/* Target-struct-independent code to start (run) and stop an inferior process. Copyright (C) 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GDB. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . */ #include "defs.h" #include "gdb_string.h" #include #include "symtab.h" #include "frame.h" #include "inferior.h" #include "exceptions.h" #include "breakpoint.h" #include "gdb_wait.h" #include "gdbcore.h" #include "gdbcmd.h" #include "cli/cli-script.h" #include "target.h" #include "gdbthread.h" #include "annotate.h" #include "symfile.h" #include "top.h" #include #include "inf-loop.h" #include "regcache.h" #include "value.h" #include "observer.h" #include "language.h" #include "solib.h" #include "main.h" #include "gdb_assert.h" #include "mi/mi-common.h" /* Prototypes for local functions */ static void signals_info (char *, int); static void handle_command (char *, int); static void sig_print_info (enum target_signal); static void sig_print_header (void); static void resume_cleanups (void *); static int hook_stop_stub (void *); static int restore_selected_frame (void *); static void build_infrun (void); static int follow_fork (void); static void set_schedlock_func (char *args, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c); struct execution_control_state; static int currently_stepping (struct execution_control_state *ecs); static void xdb_handle_command (char *args, int from_tty); static int prepare_to_proceed (int); void _initialize_infrun (void); int inferior_ignoring_leading_exec_events = 0; /* When set, stop the 'step' command if we enter a function which has no line number information. The normal behavior is that we step over such function. */ int step_stop_if_no_debug = 0; static void show_step_stop_if_no_debug (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value) { fprintf_filtered (file, _("Mode of the step operation is %s.\n"), value); } /* In asynchronous mode, but simulating synchronous execution. */ int sync_execution = 0; /* wait_for_inferior and normal_stop use this to notify the user when the inferior stopped in a different thread than it had been running in. */ static ptid_t previous_inferior_ptid; /* This is true for configurations that may follow through execl() and similar functions. At present this is only true for HP-UX native. */ #ifndef MAY_FOLLOW_EXEC #define MAY_FOLLOW_EXEC (0) #endif static int may_follow_exec = MAY_FOLLOW_EXEC; static int debug_infrun = 0; static void show_debug_infrun (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value) { fprintf_filtered (file, _("Inferior debugging is %s.\n"), value); } /* If the program uses ELF-style shared libraries, then calls to functions in shared libraries go through stubs, which live in a table called the PLT (Procedure Linkage Table). The first time the function is called, the stub sends control to the dynamic linker, which looks up the function's real address, patches the stub so that future calls will go directly to the function, and then passes control to the function. If we are stepping at the source level, we don't want to see any of this --- we just want to skip over the stub and the dynamic linker. The simple approach is to single-step until control leaves the dynamic linker. However, on some systems (e.g., Red Hat's 5.2 distribution) the dynamic linker calls functions in the shared C library, so you can't tell from the PC alone whether the dynamic linker is still running. In this case, we use a step-resume breakpoint to get us past the dynamic linker, as if we were using "next" to step over a function call. IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE says whether we're in the dynamic linker code or not. Normally, this means we single-step. However, if SKIP_SOLIB_RESOLVER then returns non-zero, then its value is an address where we can place a step-resume breakpoint to get past the linker's symbol resolution function. IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE can generally be implemented in a pretty portable way, by comparing the PC against the address ranges of the dynamic linker's sections. SKIP_SOLIB_RESOLVER is generally going to be system-specific, since it depends on internal details of the dynamic linker. It's usually not too hard to figure out where to put a breakpoint, but it certainly isn't portable. SKIP_SOLIB_RESOLVER should do plenty of sanity checking. If it can't figure things out, returning zero and getting the (possibly confusing) stepping behavior is better than signalling an error, which will obscure the change in the inferior's state. */ /* This function returns TRUE if pc is the address of an instruction that lies within the dynamic linker (such as the event hook, or the dld itself). This function must be used only when a dynamic linker event has been caught, and the inferior is being stepped out of the hook, or undefined results are guaranteed. */ #ifndef SOLIB_IN_DYNAMIC_LINKER #define SOLIB_IN_DYNAMIC_LINKER(pid,pc) 0 #endif /* Convert the #defines into values. This is temporary until wfi control flow is completely sorted out. */ #ifndef CANNOT_STEP_HW_WATCHPOINTS #define CANNOT_STEP_HW_WATCHPOINTS 0 #else #undef CANNOT_STEP_HW_WATCHPOINTS #define CANNOT_STEP_HW_WATCHPOINTS 1 #endif /* Tables of how to react to signals; the user sets them. */ static unsigned char *signal_stop; static unsigned char *signal_print; static unsigned char *signal_program; #define SET_SIGS(nsigs,sigs,flags) \ do { \ int signum = (nsigs); \ while (signum-- > 0) \ if ((sigs)[signum]) \ (flags)[signum] = 1; \ } while (0) #define UNSET_SIGS(nsigs,sigs,flags) \ do { \ int signum = (nsigs); \ while (signum-- > 0) \ if ((sigs)[signum]) \ (flags)[signum] = 0; \ } while (0) /* Value to pass to target_resume() to cause all threads to resume */ #define RESUME_ALL (pid_to_ptid (-1)) /* Command list pointer for the "stop" placeholder. */ static struct cmd_list_element *stop_command; /* Function inferior was in as of last step command. */ static struct symbol *step_start_function; /* Nonzero if we are presently stepping over a breakpoint. If we hit a breakpoint or watchpoint, and then continue, we need to single step the current thread with breakpoints disabled, to avoid hitting the same breakpoint or watchpoint again. And we should step just a single thread and keep other threads stopped, so that other threads don't miss breakpoints while they are removed. So, this variable simultaneously means that we need to single step the current thread, keep other threads stopped, and that breakpoints should be removed while we step. This variable is set either: - in proceed, when we resume inferior on user's explicit request - in keep_going, if handle_inferior_event decides we need to step over breakpoint. The variable is cleared in clear_proceed_status, called every time before we call proceed. The proceed calls wait_for_inferior, which calls handle_inferior_event in a loop, and until wait_for_inferior exits, this variable is changed only by keep_going. */ static int stepping_over_breakpoint; /* Nonzero if we want to give control to the user when we're notified of shared library events by the dynamic linker. */ static int stop_on_solib_events; static void show_stop_on_solib_events (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value) { fprintf_filtered (file, _("Stopping for shared library events is %s.\n"), value); } /* Nonzero means expecting a trace trap and should stop the inferior and return silently when it happens. */ int stop_after_trap; /* Nonzero means expecting a trap and caller will handle it themselves. It is used after attach, due to attaching to a process; when running in the shell before the child program has been exec'd; and when running some kinds of remote stuff (FIXME?). */ enum stop_kind stop_soon; /* Nonzero if proceed is being used for a "finish" command or a similar situation when stop_registers should be saved. */ int proceed_to_finish; /* Save register contents here when about to pop a stack dummy frame, if-and-only-if proceed_to_finish is set. Thus this contains the return value from the called function (assuming values are returned in a register). */ struct regcache *stop_registers; /* Nonzero after stop if current stack frame should be printed. */ static int stop_print_frame; static struct breakpoint *step_resume_breakpoint = NULL; /* This is a cached copy of the pid/waitstatus of the last event returned by target_wait()/deprecated_target_wait_hook(). This information is returned by get_last_target_status(). */ static ptid_t target_last_wait_ptid; static struct target_waitstatus target_last_waitstatus; /* This is used to remember when a fork, vfork or exec event was caught by a catchpoint, and thus the event is to be followed at the next resume of the inferior, and not immediately. */ static struct { enum target_waitkind kind; struct { int parent_pid; int child_pid; } fork_event; char *execd_pathname; } pending_follow; static const char follow_fork_mode_child[] = "child"; static const char follow_fork_mode_parent[] = "parent"; static const char *follow_fork_mode_kind_names[] = { follow_fork_mode_child, follow_fork_mode_parent, NULL }; static const char *follow_fork_mode_string = follow_fork_mode_parent; static void show_follow_fork_mode_string (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value) { fprintf_filtered (file, _("\ Debugger response to a program call of fork or vfork is \"%s\".\n"), value); } static int follow_fork (void) { int follow_child = (follow_fork_mode_string == follow_fork_mode_child); return target_follow_fork (follow_child); } void follow_inferior_reset_breakpoints (void) { /* Was there a step_resume breakpoint? (There was if the user did a "next" at the fork() call.) If so, explicitly reset its thread number. step_resumes are a form of bp that are made to be per-thread. Since we created the step_resume bp when the parent process was being debugged, and now are switching to the child process, from the breakpoint package's viewpoint, that's a switch of "threads". We must update the bp's notion of which thread it is for, or it'll be ignored when it triggers. */ if (step_resume_breakpoint) breakpoint_re_set_thread (step_resume_breakpoint); /* Reinsert all breakpoints in the child. The user may have set breakpoints after catching the fork, in which case those were never set in the child, but only in the parent. This makes sure the inserted breakpoints match the breakpoint list. */ breakpoint_re_set (); insert_breakpoints (); } /* EXECD_PATHNAME is assumed to be non-NULL. */ static void follow_exec (int pid, char *execd_pathname) { int saved_pid = pid; struct target_ops *tgt; if (!may_follow_exec) return; /* This is an exec event that we actually wish to pay attention to. Refresh our symbol table to the newly exec'd program, remove any momentary bp's, etc. If there are breakpoints, they aren't really inserted now, since the exec() transformed our inferior into a fresh set of instructions. We want to preserve symbolic breakpoints on the list, since we have hopes that they can be reset after the new a.out's symbol table is read. However, any "raw" breakpoints must be removed from the list (e.g., the solib bp's), since their address is probably invalid now. And, we DON'T want to call delete_breakpoints() here, since that may write the bp's "shadow contents" (the instruction value that was overwritten witha TRAP instruction). Since we now have a new a.out, those shadow contents aren't valid. */ update_breakpoints_after_exec (); /* If there was one, it's gone now. We cannot truly step-to-next statement through an exec(). */ step_resume_breakpoint = NULL; step_range_start = 0; step_range_end = 0; /* What is this a.out's name? */ printf_unfiltered (_("Executing new program: %s\n"), execd_pathname); /* We've followed the inferior through an exec. Therefore, the inferior has essentially been killed & reborn. */ /* First collect the run target in effect. */ tgt = find_run_target (); /* If we can't find one, things are in a very strange state... */ if (tgt == NULL) error (_("Could find run target to save before following exec")); gdb_flush (gdb_stdout); target_mourn_inferior (); inferior_ptid = pid_to_ptid (saved_pid); /* Because mourn_inferior resets inferior_ptid. */ push_target (tgt); /* That a.out is now the one to use. */ exec_file_attach (execd_pathname, 0); /* And also is where symbols can be found. */ symbol_file_add_main (execd_pathname, 0); /* Reset the shared library package. This ensures that we get a shlib event when the child reaches "_start", at which point the dld will have had a chance to initialize the child. */ #if defined(SOLIB_RESTART) SOLIB_RESTART (); #endif #ifdef SOLIB_CREATE_INFERIOR_HOOK SOLIB_CREATE_INFERIOR_HOOK (PIDGET (inferior_ptid)); #else solib_create_inferior_hook (); #endif /* Reinsert all breakpoints. (Those which were symbolic have been reset to the proper address in the new a.out, thanks to symbol_file_command...) */ insert_breakpoints (); /* The next resume of this inferior should bring it to the shlib startup breakpoints. (If the user had also set bp's on "main" from the old (parent) process, then they'll auto- matically get reset there in the new process.) */ } /* Non-zero if we just simulating a single-step. This is needed because we cannot remove the breakpoints in the inferior process until after the `wait' in `wait_for_inferior'. */ static int singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 0; /* The thread we inserted single-step breakpoints for. */ static ptid_t singlestep_ptid; /* PC when we started this single-step. */ static CORE_ADDR singlestep_pc; /* If another thread hit the singlestep breakpoint, we save the original thread here so that we can resume single-stepping it later. */ static ptid_t saved_singlestep_ptid; static int stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint; /* If not equal to null_ptid, this means that after stepping over breakpoint is finished, we need to switch to deferred_step_ptid, and step it. The use case is when one thread has hit a breakpoint, and then the user has switched to another thread and issued 'step'. We need to step over breakpoint in the thread which hit the breakpoint, but then continue stepping the thread user has selected. */ static ptid_t deferred_step_ptid; /* Things to clean up if we QUIT out of resume (). */ static void resume_cleanups (void *ignore) { normal_stop (); } static const char schedlock_off[] = "off"; static const char schedlock_on[] = "on"; static const char schedlock_step[] = "step"; static const char *scheduler_enums[] = { schedlock_off, schedlock_on, schedlock_step, NULL }; static const char *scheduler_mode = schedlock_off; static void show_scheduler_mode (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value) { fprintf_filtered (file, _("\ Mode for locking scheduler during execution is \"%s\".