old-cross-binutils/gdb/gdbserver/win32-low.c
Pedro Alves 802e8e6d84 [GDBserver] Make Zx/zx packet handling idempotent.
This patch fixes hardware breakpoint regressions exposed by my fix for
"PR breakpoints/7143 - Watchpoint does not trigger when first set", at
https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2014-03/msg00167.html

The testsuite caught them on Linux/x86_64, at least.  gdb.sum:

gdb.sum:

 FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call
 FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: backtrace from factorial(5.1)
 FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: continue until exit at recursive next test

gdb.log:

 (gdb) next

 Program received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap.
 factorial (value=4) at ../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/break.c:113
 113       if (value > 1) {  /* set breakpoint 7 here */
 (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/hbreak2.exp: next over recursive call

Actually, that patch just exposed a latent issue to "breakpoints
always-inserted off" mode, not really caused it.  After that patch,
GDB no longer removes breakpoints at each internal event, thus making
some scenarios behave like breakpoint always-inserted on.  The bug is
easy to trigger with always-inserted on.

The issue is that since the target-side breakpoint conditions support,
if the stub/server supports evaluating breakpoint conditions on the
target side, then GDB is sending duplicate Zx packets to the target
without removing them before, and GDBserver is not really expecting
that for Z packets other than Z0/z0.  E.g., with "set breakpoint
always-inserted on" and "set debug remote 1":

 (gdb) b main
 Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48
 Breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028.
 Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK
                 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
 (gdb) b main
 Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943.
 Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48
 Breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028.
 Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK
                 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
 (gdb) b main
 Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943.
 Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48
 Breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028.
 Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK
                 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
 (gdb) del
 Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y
 Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK
 Sending packet: $Z0,410943,1#48...Packet received: OK
 Sending packet: $z0,410943,1#68...Packet received: OK

And for Z1, similarly:

 (gdb) hbreak main
 Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48
 Hardware assisted breakpoint 4 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028.
 Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK
                 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
 Packet Z1 (hardware-breakpoint) is supported
 (gdb) hbreak main
 Note: breakpoint 4 also set at pc 0x410943.
 Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48
 Hardware assisted breakpoint 5 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028.
 Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK
                 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
 (gdb) hbreak main
 Note: breakpoints 4 and 5 also set at pc 0x410943.
 Sending packet: $m410943,1#ff...Packet received: 48
 Hardware assisted breakpoint 6 at 0x410943: file ../../../src/gdb/gdbserver/server.c, line 3028.
 Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK
                 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
 (gdb) del
 Delete all breakpoints? (y or n) y
 Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK
                 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
 Sending packet: $Z1,410943,1#49...Packet received: OK
                 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
 Sending packet: $z1,410943,1#69...Packet received: OK
                 ^^^^^^^^^^^^

So GDB sent a bunch of Z1 packets, and then when finally removing the
breakpoint, only one z1 packet was sent.  On the GDBserver side (with
monitor set debug-hw-points 1), in the Z1 case, we see:

 $ ./gdbserver :9999 ./gdbserver
 Process ./gdbserver created; pid = 8629
 Listening on port 9999
 Remote debugging from host 127.0.0.1
 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute):
	 CONTROL (DR7): 00000101          STATUS (DR6): 00000000
	 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=1  DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0
	 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0  DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0
 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute):
	 CONTROL (DR7): 00000101          STATUS (DR6): 00000000
	 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=2  DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0
	 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0  DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0
 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute):
	 CONTROL (DR7): 00000101          STATUS (DR6): 00000000
	 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=3  DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0
	 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0  DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0
 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute):
	 CONTROL (DR7): 00000101          STATUS (DR6): 00000000
	 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4  DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0
	 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0  DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0
 insert_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute):
	 CONTROL (DR7): 00000101          STATUS (DR6): 00000000
	 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=5  DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0
	 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0  DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0
 remove_watchpoint (addr=410943, len=1, type=instruction-execute):
	 CONTROL (DR7): 00000101          STATUS (DR6): 00000000
	 DR0: addr=0x410943, ref.count=4  DR1: addr=0x0, ref.count=0
	 DR2: addr=0x0, ref.count=0  DR3: addr=0x0, ref.count=0

That's one insert_watchpoint call for each Z1 packet, and then one
remove_watchpoint call for the z1 packet.  Notice how ref.count
increased for each insert_watchpoint call, and then in the end, after
GDB told GDBserver to forget about the hardware breakpoint, GDBserver
ends with the the first debug register still with ref.count=4!  IOW,
the hardware breakpoint is left armed on the target, while on the GDB
end it's gone.  If the program happens to execute 0x410943 afterwards,
then the CPU traps, GDBserver reports the trap to GDB, and GDB not
having a breakpoint set at that address anymore, reports to the user a
spurious SIGTRAP.

This is exactly what is happening in the hbreak2.exp test, though in
that case, it's a shared library event that triggers a
breakpoint_re_set, when breakpoints are still inserted (because
nowadays GDB doesn't remove breakpoints while handling internal
events), and that recreates breakpoint locations, which likewise
forces breakpoint reinsertion and Zx packet resends...

That is a lot of bogus Zx duplication that should possibly be
addressed on the GDB side.  GDB resends Zx packets because the way to
change the target-side condition, is to resend the breakpoint to the
server with the new condition.  (That's an option in the packet: e.g.,
"Z1,410943,1;X3,220027" for "hbreak main if 0".  The packets in the
examples above are shorter because the breakpoints don't have
conditions attached).  GDB doesn't remove the breakpoint first before
reinserting it because that'd be bad for non-stop, as it'd open a
window where the inferior could miss the breakpoint.  The conditions
actually haven't changed between the resends, but GDB isn't smart
enough to realize that.

(TBC, if the target doesn't support target-side conditions, then GDB
doesn't trigger these resends (init_bp_location calls
mark_breakpoint_location_modified, and that does nothing if condition
evaluation is on the host side.  The resends are caused by the
'loc->condition_changed = condition_modified.'  line.)

But, even if GDB was made smarter, GDBserver should really still
handle the resends anyway.  So target-side conditions also aren't
really to blame.  The documentation of the Z/z packets says:

 "To avoid potential problems with duplicate packets, the operations
 should be implemented in an idempotent way."

As such, we may want to fix GDB, but we should definitely fix
GDBserver.  The fix is a prerequisite for target-side conditions on
hardware breakpoints anyway (and while at it, on watchpoints too).

GDBserver indeed already treats duplicate Z0 packets in an idempotent
way.  mem-break.c has the concept of high-level and low-level
breakpoints, somewhat similar to GDB's split of breakpoints vs
breakpoint locations, and keeps track of multiple breakpoints
referencing the same address/location, for the case of an internal
GDBserver breakpoint or a tracepoint being set at the same address as
a GDB breakpoint.  But, it only allows GDB to ever contribute one
reference to a software breakpoint location.  IOW, if gdbserver sees a
Z0 packet for the same address where it already had a GDB breakpoint
set, then GDBserver won't create another high-level GDB breakpoint.

However, mem-break.c only tracks GDB Z0 breakpoints.  The same logic
should apply to all kinds of Zx packets.  Currently, gdbserver passes
down each duplicate Zx (other than Z0) request directly to the
target->insert_point routine.  The x86 watchpoint support itself
refcounts watchpoint / hw breakpoint requests, to handle overlapping
watchpoints, and save debug registers.  But that code doesn't (and
really shouldn't) handle the duplicate requests, assuming that for
each insert there will be a corresponding remove.

So the fix is to generalize mem-break.c to track all kinds of Zx
breakpoints, and filter out duplicates.  As mentioned, this ends up
adding support for target-side conditions on hardware breakpoints and
watchpoints too (though GDB itself doesn't support the latter yet).

Probably the least obvious change in the patch is that it kind of
turns the breakpoint insert/remove APIs inside out.  Before, the
target methods were only called for GDB breakpoints.  The internal
breakpoint set/delete methods inserted memory breakpoints directly
bypassing the insert/remove target methods.  That's not good when the
target should use a debug API to set software breakpoints, instead of
relying on GDBserver patching memory with breakpoint instructions, as
is the case of NTO.

Now removal/insertion of all kinds of breakpoints/watchpoints, either
internal, or from GDB, always go through the target methods.  The
insert_point/remove_point methods no longer get passed a Z packet
type, but an internal/raw breakpoint type.  They're also passed a
pointer to the raw breakpoint itself (note that's still opaque outside
mem-break.c), so that insert_memory_breakpoint /
remove_memory_breakpoint have access to the breakpoint's shadow
buffer.  I first tried passing down a new structure based on GDB's
"struct bp_target_info" (actually with that name exactly), but then
decided against it as unnecessary complication.

