_USE_REMOTE)
+ init_remote_ops ();
add_target (&remote_ops);
-#endif
+
+ init_extended_remote_ops ();
+ add_target (&extended_remote_ops);
+
+ add_cmd ("compare-sections", class_obscure, compare_sections_command,
+ "Compare section data on target to the exec file.\n\
+Argument is a single section name (default: all loaded sections).",
+ &cmdlist);
+
+ add_cmd ("packet", class_maintenance, packet_command,
+ "Send an arbitrary packet to a remote target.\n\
+ maintenance packet TEXT\n\
+If GDB is talking to an inferior via the GDB serial protocol, then\n\
+this command sends the string TEXT to the inferior, and displays the\n\
+response packet. GDB supplies the initial `$' character, and the\n\
+terminating `#' character and checksum. This command was originally\n\
+provided for use by the gdb.emc test suite.",
+ &maintenancelist);
+
+ add_show_from_set (add_set_cmd ("remotetimeout", no_class,
+ var_integer, (char *)&remote_timeout,
+ "Set timeout value for remote read.\n", &setlist),
+ &showlist);
+
+ add_show_from_set (add_set_cmd ("remotebreak", no_class,
+ var_integer, (char *)&remote_break,
+ "Set whether to send break if interrupted.\n", &setlist),
+ &showlist);
+
+ add_show_from_set (add_set_cmd ("remotewritesize", no_class,
+ var_integer, (char *)&remote_write_size,
+ "Set the maximum number of bytes in each memory write packet.\n", &setlist),
+ &showlist);
}
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+