\n"), value); } static void set_schedlock_func (char *args, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c) { if (!target_can_lock_scheduler) { scheduler_mode = schedlock_off; error (_("Target '%s' cannot support this command."), target_shortname); } } /* Resume the inferior, but allow a QUIT. This is useful if the user wants to interrupt some lengthy single-stepping operation (for child processes, the SIGINT goes to the inferior, and so we get a SIGINT random_signal, but for remote debugging and perhaps other targets, that's not true). STEP nonzero if we should step (zero to continue instead). SIG is the signal to give the inferior (zero for none). */ void resume (int step, enum target_signal sig) { int should_resume = 1; struct cleanup *old_cleanups = make_cleanup (resume_cleanups, 0); QUIT; if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: resume (step=%d, signal=%d)\n", step, sig); /* FIXME: calling breakpoint_here_p (read_pc ()) three times! */ /* Some targets (e.g. Solaris x86) have a kernel bug when stepping over an instruction that causes a page fault without triggering a hardware watchpoint. The kernel properly notices that it shouldn't stop, because the hardware watchpoint is not triggered, but it forgets the step request and continues the program normally. Work around the problem by removing hardware watchpoints if a step is requested, GDB will check for a hardware watchpoint trigger after the step anyway. */ if (CANNOT_STEP_HW_WATCHPOINTS && step) remove_hw_watchpoints (); /* Normally, by the time we reach `resume', the breakpoints are either removed or inserted, as appropriate. The exception is if we're sitting at a permanent breakpoint; we need to step over it, but permanent breakpoints can't be removed. So we have to test for it here. */ if (breakpoint_here_p (read_pc ()) == permanent_breakpoint_here) { if (gdbarch_skip_permanent_breakpoint_p (current_gdbarch)) gdbarch_skip_permanent_breakpoint (current_gdbarch, get_current_regcache ()); else error (_("\ The program is stopped at a permanent breakpoint, but GDB does not know\n\ how to step past a permanent breakpoint on this architecture. Try using\n\ a command like `return' or `jump' to continue execution.")); } if (step && gdbarch_software_single_step_p (current_gdbarch)) { /* Do it the hard way, w/temp breakpoints */ if (gdbarch_software_single_step (current_gdbarch, get_current_frame ())) { /* ...and don't ask hardware to do it. */ step = 0; /* and do not pull these breakpoints until after a `wait' in `wait_for_inferior' */ singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 1; singlestep_ptid = inferior_ptid; singlestep_pc = read_pc (); } } /* If there were any forks/vforks/execs that were caught and are now to be followed, then do so. */ switch (pending_follow.kind) { case TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED: case TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED: pending_follow.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS; if (follow_fork ()) should_resume = 0; break; case TARGET_WAITKIND_EXECD: /* follow_exec is called as soon as the exec event is seen. */ pending_follow.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS; break; default: break; } /* Install inferior's terminal modes. */ target_terminal_inferior (); if (should_resume) { ptid_t resume_ptid; resume_ptid = RESUME_ALL; /* Default */ /* If STEP is set, it's a request to use hardware stepping facilities. But in that case, we should never use singlestep breakpoint. */ gdb_assert (!(singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p && step)); if (singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p && stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint) { /* The situation here is as follows. In thread T1 we wanted to single-step. Lacking hardware single-stepping we've set breakpoint at the PC of the next instruction -- call it P. After resuming, we've hit that breakpoint in thread T2. Now we've removed original breakpoint, inserted breakpoint at P+1, and try to step to advance T2 past breakpoint. We need to step only T2, as if T1 is allowed to freely run, it can run past P, and if other threads are allowed to run, they can hit breakpoint at P+1, and nested hits of single-step breakpoints is not something we'd want -- that's complicated to support, and has no value. */ resume_ptid = inferior_ptid; } if ((step || singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p) && breakpoint_here_p (read_pc ()) && !breakpoint_inserted_here_p (read_pc ())) { /* We're stepping, have breakpoint at PC, and it's not inserted. Most likely, proceed has noticed that we have breakpoint and tries to single-step over it, so that it's not hit. In which case, we need to single-step only this thread, and keep others stopped, as they can miss this breakpoint if allowed to run. The current code either has all breakpoints inserted, or all removed, so if we let other threads run, we can actually miss any breakpoint, not the one at PC. */ resume_ptid = inferior_ptid; } if ((scheduler_mode == schedlock_on) || (scheduler_mode == schedlock_step && (step || singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p))) { /* User-settable 'scheduler' mode requires solo thread resume. */ resume_ptid = inferior_ptid; } if (gdbarch_cannot_step_breakpoint (current_gdbarch)) { /* Most targets can step a breakpoint instruction, thus executing it normally. But if this one cannot, just continue and we will hit it anyway. */ if (step && breakpoint_inserted_here_p (read_pc ())) step = 0; } target_resume (resume_ptid, step, sig); } discard_cleanups (old_cleanups); } /* Clear out all variables saying what to do when inferior is continued. First do this, then set the ones you want, then call `proceed'. */ void clear_proceed_status (void) { stepping_over_breakpoint = 0; step_range_start = 0; step_range_end = 0; step_frame_id = null_frame_id; step_over_calls = STEP_OVER_UNDEBUGGABLE; stop_after_trap = 0; stop_soon = NO_STOP_QUIETLY; proceed_to_finish = 0; breakpoint_proceeded = 1; /* We're about to proceed... */ if (stop_registers) { regcache_xfree (stop_registers); stop_registers = NULL; } /* Discard any remaining commands or status from previous stop. */ bpstat_clear (&stop_bpstat); } /* This should be suitable for any targets that support threads. */ static int prepare_to_proceed (int step) { ptid_t wait_ptid; struct target_waitstatus wait_status; /* Get the last target status returned by target_wait(). */ get_last_target_status (&wait_ptid, &wait_status); /* Make sure we were stopped at a breakpoint. */ if (wait_status.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED || wait_status.value.sig != TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP) { return 0; } /* Switched over from WAIT_PID. */ if (!ptid_equal (wait_ptid, minus_one_ptid) && !ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, wait_ptid) && breakpoint_here_p (read_pc_pid (wait_ptid))) { /* If stepping, remember current thread to switch back to. */ if (step) { deferred_step_ptid = inferior_ptid; } /* Switch back to WAIT_PID thread. */ switch_to_thread (wait_ptid); /* We return 1 to indicate that there is a breakpoint here, so we need to step over it before continuing to avoid hitting it straight away. */ return 1; } return 0; } /* Record the pc of the program the last time it stopped. This is just used internally by wait_for_inferior, but need to be preserved over calls to it and cleared when the inferior is started. */ static CORE_ADDR prev_pc; /* Basic routine for continuing the program in various fashions. ADDR is the address to resume at, or -1 for resume where stopped. SIGGNAL is the signal to give it, or 0 for none, or -1 for act according to how it stopped. STEP is nonzero if should trap after one instruction. -1 means return after that and print nothing. You should probably set various step_... variables before calling here, if you are stepping. You should call clear_proceed_status before calling proceed. */ void proceed (CORE_ADDR addr, enum target_signal siggnal, int step) { int oneproc = 0; if (step > 0) step_start_function = find_pc_function (read_pc ()); if (step < 0) stop_after_trap = 1; if (addr == (CORE_ADDR) -1) { if (read_pc () == stop_pc && breakpoint_here_p (read_pc ())) /* There is a breakpoint at the address we will resume at, step one instruction before inserting breakpoints so that we do not stop right away (and report a second hit at this breakpoint). */ oneproc = 1; else if (gdbarch_single_step_through_delay_p (current_gdbarch) && gdbarch_single_step_through_delay (current_gdbarch, get_current_frame ())) /* We stepped onto an instruction that needs to be stepped again before re-inserting the breakpoint, do so. */ oneproc = 1; } else { write_pc (addr); } if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: proceed (addr=0x%s, signal=%d, step=%d)\n", paddr_nz (addr), siggnal, step); /* In a multi-threaded task we may select another thread and then continue or step. But if the old thread was stopped at a breakpoint, it will immediately cause another breakpoint stop without any execution (i.e. it will report a breakpoint hit incorrectly). So we must step over it first. prepare_to_proceed checks the current thread against the thread that reported the most recent event. If a step-over is required it returns TRUE and sets the current thread to the old thread. */ if (prepare_to_proceed (step)) oneproc = 1; if (oneproc) /* We will get a trace trap after one instruction. Continue it automatically and insert breakpoints then. */ stepping_over_breakpoint = 1; else insert_breakpoints (); if (siggnal != TARGET_SIGNAL_DEFAULT) stop_signal = siggnal; /* If this signal should not be seen by program, give it zero. Used for debugging signals. */ else if (!signal_program[stop_signal]) stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0; annotate_starting (); /* Make sure that output from GDB appears before output from the inferior. */ gdb_flush (gdb_stdout); /* Refresh prev_pc value just prior to resuming. This used to be done in stop_stepping, however, setting prev_pc there did not handle scenarios such as inferior function calls or returning from a function via the return command. In those cases, the prev_pc value was not set properly for subsequent commands. The prev_pc value is used to initialize the starting line number in the ecs. With an invalid value, the gdb next command ends up stopping at the position represented by the next line table entry past our start position. On platforms that generate one line table entry per line, this is not a problem. However, on the ia64, the compiler generates extraneous line table entries that do not increase the line number. When we issue the gdb next command on the ia64 after an inferior call or a return command, we often end up a few instructions forward, still within the original line we started. An attempt was made to have init_execution_control_state () refresh the prev_pc value before calculating the line number. This approach did not work because on platforms that use ptrace, the pc register cannot be read unless the inferior is stopped. At that point, we are not guaranteed the inferior is stopped and so the read_pc () call can fail. Setting the prev_pc value here ensures the value is updated correctly when the inferior is stopped. */ prev_pc = read_pc (); /* Resume inferior. */ resume (oneproc || step || bpstat_should_step (), stop_signal); /* Wait for it to stop (if not standalone) and in any case decode why it stopped, and act accordingly. */ /* Do this only if we are not using the event loop, or if the target does not support asynchronous execution. */ if (!target_can_async_p ()) { wait_for_inferior (); normal_stop (); } } /* Start remote-debugging of a machine over a serial link. */ void start_remote (int from_tty) { init_thread_list (); init_wait_for_inferior (); stop_soon = STOP_QUIETLY_REMOTE; stepping_over_breakpoint = 0; /* Always go on waiting for the target, regardless of the mode. */ /* FIXME: cagney/1999-09-23: At present it isn't possible to indicate to wait_for_inferior that a target should timeout if nothing is returned (instead of just blocking). Because of this, targets expecting an immediate response need to, internally, set things up so that the target_wait() is forced to eventually timeout. */ /* FIXME: cagney/1999-09-24: It isn't possible for target_open() to differentiate to its caller what the state of the target is after the initial open has been performed. Here we're assuming that the target has stopped. It should be possible to eventually have target_open() return to the caller an indication that the target is currently running and GDB state should be set to the same as for an async run. */ wait_for_inferior (); /* Now that the inferior has stopped, do any bookkeeping like loading shared libraries. We want to do this before normal_stop, so that the displayed frame is up to date. */ post_create_inferior (¤t_target, from_tty); normal_stop (); } /* Initialize static vars when a new inferior begins. */ void init_wait_for_inferior (void) { /* These are meaningless until the first time through wait_for_inferior. */ prev_pc = 0; breakpoint_init_inferior (inf_starting); /* Don't confuse first call to proceed(). */ stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0; /* The first resume is not following a fork/vfork/exec. */ pending_follow.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS; /* I.e., none. */ clear_proceed_status (); stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint = 0; deferred_step_ptid = null_ptid; target_last_wait_ptid = minus_one_ptid; } /* This enum encodes possible reasons for doing a target_wait, so that wfi can call target_wait in one place. (Ultimately the call will be moved out of the infinite loop entirely.) */ enum infwait_states { infwait_normal_state, infwait_thread_hop_state, infwait_step_watch_state, infwait_nonstep_watch_state }; /* Why did the inferior stop? Used to print the appropriate messages to the interface from within handle_inferior_event(). */ enum inferior_stop_reason { /* Step, next, nexti, stepi finished. */ END_STEPPING_RANGE, /* Inferior terminated by signal. */ SIGNAL_EXITED, /* Inferior exited. */ EXITED, /* Inferior received signal, and user asked to be notified. */ SIGNAL_RECEIVED }; /* This structure contains what used to be local variables in wait_for_inferior. Probably many of them can return to being locals in handle_inferior_event. */ struct execution_control_state { struct target_waitstatus ws; struct target_waitstatus *wp; /* Should we step over breakpoint next time keep_going is called? */ int stepping_over_breakpoint; int random_signal; CORE_ADDR stop_func_start; CORE_ADDR stop_func_end; char *stop_func_name; struct symtab_and_line sal; int current_line; struct symtab *current_symtab; int handling_longjmp; /* FIXME */ ptid_t ptid; ptid_t saved_inferior_ptid; int step_after_step_resume_breakpoint; int stepping_through_solib_after_catch; bpstat stepping_through_solib_catchpoints; int new_thread_event; struct target_waitstatus tmpstatus; enum infwait_states infwait_state; ptid_t waiton_ptid; int wait_some_more; }; void init_execution_control_state (struct execution_control_state *ecs); void handle_inferior_event (struct execution_control_state *ecs); static void step_into_function (struct execution_control_state *ecs); static void insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_frame (struct frame_info *step_frame); static void insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_caller (struct frame_info *); static void insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_sal (struct symtab_and_line sr_sal, struct frame_id sr_id); static void stop_stepping (struct execution_control_state *ecs); static void prepare_to_wait (struct execution_control_state *ecs); static void keep_going (struct execution_control_state *ecs); static void print_stop_reason (enum inferior_stop_reason stop_reason, int stop_info); /* Wait for control to return from inferior to debugger. If inferior gets a signal, we may decide to start it up again instead of returning. That is why there is a loop in this function. When this function actually returns it means the inferior should be left stopped and GDB should read more commands. */ void wait_for_inferior (void) { struct cleanup *old_cleanups; struct execution_control_state ecss; struct execution_control_state *ecs; if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: wait_for_inferior\n"); old_cleanups = make_cleanup (delete_step_resume_breakpoint, &step_resume_breakpoint); /* wfi still stays in a loop, so it's OK just to take the address of a local to get the ecs pointer. */ ecs = &ecss; /* Fill in with reasonable starting values. */ init_execution_control_state (ecs); /* We'll update this if & when we switch to a new thread. */ previous_inferior_ptid = inferior_ptid; overlay_cache_invalid = 1; /* We have to invalidate the registers BEFORE calling target_wait because they can be loaded from the target while in target_wait. This makes remote debugging a