As software/memory breakpoints work by poking at memory, when setting
a GDB Z0 breakpoint (but not internal breakpoints, as those can assume
the conditions are already right), we need to tell the target to
prepare to access memory (which on Linux means stop threads).  If that
operation fails, we need to return error to GDB.  Seeing an error, if
this is the first breakpoint of that type that GDB tries to insert,
GDB would then assume the breakpoint type is supported, but it may
actually not be.  So we need to check whether the type is supported at
all before preparing to access memory.  And to solve that, the patch
adds a new target->supports_z_point_type method that is called before
actually trying to insert the breakpoint.

Other than that, hopefully the change is more or less obvious.

New test added that exercises the hbreak2.exp regression in a more
direct way, without relying on a breakpoint re-set happening before
main is reached.

Tested by building GDBserver for:

 aarch64-linux-gnu
 arm-linux-gnueabihf
 i686-pc-linux-gnu
 i686-w64-mingw32
 m68k-linux-gnu
 mips-linux-gnu
 mips-uclinux
 nios2-linux-gnu
 powerpc-linux-gnu
 sh-linux-gnu
 tilegx-unknown-linux-gnu
 x86_64-redhat-linux
 x86_64-w64-mingw32

And also regression tested on x86_64 Fedora 20.

gdb/gdbserver/
2014-05-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_insert_point)
	(aarch64_remove_point): No longer check whether the type is
	supported here.  Adjust to new interface.
	(the_low_target): Install aarch64_supports_z_point_type as
	supports_z_point_type method.
	* linux-arm-low.c (raw_bkpt_type_to_arm_hwbp_type): New function.
	(arm_linux_hw_point_initialize): Take an enum raw_bkpt_type
	instead of a Z packet char.  Adjust.
	(arm_supports_z_point_type): New function.
	(arm_insert_point, arm_remove_point): Adjust to new interface.
	(the_low_target): Install arm_supports_z_point_type.
	* linux-crisv32-low.c (cris_supports_z_point_type): New function.
	(cris_insert_point, cris_remove_point): Adjust to new interface.
	Don't check whether the type is supported here.
	(the_low_target): Install cris_supports_z_point_type.
	* linux-low.c (linux_supports_z_point_type): New function.
	(linux_insert_point, linux_remove_point): Adjust to new interface.
	* linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops) <insert_point,
	remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type instead of a char.  Add
	raw_breakpoint pointer parameter.
	<supports_z_point_type>: New method.
	* linux-mips-low.c (mips_supports_z_point_type): New function.
	(mips_insert_point, mips_remove_point): Adjust to new interface.
	Use mips_supports_z_point_type.
	(the_low_target): Install mips_supports_z_point_type.
	* linux-ppc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as
	supports_z_point_type method.
	* linux-s390-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as
	supports_z_point_type method.
	* linux-sparc-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as
	supports_z_point_type method.
	* linux-x86-low.c (x86_supports_z_point_type): New function.
	(x86_insert_point): Adjust to new insert_point interface.  Use
	insert_memory_breakpoint.  Adjust to new
	i386_low_insert_watchpoint interface.
	(x86_remove_point): Adjust to remove_point interface.  Use
	remove_memory_breakpoint.  Adjust to new
	i386_low_remove_watchpoint interface.
	(the_low_target): Install x86_supports_z_point_type.
	* lynx-low.c (lynx_target_ops): Install NULL as
	supports_z_point_type callback.
	* nto-low.c (nto_supports_z_point_type): New.
	(nto_insert_point, nto_remove_point): Adjust to new interface.
	(nto_target_ops): Install nto_supports_z_point_type.
	* mem-break.c: Adjust intro comment.
	(struct raw_breakpoint) <raw_type, size>: New fields.
	<inserted>: Update comment.
	<shlib_disabled>: Delete field.
	(enum bkpt_type) <gdb_breakpoint>: Delete value.
	<gdb_breakpoint_Z0, gdb_breakpoint_Z1, gdb_breakpoint_Z2,
	gdb_breakpoint_Z3, gdb_breakpoint_Z4>: New values.
	(raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type): New function.
	(find_enabled_raw_code_breakpoint_at): New function.
	(find_raw_breakpoint_at): New type and size parameters.  Use them.
	(insert_memory_breakpoint): New function, based off
	set_raw_breakpoint_at.
	(remove_memory_breakpoint): New function.
	(set_raw_breakpoint_at): Reimplement.
	(set_breakpoint): New, based on set_breakpoint_at.
	(set_breakpoint_at): Reimplement.
	(delete_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->remove_point
	instead of assuming memory breakpoints.
	(find_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete.
	(Z_packet_to_bkpt_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type): New functions.
	(find_gdb_breakpoint): New function.
	(set_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete.
	(z_type_supported): New function.
	(set_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off
	set_gdb_breakpoint_at.
	(check_gdb_bp_preconditions, set_gdb_breakpoint): New functions.
	(delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete.
	(delete_gdb_breakpoint_1): New function, loosely based off
	delete_gdb_breakpoint_at.
	(delete_gdb_breakpoint): New function.
	(clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Rename to ...
	(clear_breakpoint_conditions): ... this.  Don't handle a NULL
	breakpoint.
	(add_condition_to_breakpoint): Make static.
	(add_breakpoint_condition): Take a struct breakpoint pointer
	instead of an address.  Adjust.
	(gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Rename to ...
	(gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this, and add
	z_type parameter.
	(gdb_condition_true_at_breakpoint): Reimplement.
	(add_breakpoint_commands): Take a struct breakpoint pointer
	instead of an address.  Adjust.
	(gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Rename to ...
	(gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint_z_type): ... this.  Add z_type
	parameter.  Return true if no breakpoint was found.  Change debug
	output.
	(gdb_no_commands_at_breakpoint): Reimplement.
	(run_breakpoint_commands): Rename to ...
	(run_breakpoint_commands_z_type): ... this.  Add z_type parameter,
	and change return type to boolean.
	(run_breakpoint_commands): New function.
	(gdb_breakpoint_here): Also check for Z1 breakpoints.
	(uninsert_raw_breakpoint): Don't try to reinsert a disabled
	breakpoint.  Go through the_target->remove_point instead of
	assuming memory breakpoint.
	(uninsert_breakpoints_at, uninsert_all_breakpoints): Uninsert
	software and hardware breakpoints.
	(reinsert_raw_breakpoint): Go through the_target->insert_point
	instead of assuming memory breakpoint.
	(reinsert_breakpoints_at, reinsert_all_breakpoints): Reinsert
	software and hardware breakpoints.
	(check_breakpoints, breakpoint_here, breakpoint_inserted_here):
	Check both software and hardware breakpoints.
	(validate_inserted_breakpoint): Assert the breakpoint is a
	software breakpoint.  Set the inserted flag to -1 instead of
	setting shlib_disabled.
	(delete_disabled_breakpoints): Adjust.
	(validate_breakpoints): Only validate software breakpoints.
	Adjust to inserted flag change.
	(check_mem_read, check_mem_write): Skip breakpoint types other
	than software breakpoints.  Adjust to inserted flag change.
	* mem-break.h (enum raw_bkpt_type): New enum.
	(raw_breakpoint, struct process_info): Forward declare.
	(Z_packet_to_target_hw_bp_type): Delete declaration.
	(raw_bkpt_type_to_target_hw_bp_type, Z_packet_to_raw_bkpt_type)
	(set_gdb_breakpoint, delete_gdb_breakpoint)
	(clear_breakpoint_conditions): New declarations.
	(set_gdb_breakpoint_at, clear_gdb_breakpoint_conditions): Delete.
	(breakpoint_inserted_here): Update comment.
	(add_breakpoint_condition, add_breakpoint_commands): Replace
	address parameter with a breakpoint pointer parameter.
	(gdb_breakpoint_here): Update comment.
	(delete_gdb_breakpoint_at): Delete.
	(insert_memory_breakpoint, remove_memory_breakpoint): Declare.
	* server.c (process_point_options): Take a struct breakpoint
	pointer instead of an address.  Adjust.
	(process_serial_event) <Z/z packets>: Use set_gdb_breakpoint and
	delete_gdb_breakpoint.
	* spu-low.c (spu_target_ops): Install NULL as
	supports_z_point_type method.
	* target.h: Include mem-break.h.
	(struct target_ops) <prepare_to_access_memory>: Update comment.
	<supports_z_point_type>: New field.
	<insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument
	instead of a char.  Also take a raw breakpoint pointer.
	* win32-arm-low.c (the_low_target): Install NULL as
	supports_z_point_type.
	* win32-i386-low.c (i386_supports_z_point_type): New function.
	(i386_insert_point, i386_remove_point): Adjust to new interface.
	(the_low_target): Install i386_supports_z_point_type.
	* win32-low.c (win32_supports_z_point_type): New function.
	(win32_insert_point, win32_remove_point): Adjust to new interface.
	(win32_target_ops): Install win32_supports_z_point_type.
	* win32-low.h (struct win32_target_ops):
	<supports_z_point_type>: New method.
	<insert_point, remove_point>: Take an enum raw_bkpt_type argument
	instead of a char.  Also take a raw breakpoint pointer.

