97579e709b8c882e32a01ecec40864983429248e
[binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / TODO
1 If you find inaccuracies in this list, please send mail to
2 gdb-patches@sourceware.cygnus.com. If you would like to work on any
3 of these, you should consider sending mail to the same address, to
4 find out whether anyone else is working on it.
5
6
7 Known problems in GDB 5.0
8 =========================
9
10 Below is a list of problems identified during the GDB 5.0 release
11 cycle. People hope to have these problems fixed in a follow-on
12 release.
13
14 (The names in paren indicate people that posted the original problem.)
15
16 --
17
18 GDB doesn't build under IRIX6.4
19
20 Benjamin Gamsa wrote:
21
22 Has anyone successfully built the latest (from cvs) gdb on IRIX6.4 or
23 later? The first problem I hit is that proc-api.c includes
24 sys/user.h, which no longer exists under IRIX6.4. If I comment out
25 that include, the next problem I hit is that PIOCGETPR and PIOCGETU
26 are no longer defined in IRIX6.4 (presumably related to the
27 disappearance of user.h).
28
29 --
30
31 The BFD directory requires bug-fixed AUTOMAKE et.al.
32
33 AUTOMAKE 1.4 incorrectly set the TEXINPUTS environment variable. It
34 contained the full path to texinfo.tex when it should have only
35 contained the directory. The bug has been fixed in the current
36 AUTOMAKE sources. Automake snapshots can be found in:
37 ftp://sourceware.cygnus.com/pub/gdb/snapshots
38 and ftp://sourceware.cygnus.com/pub/binutils
39
40 --
41
42 gdb-cvs fails to build on freebsd-elf
43 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb/2000-04/msg00004.html
44
45 Either the FreeBSD group need to contribute their local GDB changes
46 back to the master sources or someone needs to provides a new
47 (clean-room) implementation. Since the former involves a fairly
48 complicated assignment the latter may be easier. [cagney]
49
50 --
51
52 Generic: lin-thread cannot handle thread exit (Mark Kettenis, Michael
53 Snyder) http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb/2000-q1/msg00525.html
54
55 The thread_db assisted debugging code doesn't handle exiting threads
56 properly, at least in combination with glibc 2.1.3 (the framework is
57 there, just not the actual code). There are at least two problems
58 that prevent this from working.
59
60 As an additional reference point, the pre thread_db code did not work
61 either.
62
63 --
64
65 Java (Anthony Green, David Taylor)
66
67 Anthony Green has a number of Java patches that did not make it into
68 the 5.0 release.
69
70 Patch: java tests
71 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb-patches/2000-q1/msg00512.html
72
73 Patch: java booleans
74 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb-patches/2000-q1/msg00515.html
75
76 Patch: handle N_MAIN stab
77 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb-patches/2000-q1/msg00527.html
78
79 --
80
81 Pascal (Pierre Muller, David Taylor)
82
83 Pierre Muller has contributed patches for adding Pascal Language
84 support to GDB.
85
86 2 pascal language patches inserted in database
87 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb/2000-q1/msg00521.html
88
89 Indent -gnu ?
90 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb/2000-q1/msg00496.html
91
92 --
93
94 GNU/Linux/x86 and random thread signals (and Solaris/SPARC but not
95 Solaris/x86).
96 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb/2000-q1/msg00336.html
97
98 Christopher Blizzard writes:
99
100 So, I've done some more digging into this and it looks like Jim
101 Kingdon has reported this problem in the past:
102
103 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/bug-gdb/1999-10/msg00058.html
104
105 I can reproduce this problem both with and without Tom's patch. Has
106 anyone seen this before? Maybe have a solution for it hanging around?
107 :)
108
109 There's a test case for this documented at:
110
111 when debugging threaded applications you get extra SIGTRAPs
112 http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9565
113
114 [There should be a GDB testcase - cagney]
115
116 --
117
118 Possible regressions with some devel GCCs.
119 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb/2000-q1/msg00475.html
120
121 gcc-2.95.2 outputs a line note *before* the prologue (and one for the
122 closing brace after the epilogue, instead of before it, as it used to
123 be). By disabling the RTL-style prologue generating mechanism
124 (undocumented GCC option -mno-schedule-prologue), you get back the
125 traditional behaviour.
126 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb/2000-q1/msg00510.html
127
128 This should now be fixed.
129
130 --
131
132 RFD: infrun.c: No bpstat_stop_status call after proceed over break?
133 (Peter Schauer)
134 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb-patches/2000-q1/msg00665.html
135
136 GDB misses watchpoint triggers after proceeding over a breakpoint on
137 x86 targets.