bit more efficient for those targets that provide critical registers as part of their normal status mechanism. */ registers_changed (); while (1) { if (deprecated_target_wait_hook) ecs->ptid = deprecated_target_wait_hook (ecs->waiton_ptid, ecs->wp); else ecs->ptid = target_wait (ecs->waiton_ptid, ecs->wp); /* Now figure out what to do with the result of the result. */ handle_inferior_event (ecs); if (!ecs->wait_some_more) break; } do_cleanups (old_cleanups); } /* Asynchronous version of wait_for_inferior. It is called by the event loop whenever a change of state is detected on the file descriptor corresponding to the target. It can be called more than once to complete a single execution command. In such cases we need to keep the state in a global variable ASYNC_ECSS. If it is the last time that this function is called for a single execution command, then report to the user that the inferior has stopped, and do the necessary cleanups. */ struct execution_control_state async_ecss; struct execution_control_state *async_ecs; void fetch_inferior_event (void *client_data) { static struct cleanup *old_cleanups; async_ecs = &async_ecss; if (!async_ecs->wait_some_more) { old_cleanups = make_exec_cleanup (delete_step_resume_breakpoint, &step_resume_breakpoint); /* Fill in with reasonable starting values. */ init_execution_control_state (async_ecs); /* We'll update this if & when we switch to a new thread. */ previous_inferior_ptid = inferior_ptid; overlay_cache_invalid = 1; /* We have to invalidate the registers BEFORE calling target_wait because they can be loaded from the target while in target_wait. This makes remote debugging a bit more efficient for those targets that provide critical registers as part of their normal status mechanism. */ registers_changed (); } if (deprecated_target_wait_hook) async_ecs->ptid = deprecated_target_wait_hook (async_ecs->waiton_ptid, async_ecs->wp); else async_ecs->ptid = target_wait (async_ecs->waiton_ptid, async_ecs->wp); /* Now figure out what to do with the result of the result. */ handle_inferior_event (async_ecs); if (!async_ecs->wait_some_more) { /* Do only the cleanups that have been added by this function. Let the continuations for the commands do the rest, if there are any. */ do_exec_cleanups (old_cleanups); normal_stop (); if (step_multi && stop_step) inferior_event_handler (INF_EXEC_CONTINUE, NULL); else inferior_event_handler (INF_EXEC_COMPLETE, NULL); } } /* Prepare an execution control state for looping through a wait_for_inferior-type loop. */ void init_execution_control_state (struct execution_control_state *ecs) { ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint = 0; ecs->random_signal = 0; ecs->step_after_step_resume_breakpoint = 0; ecs->handling_longjmp = 0; /* FIXME */ ecs->stepping_through_solib_after_catch = 0; ecs->stepping_through_solib_catchpoints = NULL; ecs->sal = find_pc_line (prev_pc, 0); ecs->current_line = ecs->sal.line; ecs->current_symtab = ecs->sal.symtab; ecs->infwait_state = infwait_normal_state; ecs->waiton_ptid = pid_to_ptid (-1); ecs->wp = &(ecs->ws); } /* Return the cached copy of the last pid/waitstatus returned by target_wait()/deprecated_target_wait_hook(). The data is actually cached by handle_inferior_event(), which gets called immediately after target_wait()/deprecated_target_wait_hook(). */ void get_last_target_status (ptid_t *ptidp, struct target_waitstatus *status) { *ptidp = target_last_wait_ptid; *status = target_last_waitstatus; } void nullify_last_target_wait_ptid (void) { target_last_wait_ptid = minus_one_ptid; } /* Switch thread contexts, maintaining "infrun state". */ static void context_switch (struct execution_control_state *ecs) { /* Caution: it may happen that the new thread (or the old one!) is not in the thread list. In this case we must not attempt to "switch context", or we run the risk that our context may be lost. This may happen as a result of the target module mishandling thread creation. */ if (debug_infrun) { fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: Switching context from %s ", target_pid_to_str (inferior_ptid)); fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "to %s\n", target_pid_to_str (ecs->ptid)); } if (in_thread_list (inferior_ptid) && in_thread_list (ecs->ptid)) { /* Perform infrun state context switch: */ /* Save infrun state for the old thread. */ save_infrun_state (inferior_ptid, prev_pc, stepping_over_breakpoint, step_resume_breakpoint, step_range_start, step_range_end, &step_frame_id, ecs->handling_longjmp, ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint, ecs->stepping_through_solib_after_catch, ecs->stepping_through_solib_catchpoints, ecs->current_line, ecs->current_symtab); /* Load infrun state for the new thread. */ load_infrun_state (ecs->ptid, &prev_pc, &stepping_over_breakpoint, &step_resume_breakpoint, &step_range_start, &step_range_end, &step_frame_id, &ecs->handling_longjmp, &ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint, &ecs->stepping_through_solib_after_catch, &ecs->stepping_through_solib_catchpoints, &ecs->current_line, &ecs->current_symtab); } switch_to_thread (ecs->ptid); } static void adjust_pc_after_break (struct execution_control_state *ecs) { CORE_ADDR breakpoint_pc; /* If this target does not decrement the PC after breakpoints, then we have nothing to do. */ if (gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break (current_gdbarch) == 0) return; /* If we've hit a breakpoint, we'll normally be stopped with SIGTRAP. If we aren't, just return. We assume that waitkinds other than TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED are not affected by gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break. Other waitkinds which are implemented by software breakpoints should be handled through the normal breakpoint layer. NOTE drow/2004-01-31: On some targets, breakpoints may generate different signals (SIGILL or SIGEMT for instance), but it is less clear where the PC is pointing afterwards. It may not match gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break. I don't know any specific target that generates these signals at breakpoints (the code has been in GDB since at least 1992) so I can not guess how to handle them here. In earlier versions of GDB, a target with gdbarch_have_nonsteppable_watchpoint would have the PC after hitting a watchpoint affected by gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break. I haven't found any target with both of these set in GDB history, and it seems unlikely to be correct, so gdbarch_have_nonsteppable_watchpoint is not checked here. */ if (ecs->ws.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED) return; if (ecs->ws.value.sig != TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP) return; /* Find the location where (if we've hit a breakpoint) the breakpoint would be. */ breakpoint_pc = read_pc_pid (ecs->ptid) - gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break (current_gdbarch); /* Check whether there actually is a software breakpoint inserted at that location. */ if (software_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (breakpoint_pc)) { /* When using hardware single-step, a SIGTRAP is reported for both a completed single-step and a software breakpoint. Need to differentiate between the two, as the latter needs adjusting but the former does not. The SIGTRAP can be due to a completed hardware single-step only if - we didn't insert software single-step breakpoints - the thread to be examined is still the current thread - this thread is currently being stepped If any of these events did not occur, we must have stopped due to hitting a software breakpoint, and have to back up to the breakpoint address. As a special case, we could have hardware single-stepped a software breakpoint. In this case (prev_pc == breakpoint_pc), we also need to back up to the breakpoint address. */ if (singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p || !ptid_equal (ecs->ptid, inferior_ptid) || !currently_stepping (ecs) || prev_pc == breakpoint_pc) write_pc_pid (breakpoint_pc, ecs->ptid); } } /* Given an execution control state that has been freshly filled in by an event from the inferior, figure out what it means and take appropriate action. */ void handle_inferior_event (struct execution_control_state *ecs) { int sw_single_step_trap_p = 0; int stopped_by_watchpoint; int stepped_after_stopped_by_watchpoint = 0; /* Cache the last pid/waitstatus. */ target_last_wait_ptid = ecs->ptid; target_last_waitstatus = *ecs->wp; /* Always clear state belonging to the previous time we stopped. */ stop_stack_dummy = 0; adjust_pc_after_break (ecs); switch (ecs->infwait_state) { case infwait_thread_hop_state: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: infwait_thread_hop_state\n"); /* Cancel the waiton_ptid. */ ecs->waiton_ptid = pid_to_ptid (-1); break; case infwait_normal_state: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: infwait_normal_state\n"); break; case infwait_step_watch_state: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: infwait_step_watch_state\n"); stepped_after_stopped_by_watchpoint = 1; break; case infwait_nonstep_watch_state: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: infwait_nonstep_watch_state\n"); insert_breakpoints (); /* FIXME-maybe: is this cleaner than setting a flag? Does it handle things like signals arriving and other things happening in combination correctly? */ stepped_after_stopped_by_watchpoint = 1; break; default: internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("bad switch")); } ecs->infwait_state = infwait_normal_state; reinit_frame_cache (); /* If it's a new process, add it to the thread database */ ecs->new_thread_event = (!ptid_equal (ecs->ptid, inferior_ptid) && !ptid_equal (ecs->ptid, minus_one_ptid) && !in_thread_list (ecs->ptid)); if (ecs->ws.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED && ecs->ws.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED && ecs->new_thread_event) { add_thread (ecs->ptid); ui_out_text (uiout, "[New "); ui_out_text (uiout, target_pid_to_str (ecs->ptid)); ui_out_text (uiout, "]\n"); } switch (ecs->ws.kind) { case TARGET_WAITKIND_LOADED: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_LOADED\n"); /* Ignore gracefully during startup of the inferior, as it might be the shell which has just loaded some objects, otherwise add the symbols for the newly loaded objects. Also ignore at the beginning of an attach or remote session; we will query the full list of libraries once the connection is established. */ if (stop_soon == NO_STOP_QUIETLY) { /* Remove breakpoints, SOLIB_ADD might adjust breakpoint addresses via breakpoint_re_set. */ remove_breakpoints (); /* Check for any newly added shared libraries if we're supposed to be adding them automatically. Switch terminal for any messages produced by breakpoint_re_set. */ target_terminal_ours_for_output (); /* NOTE: cagney/2003-11-25: Make certain that the target stack's section table is kept up-to-date. Architectures, (e.g., PPC64), use the section table to perform operations such as address => section name and hence require the table to contain all sections (including those found in shared libraries). */ /* NOTE: cagney/2003-11-25: Pass current_target and not exec_ops to SOLIB_ADD. This is because current GDB is only tooled to propagate section_table changes out from the "current_target" (see target_resize_to_sections), and not up from the exec stratum. This, of course, isn't right. "infrun.c" should only interact with the exec/process stratum, instead relying on the target stack to propagate relevant changes (stop, section table changed, ...) up to other layers. */ #ifdef SOLIB_ADD SOLIB_ADD (NULL, 0, ¤t_target, auto_solib_add); #else solib_add (NULL, 0, ¤t_target, auto_solib_add); #endif target_terminal_inferior (); /* If requested, stop when the dynamic linker notifies gdb of events. This allows the user to get control and place breakpoints in initializer routines for dynamically loaded objects (among other things). */ if (stop_on_solib_events) { stop_stepping (ecs); return; } /* NOTE drow/2007-05-11: This might be a good place to check for "catch load". */ /* Reinsert breakpoints and continue. */ insert_breakpoints (); } /* If we are skipping through a shell, or through shared library loading that we aren't interested in, resume the program. If we're running the program normally, also resume. But stop if we're attaching or setting up a remote connection. */ if (stop_soon == STOP_QUIETLY || stop_soon == NO_STOP_QUIETLY) { resume (0, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); prepare_to_wait (ecs); return; } break; case TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS\n"); resume (0, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); prepare_to_wait (ecs); return; case TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED\n"); target_terminal_ours (); /* Must do this before mourn anyway */ print_stop_reason (EXITED, ecs->ws.value.integer); /* Record the exit code in the convenience variable $_exitcode, so that the user can inspect this again later. */ set_internalvar (lookup_internalvar ("_exitcode"), value_from_longest (builtin_type_int, (LONGEST) ecs->ws.value.integer)); gdb_flush (gdb_stdout); target_mourn_inferior (); singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 0; stop_print_frame = 0; stop_stepping (ecs); return; case TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED\n"); stop_print_frame = 0; stop_signal = ecs->ws.value.sig; target_terminal_ours (); /* Must do this before mourn anyway */ /* Note: By definition of TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED, we shouldn't reach here unless the inferior is dead. However, for years target_kill() was called here, which hints that fatal signals aren't really fatal on some systems. If that's true, then some changes may be needed. */ target_mourn_inferior (); print_stop_reason (SIGNAL_EXITED, stop_signal); singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 0; stop_stepping (ecs); return; /* The following are the only cases in which we keep going; the above cases end in a continue or goto. */ case TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED: case TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED\n"); stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP; pending_follow.kind = ecs->ws.kind; pending_follow.fork_event.parent_pid = PIDGET (ecs->ptid); pending_follow.fork_event.child_pid = ecs->ws.value.related_pid; if (!ptid_equal (ecs->ptid, inferior_ptid)) { context_switch (ecs); reinit_frame_cache (); } stop_pc = read_pc (); stop_bpstat = bpstat_stop_status (stop_pc, ecs->ptid); ecs->random_signal = !bpstat_explains_signal (stop_bpstat); /* If no catchpoint triggered for this, then keep going. */ if (ecs->random_signal) { stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0; keep_going (ecs); return; } goto process_event_stop_test; case TARGET_WAITKIND_EXECD: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_EXECD\n"); stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP; /* NOTE drow/2002-12-05: This code should be pushed down into the target_wait function. Until then following vfork on HP/UX 10.20 is probably broken by this. Of course, it's broken anyway. */ /* Is this a target which reports multiple exec events per actual call to exec()? (HP-UX using ptrace does, for example.) If so, ignore all but the last one. Just resume the exec'r, and wait for the next exec event. */ if (inferior_ignoring_leading_exec_events) { inferior_ignoring_leading_exec_events--; target_resume (ecs->ptid, 0, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); prepare_to_wait (ecs); return; } inferior_ignoring_leading_exec_events = target_reported_exec_events_per_exec_call () - 1; pending_follow.execd_pathname = savestring (ecs->ws.value.execd_pathname, strlen (ecs->ws.value.execd_pathname)); /* This causes the eventpoints and symbol table to be reset. Must