gdb/testsuite/
2014-05-20  Pedro Alves  <palves@redhat.com>

	* gdb.base/break-idempotent.c: New file.
	* gdb.base/break-idempotent.exp: New file.
2014-05-20 18:42:30 +01:00

1824 lines
49 KiB
C

/* Low level interface to Windows debugging, for gdbserver.
Copyright (C) 2006-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Contributed by Leo Zayas. Based on "win32-nat.c" from GDB.
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 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#include "server.h"
#include "regcache.h"
#include "gdb/signals.h"
#include "gdb/fileio.h"
#include "mem-break.h"
#include "win32-low.h"
#include "gdbthread.h"
#include "dll.h"
#include "hostio.h"
#include <stdint.h>
#include <windows.h>
#include <winnt.h>
#include <imagehlp.h>
#include <tlhelp32.h>
#include <psapi.h>
#include <process.h>
#ifndef USE_WIN32API
#include <sys/cygwin.h>
#endif
#define OUTMSG(X) do { printf X; fflush (stderr); } while (0)
#define OUTMSG2(X) \
do \
{ \
if (debug_threads) \
{ \
printf X; \
fflush (stderr); \
} \
} while (0)
#ifndef _T
#define _T(x) TEXT (x)
#endif
#ifndef COUNTOF
#define COUNTOF(STR) (sizeof (STR) / sizeof ((STR)[0]))
#endif
#ifdef _WIN32_WCE
# define GETPROCADDRESS(DLL, PROC) \
((winapi_ ## PROC) GetProcAddress (DLL, TEXT (#PROC)))
#else
# define GETPROCADDRESS(DLL, PROC) \
((winapi_ ## PROC) GetProcAddress (DLL, #PROC))
#endif
int using_threads = 1;
/* Globals. */
static int attaching = 0;
static HANDLE current_process_handle = NULL;
static DWORD current_process_id = 0;
static DWORD main_thread_id = 0;
static enum gdb_signal last_sig = GDB_SIGNAL_0;
/* The current debug event from WaitForDebugEvent. */
static DEBUG_EVENT current_event;
/* A status that hasn't been reported to the core yet, and so
win32_wait should return it next, instead of fetching the next
debug event off the win32 API. */
static struct target_waitstatus cached_status;
/* Non zero if an interrupt request is to be satisfied by suspending
all threads. */
static int soft_interrupt_requested = 0;
/* Non zero if the inferior is stopped in a simulated breakpoint done
by suspending all the threads. */
static int faked_breakpoint = 0;
const struct target_desc *win32_tdesc;
#define NUM_REGS (the_low_target.num_regs)
typedef BOOL (WINAPI *winapi_DebugActiveProcessStop) (DWORD dwProcessId);
typedef BOOL (WINAPI *winapi_DebugSetProcessKillOnExit) (BOOL KillOnExit);
typedef BOOL (WINAPI *winapi_DebugBreakProcess) (HANDLE);
typedef BOOL (WINAPI *winapi_GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent) (DWORD, DWORD);
static ptid_t win32_wait (ptid_t ptid, struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus,
int options);
static void win32_resume (struct thread_resume *resume_info, size_t n);
#ifndef _WIN32_WCE
static void win32_add_all_dlls (void);
#endif
/* Get the thread ID from the current selected inferior (the current
thread). */
static ptid_t
current_inferior_ptid (void)
{
return current_ptid;
}
/* The current debug event from WaitForDebugEvent. */
static ptid_t
debug_event_ptid (DEBUG_EVENT *event)
{
return ptid_build (event->dwProcessId, event->dwThreadId, 0);
}
/* Get the thread context of the thread associated with TH. */
static void
win32_get_thread_context (win32_thread_info *th)
{
memset (&th->context, 0, sizeof (CONTEXT));
(*the_low_target.get_thread_context) (th, &current_event);
#ifdef _WIN32_WCE
memcpy (&th->base_context, &th->context, sizeof (CONTEXT));
#endif
}
/* Set the thread context of the thread associated with TH. */
static void
win32_set_thread_context (win32_thread_info *th)
{
#ifdef _WIN32_WCE
/* Calling SuspendThread on a thread that is running kernel code
will report that the suspending was successful, but in fact, that
will often not be true. In those cases, the context returned by
GetThreadContext will not be correct by the time the thread
stops, hence we can't set that context back into the thread when
resuming - it will most likelly crash the inferior.
Unfortunately, there is no way to know when the thread will
really stop. To work around it, we'll only write the context
back to the thread when either the user or GDB explicitly change
it between stopping and resuming. */
if (memcmp (&th->context, &th->base_context, sizeof (CONTEXT)) != 0)
#endif
(*the_low_target.set_thread_context) (th, &current_event);
}
/* Find a thread record given a thread id. If GET_CONTEXT is set then
also retrieve the context for this thread. */
static win32_thread_info *
thread_rec (ptid_t ptid, int get_context)
{
struct thread_info *thread;
win32_thread_info *th;
thread = (struct thread_info *) find_inferior_id (&all_threads, ptid);
if (thread == NULL)
return NULL;
th = inferior_target_data (thread);
if (get_context && th->context.ContextFlags == 0)
{
if (!th->suspended)
{
if (SuspendThread (th->h) == (DWORD) -1)
{
DWORD err = GetLastError ();
OUTMSG (("warning: SuspendThread failed in thread_rec, "
"(error %d): %s\n", (int) err, strwinerror (err)));
}
else
th->suspended = 1;
}
win32_get_thread_context (th);
}
return th;
}
/* Add a thread to the thread list. */
static win32_thread_info *
child_add_thread (DWORD pid, DWORD tid, HANDLE h, void *tlb)
{
win32_thread_info *th;
ptid_t ptid = ptid_build (pid, tid, 0);
if ((th = thread_rec (ptid, FALSE)))
return th;
th = xcalloc (1, sizeof (*th));
th->tid = tid;
th->h = h;
th->thread_local_base = (CORE_ADDR) (uintptr_t) tlb;
add_thread (ptid, th);
if (the_low_target.thread_added != NULL)
(*the_low_target.thread_added) (th);
return th;
}
/* Delete a thread from the list of threads. */
static void
delete_thread_info (struct inferior_list_entry *thread)
{
win32_thread_info *th = inferior_target_data ((struct thread_info *) thread);
remove_thread ((struct thread_info *) thread);
CloseHandle (th->h);
free (th);
}
/* Delete a thread from the list of threads. */
static void
child_delete_thread (DWORD pid, DWORD tid)
{
struct inferior_list_entry *thread;
ptid_t ptid;
/* If the last thread is exiting, just return. */
if (one_inferior_p (&all_threads))
return;
ptid = ptid_build (pid, tid, 0);
thread = find_inferior_id (&all_threads, ptid);
if (thread == NULL)
return;
delete_thread_info (thread);
}
/* These watchpoint related wrapper functions simply pass on the function call
if the low target has registered a corresponding function. */
static int
win32_supports_z_point_type (char z_type)
{
return (the_low_target.supports_z_point_type != NULL
&& the_low_target.supports_z_point_type (z_type));
}
static int
win32_insert_point (enum raw_bkpt_type type, CORE_ADDR addr,
int size, struct raw_breakpoint *bp)
{
if (the_low_target.insert_point != NULL)
return the_low_target.insert_point (type, addr, size, bp);
else
/* Unsupported (see target.h). */
return 1;
}
static int
win32_remove_point (enum raw_bkpt_type type, CORE_ADDR addr,
int size, struct raw_breakpoint *bp)
{
if (the_low_target.remove_point != NULL)
return the_low_target.remove_point (type, addr, size, bp);
else
/* Unsupported (see target.h). */
return 1;
}
static int
win32_stopped_by_watchpoint (void)
{
if (the_low_target.stopped_by_watchpoint != NULL)
return the_low_target.stopped_by_watchpoint ();
else
return 0;
}
static CORE_ADDR
win32_stopped_data_address (void)
{
if (the_low_target.stopped_data_address != NULL)
return the_low_target.stopped_data_address ();
else
return 0;
}
/* Transfer memory from/to the debugged process. */
static int
child_xfer_memory (CORE_ADDR memaddr, char *our, int len,
int write, struct target_ops *target)
{
BOOL success;
SIZE_T done = 0;
DWORD lasterror = 0;
uintptr_t addr = (uintptr_t) memaddr;
if (write)
{
success = WriteProcessMemory (current_process_handle, (LPVOID) addr,
(LPCVOID) our, len, &done);