138
139 --
140
141 x86 linux GDB and SIGALRM (???)
142 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb/2000-q1/msg00803.html
143
144 I know there are problems with single stepping through signal
145 handlers. These problems were present in 4.18. They were just masked
146 because 4.18 failed to recognize signal handlers. Fixing it is not
147 easy, and will require changes to handle_inferior_event(), that I
148 prefer not to make before the 5.0 release.
149
150 Mark
151
152 --
153
154 Revised UDP support (was: Re: [Fwd: [patch] UDP transport support])
155 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb-patches/2000-04/msg00000.html
156
157 (Broken) support for GDB's remote protocol across UDP is to be
158 included in the follow-on release.
159
160 --
161
162 Can't build IRIX -> arm GDB.
163 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb-patches/2000-04/msg00356.html
164
165 David Whedon writes:
166 > Now I'm building for an embedded arm target. If there is a way of turning
167 > remote-rdi off, I couldn't find it. It looks like it gets built by default
168 > in gdb/configure.tgt(line 58) Anyway, the build dies in
169 > gdb/rdi-share/unixcomm.c. SERPORT1 et. al. never get defined because we
170 > aren't one of the architectures supported.
171
172 --
173
174 Problem with weak functions
175 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb/2000-05/msg00060.html
176
177 Dan Nicolaescu writes:
178 > It seems that gdb-4.95.1 does not display correctly the function when
179 > stoping in weak functions.
180 >
181 > It stops in a function that is defined as weak, not in the function
182 > that is actualy run...
183
184 --
185
186 GDB5 TOT on unixware 7
187 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb/2000-04/msg00119.html
188
189 Robert Lipe writes:
190 > I just spun the top of tree of the GDB5 branch on UnixWare 7. As a
191 > practical matter, the current thread support is somewhat more annoying
192 > than when GDB was thread-unaware.
193
194 --
195
196 Code Cleanups
197 =============
198
199 The following are small cleanups that will hopefully be completed by
200 the follow on to 5.0.
201
202 --
203
204 ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED
205
206 The need for this as almost been eliminated. The next version of GCC
207 (assuming cagney gets the relevant patch committed) will be able to
208 supress unused parameter warnings.
209
210 --
211
212 Eliminate more compiler warnings.
213
214 Of course there also needs to be the usual debate over which warnings
215 are valid and how to best go about this.
216
217 One method: choose a single option; get agreement that it is
218 reasonable; try it out to see if there isn't anything silly about it
219 (-Wunused-parameters is an example of that) then incrementally hack
220 away.
221
222 The other method is to enable all warnings and eliminate them from one
223 file at a time.
224
225 --
226
227 Delete macro TARGET_BYTE_ORDER_SELECTABLE.
228
229 Patches in the database.
230
231 --
232
233 Updated readline
234
235 Readline 4.? is out. A merge wouldn't hurt.
236
237 --
238
239 Purge PARAMS
240
241 Eliminate all uses of PARAMS in GDB's source code.
242
243 --
244
245 Elimination of make_cleanup_func. (Andrew Cagney)
246
247 make_cleanup_func elimination
248 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb-patches/2000-q1/msg00791.html
249 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb-patches/2000-q1/msg00814.html
250
251 --
252
253 Re: Various C++ things
254
255 value_headof/value_from_vtable_info are worthless, and should be removed.
256 The one place in printcmd.c that uses it should use the RTTI functions.
257
258 RTTI for g++ should be using the typeinfo functions rather than the vtables.
259 The typeinfo functions are always at offset 4 from the beginning of the vtable,
260 and are always right. The vtables will have weird names like E::VB sometimes.
261 The typeinfo function will always be "E type_info function", or somesuch.
262
263 value_virtual_fn_field needs to be fixed so there are no failures for virtual
264 functions for C++ using g++.
265
266 Testsuite cases are the major priority right now for C++ support, since i have
267 to make a lot of changes that could potentially break each other.
268
269 --
270
271 Fix ``set architecture <tab>''
272
273 This command should expand to a list of all supported architectures.
274 At present ``info architecture'' needs to be used. That is simply
275 wrong. It involves the use of add_set_enum_cmd().
276
277 --
278
279 GDBARCH cleanup (Andrew Cagney)
280
281 The non-generated parts of gdbarch.{sh,h,c} should be separated out
282 into arch-utils.[hc].