do this now, before trying to determine whether to stop. */ follow_exec (PIDGET (inferior_ptid), pending_follow.execd_pathname); xfree (pending_follow.execd_pathname); stop_pc = read_pc_pid (ecs->ptid); ecs->saved_inferior_ptid = inferior_ptid; inferior_ptid = ecs->ptid; stop_bpstat = bpstat_stop_status (stop_pc, ecs->ptid); ecs->random_signal = !bpstat_explains_signal (stop_bpstat); inferior_ptid = ecs->saved_inferior_ptid; if (!ptid_equal (ecs->ptid, inferior_ptid)) { context_switch (ecs); reinit_frame_cache (); } /* If no catchpoint triggered for this, then keep going. */ if (ecs->random_signal) { stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0; keep_going (ecs); return; } goto process_event_stop_test; /* Be careful not to try to gather much state about a thread that's in a syscall. It's frequently a losing proposition. */ case TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY\n"); resume (0, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); prepare_to_wait (ecs); return; /* Before examining the threads further, step this thread to get it entirely out of the syscall. (We get notice of the event when the thread is just on the verge of exiting a syscall. Stepping one instruction seems to get it back into user code.) */ case TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_RETURN: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_RETURN\n"); target_resume (ecs->ptid, 1, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); prepare_to_wait (ecs); return; case TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED\n"); stop_signal = ecs->ws.value.sig; break; /* We had an event in the inferior, but we are not interested in handling it at this level. The lower layers have already done what needs to be done, if anything. One of the possible circumstances for this is when the inferior produces output for the console. The inferior has not stopped, and we are ignoring the event. Another possible circumstance is any event which the lower level knows will be reported multiple times without an intervening resume. */ case TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE\n"); prepare_to_wait (ecs); return; } /* We may want to consider not doing a resume here in order to give the user a chance to play with the new thread. It might be good to make that a user-settable option. */ /* At this point, all threads are stopped (happens automatically in either the OS or the native code). Therefore we need to continue all threads in order to make progress. */ if (ecs->new_thread_event) { target_resume (RESUME_ALL, 0, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); prepare_to_wait (ecs); return; } stop_pc = read_pc_pid (ecs->ptid); if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: stop_pc = 0x%s\n", paddr_nz (stop_pc)); if (stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint) { gdb_assert (singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p); gdb_assert (ptid_equal (singlestep_ptid, ecs->ptid)); gdb_assert (!ptid_equal (singlestep_ptid, saved_singlestep_ptid)); stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint = 0; /* We've either finished single-stepping past the single-step breakpoint, or stopped for some other reason. It would be nice if we could tell, but we can't reliably. */ if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint\n"); /* Pull the single step breakpoints out of the target. */ remove_single_step_breakpoints (); singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 0; ecs->random_signal = 0; ecs->ptid = saved_singlestep_ptid; context_switch (ecs); if (deprecated_context_hook) deprecated_context_hook (pid_to_thread_id (ecs->ptid)); resume (1, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); prepare_to_wait (ecs); return; } } stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint = 0; if (!ptid_equal (deferred_step_ptid, null_ptid)) { /* If we stopped for some other reason than single-stepping, ignore the fact that we were supposed to switch back. */ if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: handling deferred step\n"); /* Pull the single step breakpoints out of the target. */ if (singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p) { remove_single_step_breakpoints (); singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 0; } /* Note: We do not call context_switch at this point, as the context is already set up for stepping the original thread. */ switch_to_thread (deferred_step_ptid); deferred_step_ptid = null_ptid; /* Suppress spurious "Switching to ..." message. */ previous_inferior_ptid = inferior_ptid; resume (1, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); prepare_to_wait (ecs); return; } deferred_step_ptid = null_ptid; } /* See if a thread hit a thread-specific breakpoint that was meant for another thread. If so, then step that thread past the breakpoint, and continue it. */ if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP) { int thread_hop_needed = 0; /* Check if a regular breakpoint has been hit before checking for a potential single step breakpoint. Otherwise, GDB will not see this breakpoint hit when stepping onto breakpoints. */ if (regular_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (stop_pc)) { ecs->random_signal = 0; if (!breakpoint_thread_match (stop_pc, ecs->ptid)) thread_hop_needed = 1; } else if (singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p) { /* We have not context switched yet, so this should be true no matter which thread hit the singlestep breakpoint. */ gdb_assert (ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, singlestep_ptid)); if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: software single step " "trap for %s\n", target_pid_to_str (ecs->ptid)); ecs->random_signal = 0; /* The call to in_thread_list is necessary because PTIDs sometimes change when we go from single-threaded to multi-threaded. If the singlestep_ptid is still in the list, assume that it is really different from ecs->ptid. */ if (!ptid_equal (singlestep_ptid, ecs->ptid) && in_thread_list (singlestep_ptid)) { /* If the PC of the thread we were trying to single-step has changed, discard this event (which we were going to ignore anyway), and pretend we saw that thread trap. This prevents us continuously moving the single-step breakpoint forward, one instruction at a time. If the PC has changed, then the thread we were trying to single-step has trapped or been signalled, but the event has not been reported to GDB yet. There might be some cases where this loses signal information, if a signal has arrived at exactly the same time that the PC changed, but this is the best we can do with the information available. Perhaps we should arrange to report all events for all threads when they stop, or to re-poll the remote looking for this particular thread (i.e. temporarily enable schedlock). */ if (read_pc_pid (singlestep_ptid) != singlestep_pc) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: unexpected thread," " but expected thread advanced also\n"); /* The current context still belongs to singlestep_ptid. Don't swap here, since that's the context we want to use. Just fudge our state and continue. */ ecs->ptid = singlestep_ptid; stop_pc = read_pc_pid (ecs->ptid); } else { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: unexpected thread\n"); thread_hop_needed = 1; stepping_past_singlestep_breakpoint = 1; saved_singlestep_ptid = singlestep_ptid; } } } if (thread_hop_needed) { int remove_status; if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: thread_hop_needed\n"); /* Saw a breakpoint, but it was hit by the wrong thread. Just continue. */ if (singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p) { /* Pull the single step breakpoints out of the target. */ remove_single_step_breakpoints (); singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 0; } remove_status = remove_breakpoints (); /* Did we fail to remove breakpoints? If so, try to set the PC past the bp. (There's at least one situation in which we can fail to remove the bp's: On HP-UX's that use ttrace, we can't change the address space of a vforking child process until the child exits (well, okay, not then either :-) or execs. */ if (remove_status != 0) error (_("Cannot step over breakpoint hit in wrong thread")); else { /* Single step */ if (!ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, ecs->ptid)) context_switch (ecs); ecs->waiton_ptid = ecs->ptid; ecs->wp = &(ecs->ws); ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint = 1; ecs->infwait_state = infwait_thread_hop_state; keep_going (ecs); registers_changed (); return; } } else if (singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p) { sw_single_step_trap_p = 1; ecs->random_signal = 0; } } else ecs->random_signal = 1; /* See if something interesting happened to the non-current thread. If so, then switch to that thread. */ if (!ptid_equal (ecs->ptid, inferior_ptid)) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: context switch\n"); context_switch (ecs); if (deprecated_context_hook) deprecated_context_hook (pid_to_thread_id (ecs->ptid)); } if (singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p) { /* Pull the single step breakpoints out of the target. */ remove_single_step_breakpoints (); singlestep_breakpoints_inserted_p = 0; } if (stepped_after_stopped_by_watchpoint) stopped_by_watchpoint = 0; else stopped_by_watchpoint = watchpoints_triggered (&ecs->ws); /* If necessary, step over this watchpoint. We'll be back to display it in a moment. */ if (stopped_by_watchpoint && (HAVE_STEPPABLE_WATCHPOINT || gdbarch_have_nonsteppable_watchpoint (current_gdbarch))) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: STOPPED_BY_WATCHPOINT\n"); /* At this point, we are stopped at an instruction which has attempted to write to a piece of memory under control of a watchpoint. The instruction hasn't actually executed yet. If we were to evaluate the watchpoint expression now, we would get the old value, and therefore no change would seem to have occurred. In order to make watchpoints work `right', we really need to complete the memory write, and then evaluate the watchpoint expression. We do this by single-stepping the target. It may not be necessary to disable the watchpoint to stop over it. For example, the PA can (with some kernel cooperation) single step over a watchpoint without disabling the watchpoint. It is far more common to need to disable a watchpoint to step the inferior over it. If we have non-steppable watchpoints, we must disable the current watchpoint; it's simplest to disable all watchpoints and breakpoints. */ if (!HAVE_STEPPABLE_WATCHPOINT) remove_breakpoints (); registers_changed (); target_resume (ecs->ptid, 1, TARGET_SIGNAL_0); /* Single step */ ecs->waiton_ptid = ecs->ptid; if (HAVE_STEPPABLE_WATCHPOINT) ecs->infwait_state = infwait_step_watch_state; else ecs->infwait_state = infwait_nonstep_watch_state; prepare_to_wait (ecs); return; } ecs->stop_func_start = 0; ecs->stop_func_end = 0; ecs->stop_func_name = 0; /* Don't care about return value; stop_func_start and stop_func_name will both be 0 if it doesn't work. */ find_pc_partial_function (stop_pc, &ecs->stop_func_name, &ecs->stop_func_start, &ecs->stop_func_end); ecs->stop_func_start += gdbarch_deprecated_function_start_offset (current_gdbarch); ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint = 0; bpstat_clear (&stop_bpstat); stop_step = 0; stop_print_frame = 1; ecs->random_signal = 0; stopped_by_random_signal = 0; if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP && stepping_over_breakpoint && gdbarch_single_step_through_delay_p (current_gdbarch) && currently_stepping (ecs)) { /* We're trying to step off a breakpoint. Turns out that we're also on an instruction that needs to be stepped multiple times before it's been fully executing. E.g., architectures with a delay slot. It needs to be stepped twice, once for the instruction and once for the delay slot. */ int step_through_delay = gdbarch_single_step_through_delay (current_gdbarch, get_current_frame ()); if (debug_infrun && step_through_delay) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: step through delay\n"); if (step_range_end == 0 && step_through_delay) { /* The user issued a continue when stopped at a breakpoint. Set up for another trap and get out of here. */ ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint = 1; keep_going (ecs); return; } else if (step_through_delay) { /* The user issued a step when stopped at a breakpoint. Maybe we should stop, maybe we should not - the delay slot *might* correspond to a line of source. In any case, don't decide that here, just set ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint, making sure we single-step again before breakpoints are re-inserted. */ ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint = 1; } } /* Look at the cause of the stop, and decide what to do. The alternatives are: 1) break; to really stop and return to the debugger, 2) drop through to start up again (set ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint to 1 to single step once) 3) set ecs->random_signal to 1, and the decision between 1 and 2 will be made according to the signal handling tables. */ /* First, distinguish signals caused by the debugger from signals that have to do with the program's own actions. Note that breakpoint insns may cause SIGTRAP or SIGILL or SIGEMT, depending on the operating system version. Here we detect when a SIGILL or SIGEMT is really a breakpoint and change it to SIGTRAP. We do something similar for SIGSEGV, since a SIGSEGV will be generated when we're trying to execute a breakpoint instruction on a non-executable stack. This happens for call dummy breakpoints for architectures like SPARC that place call dummies on the stack. */ if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP || (breakpoint_inserted_here_p (stop_pc) && (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_ILL || stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_SEGV || stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_EMT)) || stop_soon == STOP_QUIETLY || stop_soon == STOP_QUIETLY_NO_SIGSTOP || stop_soon == STOP_QUIETLY_REMOTE) { if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP && stop_after_trap) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: stopped\n"); stop_print_frame = 0; stop_stepping (ecs); return; } /* This is originated from start_remote(), start_inferior() and shared libraries hook functions. */ if (stop_soon == STOP_QUIETLY || stop_soon == STOP_QUIETLY_REMOTE) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: quietly stopped\n"); stop_stepping (ecs); return; } /* This originates from attach_command(). We need to overwrite the stop_signal here, because some kernels don't ignore a SIGSTOP in a subsequent ptrace(PTRACE_SONT,SOGSTOP) call. See more comments in inferior.h. */ if (stop_soon == STOP_QUIETLY_NO_SIGSTOP) { stop_stepping (ecs); if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_STOP) stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0; return; } /* See if there is a breakpoint at the current PC. */ stop_bpstat = bpstat_stop_status (stop_pc, ecs->ptid); /* Following in case break condition called a function. */ stop_print_frame = 1; /* NOTE: cagney/2003-03-29: These two checks for a random signal at one stage in the past included checks for an inferior function call's call dummy's return breakpoint. The original comment, that went with the test, read: ``End of a stack dummy. Some systems (e.g. Sony news) give another signal besides SIGTRAP, so check here as well as above.'' If someone ever tries to get get call dummys on a non-executable stack to work (where the target would stop with something like a SIGSEGV), then those tests might need to be re-instated. Given, however, that the tests were only enabled when momentary breakpoints were not being used, I suspect that it won't be the case. NOTE: kettenis/2004-02-05: Indeed such checks don't seem to be necessary for call dummies on a non-executable stack on SPARC. */ if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP) ecs->random_signal = !