if (!success)
lasterror = GetLastError ();
FlushInstructionCache (current_process_handle, (LPCVOID) addr, len);
}
else
{
success = ReadProcessMemory (current_process_handle, (LPCVOID) addr,
(LPVOID) our, len, &done);
if (!success)
lasterror = GetLastError ();
}
if (!success && lasterror == ERROR_PARTIAL_COPY && done > 0)
return done;
else
return success ? done : -1;
}
/* Clear out any old thread list and reinitialize it to a pristine
state. */
static void
child_init_thread_list (void)
{
for_each_inferior (&all_threads, delete_thread_info);
}
/* Zero during the child initialization phase, and nonzero otherwise. */
static int child_initialization_done = 0;
static void
do_initial_child_stuff (HANDLE proch, DWORD pid, int attached)
{
struct process_info *proc;
last_sig = GDB_SIGNAL_0;
current_process_handle = proch;
current_process_id = pid;
main_thread_id = 0;
soft_interrupt_requested = 0;
faked_breakpoint = 0;
memset (&current_event, 0, sizeof (current_event));
proc = add_process (pid, attached);
proc->tdesc = win32_tdesc;
child_init_thread_list ();
child_initialization_done = 0;
if (the_low_target.initial_stuff != NULL)
(*the_low_target.initial_stuff) ();
cached_status.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
/* Flush all currently pending debug events (thread and dll list) up
to the initial breakpoint. */
while (1)
{
struct target_waitstatus status;
win32_wait (minus_one_ptid, &status, 0);
/* Note win32_wait doesn't return thread events. */
if (status.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_LOADED)
{
cached_status = status;
break;
}
{
struct thread_resume resume;
resume.thread = minus_one_ptid;
resume.kind = resume_continue;
resume.sig = 0;
win32_resume (&resume, 1);
}
}
#ifndef _WIN32_WCE
/* Now that the inferior has been started and all DLLs have been mapped,
we can iterate over all DLLs and load them in.
We avoid doing it any earlier because, on certain versions of Windows,
LOAD_DLL_DEBUG_EVENTs are sometimes not complete. In particular,
we have seen on Windows 8.1 that the ntdll.dll load event does not
include the DLL name, preventing us from creating an associated SO.
A possible explanation is that ntdll.dll might be mapped before
the SO info gets created by the Windows system -- ntdll.dll is
the first DLL to be reported via LOAD_DLL_DEBUG_EVENT and other DLLs
do not seem to suffer from that problem.
Rather than try to work around this sort of issue, it is much
simpler to just ignore DLL load/unload events during the startup
phase, and then process them all in one batch now. */
win32_add_all_dlls ();
#endif
child_initialization_done = 1;
}
/* Resume all artificially suspended threads if we are continuing
execution. */
static int
continue_one_thread (struct inferior_list_entry *this_thread, void *id_ptr)
{
struct thread_info *thread = (struct thread_info *) this_thread;
int thread_id = * (int *) id_ptr;
win32_thread_info *th = inferior_target_data (thread);
if ((thread_id == -1 || thread_id == th->tid)
&& th->suspended)
{
if (th->context.ContextFlags)
{
win32_set_thread_context (th);
th->context.ContextFlags = 0;
}
if (ResumeThread (th->h) == (DWORD) -1)
{
DWORD err = GetLastError ();
OUTMSG (("warning: ResumeThread failed in continue_one_thread, "
"(error %d): %s\n", (int) err, strwinerror (err)));
}
th->suspended = 0;
}
return 0;
}
static BOOL
child_continue (DWORD continue_status, int thread_id)
{
/* The inferior will only continue after the ContinueDebugEvent
call. */
find_inferior (&all_threads, continue_one_thread, &thread_id);
faked_breakpoint = 0;
if (!ContinueDebugEvent (current_event.dwProcessId,
current_event.dwThreadId,
continue_status))
return FALSE;
return TRUE;
}
/* Fetch register(s) from the current thread context. */
static void
child_fetch_inferior_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int r)
{
int regno;
win32_thread_info *th = thread_rec (current_inferior_ptid (), TRUE);
if (r == -1 || r > NUM_REGS)
child_fetch_inferior_registers (regcache, NUM_REGS);
else
for (regno = 0; regno < r; regno++)
(*the_low_target.fetch_inferior_register) (regcache, th, regno);
}
/* Store a new register value into the current thread context. We don't
change the program's context until later, when we resume it. */
static void
child_store_inferior_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int r)
{
int regno;
win32_thread_info *th = thread_rec (current_inferior_ptid (), TRUE);
if (r == -1 || r == 0 || r > NUM_REGS)
child_store_inferior_registers (regcache, NUM_REGS);
else
for (regno = 0; regno < r; regno++)
(*the_low_target.store_inferior_register) (regcache, th, regno);
}
/* Map the Windows error number in ERROR to a locale-dependent error
message string and return a pointer to it. Typically, the values
for ERROR come from GetLastError.
The string pointed to shall not be modified by the application,
but may be overwritten by a subsequent call to strwinerror
The strwinerror function does not change the current setting
of GetLastError. */
char *
strwinerror (DWORD error)
{
static char buf[1024];
TCHAR *msgbuf;
DWORD lasterr = GetLastError ();
DWORD chars = FormatMessage (FORMAT_MESSAGE_FROM_SYSTEM
| FORMAT_MESSAGE_ALLOCATE_BUFFER,
NULL,
error,
0, /* Default language */
(LPVOID)&msgbuf,
0,
NULL);
if (chars != 0)
{
/* If there is an \r\n appended, zap it. */
if (chars >= 2
&& msgbuf[chars - 2] == '\r'
&& msgbuf[chars - 1] == '\n')
{
chars -= 2;
msgbuf[chars] = 0;
}
if (chars > ((COUNTOF (buf)) - 1))
{
chars = COUNTOF (buf) - 1;
msgbuf [chars] = 0;
}
#ifdef UNICODE
wcstombs (buf, msgbuf, chars + 1);
#else
strncpy (buf, msgbuf, chars + 1);
#endif
LocalFree (msgbuf);
}
else
sprintf (buf, "unknown win32 error (%u)", (unsigned) error);
SetLastError (lasterr);
return buf;
}
static BOOL
create_process (const char *program, char *args,
DWORD flags, PROCESS_INFORMATION *pi)
{
BOOL ret;
#ifdef _WIN32_WCE
wchar_t *p, *wprogram, *wargs;
size_t argslen;
wprogram = alloca ((strlen (program) + 1) * sizeof (wchar_t));
mbstowcs (wprogram, program, strlen (program) + 1);
for (p = wprogram; *p; ++p)
if (L'/' == *p)
*p = L'\\';
argslen = strlen (args);
wargs = alloca ((argslen + 1) * sizeof (wchar_t));
mbstowcs (wargs, args, argslen + 1);
ret = CreateProcessW (wprogram, /* image name */
wargs, /* command line */
NULL, /* security, not supported */
NULL, /* thread, not supported */
FALSE, /* inherit handles, not supported */
flags, /* start flags */
NULL, /* environment, not supported */
NULL, /* current directory, not supported */
NULL, /* start info, not supported */
pi); /* proc info */
#else
STARTUPINFOA si = { sizeof (STARTUPINFOA) };
ret = CreateProcessA (program, /* image name */
args, /* command line */
NULL, /* security */
NULL, /* thread */
TRUE, /* inherit handles */
flags, /* start flags */
NULL, /* environment */
NULL, /* current directory */
&si, /* start info */
pi); /* proc info */
#endif
return ret;
}
/* Start a new process.
PROGRAM is a path to the program to execute.
ARGS is a standard NULL-terminated array of arguments,
to be passed to the inferior as ``argv''.
Returns the new PID on success, -1 on failure. Registers the new
process with the process list. */
static int
win32_create_inferior (char *program, char **program_args)
{
#ifndef USE_WIN32API
char real_path[PATH_MAX];
char *orig_path, *new_path, *path_ptr;
#endif
BOOL ret;
DWORD flags;
char *args;
int argslen;
int argc;
PROCESS_INFORMATION pi;
DWORD err;
/* win32_wait needs to know we're not attaching. */
attaching = 0;
if (!program)
error ("No executable specified, specify executable to debug.\n");
flags = DEBUG_PROCESS | DEBUG_ONLY_THIS_PROCESS;
#ifndef USE_WIN32API
orig_path = NULL;
path_ptr = getenv ("PATH");
if (path_ptr)
{