283
284 Document that gdbarch_init_ftype could easily fail because it didn't
285 identify an architecture.
286
287 --
288
289 Migrate qfThreadInfo packet -> qThreadInfo. (Andrew Cagney)
290
291 Add support for packet enable/disable commands with these thread
292 packets. General cleanup.
293
294 [PATCH] Document the ThreadInfo remote protocol queries
295 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb-patches/2000-q1/msg00832.html
296
297 [PATCH] "info threads" queries for remote.c
298 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb-patches/2000-q1/msg00831.html
299
300 --
301
302 General Cleanups / Fixes
303 ========================
304
305 The following are more general cleanups and fixes. They are not tied
306 to any specific release.
307
308 --
309
310 Nuke USG define.
311
312 --
313
314 Eliminate gdb/tui/Makefile.in.
315 Cleanup configury support for optional sub-directories.
316
317 Check how GCC handles multiple front ends for an example of how things
318 could work. A tentative first step is to rationalize things so that
319 all sub directories are handled in a fashion similar to gdb/mi.
320
321 --
322
323 [PATCH/5] src/intl/Makefile.in:distclean additions
324 http://sourceware.cygnus.com/ml/gdb-patches/2000-04/msg00363.html
325
326 Do not forget to merge the patch back into the trunk.
327
328 --
329
330 Update ALPHA so that it uses ``struct frame_extra_info'' instead of
331 EXTRA_FRAME_INFO.
332
333 This is a barrier to replacing mips_extra_func_info with something
334 that works with multi-arch.
335
336 --
337
338 Multi-arch mips_extra_func_info.
339
340 This first needs the alpha to be updated so that it uses ``struct
341 frame_extra_info''.
342
343 --
344
345 Send normal output to gdb_stdout.
346 Send error messages to gdb_stderror.
347 Send debug and log output log gdb_stdlog.
348
349 GDB still contains many cases where (f)printf or printf_filtered () is
350 used when it should be sending the messages to gdb_stderror or
351 gdb_stdlog.
352
353 --
354
355 Rationalize the host-endian code (grep for HOST_BYTE_ORDER).
356
357 At preent defs.h includes <endian.h> (which is linux specific) yet
358 almost nothing depends on it. Suggest "gdb_endian.h" which can also
359 handle <machine/endian.h> and only include that where it is really
360 needed.
361
362 --
363
364 Replace asprintf() calls with xasprintf() calls.
365
366 As with things like strdup() most calls to asprintf() don't check the
367 return value.
368
369 --
370
371 Rationaize savestring(), msavestring() and mstrsave().
372
373 In general libiberty's xstrdup () can be used.
374
375 --
376
377 Eliminate mmalloc() from GDB.
378
379 Also eliminate it from defs.h.
380
381 --
382
383 Check/cleanup MI documentation.
384
385 The list of commands specified in the documentation needs to be
386 checked against the mi-cmds.c table in a mechanical way (so that they
387 two can be kept up-to-date).
388
389 --
390
391 Eliminate error_begin().
392
393 With ui_file, there is no need for the statefull error_begin ()
394 function.
395
396 --
397
398 Add built-by, build-date, tm, xm, nm and anything else into gdb binary
399 so that you can see how the GDB was created.
400
401 Some of these (*m.h) would be added to the generated config.h. That
402 in turn would fix a long standing bug where by the build process many
403 not notice a changed tm.h file. Since everything depends on config.h,
404 a change to *m.h forces a change to config.h and, consequently forces
405 a rebuild.
406
407 --
408
409 Replace gdb_stdtarg with gdb_targout (and possibly gdb_targerr).
410
411 gdb_stdtarg is easily confused with gdb_stdarg.
412
413 --
414
415 Remote protocol doco feedback.
416
417 Too much feedback to mention needs to be merged in (901660). Search
418 for the word ``remote''.
419
420 --
421
422 set/show remote X-packet ...
423
424 ``(gdb) help set remote X-packet'' doesn't list the applicable
425 responses. The help message needs to be expanded.
426
427 --
428
429 Extra ui_file methods - dump.
430
431 These are for debugging / testing. An aside is to set up a whitebox
432 testsuite for key internals such as ui_file.
433
434 --
435
436 Add an "info bfd" command that displays supported object formats,
437 similarly to objdump -i.