(bpstat_explains_signal (stop_bpstat) || stepping_over_breakpoint || (step_range_end && step_resume_breakpoint == NULL)); else { ecs->random_signal = !bpstat_explains_signal (stop_bpstat); if (!ecs->random_signal) stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP; } } /* When we reach this point, we've pretty much decided that the reason for stopping must've been a random (unexpected) signal. */ else ecs->random_signal = 1; process_event_stop_test: /* For the program's own signals, act according to the signal handling tables. */ if (ecs->random_signal) { /* Signal not for debugging purposes. */ int printed = 0; if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: random signal %d\n", stop_signal); stopped_by_random_signal = 1; if (signal_print[stop_signal]) { printed = 1; target_terminal_ours_for_output (); print_stop_reason (SIGNAL_RECEIVED, stop_signal); } if (signal_stop[stop_signal]) { stop_stepping (ecs); return; } /* If not going to stop, give terminal back if we took it away. */ else if (printed) target_terminal_inferior (); /* Clear the signal if it should not be passed. */ if (signal_program[stop_signal] == 0) stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0; if (prev_pc == read_pc () && breakpoint_here_p (read_pc ()) && !breakpoint_inserted_here_p (read_pc ()) && step_resume_breakpoint == NULL) { /* We were just starting a new sequence, attempting to single-step off of a breakpoint and expecting a SIGTRAP. Intead this signal arrives. This signal will take us out of the stepping range so GDB needs to remember to, when the signal handler returns, resume stepping off that breakpoint. */ /* To simplify things, "continue" is forced to use the same code paths as single-step - set a breakpoint at the signal return address and then, once hit, step off that breakpoint. */ insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_frame (get_current_frame ()); ecs->step_after_step_resume_breakpoint = 1; keep_going (ecs); return; } if (step_range_end != 0 && stop_signal != TARGET_SIGNAL_0 && stop_pc >= step_range_start && stop_pc < step_range_end && frame_id_eq (get_frame_id (get_current_frame ()), step_frame_id) && step_resume_breakpoint == NULL) { /* The inferior is about to take a signal that will take it out of the single step range. Set a breakpoint at the current PC (which is presumably where the signal handler will eventually return) and then allow the inferior to run free. Note that this is only needed for a signal delivered while in the single-step range. Nested signals aren't a problem as they eventually all return. */ insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_frame (get_current_frame ()); keep_going (ecs); return; } /* Note: step_resume_breakpoint may be non-NULL. This occures when either there's a nested signal, or when there's a pending signal enabled just as the signal handler returns (leaving the inferior at the step-resume-breakpoint without actually executing it). Either way continue until the breakpoint is really hit. */ keep_going (ecs); return; } /* Handle cases caused by hitting a breakpoint. */ { CORE_ADDR jmp_buf_pc; struct bpstat_what what; what = bpstat_what (stop_bpstat); if (what.call_dummy) { stop_stack_dummy = 1; } switch (what.main_action) { case BPSTAT_WHAT_SET_LONGJMP_RESUME: /* If we hit the breakpoint at longjmp, disable it for the duration of this command. Then, install a temporary breakpoint at the target of the jmp_buf. */ if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: BPSTAT_WHAT_SET_LONGJMP_RESUME\n"); disable_longjmp_breakpoint (); if (!gdbarch_get_longjmp_target_p (current_gdbarch) || !gdbarch_get_longjmp_target (current_gdbarch, get_current_frame (), &jmp_buf_pc)) { keep_going (ecs); return; } /* Need to blow away step-resume breakpoint, as it interferes with us */ if (step_resume_breakpoint != NULL) { delete_step_resume_breakpoint (&step_resume_breakpoint); } set_longjmp_resume_breakpoint (jmp_buf_pc, null_frame_id); ecs->handling_longjmp = 1; /* FIXME */ keep_going (ecs); return; case BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME: case BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME_SINGLE: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME\n"); disable_longjmp_breakpoint (); ecs->handling_longjmp = 0; /* FIXME */ if (what.main_action == BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME) break; /* else fallthrough */ case BPSTAT_WHAT_SINGLE: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: BPSTAT_WHAT_SINGLE\n"); ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint = 1; /* Still need to check other stuff, at least the case where we are stepping and step out of the right range. */ break; case BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_NOISY: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_NOISY\n"); stop_print_frame = 1; /* We are about to nuke the step_resume_breakpointt via the cleanup chain, so no need to worry about it here. */ stop_stepping (ecs); return; case BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_SILENT: if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_SILENT\n"); stop_print_frame = 0; /* We are about to nuke the step_resume_breakpoin via the cleanup chain, so no need to worry about it here. */ stop_stepping (ecs); return; case BPSTAT_WHAT_STEP_RESUME: /* This proably demands a more elegant solution, but, yeah right... This function's use of the simple variable step_resume_breakpoint doesn't seem to accomodate simultaneously active step-resume bp's, although the breakpoint list certainly can. If we reach here and step_resume_breakpoint is already NULL, then apparently we have multiple active step-resume bp's. We'll just delete the breakpoint we stopped at, and carry on. Correction: what the code currently does is delete a step-resume bp, but it makes no effort to ensure that the one deleted is the one currently stopped at. MVS */ if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: BPSTAT_WHAT_STEP_RESUME\n"); if (step_resume_breakpoint == NULL) { step_resume_breakpoint = bpstat_find_step_resume_breakpoint (stop_bpstat); } delete_step_resume_breakpoint (&step_resume_breakpoint); if (ecs->step_after_step_resume_breakpoint) { /* Back when the step-resume breakpoint was inserted, we were trying to single-step off a breakpoint. Go back to doing that. */ ecs->step_after_step_resume_breakpoint = 0; ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint = 1; keep_going (ecs); return; } break; case BPSTAT_WHAT_CHECK_SHLIBS: case BPSTAT_WHAT_CHECK_SHLIBS_RESUME_FROM_HOOK: { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: BPSTAT_WHAT_CHECK_SHLIBS\n"); /* Remove breakpoints, we eventually want to step over the shlib event breakpoint, and SOLIB_ADD might adjust breakpoint addresses via breakpoint_re_set. */ remove_breakpoints (); /* Check for any newly added shared libraries if we're supposed to be adding them automatically. Switch terminal for any messages produced by breakpoint_re_set. */ target_terminal_ours_for_output (); /* NOTE: cagney/2003-11-25: Make certain that the target stack's section table is kept up-to-date. Architectures, (e.g., PPC64), use the section table to perform operations such as address => section name and hence require the table to contain all sections (including those found in shared libraries). */ /* NOTE: cagney/2003-11-25: Pass current_target and not exec_ops to SOLIB_ADD. This is because current GDB is only tooled to propagate section_table changes out from the "current_target" (see target_resize_to_sections), and not up from the exec stratum. This, of course, isn't right. "infrun.c" should only interact with the exec/process stratum, instead relying on the target stack to propagate relevant changes (stop, section table changed, ...) up to other layers. */ #ifdef SOLIB_ADD SOLIB_ADD (NULL, 0, ¤t_target, auto_solib_add); #else solib_add (NULL, 0, ¤t_target, auto_solib_add); #endif target_terminal_inferior (); /* If requested, stop when the dynamic linker notifies gdb of events. This allows the user to get control and place breakpoints in initializer routines for dynamically loaded objects (among other things). */ if (stop_on_solib_events || stop_stack_dummy) { stop_stepping (ecs); return; } /* If we stopped due to an explicit catchpoint, then the (see above) call to SOLIB_ADD pulled in any symbols from a newly-loaded library, if appropriate. We do want the inferior to stop, but not where it is now, which is in the dynamic linker callback. Rather, we would like it stop in the user's program, just after the call that caused this catchpoint to trigger. That gives the user a more useful vantage from which to examine their program's state. */ else if (what.main_action == BPSTAT_WHAT_CHECK_SHLIBS_RESUME_FROM_HOOK) { /* ??rehrauer: If I could figure out how to get the right return PC from here, we could just set a temp breakpoint and resume. I'm not sure we can without cracking open the dld's shared libraries and sniffing their unwind tables and text/data ranges, and that's not a terribly portable notion. Until that time, we must step the inferior out of the dld callback, and also out of the dld itself (and any code or stubs in libdld.sl, such as "shl_load" and friends) until we reach non-dld code. At that point, we can stop stepping. */ bpstat_get_triggered_catchpoints (stop_bpstat, &ecs-> stepping_through_solib_catchpoints); ecs->stepping_through_solib_after_catch = 1; /* Be sure to lift all breakpoints, so the inferior does actually step past this point... */ ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint = 1; break; } else { /* We want to step over this breakpoint, then keep going. */ ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint = 1; break; } } break; case BPSTAT_WHAT_LAST: /* Not a real code, but listed here to shut up gcc -Wall. */ case BPSTAT_WHAT_KEEP_CHECKING: break; } } /* We come here if we hit a breakpoint but should not stop for it. Possibly we also were stepping and should stop for that. So fall through and test for stepping. But, if not stepping, do not stop. */ /* Are we stepping to get the inferior out of the dynamic linker's hook (and possibly the dld itself) after catching a shlib event? */ if (ecs->stepping_through_solib_after_catch) { #if defined(SOLIB_ADD) /* Have we reached our destination? If not, keep going. */ if (SOLIB_IN_DYNAMIC_LINKER (PIDGET (ecs->ptid), stop_pc)) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: stepping in dynamic linker\n"); ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint = 1; keep_going (ecs); return; } #endif if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: step past dynamic linker\n"); /* Else, stop and report the catchpoint(s) whose triggering caused us to begin stepping. */ ecs->stepping_through_solib_after_catch = 0; bpstat_clear (&stop_bpstat); stop_bpstat = bpstat_copy (ecs->stepping_through_solib_catchpoints); bpstat_clear (&ecs->stepping_through_solib_catchpoints); stop_print_frame = 1; stop_stepping (ecs); return; } if (step_resume_breakpoint) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: step-resume breakpoint is inserted\n"); /* Having a step-resume breakpoint overrides anything else having to do with stepping commands until that breakpoint is reached. */ keep_going (ecs); return; } if (step_range_end == 0) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: no stepping, continue\n"); /* Likewise if we aren't even stepping. */ keep_going (ecs); return; } /* If stepping through a line, keep going if still within it. Note that step_range_end is the address of the first instruction beyond the step range, and NOT the address of the last instruction within it! */ if (stop_pc >= step_range_start && stop_pc < step_range_end) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: stepping inside range [0x%s-0x%s]\n", paddr_nz (step_range_start), paddr_nz (step_range_end)); keep_going (ecs); return; } /* We stepped out of the stepping range. */ /* If we are stepping at the source level and entered the runtime loader dynamic symbol resolution code, we keep on single stepping until we exit the run time loader code and reach the callee's address. */ if (step_over_calls == STEP_OVER_UNDEBUGGABLE #ifdef IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE && IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE (stop_pc) #else && in_solib_dynsym_resolve_code (stop_pc) #endif ) { CORE_ADDR pc_after_resolver = gdbarch_skip_solib_resolver (current_gdbarch, stop_pc); if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: stepped into dynsym resolve code\n"); if (pc_after_resolver) { /* Set up a step-resume breakpoint at the address indicated by SKIP_SOLIB_RESOLVER. */ struct symtab_and_line sr_sal; init_sal (&sr_sal); sr_sal.pc = pc_after_resolver; insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_sal (sr_sal, null_frame_id); } keep_going (ecs); return; } if (step_range_end != 1 && (step_over_calls == STEP_OVER_UNDEBUGGABLE || step_over_calls == STEP_OVER_ALL) && get_frame_type (get_current_frame ()) == SIGTRAMP_FRAME) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: stepped into signal trampoline\n"); /* The inferior, while doing a "step" or "next", has ended up in a signal trampoline (either by a signal being delivered or by the signal handler returning). Just single-step until the inferior leaves the trampoline (either by calling the handler or returning). */ keep_going (ecs); return; } /* Check for subroutine calls. The check for the current frame equalling the step ID is not necessary - the check of the previous frame's ID is sufficient - but it is a common case and cheaper than checking the previous frame's ID. NOTE: frame_id_eq will never report two invalid frame IDs as being equal, so to get into this block, both the current and previous frame must have valid frame IDs. */ if (!frame_id_eq (get_frame_id (get_current_frame ()), step_frame_id) && frame_id_eq (frame_unwind_id (get_current_frame ()), step_frame_id)) { CORE_ADDR real_stop_pc; if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: stepped into subroutine\n"); if ((step_over_calls == STEP_OVER_NONE) || ((step_range_end == 1) && in_prologue (prev_pc, ecs->stop_func_start))) { /* I presume that step_over_calls is only 0 when we're supposed to be stepping at the assembly language level ("stepi"). Just stop. */ /* Also, maybe we just did a "nexti" inside a prolog, so we thought it was a subroutine call but it was not. Stop as well. FENN */ stop_step = 1; print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0); stop_stepping (ecs); return; } if (step_over_calls == STEP_OVER_ALL) { /* We're doing a "next", set a breakpoint at callee's return address (the address at which the caller will resume). */ insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_caller (get_current_frame ()); keep_going (ecs); return; } /* If we are in a function call trampoline (a stub between the calling routine and the real function), locate the real function. That's what tells us (a) whether we want to step into it at all, and (b) what prologue we want to run to the end of, if we do step into it. */ real_stop_pc = skip_language_trampoline (get_current_frame (), stop_pc); if (real_stop_pc == 0) real_stop_pc = gdbarch_skip_trampoline_code (current_gdbarch, get_current_frame (), stop_pc); if (real_stop_pc != 0) ecs->stop_func_start = real_stop_pc; if ( #ifdef IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE IN_SOLIB_DYNSYM_RESOLVE_CODE (ecs->stop_func_start) #else in_solib_dynsym_resolve_code (ecs->stop_func_start) #endif ) { struct symtab_and_line sr_sal; init_sal (&sr_sal); sr_sal.pc = ecs->stop_func_start; insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_sal (sr_sal, null_frame_id); keep_going (ecs); return; } /* If we have line number information for the function