int size = cygwin_conv_path_list (CCP_POSIX_TO_WIN_A, path_ptr, NULL, 0);
orig_path = alloca (strlen (path_ptr) + 1);
new_path = alloca (size);
strcpy (orig_path, path_ptr);
cygwin_conv_path_list (CCP_POSIX_TO_WIN_A, path_ptr, new_path, size);
setenv ("PATH", new_path, 1);
}
cygwin_conv_path (CCP_POSIX_TO_WIN_A, program, real_path, PATH_MAX);
program = real_path;
#endif
argslen = 1;
for (argc = 1; program_args[argc]; argc++)
argslen += strlen (program_args[argc]) + 1;
args = alloca (argslen);
args[0] = '\0';
for (argc = 1; program_args[argc]; argc++)
{
/* FIXME: Can we do better about quoting? How does Cygwin
handle this? */
strcat (args, " ");
strcat (args, program_args[argc]);
}
OUTMSG2 (("Command line is \"%s\"\n", args));
#ifdef CREATE_NEW_PROCESS_GROUP
flags |= CREATE_NEW_PROCESS_GROUP;
#endif
ret = create_process (program, args, flags, &pi);
err = GetLastError ();
if (!ret && err == ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND)
{
char *exename = alloca (strlen (program) + 5);
strcat (strcpy (exename, program), ".exe");
ret = create_process (exename, args, flags, &pi);
err = GetLastError ();
}
#ifndef USE_WIN32API
if (orig_path)
setenv ("PATH", orig_path, 1);
#endif
if (!ret)
{
error ("Error creating process \"%s%s\", (error %d): %s\n",
program, args, (int) err, strwinerror (err));
}
else
{
OUTMSG2 (("Process created: %s\n", (char *) args));
}
#ifndef _WIN32_WCE
/* On Windows CE this handle can't be closed. The OS reuses
it in the debug events, while the 9x/NT versions of Windows
probably use a DuplicateHandle'd one. */
CloseHandle (pi.hThread);
#endif
do_initial_child_stuff (pi.hProcess, pi.dwProcessId, 0);
return current_process_id;
}
/* Attach to a running process.
PID is the process ID to attach to, specified by the user
or a higher layer. */
static int
win32_attach (unsigned long pid)
{
HANDLE h;
winapi_DebugSetProcessKillOnExit DebugSetProcessKillOnExit = NULL;
DWORD err;
#ifdef _WIN32_WCE
HMODULE dll = GetModuleHandle (_T("COREDLL.DLL"));
#else
HMODULE dll = GetModuleHandle (_T("KERNEL32.DLL"));
#endif
DebugSetProcessKillOnExit = GETPROCADDRESS (dll, DebugSetProcessKillOnExit);
h = OpenProcess (PROCESS_ALL_ACCESS, FALSE, pid);
if (h != NULL)
{
if (DebugActiveProcess (pid))
{
if (DebugSetProcessKillOnExit != NULL)
DebugSetProcessKillOnExit (FALSE);
/* win32_wait needs to know we're attaching. */
attaching = 1;
do_initial_child_stuff (h, pid, 1);
return 0;
}
CloseHandle (h);
}
err = GetLastError ();
error ("Attach to process failed (error %d): %s\n",
(int) err, strwinerror (err));
}
/* Handle OUTPUT_DEBUG_STRING_EVENT from child process. */
static void
handle_output_debug_string (struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus)
{
#define READ_BUFFER_LEN 1024
CORE_ADDR addr;
char s[READ_BUFFER_LEN + 1] = { 0 };
DWORD nbytes = current_event.u.DebugString.nDebugStringLength;
if (nbytes == 0)
return;
if (nbytes > READ_BUFFER_LEN)
nbytes = READ_BUFFER_LEN;
addr = (CORE_ADDR) (size_t) current_event.u.DebugString.lpDebugStringData;
if (current_event.u.DebugString.fUnicode)
{
/* The event tells us how many bytes, not chars, even
in Unicode. */
WCHAR buffer[(READ_BUFFER_LEN + 1) / sizeof (WCHAR)] = { 0 };
if (read_inferior_memory (addr, (unsigned char *) buffer, nbytes) != 0)
return;
wcstombs (s, buffer, (nbytes + 1) / sizeof (WCHAR));
}
else
{
if (read_inferior_memory (addr, (unsigned char *) s, nbytes) != 0)
return;
}
if (strncmp (s, "cYg", 3) != 0)
{
if (!server_waiting)
{
OUTMSG2(("%s", s));
return;
}
monitor_output (s);
}
#undef READ_BUFFER_LEN
}
static void
win32_clear_inferiors (void)
{
if (current_process_handle != NULL)
CloseHandle (current_process_handle);
for_each_inferior (&all_threads, delete_thread_info);
clear_inferiors ();
}
/* Kill all inferiors. */
static int
win32_kill (int pid)
{
struct process_info *process;
if (current_process_handle == NULL)
return -1;
TerminateProcess (current_process_handle, 0);
for (;;)
{
if (!child_continue (DBG_CONTINUE, -1))
break;
if (!WaitForDebugEvent (&current_event, INFINITE))
break;
if (current_event.dwDebugEventCode == EXIT_PROCESS_DEBUG_EVENT)
break;
else if (current_event.dwDebugEventCode == OUTPUT_DEBUG_STRING_EVENT)
{
struct target_waitstatus our_status = { 0 };
handle_output_debug_string (&our_status);
}
}
win32_clear_inferiors ();
process = find_process_pid (pid);
remove_process (process);
return 0;
}
/* Detach from inferior PID. */
static int
win32_detach (int pid)
{
struct process_info *process;
winapi_DebugActiveProcessStop DebugActiveProcessStop = NULL;
winapi_DebugSetProcessKillOnExit DebugSetProcessKillOnExit = NULL;
#ifdef _WIN32_WCE
HMODULE dll = GetModuleHandle (_T("COREDLL.DLL"));
#else
HMODULE dll = GetModuleHandle (_T("KERNEL32.DLL"));
#endif
DebugActiveProcessStop = GETPROCADDRESS (dll, DebugActiveProcessStop);
DebugSetProcessKillOnExit = GETPROCADDRESS (dll, DebugSetProcessKillOnExit);
if (DebugSetProcessKillOnExit == NULL
|| DebugActiveProcessStop == NULL)
return -1;
{
struct thread_resume resume;
resume.thread = minus_one_ptid;
resume.kind = resume_continue;
resume.sig = 0;
win32_resume (&resume, 1);
}
if (!DebugActiveProcessStop (current_process_id))
return -1;
DebugSetProcessKillOnExit (FALSE);
process = find_process_pid (pid);
remove_process (process);
win32_clear_inferiors ();
return 0;
}
static void
win32_mourn (struct process_info *process)
{
remove_process (process);
}
/* Wait for inferiors to end. */
static void
win32_join (int pid)
{
HANDLE h = OpenProcess (PROCESS_ALL_ACCESS, FALSE, pid);
if (h != NULL)
{
WaitForSingleObject (h, INFINITE);
CloseHandle (h);
}
}
/* Return 1 iff the thread with thread ID TID is alive. */
static int
win32_thread_alive (ptid_t ptid)
{
int res;
/* Our thread list is reliable; don't bother to poll target
threads. */
if (find_inferior_id (&all_threads, ptid) != NULL)
res = 1;
else
res = 0;
return res;
}
/* Resume the inferior process. RESUME_INFO describes how we want
to resume. */
static void
win32_resume (struct thread_resume *resume_info, size_t n)
{
DWORD tid;
enum gdb_signal sig;
int step;
win32_thread_info *th;
DWORD continue_status = DBG_CONTINUE;
ptid_t ptid;
/* This handles the very limited set of resume packets that GDB can
currently produce. */
if (n == 1 && ptid_equal (resume_info[0].thread, minus_one_ptid))
tid = -1;
else if (n > 1)
tid = -1;
else
/* Yes, we're ignoring resume_info[0].thread. It'd be tricky to make
the Windows resume code do the right thing for thread switching. */
tid = current_event.dwThreadId;
if (!ptid_equal (resume_info[0].thread, minus_one_ptid))
{
sig = resume_info[0].sig;
step = resume_info[0].kind == resume_step;
}
else
{
sig = 0;
step = 0;
}
if (sig != GDB_SIGNAL_0)
{
if (current_event.dwDebugEventCode != EXCEPTION_DEBUG_EVENT)
{
OUTMSG (("Cannot continue with signal %d here.\n", sig));
}
else if (sig == last_sig)
continue_status = DBG_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED;
else
OUTMSG (("Can only continue with recieved signal %d.\n", last_sig));
}
last_sig = GDB_SIGNAL_0;
/* Get context for the currently selected thread. */
ptid = debug_event_ptid (&current_event);
th = thread_rec (ptid, FALSE);
if (th)
{
if (th->context.ContextFlags)
{
/* Move register values from the inferior into the thread
context structure. */
regcache_invalidate ();
if (step)
{
if (the_low_target.single_step != NULL)
(*the_low_target.single_step) (th);
else
error ("Single stepping is not supported "
"in this configuration.\n");
}
win32_set_thread_context (th);
th->context.ContextFlags = 0;
}
}
/* Allow continuing with the same signal that interrupted us.
Otherwise complain. */
child_continue (continue_status, tid);
}
static void
win32_add_one_solib (const char *name, CORE_ADDR load_addr)