438
439 Is there a command already?
440
441 --
442
443 Eliminate PTR. ISO-C allows ``void *''.
444
445 --
446
447 Eliminate abort ().
448
449 GDB should never abort. GDB should either throw ``error ()'' or
450 ``internal_error ()''. Better still GDB should naturally unwind with
451 an error status.
452
453 --
454
455 Architectural Changes
456 =====================
457
458 These are harder than simple cleanups / fixes and, consequently
459 involve more work. Typically an Architectural Change will be broken
460 down into a more digestible set of cleanups and fixes.
461
462 --
463
464 Replace READ_FP() with FRAME_HANDLE().
465
466 READ_FP() is a hangover from the days of the vax when the ABI really
467 did have a frame pointer register. Modern architectures typically
468 construct a virtual frame-handle from the stack pointer and various
469 other bits of string.
470
471 Unfortunatly GDB still treats this synthetic FP register as though it
472 is real. That in turn really confuses users (arm and ``print $fp'' VS
473 ``info registers fp''). The synthetic FP should be separated out of
474 the true register set presented to the user.
475
476 --
477
478 MI's input does not use buffering.
479
480 At present the MI interface reads raw characters of from an unbuffered
481 FD. This is to avoid several nasty buffer/race conditions. That code
482 should be changed so that it registers its self with the event loop
483 (on the input FD) and then push commands up to MI as they arrive.
484
485 The serial code already does this.
486
487 --
488
489 Register Cache Cleanup (below from Andrew Cagney)
490
491 I would depict the current register architecture as something like:
492
493 High GDB --> Low GDB
494 | |
495 \|/ \|/
496 --- REG NR -----
497 |
498 register + REGISTER_BYTE(reg_nr)
499 |
500 \|/
501 -------------------------
502 | extern register[] |
503 -------------------------
504
505 where neither the high (valops.c et.al.) or low gdb (*-tdep.c) are
506 really clear on what mechanisms they should be using to manipulate that
507 buffer. Further, much code assumes, dangerously, that registers are
508 contigious. Having got mips-tdep.c to support multiple ABIs, believe
509 me, that is a bad assumption. Finally, that register cache layout is
510 determined by the current remote/local target and _not_ the less
511 specific target ISA. In fact, in many cases it is determined by the
512 somewhat arbitrary layout of the [gG] packets!
513
514
515 How I would like the register file to work is more like:
516
517
518 High GDB
519 |
520 \|/
521 pseudo reg-nr
522 |
523 map pseudo <->
524 random cache
525 bytes
526 |
527 \|/
528 ------------
529 | register |
530 | cache |
531 ------------
532 /|\
533 |
534 map random cache
535 bytes to target
536 dependant i-face
537 /|\
538 |
539 target dependant
540 such as [gG] packet
541 or ptrace buffer
542
543 The main objectives being:
544
545 o a clear separation between the low
546 level target and the high level GDB
547
548 o a mechanism that solves the general
549 problem of register aliases, overlaps
550 etc instead of treating them as optional
551 extras that can be wedged in as an after
552 thought (that is a reasonable description
553 of the current code).
554
555 Identify then solve the hard case and the
556 rest just falls out. GDB solved the easy
557 case and then tried to ignore the real
558 world :-)
559
560 o a removal of the assumption that the
561 mapping between the register cache
562 and virtual registers is largely static.
563 If you flip the USR/SSR stack register
564 select bit in the status-register then
565 the corresponding stack registers should
566 reflect the change.
567
568 o a mechanism that clearly separates the
569 gdb internal register cache from any
570 target (not architecture) dependant
571 specifics such as [gG] packets.
572
573 Of course, like anything, it sounds good in theory. In reality, it
574 would have to contend with many<->many relationships at both the
575 virt<->cache and cache<->target level. For instance:
576
577 virt<->cache
578 Modifying an mmx register may involve
579 scattering values across both FP and
580 mmpx specific parts of a buffer
581
582 cache<->target
583 When writing back a SP it may need to
584 both be written to both SP and USP.
585
586
587 Hmm,
588
589 Rather than let this like the last time it was discussed, just slip, I'm
590 first going to add this e-mail (+ references) to TODO. I'd then like to
591 sketch out a broad strategy I think could get us there.
592
593
594 First thing I'd suggest is separating out the ``extern registers[]''
595 code so that we can at least identify what is using it. At present
596 things are scattered across many files. That way we can at least
597 pretend that there is a cache instead of a global array :-)
598
599 I'd then suggest someone putting up a proposal for the pseudo-reg /
600 high-level side interface so that code can be adopted to it. For old
601 code, initially a blanket rename of write_register_bytes() to
602 deprecated_write_register_bytes() would help.