we are thinking of stepping into, step into it. If there are several symtabs at that PC (e.g. with include files), just want to know whether *any* of them have line numbers. find_pc_line handles this. */ { struct symtab_and_line tmp_sal; tmp_sal = find_pc_line (ecs->stop_func_start, 0); if (tmp_sal.line != 0) { step_into_function (ecs); return; } } /* If we have no line number and the step-stop-if-no-debug is set, we stop the step so that the user has a chance to switch in assembly mode. */ if (step_over_calls == STEP_OVER_UNDEBUGGABLE && step_stop_if_no_debug) { stop_step = 1; print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0); stop_stepping (ecs); return; } /* Set a breakpoint at callee's return address (the address at which the caller will resume). */ insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_caller (get_current_frame ()); keep_going (ecs); return; } /* If we're in the return path from a shared library trampoline, we want to proceed through the trampoline when stepping. */ if (gdbarch_in_solib_return_trampoline (current_gdbarch, stop_pc, ecs->stop_func_name)) { /* Determine where this trampoline returns. */ CORE_ADDR real_stop_pc; real_stop_pc = gdbarch_skip_trampoline_code (current_gdbarch, get_current_frame (), stop_pc); if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: stepped into solib return tramp\n"); /* Only proceed through if we know where it's going. */ if (real_stop_pc) { /* And put the step-breakpoint there and go until there. */ struct symtab_and_line sr_sal; init_sal (&sr_sal); /* initialize to zeroes */ sr_sal.pc = real_stop_pc; sr_sal.section = find_pc_overlay (sr_sal.pc); /* Do not specify what the fp should be when we stop since on some machines the prologue is where the new fp value is established. */ insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_sal (sr_sal, null_frame_id); /* Restart without fiddling with the step ranges or other state. */ keep_going (ecs); return; } } ecs->sal = find_pc_line (stop_pc, 0); /* NOTE: tausq/2004-05-24: This if block used to be done before all the trampoline processing logic, however, there are some trampolines that have no names, so we should do trampoline handling first. */ if (step_over_calls == STEP_OVER_UNDEBUGGABLE && ecs->stop_func_name == NULL && ecs->sal.line == 0) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: stepped into undebuggable function\n"); /* The inferior just stepped into, or returned to, an undebuggable function (where there is no debugging information and no line number corresponding to the address where the inferior stopped). Since we want to skip this kind of code, we keep going until the inferior returns from this function - unless the user has asked us not to (via set step-mode) or we no longer know how to get back to the call site. */ if (step_stop_if_no_debug || !frame_id_p (frame_unwind_id (get_current_frame ()))) { /* If we have no line number and the step-stop-if-no-debug is set, we stop the step so that the user has a chance to switch in assembly mode. */ stop_step = 1; print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0); stop_stepping (ecs); return; } else { /* Set a breakpoint at callee's return address (the address at which the caller will resume). */ insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_caller (get_current_frame ()); keep_going (ecs); return; } } if (step_range_end == 1) { /* It is stepi or nexti. We always want to stop stepping after one instruction. */ if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: stepi/nexti\n"); stop_step = 1; print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0); stop_stepping (ecs); return; } if (ecs->sal.line == 0) { /* We have no line number information. That means to stop stepping (does this always happen right after one instruction, when we do "s" in a function with no line numbers, or can this happen as a result of a return or longjmp?). */ if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: no line number info\n"); stop_step = 1; print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0); stop_stepping (ecs); return; } if ((stop_pc == ecs->sal.pc) && (ecs->current_line != ecs->sal.line || ecs->current_symtab != ecs->sal.symtab)) { /* We are at the start of a different line. So stop. Note that we don't stop if we step into the middle of a different line. That is said to make things like for (;;) statements work better. */ if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: stepped to a different line\n"); stop_step = 1; print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0); stop_stepping (ecs); return; } /* We aren't done stepping. Optimize by setting the stepping range to the line. (We might not be in the original line, but if we entered a new line in mid-statement, we continue stepping. This makes things like for(;;) statements work better.) */ step_range_start = ecs->sal.pc; step_range_end = ecs->sal.end; step_frame_id = get_frame_id (get_current_frame ()); ecs->current_line = ecs->sal.line; ecs->current_symtab = ecs->sal.symtab; /* In the case where we just stepped out of a function into the middle of a line of the caller, continue stepping, but step_frame_id must be modified to current frame */ #if 0 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-10-16: I think this frame ID inner test is too generous. It will trigger on things like a step into a frameless stackless leaf function. I think the logic should instead look at the unwound frame ID has that should give a more robust indication of what happened. */ if (step - ID == current - ID) still stepping in same function; else if (step - ID == unwind (current - ID)) stepped into a function; else stepped out of a function; /* Of course this assumes that the frame ID unwind code is robust and we're willing to introduce frame unwind logic into this function. Fortunately, those days are nearly upon us. */ #endif { struct frame_info *frame = get_current_frame (); struct frame_id current_frame = get_frame_id (frame); if (!(frame_id_inner (get_frame_arch (frame), current_frame, step_frame_id))) step_frame_id = current_frame; } if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: keep going\n"); keep_going (ecs); } /* Are we in the middle of stepping? */ static int currently_stepping (struct execution_control_state *ecs) { return ((!ecs->handling_longjmp && ((step_range_end && step_resume_breakpoint == NULL) || stepping_over_breakpoint)) || ecs->stepping_through_solib_after_catch || bpstat_should_step ()); } /* Subroutine call with source code we should not step over. Do step to the first line of code in it. */ static void step_into_function (struct execution_control_state *ecs) { struct symtab *s; struct symtab_and_line sr_sal; s = find_pc_symtab (stop_pc); if (s && s->language != language_asm) ecs->stop_func_start = gdbarch_skip_prologue (current_gdbarch, ecs->stop_func_start); ecs->sal = find_pc_line (ecs->stop_func_start, 0); /* Use the step_resume_break to step until the end of the prologue, even if that involves jumps (as it seems to on the vax under 4.2). */ /* If the prologue ends in the middle of a source line, continue to the end of that source line (if it is still within the function). Otherwise, just go to end of prologue. */ if (ecs->sal.end && ecs->sal.pc != ecs->stop_func_start && ecs->sal.end < ecs->stop_func_end) ecs->stop_func_start = ecs->sal.end; /* Architectures which require breakpoint adjustment might not be able to place a breakpoint at the computed address. If so, the test ``ecs->stop_func_start == stop_pc'' will never succeed. Adjust ecs->stop_func_start to an address at which a breakpoint may be legitimately placed. Note: kevinb/2004-01-19: On FR-V, if this adjustment is not made, GDB will enter an infinite loop when stepping through optimized code consisting of VLIW instructions which contain subinstructions corresponding to different source lines. On FR-V, it's not permitted to place a breakpoint on any but the first subinstruction of a VLIW instruction. When a breakpoint is set, GDB will adjust the breakpoint address to the beginning of the VLIW instruction. Thus, we need to make the corresponding adjustment here when computing the stop address. */ if (gdbarch_adjust_breakpoint_address_p (current_gdbarch)) { ecs->stop_func_start = gdbarch_adjust_breakpoint_address (current_gdbarch, ecs->stop_func_start); } if (ecs->stop_func_start == stop_pc) { /* We are already there: stop now. */ stop_step = 1; print_stop_reason (END_STEPPING_RANGE, 0); stop_stepping (ecs); return; } else { /* Put the step-breakpoint there and go until there. */ init_sal (&sr_sal); /* initialize to zeroes */ sr_sal.pc = ecs->stop_func_start; sr_sal.section = find_pc_overlay (ecs->stop_func_start); /* Do not specify what the fp should be when we stop since on some machines the prologue is where the new fp value is established. */ insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_sal (sr_sal, null_frame_id); /* And make sure stepping stops right away then. */ step_range_end = step_range_start; } keep_going (ecs); } /* Insert a "step-resume breakpoint" at SR_SAL with frame ID SR_ID. This is used to both functions and to skip over code. */ static void insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_sal (struct symtab_and_line sr_sal, struct frame_id sr_id) { /* There should never be more than one step-resume breakpoint per thread, so we should never be setting a new step_resume_breakpoint when one is already active. */ gdb_assert (step_resume_breakpoint == NULL); if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: inserting step-resume breakpoint at 0x%s\n", paddr_nz (sr_sal.pc)); step_resume_breakpoint = set_momentary_breakpoint (sr_sal, sr_id, bp_step_resume); } /* Insert a "step-resume breakpoint" at RETURN_FRAME.pc. This is used to skip a potential signal handler. This is called with the interrupted function's frame. The signal handler, when it returns, will resume the interrupted function at RETURN_FRAME.pc. */ static void insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_frame (struct frame_info *return_frame) { struct symtab_and_line sr_sal; gdb_assert (return_frame != NULL); init_sal (&sr_sal); /* initialize to zeros */ sr_sal.pc = gdbarch_addr_bits_remove (current_gdbarch, get_frame_pc (return_frame)); sr_sal.section = find_pc_overlay (sr_sal.pc); insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_sal (sr_sal, get_frame_id (return_frame)); } /* Similar to insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_frame, except but a breakpoint at the previous frame's PC. This is used to skip a function after stepping into it (for "next" or if the called function has no debugging information). The current function has almost always been reached by single stepping a call or return instruction. NEXT_FRAME belongs to the current function, and the breakpoint will be set at the caller's resume address. This is a separate function rather than reusing insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_frame in order to avoid get_prev_frame, which may stop prematurely (see the implementation of frame_unwind_id for an example). */ static void insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_caller (struct frame_info *next_frame) { struct symtab_and_line sr_sal; /* We shouldn't have gotten here if we don't know where the call site is. */ gdb_assert (frame_id_p (frame_unwind_id (next_frame))); init_sal (&sr_sal); /* initialize to zeros */ sr_sal.pc = gdbarch_addr_bits_remove (current_gdbarch, frame_pc_unwind (next_frame)); sr_sal.section = find_pc_overlay (sr_sal.pc); insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_sal (sr_sal, frame_unwind_id (next_frame)); } static void stop_stepping (struct execution_control_state *ecs) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: stop_stepping\n"); /* Let callers know we don't want to wait for the inferior anymore. */ ecs->wait_some_more = 0; } /* This function handles various cases where we need to continue waiting for the inferior. */ /* (Used to be the keep_going: label in the old wait_for_inferior) */ static void keep_going (struct execution_control_state *ecs) { /* Save the pc before execution, to compare with pc after stop. */ prev_pc = read_pc (); /* Might have been DECR_AFTER_BREAK */ /* If we did not do break;, it means we should keep running the inferior and not return to debugger. */ if (stepping_over_breakpoint && stop_signal != TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP) { /* We took a signal (which we are supposed to pass through to the inferior, else we'd have done a break above) and we haven't yet gotten our trap. Simply continue. */ resume (currently_stepping (ecs), stop_signal); } else { /* Either the trap was not expected, but we are continuing anyway (the user asked that this signal be passed to the child) -- or -- The signal was SIGTRAP, e.g. it was our signal, but we decided we should resume from it. We're going to run this baby now! Note that insert_breakpoints won't try to re-insert already inserted breakpoints. Therefore, we don't care if breakpoints were already inserted, or not. */ if (ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint) { remove_breakpoints (); } else { struct gdb_exception e; /* Stop stepping when inserting breakpoints has failed. */ TRY_CATCH (e, RETURN_MASK_ERROR) { insert_breakpoints (); } if (e.reason < 0) { stop_stepping (ecs); return; } } stepping_over_breakpoint = ecs->stepping_over_breakpoint; /* Do not deliver SIGNAL_TRAP (except when the user explicitly specifies that such a signal should be delivered to the target program). Typically, this would occure when a user is debugging a target monitor on a simulator: the target monitor sets a breakpoint; the simulator encounters this break-point and halts the simulation handing control to GDB; GDB, noteing that the break-point isn't valid, returns control back to the simulator; the simulator then delivers the hardware equivalent of a SIGNAL_TRAP to the program being debugged. */ if (stop_signal == TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP && !signal_program[stop_signal]) stop_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0; resume (currently_stepping (ecs), stop_signal); } prepare_to_wait (ecs); } /* This function normally comes after a resume, before handle_inferior_event exits. It takes care of any last bits of housekeeping, and sets the all-important wait_some_more flag. */ static void prepare_to_wait (struct execution_control_state *ecs) { if (debug_infrun) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "infrun: prepare_to_wait\n"); if (ecs->infwait_state == infwait_normal_state) { overlay_cache_invalid = 1; /* We have to invalidate the registers BEFORE calling target_wait because they can be loaded from the target while in target_wait. This makes remote debugging a bit more efficient for those targets that provide critical registers as part of their normal status mechanism. */ registers_changed (); ecs->waiton_ptid = pid_to_ptid (-1); ecs->wp = &(ecs->ws); } /* This is the old end of the while loop. Let everybody know we want to wait for the inferior some more and get called again soon. */ ecs->wait_some_more = 1; } /* Print why the inferior has stopped. We always print something when the inferior exits, or receives a signal. The rest of the cases are dealt with later on in normal_stop() and print_it_typical(). Ideally there should be a call to this function from handle_inferior_event() each time stop_stepping() is called.