{
char buf[MAX_PATH + 1];
char buf2[MAX_PATH + 1];
#ifdef _WIN32_WCE
WIN32_FIND_DATA w32_fd;
WCHAR wname[MAX_PATH + 1];
mbstowcs (wname, name, MAX_PATH);
HANDLE h = FindFirstFile (wname, &w32_fd);
#else
WIN32_FIND_DATAA w32_fd;
HANDLE h = FindFirstFileA (name, &w32_fd);
#endif
/* The symbols in a dll are offset by 0x1000, which is the
offset from 0 of the first byte in an image - because
of the file header and the section alignment. */
load_addr += 0x1000;
if (h == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
strcpy (buf, name);
else
{
FindClose (h);
strcpy (buf, name);
#ifndef _WIN32_WCE
{
char cwd[MAX_PATH + 1];
char *p;
if (GetCurrentDirectoryA (MAX_PATH + 1, cwd))
{
p = strrchr (buf, '\\');
if (p)
p[1] = '\0';
SetCurrentDirectoryA (buf);
GetFullPathNameA (w32_fd.cFileName, MAX_PATH, buf, &p);
SetCurrentDirectoryA (cwd);
}
}
#endif
}
#ifndef _WIN32_WCE
if (strcasecmp (buf, "ntdll.dll") == 0)
{
GetSystemDirectoryA (buf, sizeof (buf));
strcat (buf, "\\ntdll.dll");
}
#endif
#ifdef __CYGWIN__
cygwin_conv_path (CCP_WIN_A_TO_POSIX, buf, buf2, sizeof (buf2));
#else
strcpy (buf2, buf);
#endif
loaded_dll (buf2, load_addr);
}
static char *
get_image_name (HANDLE h, void *address, int unicode)
{
static char buf[(2 * MAX_PATH) + 1];
DWORD size = unicode ? sizeof (WCHAR) : sizeof (char);
char *address_ptr;
int len = 0;
char b[2];
SIZE_T done;
/* Attempt to read the name of the dll that was detected.
This is documented to work only when actively debugging
a program. It will not work for attached processes. */
if (address == NULL)
return NULL;
#ifdef _WIN32_WCE
/* Windows CE reports the address of the image name,
instead of an address of a pointer into the image name. */
address_ptr = address;
#else
/* See if we could read the address of a string, and that the
address isn't null. */
if (!ReadProcessMemory (h, address, &address_ptr,
sizeof (address_ptr), &done)
|| done != sizeof (address_ptr)
|| !address_ptr)
return NULL;
#endif
/* Find the length of the string */
while (ReadProcessMemory (h, address_ptr + len++ * size, &b, size, &done)
&& (b[0] != 0 || b[size - 1] != 0) && done == size)
continue;
if (!unicode)
ReadProcessMemory (h, address_ptr, buf, len, &done);
else
{
WCHAR *unicode_address = (WCHAR *) alloca (len * sizeof (WCHAR));
ReadProcessMemory (h, address_ptr, unicode_address, len * sizeof (WCHAR),
&done);
WideCharToMultiByte (CP_ACP, 0, unicode_address, len, buf, len, 0, 0);
}
return buf;
}
typedef BOOL (WINAPI *winapi_EnumProcessModules) (HANDLE, HMODULE *,
DWORD, LPDWORD);
typedef BOOL (WINAPI *winapi_GetModuleInformation) (HANDLE, HMODULE,
LPMODULEINFO, DWORD);
typedef DWORD (WINAPI *winapi_GetModuleFileNameExA) (HANDLE, HMODULE,
LPSTR, DWORD);
static winapi_EnumProcessModules win32_EnumProcessModules;
static winapi_GetModuleInformation win32_GetModuleInformation;
static winapi_GetModuleFileNameExA win32_GetModuleFileNameExA;
static BOOL
load_psapi (void)
{
static int psapi_loaded = 0;
static HMODULE dll = NULL;
if (!psapi_loaded)
{
psapi_loaded = 1;
dll = LoadLibrary (TEXT("psapi.dll"));
if (!dll)
return FALSE;
win32_EnumProcessModules =
GETPROCADDRESS (dll, EnumProcessModules);
win32_GetModuleInformation =
GETPROCADDRESS (dll, GetModuleInformation);
win32_GetModuleFileNameExA =
GETPROCADDRESS (dll, GetModuleFileNameExA);
}
return (win32_EnumProcessModules != NULL
&& win32_GetModuleInformation != NULL
&& win32_GetModuleFileNameExA != NULL);
}
#ifndef _WIN32_WCE
/* Iterate over all DLLs currently mapped by our inferior, and
add them to our list of solibs. */
static void
win32_add_all_dlls (void)
{
size_t i;
HMODULE dh_buf[1];
HMODULE *DllHandle = dh_buf;
DWORD cbNeeded;
BOOL ok;
if (!load_psapi ())
return;
cbNeeded = 0;
ok = (*win32_EnumProcessModules) (current_process_handle,
DllHandle,
sizeof (HMODULE),
&cbNeeded);
if (!ok || !cbNeeded)
return;
DllHandle = (HMODULE *) alloca (cbNeeded);
if (!DllHandle)
return;
ok = (*win32_EnumProcessModules) (current_process_handle,
DllHandle,
cbNeeded,
&cbNeeded);
if (!ok)
return;
for (i = 1; i < ((size_t) cbNeeded / sizeof (HMODULE)); i++)
{
MODULEINFO mi;
char dll_name[MAX_PATH];
if (!(*win32_GetModuleInformation) (current_process_handle,
DllHandle[i],
&mi,
sizeof (mi)))
continue;
if ((*win32_GetModuleFileNameExA) (current_process_handle,
DllHandle[i],
dll_name,
MAX_PATH) == 0)
continue;
win32_add_one_solib (dll_name, (CORE_ADDR) (uintptr_t) mi.lpBaseOfDll);
}
}
#endif
typedef HANDLE (WINAPI *winapi_CreateToolhelp32Snapshot) (DWORD, DWORD);
typedef BOOL (WINAPI *winapi_Module32First) (HANDLE, LPMODULEENTRY32);
typedef BOOL (WINAPI *winapi_Module32Next) (HANDLE, LPMODULEENTRY32);
/* Handle a DLL load event.
This function assumes that this event did not occur during inferior
initialization, where their event info may be incomplete (see
do_initial_child_stuff and win32_add_all_dlls for more info on
how we handle DLL loading during that phase). */
static void
handle_load_dll (void)
{
LOAD_DLL_DEBUG_INFO *event = &current_event.u.LoadDll;
char *dll_name;
dll_name = get_image_name (current_process_handle,
event->lpImageName, event->fUnicode);
if (!dll_name)
return;
win32_add_one_solib (dll_name, (CORE_ADDR) (uintptr_t) event->lpBaseOfDll);
}
/* Handle a DLL unload event.
This function assumes that this event did not occur during inferior
initialization, where their event info may be incomplete (see
do_initial_child_stuff and win32_add_one_solib for more info
on how we handle DLL loading during that phase). */
static void
handle_unload_dll (void)
{
CORE_ADDR load_addr =
(CORE_ADDR) (uintptr_t) current_event.u.UnloadDll.lpBaseOfDll;
/* The symbols in a dll are offset by 0x1000, which is the
offset from 0 of the first byte in an image - because
of the file header and the section alignment. */
load_addr += 0x1000;
unloaded_dll (NULL, load_addr);
}
static void
handle_exception (struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus)
{
DWORD code = current_event.u.Exception.ExceptionRecord.ExceptionCode;
ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED;
switch (code)
{
case EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION:
OUTMSG2 (("EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_SEGV;
break;
case STATUS_STACK_OVERFLOW:
OUTMSG2 (("STATUS_STACK_OVERFLOW"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_SEGV;
break;
case STATUS_FLOAT_DENORMAL_OPERAND:
OUTMSG2 (("STATUS_FLOAT_DENORMAL_OPERAND"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_FPE;
break;
case EXCEPTION_ARRAY_BOUNDS_EXCEEDED:
OUTMSG2 (("EXCEPTION_ARRAY_BOUNDS_EXCEEDED"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_FPE;
break;
case STATUS_FLOAT_INEXACT_RESULT:
OUTMSG2 (("STATUS_FLOAT_INEXACT_RESULT"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_FPE;
break;
case STATUS_FLOAT_INVALID_OPERATION:
OUTMSG2 (("STATUS_FLOAT_INVALID_OPERATION"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_FPE;
break;
case STATUS_FLOAT_OVERFLOW:
OUTMSG2 (("STATUS_FLOAT_OVERFLOW"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_FPE;
break;
case STATUS_FLOAT_STACK_CHECK:
OUTMSG2 (("STATUS_FLOAT_STACK_CHECK"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_FPE;
break;
case STATUS_FLOAT_UNDERFLOW:
OUTMSG2 (("STATUS_FLOAT_UNDERFLOW"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_FPE;
break;
case STATUS_FLOAT_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO:
OUTMSG2 (("STATUS_FLOAT_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_FPE;
break;
case STATUS_INTEGER_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO:
OUTMSG2 (("STATUS_INTEGER_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_FPE;
break;
case STATUS_INTEGER_OVERFLOW:
OUTMSG2 (("STATUS_INTEGER_OVERFLOW"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_FPE;
break;
case EXCEPTION_BREAKPOINT:
OUTMSG2 (("EXCEPTION_BREAKPOINT"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP;
#ifdef _WIN32_WCE
/* Remove the initial breakpoint. */
check_breakpoints ((CORE_ADDR) (long) current_event
.u.Exception.ExceptionRecord.ExceptionAddress);
#endif
break;
case DBG_CONTROL_C:
OUTMSG2 (("DBG_CONTROL_C"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_INT;
break;
case DBG_CONTROL_BREAK:
OUTMSG2 (("DBG_CONTROL_BREAK"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_INT;
break;
case EXCEPTION_SINGLE_STEP:
OUTMSG2 (("EXCEPTION_SINGLE_STEP"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP;
break;
case EXCEPTION_ILLEGAL_INSTRUCTION:
OUTMSG2 (("EXCEPTION_ILLEGAL_INSTRUCTION"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_ILL;
break;
case EXCEPTION_PRIV_INSTRUCTION:
OUTMSG2 (("EXCEPTION_PRIV_INSTRUCTION"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_ILL;
break;
case EXCEPTION_NONCONTINUABLE_EXCEPTION:
OUTMSG2 (("EXCEPTION_NONCONTINUABLE_EXCEPTION"));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_ILL;
break;
default:
if (current_event.u.Exception.dwFirstChance)
{
ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
return;
}
OUTMSG2 (("gdbserver: unknown target exception 0x%08x at 0x%s",
(unsigned) current_event.u.Exception.ExceptionRecord.ExceptionCode,
phex_nz ((uintptr_t) current_event.u.Exception.ExceptionRecord.
ExceptionAddress, sizeof (uintptr_t))));
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN;
break;
}
OUTMSG2 (("\n"));
last_sig = ourstatus->value.sig;
}
static void
suspend_one_thread (struct inferior_list_entry *entry)
{
struct thread_info *thread = (struct thread_info *) entry;
win32_thread_info *th = inferior_target_data (thread);
if (!th->suspended)
{
if (SuspendThread (th->h) == (DWORD) -1)
{
DWORD err = GetLastError ();
OUTMSG (("warning: SuspendThread failed in suspend_one_thread, "
"(error %d): %s\n", (int) err, strwinerror (err)));
}
else
th->suspended = 1;
}
}
static void
fake_breakpoint_event (void)
{
OUTMSG2(("fake_breakpoint_event\n"));
faked_breakpoint = 1;
memset (&current_event, 0, sizeof (current_event));
current_event.dwThreadId = main_thread_id;
current_event.dwDebugEventCode = EXCEPTION_DEBUG_EVENT;
current_event.u.Exception.ExceptionRecord.ExceptionCode
= EXCEPTION_BREAKPOINT;
for_each_inferior (&all_threads, suspend_one_thread);
}
#ifdef _WIN32_WCE
static int
auto_delete_breakpoint (CORE_ADDR stop_pc)
{
return 1;
}
#endif
/* Get the next event from the child. */
static int
get_child_debug_event (struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus)
{
ptid_t ptid;
last_sig = GDB_SIGNAL_0;
ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS;
/* Check if GDB sent us an interrupt request. */
check_remote_input_interrupt_request ();
if (soft_interrupt_requested)
{
soft_interrupt_requested = 0;
fake_breakpoint_event ();
goto gotevent;
}
#ifndef _WIN32_WCE
attaching = 0;
#else
if (attaching)
{
/* WinCE doesn't set an initial breakpoint automatically. To
stop the inferior, we flush all currently pending debug
events -- the thread list and the dll list are always
reported immediatelly without delay, then, we suspend all
threads and pretend we saw a trap at the current PC of the
main thread.
Contrary to desktop Windows, Windows CE *does* report the dll
names on LOAD_DLL_DEBUG_EVENTs resulting from a
DebugActiveProcess call. This limits the way we can detect
if all the dlls have already been reported. If we get a real
debug event before leaving attaching, the worst that will
happen is the user will see a spurious breakpoint. */
current_event.dwDebugEventCode = 0;
if (!WaitForDebugEvent (&current_event, 0))
{
OUTMSG2(("no attach events left\n"));
fake_breakpoint_event ();
attaching = 0;
}
else
OUTMSG2(("got attach event\n"));
}
else
#endif
{
/* Keep the wait time low enough for confortable remote
interruption, but high enough so gdbserver doesn't become a
bottleneck. */
if (!WaitForDebugEvent (&current_event, 250))
{
DWORD e = GetLastError();
if (e == ERROR_PIPE_NOT_CONNECTED)
{
/* This will happen if the loader fails to succesfully
load the application, e.g., if the main executable
tries to pull in a non-existing export from a
DLL. */
ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED;
ourstatus->value.integer = 1;
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
}
gotevent:
switch (current_event.dwDebugEventCode)
{
case CREATE_THREAD_DEBUG_EVENT:
OUTMSG2 (("gdbserver: kernel event CREATE_THREAD_DEBUG_EVENT "
"for pid=%u tid=%x)\n",
(unsigned) current_event.dwProcessId,
(unsigned) current_event.dwThreadId));
/* Record the existence of this thread. */
child_add_thread (current_event.dwProcessId,
current_event.dwThreadId,
current_event.u.CreateThread.hThread,
current_event.u.CreateThread.lpThreadLocalBase);
break;
case EXIT_THREAD_DEBUG_EVENT:
OUTMSG2 (("gdbserver: kernel event EXIT_THREAD_DEBUG_EVENT "
"for pid=%u tid=%x\n",
(unsigned) current_event.dwProcessId,
(unsigned) current_event.dwThreadId));
child_delete_thread (current_event.dwProcessId,
current_event.dwThreadId);
current_inferior = (struct thread_info *) all_threads.head;
return 1;
case CREATE_PROCESS_DEBUG_EVENT:
OUTMSG2 (("gdbserver: kernel event CREATE_PROCESS_DEBUG_EVENT "
"for pid=%u tid=%x\n",
(unsigned) current_event.dwProcessId,
(unsigned) current_event.dwThreadId));
CloseHandle (current_event.u.CreateProcessInfo.hFile);
current_process_handle = current_event.u.CreateProcessInfo.hProcess;
main_thread_id = current_event.dwThreadId;
ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_EXECD;
ourstatus->value.execd_pathname = "Main executable";
/* Add the main thread. */
child_add_thread (current_event.dwProcessId,
main_thread_id,
current_event.u.CreateProcessInfo.hThread,
current_event.u.CreateProcessInfo.lpThreadLocalBase);
ourstatus->value.related_pid = debug_event_ptid (&current_event);
#ifdef _WIN32_WCE
if (!attaching)
{
/* Windows CE doesn't set the initial breakpoint
automatically like the desktop versions of Windows do.
We add it explicitly here. It will be removed as soon as
it is hit. */
set_breakpoint_at ((CORE_ADDR) (long) current_event.u
.CreateProcessInfo.lpStartAddress,
auto_delete_breakpoint);
}
#endif
break;
case EXIT_PROCESS_DEBUG_EVENT:
OUTMSG2 (("gdbserver: kernel event EXIT_PROCESS_DEBUG_EVENT "
"for pid=%u tid=%x\n",
(unsigned) current_event.dwProcessId,
(unsigned) current_event.dwThreadId));
ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED;
ourstatus->value.integer = current_event.u.ExitProcess.dwExitCode;
child_continue (DBG_CONTINUE, -1);
CloseHandle (current_process_handle);
current_process_handle = NULL;
break;
case LOAD_DLL_DEBUG_EVENT:
OUTMSG2 (("gdbserver: kernel event LOAD_DLL_DEBUG_EVENT "
"for pid=%u tid=%x\n",
(unsigned) current_event.dwProcessId,
(unsigned) current_event.dwThreadId));
CloseHandle (current_event.u.LoadDll.hFile);
if (! child_initialization_done)
break;
handle_load_dll ();
ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_LOADED;
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP;
break;
case UNLOAD_DLL_DEBUG_EVENT:
OUTMSG2 (("gdbserver: kernel event UNLOAD_DLL_DEBUG_EVENT "
"for pid=%u tid=%x\n",
(unsigned) current_event.dwProcessId,
(unsigned) current_event.dwThreadId));
if (! child_initialization_done)
break;
handle_unload_dll ();
ourstatus->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_LOADED;
ourstatus->value.sig = GDB_SIGNAL_TRAP;
break;
case EXCEPTION_DEBUG_EVENT:
OUTMSG2 (("gdbserver: kernel event EXCEPTION_DEBUG_EVENT "
"for pid=%u tid=%x\n",
(unsigned) current_event.dwProcessId,
(unsigned) current_event.dwThreadId));