603
604 Following that would, finaly be the corresponding changes to the target.
605
606 --
607
608 Fix ``I'm sorry, Dave, I can't do that.'' from symfile.c.
609
610 This requires internationalization.
611
612 --
613
614 Check that GDB can handle all BFD architectures (Andrew Cagney)
615
616 There should be a test that checks that BFD/GDB are in sync with
617 regard to architecture changes. Something like a test that first
618 queries GDB for all supported architectures and then feeds each back
619 to GDB.. Anyone interested in learning how to write tests? :-)
620
621 --
622
623 Add support for Modula3
624
625 Get DEC/Compaq to contribute their Modula-3 support.
626
627 --
628
629 Convert ALL architectures to MULTI-ARCH.
630
631 --
632
633 Convert GDB build process to AUTOMAKE.
634
635 --
636
637 Restructure gdb directory tree so that it avoids any 8.3 and 14
638 filename problems.
639
640 --
641
642 Can the xdep files be replaced by autoconf?
643 Can the tm.h and nm.h files be eliminated by multi-arch.
644
645 --
646
647 Add a transcript mechanism to GDB.
648
649 Such a mechanism might log all gdb input and output to a file in a
650 form that would allow it to be replayed. It could involve ``gdb
651 --transcript=FILE'' or it could involve ``(gdb) transcript file''.
652
653 --
654
655 Make MI interface accessable from existing CLI.
656
657 --
658
659 Select the initial multi-arch ISA / ABI based on --target or similar.
660
661 At present the default is based on what ever is first in the BFD
662 archures table. It should be determined based on the ``--target=...''
663 name.
664
665 --
666
667 Truly multi-arch.
668
669 Enable the code to recognize --enable-targets=.... like BINUTILS does.
670
671 --
672
673 Add a breakpoint-edit command to MI.
674
675 It would be similar to MI's breakpoint create but would apply to an
676 existing breakpoint. It saves the need to delete/create breakpoints
677 when ever they are changed.
678
679 --
680
681 Add directory path to MI breakpoint.
682
683 That way the GUI's task of finding the file within which the
684 breakpoint was set is simplified.
685
686 --
687
688 Re-do GDB's output pager.
689
690 GDB's output pager still relies on people correctly using *_filtered
691 for gdb_stdout and *_unfiltered for gdb_stdlog / gdb_stderr.
692 Hopefully, with all normal output going to gdb_stdout, the pager can
693 just look at the ui_file that the output is on and then use that to
694 decide what to do about paging. Sounds good in theory.
695
696 --
697
698 Add mechanism to reject expression classes to MI
699
700 There are situtations where you don't want GDB's expression
701 parser/evaluator to perform inferior function calls or variable
702 assignments.
703
704 --
705
706 Remove sideffects from libgdb breakpoint create function.
707
708 The user can use the CLI to create a breakpoint with partial
709 information - no file (gdb would use the file from the last
710 breakpoint).
711
712 The libgdb interface currently affects that environment which can lead
713 to confusion when a user is setting breakpoints via both the MI and
714 the CLI.
715
716 This is also a good example of how getting the CLI ``right'' will be
717 hard.
718
719 --
720
721 GDB doesn't recover gracefully from remote protocol errors.
722
723 GDB wasn't checking for NAKs from the remote target. Instead a NAK is
724 ignored and a timeout is required before GDB retries. A pre-cursor to
725 fixing this this is making GDB's remote protocol packet more robust.
726
727 While downloading to a remote protocol target, gdb ignores packet
728 errors in so far as it will continue to edownload with chunk N+1 even
729 if chunk N was not correctly sent. This causes gdb.base/remote.exp to
730 take a painfully long time to run. As a PS that test needs to be
731 fixed so that it builds on 16 bit machines.
732
733 --
734
735 Move gdb_lasterr to ui_out?
736
737 The way GDB throws errors and records them needs a re-think. ui_out
738 handles the correct output well. It doesn't resolve what to do with
739 output / error-messages when things go wrong.
740
741 --
742
743 Fix implementation of ``target xxx''.
744
745 At present when the user specifies ``target xxxx'', the CLI maps that
746 directly onto a target open method. It is then assumed that the
747 target open method should do all sorts of complicated things as this
748 is the only chance it has. Check how the various remote targets
749 duplicate the target operations. Check also how the various targets
750 behave differently for purely arbitrary reasons.