*/ static void print_stop_reason (enum inferior_stop_reason stop_reason, int stop_info) { switch (stop_reason) { case END_STEPPING_RANGE: /* We are done with a step/next/si/ni command. */ /* For now print nothing. */ /* Print a message only if not in the middle of doing a "step n" operation for n > 1 */ if (!step_multi || !stop_step) if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout)) ui_out_field_string (uiout, "reason", async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_END_STEPPING_RANGE)); break; case SIGNAL_EXITED: /* The inferior was terminated by a signal. */ annotate_signalled (); if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout)) ui_out_field_string (uiout, "reason", async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_EXITED_SIGNALLED)); ui_out_text (uiout, "\nProgram terminated with signal "); annotate_signal_name (); ui_out_field_string (uiout, "signal-name", target_signal_to_name (stop_info)); annotate_signal_name_end (); ui_out_text (uiout, ", "); annotate_signal_string (); ui_out_field_string (uiout, "signal-meaning", target_signal_to_string (stop_info)); annotate_signal_string_end (); ui_out_text (uiout, ".\n"); ui_out_text (uiout, "The program no longer exists.\n"); break; case EXITED: /* The inferior program is finished. */ annotate_exited (stop_info); if (stop_info) { if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout)) ui_out_field_string (uiout, "reason", async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_EXITED)); ui_out_text (uiout, "\nProgram exited with code "); ui_out_field_fmt (uiout, "exit-code", "0%o", (unsigned int) stop_info); ui_out_text (uiout, ".\n"); } else { if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout)) ui_out_field_string (uiout, "reason", async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_EXITED_NORMALLY)); ui_out_text (uiout, "\nProgram exited normally.\n"); } /* Support the --return-child-result option. */ return_child_result_value = stop_info; break; case SIGNAL_RECEIVED: /* Signal received. The signal table tells us to print about it. */ annotate_signal (); ui_out_text (uiout, "\nProgram received signal "); annotate_signal_name (); if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout)) ui_out_field_string (uiout, "reason", async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_SIGNAL_RECEIVED)); ui_out_field_string (uiout, "signal-name", target_signal_to_name (stop_info)); annotate_signal_name_end (); ui_out_text (uiout, ", "); annotate_signal_string (); ui_out_field_string (uiout, "signal-meaning", target_signal_to_string (stop_info)); annotate_signal_string_end (); ui_out_text (uiout, ".\n"); break; default: internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("print_stop_reason: unrecognized enum value")); break; } } /* Here to return control to GDB when the inferior stops for real. Print appropriate messages, remove breakpoints, give terminal our modes. STOP_PRINT_FRAME nonzero means print the executing frame (pc, function, args, file, line number and line text). BREAKPOINTS_FAILED nonzero means stop was due to error attempting to insert breakpoints. */ void normal_stop (void) { struct target_waitstatus last; ptid_t last_ptid; get_last_target_status (&last_ptid, &last); /* As with the notification of thread events, we want to delay notifying the user that we've switched thread context until the inferior actually stops. There's no point in saying anything if the inferior has exited. Note that SIGNALLED here means "exited with a signal", not "received a signal". */ if (!ptid_equal (previous_inferior_ptid, inferior_ptid) && target_has_execution && last.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED && last.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED) { target_terminal_ours_for_output (); printf_filtered (_("[Switching to %s]\n"), target_pid_to_str (inferior_ptid)); previous_inferior_ptid = inferior_ptid; } /* NOTE drow/2004-01-17: Is this still necessary? */ /* Make sure that the current_frame's pc is correct. This is a correction for setting up the frame info before doing gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break */ if (target_has_execution) /* FIXME: cagney/2002-12-06: Has the PC changed? Thanks to gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break, the program counter can change. Ask the frame code to check for this and sort out any resultant mess. gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break needs to just go away. */ deprecated_update_frame_pc_hack (get_current_frame (), read_pc ()); if (target_has_execution) { if (remove_breakpoints ()) { target_terminal_ours_for_output (); printf_filtered (_("\ Cannot remove breakpoints because program is no longer writable.\n\ It might be running in another process.\n\ Further execution is probably impossible.\n")); } } /* Delete the breakpoint we stopped at, if it wants to be deleted. Delete any breakpoint that is to be deleted at the next stop. */ breakpoint_auto_delete (stop_bpstat); /* If an auto-display called a function and that got a signal, delete that auto-display to avoid an infinite recursion. */ if (stopped_by_random_signal) disable_current_display (); /* Don't print a message if in the middle of doing a "step n" operation for n > 1 */ if (step_multi && stop_step) goto done; target_terminal_ours (); /* Set the current source location. This will also happen if we display the frame below, but the current SAL will be incorrect during a user hook-stop function. */ if (target_has_stack && !stop_stack_dummy) set_current_sal_from_frame (get_current_frame (), 1); /* Look up the hook_stop and run it (CLI internally handles problem of stop_command's pre-hook not existing). */ if (stop_command) catch_errors (hook_stop_stub, stop_command, "Error while running hook_stop:\n", RETURN_MASK_ALL); if (!target_has_stack) { goto done; } /* Select innermost stack frame - i.e., current frame is frame 0, and current location is based on that. Don't do this on return from a stack dummy routine, or if the program has exited. */ if (!stop_stack_dummy) { select_frame (get_current_frame ()); /* Print current location without a level number, if we have changed functions or hit a breakpoint. Print source line if we have one. bpstat_print() contains the logic deciding in detail what to print, based on the event(s) that just occurred. */ if (stop_print_frame) { int bpstat_ret; int source_flag; int do_frame_printing = 1; bpstat_ret = bpstat_print (stop_bpstat); switch (bpstat_ret) { case PRINT_UNKNOWN: /* If we had hit a shared library event breakpoint, bpstat_print would print out this message. If we hit an OS-level shared library event, do the same thing. */ if (last.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_LOADED) { printf_filtered (_("Stopped due to shared library event\n")); source_flag = SRC_LINE; /* something bogus */ do_frame_printing = 0; break; } /* FIXME: cagney/2002-12-01: Given that a frame ID does (or should) carry around the function and does (or should) use that when doing a frame comparison. */ if (stop_step && frame_id_eq (step_frame_id, get_frame_id (get_current_frame ())) && step_start_function == find_pc_function (stop_pc)) source_flag = SRC_LINE; /* finished step, just print source line */ else source_flag = SRC_AND_LOC; /* print location and source line */ break; case PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC: source_flag = SRC_AND_LOC; /* print location and source line */ break; case PRINT_SRC_ONLY: source_flag = SRC_LINE; break; case PRINT_NOTHING: source_flag = SRC_LINE; /* something bogus */ do_frame_printing = 0; break; default: internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("Unknown value.")); } if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout)) ui_out_field_int (uiout, "thread-id", pid_to_thread_id (inferior_ptid)); /* The behavior of this routine with respect to the source flag is: SRC_LINE: Print only source line LOCATION: Print only location SRC_AND_LOC: Print location and source line */ if (do_frame_printing) print_stack_frame (get_selected_frame (NULL), 0, source_flag); /* Display the auto-display expressions. */ do_displays (); } } /* Save the function value return registers, if we care. We might be about to restore their previous contents. */ if (proceed_to_finish) { /* This should not be necessary. */ if (stop_registers) regcache_xfree (stop_registers); /* NB: The copy goes through to the target picking up the value of all the registers. */ stop_registers = regcache_dup (get_current_regcache ()); } if (stop_stack_dummy) { /* Pop the empty frame that contains the stack dummy. POP_FRAME ends with a setting of the current frame, so we can use that next. */ frame_pop (get_current_frame ()); /* Set stop_pc to what it was before we called the function. Can't rely on restore_inferior_status because that only gets called if we don't stop in the called function. */ stop_pc = read_pc (); select_frame (get_current_frame ()); } done: annotate_stopped (); observer_notify_normal_stop (stop_bpstat); } static int hook_stop_stub (void *cmd) { execute_cmd_pre_hook ((struct cmd_list_element *) cmd); return (0); } int signal_stop_state (int signo) { return signal_stop[signo]; } int signal_print_state (int signo) { return signal_print[signo]; } int signal_pass_state (int signo) { return signal_program[signo]; } int signal_stop_update (int signo, int state) { int ret = signal_stop[signo]; signal_stop[signo] = state; return ret; } int signal_print_update (int signo, int state) { int ret = signal_print[signo]; signal_print[signo] = state; return ret; } int signal_pass_update (int signo, int state) { int ret = signal_program[signo]; signal_program[signo] = state; return ret; } static void sig_print_header (void) { printf_filtered (_("\ Signal Stop\tPrint\tPass to program\tDescription\n")); } static void sig_print_info (enum target_signal oursig) { char *name = target_signal_to_name (oursig); int name_padding = 13 - strlen (name); if (name_padding <= 0) name_padding = 0; printf_filtered ("%s", name); printf_filtered ("%*.*s ", name_padding, name_padding, " "); printf_filtered ("%s\t", signal_stop[oursig] ? "Yes" : "No"); printf_filtered ("%s\t", signal_print[oursig] ? "Yes" : "No"); printf_filtered ("%s\t\t", signal_program[oursig] ? "Yes" : "No"); printf_filtered ("%s\n", target_signal_to_string (oursig)); } /* Specify how various signals in the inferior should be handled. */ static void handle_command (char *args, int from_tty) { char **argv; int digits, wordlen; int sigfirst, signum, siglast; enum target_signal oursig; int allsigs; int nsigs; unsigned char *sigs; struct cleanup *old_chain; if (args == NULL) { error_no_arg (_("signal to handle")); } /* Allocate and zero an array of flags for which signals to handle. */ nsigs = (int) TARGET_SIGNAL_LAST; sigs = (unsigned char *) alloca (nsigs); memset (sigs, 0, nsigs); /* Break the command line up into args. */ argv = buildargv (args); if (argv == NULL) { nomem (0); } old_chain = make_cleanup_freeargv (argv); /* Walk through the args, looking for signal oursigs, signal names, and actions. Signal numbers and signal names may be interspersed with actions, with the actions being performed for all signals cumulatively specified. Signal ranges can be specified as -. */ while (*argv != NULL) { wordlen = strlen (*argv); for (digits = 0; isdigit ((*argv)[digits]); digits++) {; } allsigs = 0; sigfirst = siglast = -1; if (wordlen >= 1 && !strncmp (*argv, "all", wordlen)) { /* Apply action to all signals except those used by the debugger. Silently skip those. */ allsigs = 1; sigfirst = 0; siglast = nsigs - 1; } else if (wordlen >= 1 && !strncmp (*argv, "stop", wordlen)) { SET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_stop); SET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_print); } else if (wordlen >= 1 && !strncmp (*argv, "ignore", wordlen)) { UNSET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_program); } else if (wordlen >= 2 && !strncmp (*argv, "print", wordlen)) { SET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_print); } else if (wordlen >= 2 && !strncmp (*argv, "pass", wordlen)) { SET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_program); } else if (wordlen >= 3 && !strncmp (*argv, "nostop", wordlen)) { UNSET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_stop); } else if (wordlen >= 3 && !strncmp (*argv, "noignore", wordlen)) { SET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_program); } else if (wordlen >= 4 && !strncmp (*argv, "noprint", wordlen)) { UNSET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_print); UNSET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_stop); } else if (wordlen >= 4 && !strncmp (*argv, "nopass", wordlen)) { UNSET_SIGS (nsigs, sigs, signal_program); } else if (digits > 0) { /* It is numeric. The numeric signal refers to our own internal signal numbering from target.h, not to host/target signal number. This is a feature; users really should be using symbolic names anyway, and the common ones like SIGHUP, SIGINT, SIGALRM, etc. will work right anyway. */ sigfirst = siglast = (int) target_signal_from_command (atoi (*argv)); if ((*argv)[digits] == '-') { siglast = (int) target_signal_from_command (atoi ((*argv) + digits + 1)); } if (sigfirst > siglast) { /* Bet he didn't figure we'd think of this case... */ signum = sigfirst; sigfirst = siglast; siglast = signum; } } else { oursig = target_signal_from_name (*argv); if (oursig != TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN) { sigfirst = siglast = (int) oursig; } else { /* Not a number and not a recognized flag word => complain. */ error (_("Unrecognized or ambiguous flag word: \"%s\"."), *argv); } } /* If any signal numbers or symbol names were found, set flags for which signals to apply actions to. */ for (signum = sigfirst; signum >= 0 && signum <= siglast; signum++) { switch ((enum target_signal) signum) { case TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP: case TARGET_SIGNAL_INT: if (!allsigs && !sigs[signum]) { if (query ("%s is used by the debugger.\n\ Are you sure you want to change it? ", target_signal_to_name ((enum target_signal) signum))) { sigs[signum] = 1; } else { printf_unfiltered (_("Not confirmed, unchanged.\n")); gdb_flush (gdb_stdout); } } break; case TARGET_SIGNAL_0: case TARGET_SIGNAL_DEFAULT: case TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN: /* Make sure that "all" doesn't print these. */ break; default: sigs[signum] = 1; break; } } argv++; } target_notice_signals (inferior_ptid); if (from_tty) { /* Show the results. */ sig_print_header (); for (signum = 0; signum < nsigs; signum++) { if (sigs[signum]) { sig_print_info (signum); } } } do_cleanups (old_chain); } static void xdb_handle_command (char *args, int from_tty) { char **argv; struct cleanup *old_chain; /* Break the command line up into args. */ argv = buildargv (args); if (argv == NULL) { nomem (0); } old_chain = make_cleanup_freeargv (argv); if (argv[1] != (char *) NULL) { char *argBuf; int bufLen; bufLen = strlen (argv[0]) + 20; argBuf = (char *) xmalloc (bufLen); if (argBuf) { int validFlag = 1; enum target_signal oursig; oursig = target_signal_from_name (argv[0]); memset (argBuf, 0, bufLen); if (strcmp (argv[1], "Q") == 0) sprintf (argBuf, "%s %s", argv[0], "noprint"); else { if (strcmp (argv[1], "s") == 0) { if (!signal_stop[oursig]) sprintf (argBuf, "%s %s", argv[0], "stop"); else sprintf (argBuf, "%s %s", argv[0], "nostop"); } else if (strcmp (argv[1], "i") == 0) { if (!signal_program[oursig]) sprintf (argBuf, "%s %s", argv[0], "pass"); else sprintf (argBuf, "%s %s", argv[0], "nopass"); } else if (strcmp (argv[1], "r") == 0) { if (!signal_print[oursig]) sprintf (argBuf, "%s %s", argv[0], "print"); else sprintf (argBuf, "%s %s", argv[0], "noprint"); } else validFlag = 0; } if (validFlag) handle_command (argBuf, from_tty); else printf_filtered (_("Invalid signal handling flag.