handle_exception (ourstatus);
break;
case OUTPUT_DEBUG_STRING_EVENT:
/* A message from the kernel (or Cygwin). */
OUTMSG2 (("gdbserver: kernel event OUTPUT_DEBUG_STRING_EVENT "
"for pid=%u tid=%x\n",
(unsigned) current_event.dwProcessId,
(unsigned) current_event.dwThreadId));
handle_output_debug_string (ourstatus);
break;
default:
OUTMSG2 (("gdbserver: kernel event unknown "
"for pid=%u tid=%x code=%x\n",
(unsigned) current_event.dwProcessId,
(unsigned) current_event.dwThreadId,
(unsigned) current_event.dwDebugEventCode));
break;
}
ptid = debug_event_ptid (&current_event);
current_inferior =
(struct thread_info *) find_inferior_id (&all_threads, ptid);
return 1;
}
/* Wait for the inferior process to change state.
STATUS will be filled in with a response code to send to GDB.
Returns the signal which caused the process to stop. */
static ptid_t
win32_wait (ptid_t ptid, struct target_waitstatus *ourstatus, int options)
{
struct regcache *regcache;
if (cached_status.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE)
{
/* The core always does a wait after creating the inferior, and
do_initial_child_stuff already ran the inferior to the
initial breakpoint (or an exit, if creating the process
fails). Report it now. */
*ourstatus = cached_status;
cached_status.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
return debug_event_ptid (&current_event);
}
while (1)
{
if (!get_child_debug_event (ourstatus))
continue;
switch (ourstatus->kind)
{
case TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED:
OUTMSG2 (("Child exited with retcode = %x\n",
ourstatus->value.integer));
win32_clear_inferiors ();
return pid_to_ptid (current_event.dwProcessId);
case TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED:
case TARGET_WAITKIND_LOADED:
OUTMSG2 (("Child Stopped with signal = %d \n",
ourstatus->value.sig));
regcache = get_thread_regcache (current_inferior, 1);
child_fetch_inferior_registers (regcache, -1);
return debug_event_ptid (&current_event);
default:
OUTMSG (("Ignoring unknown internal event, %d\n", ourstatus->kind));
/* fall-through */
case TARGET_WAITKIND_SPURIOUS:
case TARGET_WAITKIND_EXECD:
/* do nothing, just continue */
child_continue (DBG_CONTINUE, -1);
break;
}
}
}
/* Fetch registers from the inferior process.
If REGNO is -1, fetch all registers; otherwise, fetch at least REGNO. */
static void
win32_fetch_inferior_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int regno)
{
child_fetch_inferior_registers (regcache, regno);
}
/* Store registers to the inferior process.
If REGNO is -1, store all registers; otherwise, store at least REGNO. */
static void
win32_store_inferior_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int regno)
{
child_store_inferior_registers (regcache, regno);
}
/* Read memory from the inferior process. This should generally be
called through read_inferior_memory, which handles breakpoint shadowing.
Read LEN bytes at MEMADDR into a buffer at MYADDR. */
static int
win32_read_inferior_memory (CORE_ADDR memaddr, unsigned char *myaddr, int len)
{
return child_xfer_memory (memaddr, (char *) myaddr, len, 0, 0) != len;
}
/* Write memory to the inferior process. This should generally be
called through write_inferior_memory, which handles breakpoint shadowing.
Write LEN bytes from the buffer at MYADDR to MEMADDR.
Returns 0 on success and errno on failure. */
static int
win32_write_inferior_memory (CORE_ADDR memaddr, const unsigned char *myaddr,
int len)
{
return child_xfer_memory (memaddr, (char *) myaddr, len, 1, 0) != len;
}
/* Send an interrupt request to the inferior process. */
static void
win32_request_interrupt (void)
{
winapi_DebugBreakProcess DebugBreakProcess;
winapi_GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent;
#ifdef _WIN32_WCE
HMODULE dll = GetModuleHandle (_T("COREDLL.DLL"));
#else
HMODULE dll = GetModuleHandle (_T("KERNEL32.DLL"));
#endif
GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent = GETPROCADDRESS (dll, GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent);
if (GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent != NULL
&& GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent (CTRL_BREAK_EVENT, current_process_id))
return;
/* GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent can fail if process id being debugged is
not a process group id.
Fallback to XP/Vista 'DebugBreakProcess', which generates a
breakpoint exception in the interior process. */
DebugBreakProcess = GETPROCADDRESS (dll, DebugBreakProcess);
if (DebugBreakProcess != NULL
&& DebugBreakProcess (current_process_handle))
return;
/* Last resort, suspend all threads manually. */
soft_interrupt_requested = 1;
}
#ifdef _WIN32_WCE
int
win32_error_to_fileio_error (DWORD err)
{
switch (err)
{
case ERROR_BAD_PATHNAME:
case ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND:
case ERROR_INVALID_NAME:
case ERROR_PATH_NOT_FOUND:
return FILEIO_ENOENT;
case ERROR_CRC:
case ERROR_IO_DEVICE:
case ERROR_OPEN_FAILED:
return FILEIO_EIO;
case ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE:
return FILEIO_EBADF;
case ERROR_ACCESS_DENIED:
case ERROR_SHARING_VIOLATION:
return FILEIO_EACCES;
case ERROR_NOACCESS:
return FILEIO_EFAULT;
case ERROR_BUSY:
return FILEIO_EBUSY;
case ERROR_ALREADY_EXISTS:
case ERROR_FILE_EXISTS:
return FILEIO_EEXIST;
case ERROR_BAD_DEVICE:
return FILEIO_ENODEV;
case ERROR_DIRECTORY:
return FILEIO_ENOTDIR;
case ERROR_FILENAME_EXCED_RANGE:
case ERROR_INVALID_DATA:
case ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER:
case ERROR_NEGATIVE_SEEK:
return FILEIO_EINVAL;
case ERROR_TOO_MANY_OPEN_FILES:
return FILEIO_EMFILE;
case ERROR_HANDLE_DISK_FULL:
case ERROR_DISK_FULL:
return FILEIO_ENOSPC;
case ERROR_WRITE_PROTECT:
return FILEIO_EROFS;
case ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED:
return FILEIO_ENOSYS;
}
return FILEIO_EUNKNOWN;
}
static void
wince_hostio_last_error (char *buf)
{
DWORD winerr = GetLastError ();
int fileio_err = win32_error_to_fileio_error (winerr);
sprintf (buf, "F-1,%x", fileio_err);
}
#endif
/* Write Windows OS Thread Information Block address. */
static int
win32_get_tib_address (ptid_t ptid, CORE_ADDR *addr)
{
win32_thread_info *th;
th = thread_rec (ptid, 0);
if (th == NULL)
return 0;
if (addr != NULL)
*addr = th->thread_local_base;
return 1;
}
static struct target_ops win32_target_ops = {
win32_create_inferior,
win32_attach,
win32_kill,
win32_detach,
win32_mourn,
win32_join,
win32_thread_alive,
win32_resume,
win32_wait,
win32_fetch_inferior_registers,
win32_store_inferior_registers,
NULL, /* prepare_to_access_memory */
NULL, /* done_accessing_memory */
win32_read_inferior_memory,
win32_write_inferior_memory,
NULL, /* lookup_symbols */
win32_request_interrupt,
NULL, /* read_auxv */
win32_supports_z_point_type,
win32_insert_point,
win32_remove_point,
win32_stopped_by_watchpoint,
win32_stopped_data_address,
NULL, /* read_offsets */
NULL, /* get_tls_address */
NULL, /* qxfer_spu */
#ifdef _WIN32_WCE
wince_hostio_last_error,
#else
hostio_last_error_from_errno,
#endif
NULL, /* qxfer_osdata */
NULL, /* qxfer_siginfo */
NULL, /* supports_non_stop */
NULL, /* async */
NULL, /* start_non_stop */
NULL, /* supports_multi_process */
NULL, /* handle_monitor_command */
NULL, /* core_of_thread */
NULL, /* read_loadmap */
NULL, /* process_qsupported */
NULL, /* supports_tracepoints */
NULL, /* read_pc */
NULL, /* write_pc */
NULL, /* thread_stopped */
win32_get_tib_address
};
/* Initialize the Win32 backend. */
void
initialize_low (void)
{
set_target_ops (&win32_target_ops);
if (the_low_target.breakpoint != NULL)
set_breakpoint_data (the_low_target.breakpoint,
the_low_target.breakpoint_len);
the_low_target.arch_setup ();
}