751
752 What should happen is that ``target xxxx'' should call a generic
753 ``target'' function and that should then co-ordinate the opening of
754 ``xxxx''. This becomes especially important when you're trying to
755 open an asynchronous target that may need to perform background tasks
756 as part of the ``attach'' phase.
757
758 Unfortunatly, due to limitations in the old/creaking command.h
759 interface, that isn't possible. The function being called isn't told
760 of the ``xxx'' or any other context information.
761
762 Consequently a precursor to fixing ``target xxxx'' is to clean up the
763 CLI code so that it passes to the callback function (attatched to a
764 command) useful information such as the actual command and a context
765 for that command. Other changes such as making ``struct command''
766 opaque may also help.
767
768 --
769
770 Document trace machinery
771
772 --
773
774 Document overlay machinery.
775
776 --
777
778 Legacy Wish List
779 ================
780
781 This list is not up to date, and opinions vary about the importance or
782 even desirability of some of the items. If you do fix something, it
783 always pays to check the below.
784
785 --
786
787 @c This does not work (yet if ever). FIXME.
788 @c @item --parse=@var{lang} @dots{}
789 @c Configure the @value{GDBN} expression parser to parse the listed languages.
790 @c @samp{all} configures @value{GDBN} for all supported languages. To get a
791 @c list of all supported languages, omit the argument. Without this
792 @c option, @value{GDBN} is configured to parse all supported languages.
793
794 --
795
796 START_INFERIOR_TRAPS_EXPECTED need never be defined to 2, since that
797 is its default value. Clean this up.
798
799 --
800
801 It should be possible to use symbols from shared libraries before we know
802 exactly where the libraries will be loaded. E.g. "b perror" before running
803 the program. This could maybe be done as an extension of the "breakpoint
804 re-evaluation" after new symbols are loaded.
805
806 --
807
808 Make single_step() insert and remove breakpoints in one operation.
809
810 --
811
812 Speed up single stepping by avoiding extraneous ptrace calls.
813
814 --
815
816 Speed up single stepping by not inserting and removing breakpoints
817 each time the inferior starts and stops.
818
819 Breakpoints should not be inserted and deleted all the time. Only the
820 one(s) there should be removed when we have to step over one. Support
821 breakpoints that don't have to be removed to step over them.
822
823 [this has resulted in numerous debates. The issue isn't clear cut]
824
825 --
826
827 Provide "voodoo" debugging of core files. This creates a zombie
828 process as a child of the debugger, and loads it up with the data,
829 stack, and regs of the core file. This allows you to call functions
830 in the executable, to manipulate the data in the core file.
831
832 [you wish]
833
834 --
835
836 GDB reopens the source file on every line, as you "next" through it.
837
838 [still true? I've a memory of this being fixed]
839
840 --
841
842 Perhaps "i source" should take an argument like that of "list".
843
844 --
845
846 Remove "at 0xnnnn" from the "b foo" response, if `print address off' and if
847 it matches the source line indicated.
848
849 --
850
851 The prompt at end of screen should accept space as well as CR.
852
853 --
854
855 Backtrace should point out what the currently selected frame is, in
856 its display, perhaps showing "@3 foo (bar, ...)" or ">3 foo (bar,
857 ...)" rather than "#3 foo (bar, ...)".
858
859 --
860
861 "i program" should work for core files, and display more info, like what
862 actually caused it to die.
863
864 --
865
866 "x/10i" should shorten the long name, if any, on subsequent lines.
867
868 --
869
870 "next" over a function that longjumps, never stops until next time you happen
871 to get to that spot by accident. E.g. "n" over execute_command which has
872 an error.
873
874 --
875
876 "set zeroprint off", don't bother printing members of structs which
877 are entirely zero. Useful for those big structs with few useful
878 members.
879
880 --
881
882 GDB does four ioctl's for every command, probably switching terminal modes
883 to/from inferior or for readline or something.
884
885 --
886
887 terminal_ours versus terminal_inferior: cache state. Switch should be a noop
888 if the state is the same, too.
889
890 --
891
892 "i frame" shows wrong "arglist at" location, doesn't show where the args
893 should be found, only their actual values.
894
895 --
896
897 There should be a way for "set" commands to validate the new setting
898 before it takes effect.
899
900 --
901
902 "ena d" is ambiguous, why? "ena delete" seems to think it is a command!