\n")); if (argBuf) xfree (argBuf); } } do_cleanups (old_chain); } /* Print current contents of the tables set by the handle command. It is possible we should just be printing signals actually used by the current target (but for things to work right when switching targets, all signals should be in the signal tables). */ static void signals_info (char *signum_exp, int from_tty) { enum target_signal oursig; sig_print_header (); if (signum_exp) { /* First see if this is a symbol name. */ oursig = target_signal_from_name (signum_exp); if (oursig == TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN) { /* No, try numeric. */ oursig = target_signal_from_command (parse_and_eval_long (signum_exp)); } sig_print_info (oursig); return; } printf_filtered ("\n"); /* These ugly casts brought to you by the native VAX compiler. */ for (oursig = TARGET_SIGNAL_FIRST; (int) oursig < (int) TARGET_SIGNAL_LAST; oursig = (enum target_signal) ((int) oursig + 1)) { QUIT; if (oursig != TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN && oursig != TARGET_SIGNAL_DEFAULT && oursig != TARGET_SIGNAL_0) sig_print_info (oursig); } printf_filtered (_("\nUse the \"handle\" command to change these tables.\n")); } struct inferior_status { enum target_signal stop_signal; CORE_ADDR stop_pc; bpstat stop_bpstat; int stop_step; int stop_stack_dummy; int stopped_by_random_signal; int stepping_over_breakpoint; CORE_ADDR step_range_start; CORE_ADDR step_range_end; struct frame_id step_frame_id; enum step_over_calls_kind step_over_calls; CORE_ADDR step_resume_break_address; int stop_after_trap; int stop_soon; /* These are here because if call_function_by_hand has written some registers and then decides to call error(), we better not have changed any registers. */ struct regcache *registers; /* A frame unique identifier. */ struct frame_id selected_frame_id; int breakpoint_proceeded; int restore_stack_info; int proceed_to_finish; }; void write_inferior_status_register (struct inferior_status *inf_status, int regno, LONGEST val) { int size = register_size (current_gdbarch, regno); void *buf = alloca (size); store_signed_integer (buf, size, val); regcache_raw_write (inf_status->registers, regno, buf); } /* Save all of the information associated with the inferior<==>gdb connection. INF_STATUS is a pointer to a "struct inferior_status" (defined in inferior.h). */ struct inferior_status * save_inferior_status (int restore_stack_info) { struct inferior_status *inf_status = XMALLOC (struct inferior_status); inf_status->stop_signal = stop_signal; inf_status->stop_pc = stop_pc; inf_status->stop_step = stop_step; inf_status->stop_stack_dummy = stop_stack_dummy; inf_status->stopped_by_random_signal = stopped_by_random_signal; inf_status->stepping_over_breakpoint = stepping_over_breakpoint; inf_status->step_range_start = step_range_start; inf_status->step_range_end = step_range_end; inf_status->step_frame_id = step_frame_id; inf_status->step_over_calls = step_over_calls; inf_status->stop_after_trap = stop_after_trap; inf_status->stop_soon = stop_soon; /* Save original bpstat chain here; replace it with copy of chain. If caller's caller is walking the chain, they'll be happier if we hand them back the original chain when restore_inferior_status is called. */ inf_status->stop_bpstat = stop_bpstat; stop_bpstat = bpstat_copy (stop_bpstat); inf_status->breakpoint_proceeded = breakpoint_proceeded; inf_status->restore_stack_info = restore_stack_info; inf_status->proceed_to_finish = proceed_to_finish; inf_status->registers = regcache_dup (get_current_regcache ()); inf_status->selected_frame_id = get_frame_id (get_selected_frame (NULL)); return inf_status; } static int restore_selected_frame (void *args) { struct frame_id *fid = (struct frame_id *) args; struct frame_info *frame; frame = frame_find_by_id (*fid); /* If inf_status->selected_frame_id is NULL, there was no previously selected frame. */ if (frame == NULL) { warning (_("Unable to restore previously selected frame.")); return 0; } select_frame (frame); return (1); } void restore_inferior_status (struct inferior_status *inf_status) { stop_signal = inf_status->stop_signal; stop_pc = inf_status->stop_pc; stop_step = inf_status->stop_step; stop_stack_dummy = inf_status->stop_stack_dummy; stopped_by_random_signal = inf_status->stopped_by_random_signal; stepping_over_breakpoint = inf_status->stepping_over_breakpoint; step_range_start = inf_status->step_range_start; step_range_end = inf_status->step_range_end; step_frame_id = inf_status->step_frame_id; step_over_calls = inf_status->step_over_calls; stop_after_trap = inf_status->stop_after_trap; stop_soon = inf_status->stop_soon; bpstat_clear (&stop_bpstat); stop_bpstat = inf_status->stop_bpstat; breakpoint_proceeded = inf_status->breakpoint_proceeded; proceed_to_finish = inf_status->proceed_to_finish; /* The inferior can be gone if the user types "print exit(0)" (and perhaps other times). */ if (target_has_execution) /* NB: The register write goes through to the target. */ regcache_cpy (get_current_regcache (), inf_status->registers); regcache_xfree (inf_status->registers); /* FIXME: If we are being called after stopping in a function which is called from gdb, we should not be trying to restore the selected frame; it just prints a spurious error message (The message is useful, however, in detecting bugs in gdb (like if gdb clobbers the stack)). In fact, should we be restoring the inferior status at all in that case? . */ if (target_has_stack && inf_status->restore_stack_info) { /* The point of catch_errors is that if the stack is clobbered, walking the stack might encounter a garbage pointer and error() trying to dereference it. */ if (catch_errors (restore_selected_frame, &inf_status->selected_frame_id, "Unable to restore previously selected frame:\n", RETURN_MASK_ERROR) == 0) /* Error in restoring the selected frame. Select the innermost frame. */ select_frame (get_current_frame ()); } xfree (inf_status); } static void do_restore_inferior_status_cleanup (void *sts) { restore_inferior_status (sts); } struct cleanup * make_cleanup_restore_inferior_status (struct inferior_status *inf_status) { return make_cleanup (do_restore_inferior_status_cleanup, inf_status); } void discard_inferior_status (struct inferior_status *inf_status) { /* See save_inferior_status for info on stop_bpstat. */ bpstat_clear (&inf_status->stop_bpstat); regcache_xfree (inf_status->registers); xfree (inf_status); } int inferior_has_forked (int pid, int *child_pid) { struct target_waitstatus last; ptid_t last_ptid; get_last_target_status (&last_ptid, &last); if (last.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_FORKED) return 0; if (ptid_get_pid (last_ptid) != pid) return 0; *child_pid = last.value.related_pid; return 1; } int inferior_has_vforked (int pid, int *child_pid) { struct target_waitstatus last; ptid_t last_ptid; get_last_target_status (&last_ptid, &last); if (last.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_VFORKED) return 0; if (ptid_get_pid (last_ptid) != pid) return 0; *child_pid = last.value.related_pid; return 1; } int inferior_has_execd (int pid, char **execd_pathname) { struct target_waitstatus last; ptid_t last_ptid; get_last_target_status (&last_ptid, &last); if (last.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_EXECD) return 0; if (ptid_get_pid (last_ptid) != pid) return 0; *execd_pathname = xstrdup (last.value.execd_pathname); return 1; } /* Oft used ptids */ ptid_t null_ptid; ptid_t minus_one_ptid; /* Create a ptid given the necessary PID, LWP, and TID components. */ ptid_t ptid_build (int pid, long lwp, long tid) { ptid_t ptid; ptid.pid = pid; ptid.lwp = lwp; ptid.tid = tid; return ptid; } /* Create a ptid from just a pid. */ ptid_t pid_to_ptid (int pid) { return ptid_build (pid, 0, 0); } /* Fetch the pid (process id) component from a ptid. */ int ptid_get_pid (ptid_t ptid) { return ptid.pid; } /* Fetch the lwp (lightweight process) component from a ptid. */ long ptid_get_lwp (ptid_t ptid) { return ptid.lwp; } /* Fetch the tid (thread id) component from a ptid. */ long ptid_get_tid (ptid_t ptid) { return ptid.tid; } /* ptid_equal() is used to test equality of two ptids. */ int ptid_equal (ptid_t ptid1, ptid_t ptid2) { return (ptid1.pid == ptid2.pid && ptid1.lwp == ptid2.lwp && ptid1.tid == ptid2.tid); } /* restore_inferior_ptid() will be used by the cleanup machinery to restore the inferior_ptid value saved in a call to save_inferior_ptid(). */ static void restore_inferior_ptid (void *arg) { ptid_t *saved_ptid_ptr = arg; inferior_ptid = *saved_ptid_ptr; xfree (arg); } /* Save the value of inferior_ptid so that it may be restored by a later call to do_cleanups(). Returns the struct cleanup pointer needed for later doing the cleanup. */ struct cleanup * save_inferior_ptid (void) { ptid_t *saved_ptid_ptr; saved_ptid_ptr = xmalloc (sizeof (ptid_t)); *saved_ptid_ptr = inferior_ptid; return make_cleanup (restore_inferior_ptid, saved_ptid_ptr); } void _initialize_infrun (void) { int i; int numsigs; struct cmd_list_element *c; add_info ("signals", signals_info, _("\ What debugger does when program gets various signals.\n\ Specify a signal as argument to print info on that signal only.")); add_info_alias ("handle", "signals", 0); add_com ("handle", class_run, handle_command, _("\ Specify how to handle a signal.\n\ Args are signals and actions to apply to those signals.\n\ Symbolic signals (e.g. SIGSEGV) are recommended but numeric signals\n\ from 1-15 are allowed for compatibility with old versions of GDB.\n\ Numeric ranges may be specified with the form LOW-HIGH (e.g. 1-5).\n\ The special arg \"all\" is recognized to mean all signals except those\n\ used by the debugger, typically SIGTRAP and SIGINT.\n\ Recognized actions include \"stop\", \"nostop\", \"print\", \"noprint\",\n\ \"pass\", \"nopass\", \"ignore\", or \"noignore\".\n\ Stop means reenter debugger if this signal happens (implies print).\n\ Print means print a message if this signal happens.\n\ Pass means let program see this signal; otherwise program doesn't know.\n\ Ignore is a synonym for nopass and noignore is a synonym for pass.\n\ Pass and Stop may be combined.")); if (xdb_commands) { add_com ("lz", class_info, signals_info, _("\ What debugger does when program gets various signals.\n\ Specify a signal as argument to print info on that signal only.")); add_com ("z", class_run, xdb_handle_command, _("\ Specify how to handle a signal.\n\ Args are signals and actions to apply to those signals.\n\ Symbolic signals (e.g. SIGSEGV) are recommended but numeric signals\n\ from 1-15 are allowed for compatibility with old versions of GDB.\n\ Numeric ranges may be specified with the form LOW-HIGH (e.g. 1-5).\n\ The special arg \"all\" is recognized to mean all signals except those\n\ used by the debugger, typically SIGTRAP and SIGINT.\n\ Recognized actions include \"s\" (toggles between stop and nostop), \n\ \"r\" (toggles between print and noprint), \"i\" (toggles between pass and \ nopass), \"Q\" (noprint)\n\ Stop means reenter debugger if this signal happens (implies print).\n\ Print means print a message if this signal happens.\n\ Pass means let program see this signal; otherwise program doesn't know.\n\ Ignore is a synonym for nopass and noignore is a synonym for pass.\n\ Pass and Stop may be combined.")); } if (!dbx_commands) stop_command = add_cmd ("stop", class_obscure, not_just_help_class_command, _("\ There is no `stop' command, but you can set a hook on `stop'.\n\ This allows you to set a list of commands to be run each time execution\n\ of the program stops."), &cmdlist); add_setshow_zinteger_cmd ("infrun", class_maintenance, &debug_infrun, _("\ Set inferior debugging."), _("\ Show inferior debugging."), _("\ When non-zero, inferior specific debugging is enabled."), NULL, show_debug_infrun, &setdebuglist, &showdebuglist); numsigs = (int) TARGET_SIGNAL_LAST; signal_stop = (unsigned char *) xmalloc (sizeof (signal_stop[0]) * numsigs); signal_print = (unsigned char *) xmalloc (sizeof (signal_print[0]) * numsigs); signal_program = (unsigned char *) xmalloc (sizeof (signal_program[0]) * numsigs); for (i = 0; i < numsigs; i++) { signal_stop[i] = 1; signal_print[i] = 1; signal_program[i] = 1; } /* Signals caused by debugger's own actions should not be given to the program afterwards. */ signal_program[TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP] = 0; signal_program[TARGET_SIGNAL_INT] = 0; /* Signals that are not errors should not normally enter the debugger. */ signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_ALRM] = 0; signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_ALRM] = 0; signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_VTALRM] = 0; signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_VTALRM] = 0; signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_PROF] = 0; signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_PROF] = 0; signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_CHLD] = 0; signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_CHLD] = 0; signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_IO] = 0; signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_IO] = 0; signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_POLL] = 0; signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_POLL] = 0; signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_URG] = 0; signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_URG] = 0; signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_WINCH] = 0; signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_WINCH] = 0; /* These signals are used internally by user-level thread implementations. (See signal(5) on Solaris.) Like the above signals, a healthy program receives and handles them as part of its normal operation. */ signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_LWP] = 0; signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_LWP] = 0; signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_WAITING] = 0; signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_WAITING] = 0; signal_stop[TARGET_SIGNAL_CANCEL] = 0; signal_print[TARGET_SIGNAL_CANCEL] = 0; add_setshow_zinteger_cmd ("stop-on-solib-events", class_support, &stop_on_solib_events, _("\ Set stopping for shared library events."), _("\ Show stopping for shared library events."), _("\ If nonzero, gdb will give control to the user when the dynamic linker\n\ notifies gdb of shared library events. The most common event of interest\n\ to the user would be loading/unloading of a new library."), NULL, show_stop_on_solib_events, &setlist, &showlist); add_setshow_enum_cmd ("follow-fork-mode", class_run, follow_fork_mode_kind_names, &follow_fork_mode_string, _("\ Set debugger response to a program call of fork or vfork."), _("\ Show debugger response to a program call of fork or vfork."), _("\ A fork or vfork creates a new process. follow-fork-mode can be:\n\ parent - the original process is debugged after a fork\n\ child - the new process is debugged after a fork\n\ The unfollowed process will continue to run.\n\ By default, the debugger will follow the parent process."), NULL, show_follow_fork_mode_string, &setlist, &showlist); add_setshow_enum_cmd ("scheduler-locking", class_run, scheduler_enums, &scheduler_mode, _("\ Set mode for locking scheduler during execution."), _("\ Show mode for locking scheduler during execution."), _("\ off == no locking (threads may preempt at any time)\n\ on == full locking (no thread except the current thread may run)\n\ step == scheduler locked during every single-step operation.\n\ In this mode, no other thread may run during a step command.\n\ Other threads may run while stepping over a function call ('next')."), set_schedlock_func, /* traps on target vector */ show_scheduler_mode, &setlist, &showlist); add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("step-mode", class_run, &step_stop_if_no_debug, _("\ Set mode of the step operation."), _("\ Show mode of the step operation."), _("\ When set, doing a step over a function without debug line information\n\ will stop at the first instruction of that function. Otherwise, the\n\ function is skipped and the step command stops at a different source line."), NULL, show_step_stop_if_no_debug, &setlist, &showlist); /* ptid initializations */ null_ptid = ptid_build (0, 0, 0); minus_one_ptid = ptid_build (-1, 0, 0); inferior_ptid = null_ptid; target_last_wait_ptid = minus_one_ptid; }