903
904 --
905
906 i line VAR produces "Line number not known for symbol ``var''.". I
907 thought we were stashing that info now!
908
909 --
910
911 We should be able to write to random files at hex offsets like adb.
912
913 --
914
915 Make "target xxx" command interruptible.
916
917 --
918
919 [elena - delete this]
920
921 Handle add_file with separate text, data, and bss addresses. Maybe
922 handle separate addresses for each segment in the object file?
923
924 --
925
926 [Jimb/Elena delete this one]
927
928 Handle free_named_symtab to cope with multiply-loaded object files
929 in a dynamic linking environment. Should remember the last copy loaded,
930 but not get too snowed if it finds references to the older copy.
931
932 --
933
934 [elena delete this also]
935
936 Remove all references to:
937 text_offset
938 data_offset
939 text_data_start
940 text_end
941 exec_data_offset
942 ...
943 now that we have BFD. All remaining are in machine dependent files.
944
945 --
946
947 Re-organize help categories into things that tend to fit on a screen
948 and hang together.
949
950 --
951
952 Add in commands like ADB's for searching for patterns, etc. We should
953 be able to examine and patch raw unsymboled binaries as well in gdb as
954 we can in adb. (E.g. increase the timeout in /bin/login without source).
955
956 [actually, add ADB interface :-]
957
958 --
959
960 When doing "step" or "next", if a few lines of source are skipped between
961 the previous line and the current one, print those lines, not just the
962 last line of a multiline statement.
963
964 --
965
966 Handling of "&" address-of operator needs some serious overhaul
967 for ANSI C and consistency on arrays and functions.
968 For "float point[15];":
969 ptype &point[4] ==> Attempt to take address of non-lvalue.
970 For "char *malloc();":
971 ptype malloc ==> "char *()"; should be same as
972 ptype &malloc ==> "char *(*)()"
973 call printf ("%x\n", malloc) ==> weird value, should be same as
974 call printf ("%x\n", &malloc) ==> correct value
975
976 --
977
978 Fix dbxread.c symbol reading in the presence of interrupts. It
979 currently leaves a cleanup to blow away the entire symbol table when a
980 QUIT occurs. (What's wrong with that? -kingdon, 28 Oct 1993).
981
982 [I suspect that the grype was that, on a slow system, you might want
983 to cntrl-c and get just half the symbols and then load the rest later
984 - scary to be honest]
985
986 --
987
988 Mipsread.c reads include files depth-first, because the dependencies
989 in the psymtabs are way too inclusive (it seems to me). Figure out what
990 really depends on what, to avoid recursing 20 or 30 times while reading
991 real symtabs.
992
993 --
994
995 value_add() should be subtracting the lower bound of arrays, if known,
996 and possibly checking against the upper bound for error reporting.
997
998 --
999
1000 When listing source lines, check for a preceding \n, to verify that
1001 the file hasn't changed out from under us.
1002
1003 [fixed by some other means I think. That hack wouldn't actually work
1004 reliably - the file might move such that another \n appears. ]
1005
1006 --
1007
1008 Get all the remote systems (where the protocol allows it) to be able to
1009 stop the remote system when the GDB user types ^C (like remote.c
1010 does). For ebmon, use ^Ak.
1011
1012 --
1013
1014 Possible feature: A version of the "disassemble" command which shows
1015 both source and assembly code ("set symbol-filename on" is a partial
1016 solution).
1017
1018 [has this been done? It was certainly done for MI and GDBtk]
1019
1020 --
1021
1022 investigate "x/s 0" (right now stops early) (I think maybe GDB is
1023 using a 0 address for bad purposes internally).
1024
1025 --
1026
1027 Make "info path" and path_command work again (but independent of the
1028 environment either of gdb or that we'll pass to the inferior).
1029
1030 --
1031
1032 Make GDB understand the GCC feature for putting octal constants in
1033 enums. Make it so overflow on an enum constant does not error_type
1034 the whole type. Allow arbitrarily large enums with type attributes.
1035 Put all this stuff in the testsuite.
1036
1037 --
1038
1039 Make TYPE_CODE_ERROR with a non-zero TYPE_LENGTH more useful (print
1040 the value in hex; process type attributes). Add this to the
1041 testsuite. This way future compilers can add new types and old
1042 versions of GDB can do something halfway reasonable.
1043
1044 --
1045
1046 Fix mdebugread.c:parse_type to do fundamental types right (see
1047 rs6000_builtin_type in stabsread.c for what "right" is--the point is
1048 that the debug format fixes the sizes of these things and it shouldn't
1049 depend on stuff like TARGET_PTR_BIT and so on. For mdebug, there seem
1050 to be separate bt* codes for 64 bit and 32 bit things, and GDB should
1051 be aware of that). Also use a switch statement for clarity and speed.
1052
1053 --
1054
1055 Investigate adding symbols in target_load--some targets do, some
1056 don't.
1057
1058 --
1059
1060 Put dirname in psymtabs and change lookup*symtab to use dirname (so
1061 /foo/bar.c works whether compiled by cc /foo/bar.c, or cd /foo; cc
1062 bar.c).
1063
1064 --
1065
1066 Merge xcoffread.c and coffread.c. Use breakpoint_re_set instead of
1067 fixup_breakpoints.
1068
1069 --
1070
1071 Make a watchpoint which contains a function call an error (it is
1072 broken now, making it work is probably not worth the effort).
1073
1074 --
1075
1076 New test case based on weird.exp but in which type numbers are not
1077 renumbered (thus multiply defining a type). This currently causes an
1078 infinite loop on "p v_comb".
1079
1080 --
1081
1082 [Hey! Hint Hint Delete Delete!!!]
1083
1084 Fix 386 floating point so that floating point registers are real
1085 registers (but code can deal at run-time if they are missing, like
1086 mips and 68k). This would clean up "info float" and related stuff.
1087
1088 --
1089
1090 gcc -g -c enummask.c then gdb enummask.o, then "p v". GDB complains
1091 about not being able to access memory location 0.
1092
1093 -------------------- enummask.c
1094 enum mask
1095 {
1096 ANIMAL = 0,
1097 VEGETABLE = 1,
1098 MINERAL = 2,
1099 BASIC_CATEGORY = 3,
1100
1101 WHITE = 0,
1102 BLUE = 4,
1103 GREEN = 8,
1104 BLACK = 0xc,
1105 COLOR = 0xc,
1106
1107 ALIVE = 0x10,
1108
1109 LARGE = 0x20
1110 } v;
1111
1112 --
1113
1114 If try to modify value in file with "set write off" should give
1115 appropriate error not "cannot access memory at address 0x65e0".
1116
1117 --
1118
1119 Allow core file without exec file on RS/6000.
1120
1121 --
1122
1123 Make sure "shell" with no arguments works right on DOS.
1124
1125 --
1126
1127 Make gdb.ini (as well as .gdbinit) be checked on all platforms, so
1128 the same directory can be NFS-mounted on unix or DOS, and work the
1129 same way.
1130
1131 --
1132
1133 [Is this another delete???]
1134
1135 Get SECT_OFF_TEXT stuff out of objfile_relocate (might be needed to
1136 get RS/6000 to work right, might not be immediately relevant).
1137
1138 --
1139
1140 Work out some kind of way to allow running the inferior to be done as
1141 a sub-execution of, eg. breakpoint command lists. Currently running
1142 the inferior interupts any command list execution. This would require
1143 some rewriting of wait_for_inferior & friends, and hence should
1144 probably be done in concert with the above.
1145
1146 --
1147
1148 Add function arguments to gdb user defined functions.
1149
1150 --
1151
1152 Add convenience variables that refer to exec file, symbol file,
1153 selected frame source file, selected frame function, selected frame
1154 line number, etc.
1155
1156 --
1157
1158 Add a "suspend" subcommand of the "continue" command to suspend gdb
1159 while continuing execution of the subprocess. Useful when you are
1160 debugging servers and you want to dodge out and initiate a connection
1161 to a server running under gdb.
1162
1163 [hey async!!]
1164
1165 --
1166
1167 Modify the handling of symbols grouped through BINCL/EINCL stabs to
1168 allocate a partial symtab for each BINCL/EINCL grouping. This will
1169 seriously decrease the size of inter-psymtab dependencies and hence
1170 lessen the amount that needs to be read in when a new source file is
1171 accessed.
1172
1173 --
1174
1175 [Comming...]
1176
1177 Modify gdb to work correctly with Pascal.
1178
1179 --
1180
1181 Add a command for searching memory, a la adb. It specifies size,
1182 mask, value, start address. ADB searches until it finds it or hits
1183 an error (or is interrupted).
1184
1185 --
1186
1187 Remove the range and type checking code and documentation, if not
1188 going to implement.
1189
1190 # Local Variables:
1191 # mode: text
1192 # End: