Delete unused or undefined functions.
[binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / breakpoint.c
1 /* Everything about breakpoints, for GDB.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995,
4 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007,
5 2008, 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6
7 This file is part of GDB.
8
9 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
10 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
11 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
12 (at your option) any later version.
13
14 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
15 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
16 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
17 GNU General Public License for more details.
18
19 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
20 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
21
22 #include "defs.h"
23 #include "arch-utils.h"
24 #include <ctype.h>
25 #include "hashtab.h"
26 #include "symtab.h"
27 #include "frame.h"
28 #include "breakpoint.h"
29 #include "tracepoint.h"
30 #include "gdbtypes.h"
31 #include "expression.h"
32 #include "gdbcore.h"
33 #include "gdbcmd.h"
34 #include "value.h"
35 #include "command.h"
36 #include "inferior.h"
37 #include "gdbthread.h"
38 #include "target.h"
39 #include "language.h"
40 #include "gdb_string.h"
41 #include "demangle.h"
42 #include "annotate.h"
43 #include "symfile.h"
44 #include "objfiles.h"
45 #include "source.h"
46 #include "linespec.h"
47 #include "completer.h"
48 #include "gdb.h"
49 #include "ui-out.h"
50 #include "cli/cli-script.h"
51 #include "gdb_assert.h"
52 #include "block.h"
53 #include "solib.h"
54 #include "solist.h"
55 #include "observer.h"
56 #include "exceptions.h"
57 #include "memattr.h"
58 #include "ada-lang.h"
59 #include "top.h"
60 #include "wrapper.h"
61 #include "valprint.h"
62 #include "jit.h"
63 #include "xml-syscall.h"
64
65 /* readline include files */
66 #include "readline/readline.h"
67 #include "readline/history.h"
68
69 /* readline defines this. */
70 #undef savestring
71
72 #include "mi/mi-common.h"
73
74 /* Arguments to pass as context to some catch command handlers. */
75 #define CATCH_PERMANENT ((void *) (uintptr_t) 0)
76 #define CATCH_TEMPORARY ((void *) (uintptr_t) 1)
77
78 /* Prototypes for local functions. */
79
80 static void enable_delete_command (char *, int);
81
82 static void enable_delete_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *);
83
84 static void enable_once_command (char *, int);
85
86 static void enable_once_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *);
87
88 static void disable_command (char *, int);
89
90 static void enable_command (char *, int);
91
92 static void map_breakpoint_numbers (char *, void (*)(struct breakpoint *));
93
94 static void ignore_command (char *, int);
95
96 static int breakpoint_re_set_one (void *);
97
98 static void clear_command (char *, int);
99
100 static void catch_command (char *, int);
101
102 static void watch_command (char *, int);
103
104 static int can_use_hardware_watchpoint (struct value *);
105
106 static void break_command_1 (char *, int, int);
107
108 static void mention (struct breakpoint *);
109
110 /* This function is used in gdbtk sources and thus can not be made static. */
111 struct breakpoint *set_raw_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
112 struct symtab_and_line,
113 enum bptype);
114
115 static void breakpoint_adjustment_warning (CORE_ADDR, CORE_ADDR, int, int);
116
117 static CORE_ADDR adjust_breakpoint_address (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
118 CORE_ADDR bpaddr,
119 enum bptype bptype);
120
121 static void describe_other_breakpoints (struct gdbarch *,
122 struct program_space *, CORE_ADDR,
123 struct obj_section *, int);
124
125 static int breakpoint_address_match (struct address_space *aspace1,
126 CORE_ADDR addr1,
127 struct address_space *aspace2,
128 CORE_ADDR addr2);
129
130 static void breakpoints_info (char *, int);
131
132 static void breakpoint_1 (int, int);
133
134 static bpstat bpstat_alloc (const struct bp_location *, bpstat);
135
136 static int breakpoint_cond_eval (void *);
137
138 static void cleanup_executing_breakpoints (void *);
139
140 static void commands_command (char *, int);
141
142 static void condition_command (char *, int);
143
144 static int get_number_trailer (char **, int);
145
146 void set_breakpoint_count (int);
147
148 typedef enum
149 {
150 mark_inserted,
151 mark_uninserted
152 }
153 insertion_state_t;
154
155 static int remove_breakpoint (struct bp_location *, insertion_state_t);
156 static int remove_breakpoint_1 (struct bp_location *, insertion_state_t);
157
158 static enum print_stop_action print_it_typical (bpstat);
159
160 static enum print_stop_action print_bp_stop_message (bpstat bs);
161
162 static int watchpoint_check (void *);
163
164 static void maintenance_info_breakpoints (char *, int);
165
166 static int hw_breakpoint_used_count (void);
167
168 static int hw_watchpoint_used_count (enum bptype, int *);
169
170 static void hbreak_command (char *, int);
171
172 static void thbreak_command (char *, int);
173
174 static void watch_command_1 (char *, int, int);
175
176 static void rwatch_command (char *, int);
177
178 static void awatch_command (char *, int);
179
180 static void do_enable_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *, enum bpdisp);
181
182 static void stop_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
183
184 static void stopin_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
185
186 static void stopat_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
187
188 static char *ep_parse_optional_if_clause (char **arg);
189
190 static void catch_exception_command_1 (enum exception_event_kind ex_event,
191 char *arg, int tempflag, int from_tty);
192
193 static void tcatch_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
194
195 static void ep_skip_leading_whitespace (char **s);
196
197 static int single_step_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *,
198 CORE_ADDR pc);
199
200 static void free_bp_location (struct bp_location *loc);
201
202 static struct bp_location *allocate_bp_location (struct breakpoint *bpt);
203
204 static void update_global_location_list (int);
205
206 static void update_global_location_list_nothrow (int);
207
208 static int is_hardware_watchpoint (struct breakpoint *bpt);
209
210 static void insert_breakpoint_locations (void);
211
212 static int syscall_catchpoint_p (struct breakpoint *b);
213
214 static void tracepoints_info (char *, int);
215
216 static void delete_trace_command (char *, int);
217
218 static void enable_trace_command (char *, int);
219
220 static void disable_trace_command (char *, int);
221
222 static void trace_pass_command (char *, int);
223
224 static void skip_prologue_sal (struct symtab_and_line *sal);
225
226
227 /* Flag indicating that a command has proceeded the inferior past the
228 current breakpoint. */
229
230 static int breakpoint_proceeded;
231
232 static const char *
233 bpdisp_text (enum bpdisp disp)
234 {
235 /* NOTE: the following values are a part of MI protocol and represent
236 values of 'disp' field returned when inferior stops at a breakpoint. */
237 static char *bpdisps[] = {"del", "dstp", "dis", "keep"};
238 return bpdisps[(int) disp];
239 }
240
241 /* Prototypes for exported functions. */
242 /* If FALSE, gdb will not use hardware support for watchpoints, even
243 if such is available. */
244 static int can_use_hw_watchpoints;
245
246 static void
247 show_can_use_hw_watchpoints (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
248 struct cmd_list_element *c,
249 const char *value)
250 {
251 fprintf_filtered (file, _("\
252 Debugger's willingness to use watchpoint hardware is %s.\n"),
253 value);
254 }
255
256 /* If AUTO_BOOLEAN_FALSE, gdb will not attempt to create pending breakpoints.
257 If AUTO_BOOLEAN_TRUE, gdb will automatically create pending breakpoints
258 for unrecognized breakpoint locations.
259 If AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO, gdb will query when breakpoints are unrecognized. */
260 static enum auto_boolean pending_break_support;
261 static void
262 show_pending_break_support (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
263 struct cmd_list_element *c,
264 const char *value)
265 {
266 fprintf_filtered (file, _("\
267 Debugger's behavior regarding pending breakpoints is %s.\n"),
268 value);
269 }
270
271 /* If 1, gdb will automatically use hardware breakpoints for breakpoints
272 set with "break" but falling in read-only memory.
273 If 0, gdb will warn about such breakpoints, but won't automatically
274 use hardware breakpoints. */
275 static int automatic_hardware_breakpoints;
276 static void
277 show_automatic_hardware_breakpoints (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
278 struct cmd_list_element *c,
279 const char *value)
280 {
281 fprintf_filtered (file, _("\
282 Automatic usage of hardware breakpoints is %s.\n"),
283 value);
284 }
285
286 /* If on, gdb will keep breakpoints inserted even as inferior is
287 stopped, and immediately insert any new breakpoints. If off, gdb
288 will insert breakpoints into inferior only when resuming it, and
289 will remove breakpoints upon stop. If auto, GDB will behave as ON
290 if in non-stop mode, and as OFF if all-stop mode.*/
291
292 static const char always_inserted_auto[] = "auto";
293 static const char always_inserted_on[] = "on";
294 static const char always_inserted_off[] = "off";
295 static const char *always_inserted_enums[] = {
296 always_inserted_auto,
297 always_inserted_off,
298 always_inserted_on,
299 NULL
300 };
301 static const char *always_inserted_mode = always_inserted_auto;
302 static void
303 show_always_inserted_mode (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
304 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
305 {
306 if (always_inserted_mode == always_inserted_auto)
307 fprintf_filtered (file, _("\
308 Always inserted breakpoint mode is %s (currently %s).\n"),
309 value,
310 breakpoints_always_inserted_mode () ? "on" : "off");
311 else
312 fprintf_filtered (file, _("Always inserted breakpoint mode is %s.\n"), value);
313 }
314
315 int
316 breakpoints_always_inserted_mode (void)
317 {
318 return (always_inserted_mode == always_inserted_on
319 || (always_inserted_mode == always_inserted_auto && non_stop));
320 }
321
322 void _initialize_breakpoint (void);
323
324 /* Are we executing breakpoint commands? */
325 static int executing_breakpoint_commands;
326
327 /* Are overlay event breakpoints enabled? */
328 static int overlay_events_enabled;
329
330 /* Walk the following statement or block through all breakpoints.
331 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE does so even if the statment deletes the current
332 breakpoint. */
333
334 #define ALL_BREAKPOINTS(B) for (B = breakpoint_chain; B; B = B->next)
335
336 #define ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE(B,TMP) \
337 for (B = breakpoint_chain; \
338 B ? (TMP=B->next, 1): 0; \
339 B = TMP)
340
341 /* Similar iterator for the low-level breakpoints. SAFE variant is not
342 provided so update_global_location_list must not be called while executing
343 the block of ALL_BP_LOCATIONS. */
344
345 #define ALL_BP_LOCATIONS(B,BP_TMP) \
346 for (BP_TMP = bp_location; \
347 BP_TMP < bp_location + bp_location_count && (B = *BP_TMP); \
348 BP_TMP++)
349
350 /* Iterator for tracepoints only. */
351
352 #define ALL_TRACEPOINTS(B) \
353 for (B = breakpoint_chain; B; B = B->next) \
354 if (tracepoint_type (B))
355
356 /* Chains of all breakpoints defined. */
357
358 struct breakpoint *breakpoint_chain;
359
360 /* Array is sorted by bp_location_compare - primarily by the ADDRESS. */
361
362 static struct bp_location **bp_location;
363
364 /* Number of elements of BP_LOCATION. */
365
366 static unsigned bp_location_count;
367
368 /* Maximum alignment offset between bp_target_info.PLACED_ADDRESS and ADDRESS
369 for the current elements of BP_LOCATION which get a valid result from
370 bp_location_has_shadow. You can use it for roughly limiting the subrange of
371 BP_LOCATION to scan for shadow bytes for an address you need to read. */
372
373 static CORE_ADDR bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max;
374
375 /* Maximum offset plus alignment between
376 bp_target_info.PLACED_ADDRESS + bp_target_info.SHADOW_LEN and ADDRESS for
377 the current elements of BP_LOCATION which get a valid result from
378 bp_location_has_shadow. You can use it for roughly limiting the subrange of
379 BP_LOCATION to scan for shadow bytes for an address you need to read. */
380
381 static CORE_ADDR bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max;
382
383 /* The locations that no longer correspond to any breakpoint,
384 unlinked from bp_location array, but for which a hit
385 may still be reported by a target. */
386 VEC(bp_location_p) *moribund_locations = NULL;
387
388 /* Number of last breakpoint made. */
389
390 int breakpoint_count;
391
392 /* Number of last tracepoint made. */
393
394 int tracepoint_count;
395
396 /* Return whether a breakpoint is an active enabled breakpoint. */
397 static int
398 breakpoint_enabled (struct breakpoint *b)
399 {
400 return (b->enable_state == bp_enabled);
401 }
402
403 /* Set breakpoint count to NUM. */
404
405 void
406 set_breakpoint_count (int num)
407 {
408 breakpoint_count = num;
409 set_internalvar_integer (lookup_internalvar ("bpnum"), num);
410 }
411
412 /* Used in run_command to zero the hit count when a new run starts. */
413
414 void
415 clear_breakpoint_hit_counts (void)
416 {
417 struct breakpoint *b;
418
419 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
420 b->hit_count = 0;
421 }
422
423 /* Encapsulate tests for different types of tracepoints. */
424
425 static int
426 tracepoint_type (const struct breakpoint *b)
427 {
428 return (b->type == bp_tracepoint || b->type == bp_fast_tracepoint);
429 }
430
431 /* Default address, symtab and line to put a breakpoint at
432 for "break" command with no arg.
433 if default_breakpoint_valid is zero, the other three are
434 not valid, and "break" with no arg is an error.
435
436 This set by print_stack_frame, which calls set_default_breakpoint. */
437
438 int default_breakpoint_valid;
439 CORE_ADDR default_breakpoint_address;
440 struct symtab *default_breakpoint_symtab;
441 int default_breakpoint_line;
442 struct program_space *default_breakpoint_pspace;
443
444 \f
445 /* *PP is a string denoting a breakpoint. Get the number of the breakpoint.
446 Advance *PP after the string and any trailing whitespace.
447
448 Currently the string can either be a number or "$" followed by the name
449 of a convenience variable. Making it an expression wouldn't work well
450 for map_breakpoint_numbers (e.g. "4 + 5 + 6").
451
452 If the string is a NULL pointer, that denotes the last breakpoint.
453
454 TRAILER is a character which can be found after the number; most
455 commonly this is `-'. If you don't want a trailer, use \0. */
456 static int
457 get_number_trailer (char **pp, int trailer)
458 {
459 int retval = 0; /* default */
460 char *p = *pp;
461
462 if (p == NULL)
463 /* Empty line means refer to the last breakpoint. */
464 return breakpoint_count;
465 else if (*p == '$')
466 {
467 /* Make a copy of the name, so we can null-terminate it
468 to pass to lookup_internalvar(). */
469 char *varname;
470 char *start = ++p;
471 LONGEST val;
472
473 while (isalnum (*p) || *p == '_')
474 p++;
475 varname = (char *) alloca (p - start + 1);
476 strncpy (varname, start, p - start);
477 varname[p - start] = '\0';
478 if (get_internalvar_integer (lookup_internalvar (varname), &val))
479 retval = (int) val;
480 else
481 {
482 printf_filtered (_("Convenience variable must have integer value.\n"));
483 retval = 0;
484 }
485 }
486 else
487 {
488 if (*p == '-')
489 ++p;
490 while (*p >= '0' && *p <= '9')
491 ++p;
492 if (p == *pp)
493 /* There is no number here. (e.g. "cond a == b"). */
494 {
495 /* Skip non-numeric token */
496 while (*p && !isspace((int) *p))
497 ++p;
498 /* Return zero, which caller must interpret as error. */
499 retval = 0;
500 }
501 else
502 retval = atoi (*pp);
503 }
504 if (!(isspace (*p) || *p == '\0' || *p == trailer))
505 {
506 /* Trailing junk: return 0 and let caller print error msg. */
507 while (!(isspace (*p) || *p == '\0' || *p == trailer))
508 ++p;
509 retval = 0;
510 }
511 while (isspace (*p))
512 p++;
513 *pp = p;
514 return retval;
515 }
516
517
518 /* Like get_number_trailer, but don't allow a trailer. */
519 int
520 get_number (char **pp)
521 {
522 return get_number_trailer (pp, '\0');
523 }
524
525 /* Parse a number or a range.
526 * A number will be of the form handled by get_number.
527 * A range will be of the form <number1> - <number2>, and
528 * will represent all the integers between number1 and number2,
529 * inclusive.
530 *
531 * While processing a range, this fuction is called iteratively;
532 * At each call it will return the next value in the range.
533 *
534 * At the beginning of parsing a range, the char pointer PP will
535 * be advanced past <number1> and left pointing at the '-' token.
536 * Subsequent calls will not advance the pointer until the range
537 * is completed. The call that completes the range will advance
538 * pointer PP past <number2>.
539 */
540
541 int
542 get_number_or_range (char **pp)
543 {
544 static int last_retval, end_value;
545 static char *end_ptr;
546 static int in_range = 0;
547
548 if (**pp != '-')
549 {
550 /* Default case: pp is pointing either to a solo number,
551 or to the first number of a range. */
552 last_retval = get_number_trailer (pp, '-');
553 if (**pp == '-')
554 {
555 char **temp;
556
557 /* This is the start of a range (<number1> - <number2>).
558 Skip the '-', parse and remember the second number,
559 and also remember the end of the final token. */
560
561 temp = &end_ptr;
562 end_ptr = *pp + 1;
563 while (isspace ((int) *end_ptr))
564 end_ptr++; /* skip white space */
565 end_value = get_number (temp);
566 if (end_value < last_retval)
567 {
568 error (_("inverted range"));
569 }
570 else if (end_value == last_retval)
571 {
572 /* degenerate range (number1 == number2). Advance the
573 token pointer so that the range will be treated as a
574 single number. */
575 *pp = end_ptr;
576 }
577 else
578 in_range = 1;
579 }
580 }
581 else if (! in_range)
582 error (_("negative value"));
583 else
584 {
585 /* pp points to the '-' that betokens a range. All
586 number-parsing has already been done. Return the next
587 integer value (one greater than the saved previous value).
588 Do not advance the token pointer 'pp' until the end of range
589 is reached. */
590
591 if (++last_retval == end_value)
592 {
593 /* End of range reached; advance token pointer. */
594 *pp = end_ptr;
595 in_range = 0;
596 }
597 }
598 return last_retval;
599 }
600
601 /* Return the breakpoint with the specified number, or NULL
602 if the number does not refer to an existing breakpoint. */
603
604 struct breakpoint *
605 get_breakpoint (int num)
606 {
607 struct breakpoint *b;
608
609 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
610 if (b->number == num)
611 return b;
612
613 return NULL;
614 }
615
616 \f
617 /* condition N EXP -- set break condition of breakpoint N to EXP. */
618
619 static void
620 condition_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
621 {
622 struct breakpoint *b;
623 char *p;
624 int bnum;
625
626 if (arg == 0)
627 error_no_arg (_("breakpoint number"));
628
629 p = arg;
630 bnum = get_number (&p);
631 if (bnum == 0)
632 error (_("Bad breakpoint argument: '%s'"), arg);
633
634 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
635 if (b->number == bnum)
636 {
637 struct bp_location *loc = b->loc;
638 for (; loc; loc = loc->next)
639 {
640 if (loc->cond)
641 {
642 xfree (loc->cond);
643 loc->cond = 0;
644 }
645 }
646 if (b->cond_string != NULL)
647 xfree (b->cond_string);
648
649 if (*p == 0)
650 {
651 b->cond_string = NULL;
652 if (from_tty)
653 printf_filtered (_("Breakpoint %d now unconditional.\n"), bnum);
654 }
655 else
656 {
657 arg = p;
658 /* I don't know if it matters whether this is the string the user
659 typed in or the decompiled expression. */
660 b->cond_string = xstrdup (arg);
661 b->condition_not_parsed = 0;
662 for (loc = b->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
663 {
664 arg = p;
665 loc->cond =
666 parse_exp_1 (&arg, block_for_pc (loc->address), 0);
667 if (*arg)
668 error (_("Junk at end of expression"));
669 }
670 }
671 breakpoints_changed ();
672 observer_notify_breakpoint_modified (b->number);
673 return;
674 }
675
676 error (_("No breakpoint number %d."), bnum);
677 }
678
679 /* Set the command list of B to COMMANDS. */
680
681 void
682 breakpoint_set_commands (struct breakpoint *b, struct command_line *commands)
683 {
684 free_command_lines (&b->commands);
685 b->commands = commands;
686 breakpoints_changed ();
687 observer_notify_breakpoint_modified (b->number);
688 }
689
690 static void
691 commands_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
692 {
693 struct breakpoint *b;
694 char *p;
695 int bnum;
696 struct command_line *l;
697
698 /* If we allowed this, we would have problems with when to
699 free the storage, if we change the commands currently
700 being read from. */
701
702 if (executing_breakpoint_commands)
703 error (_("Can't use the \"commands\" command among a breakpoint's commands."));
704
705 p = arg;
706 bnum = get_number (&p);
707
708 if (p && *p)
709 error (_("Unexpected extra arguments following breakpoint number."));
710
711 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
712 if (b->number == bnum)
713 {
714 char *tmpbuf = xstrprintf ("Type commands for when breakpoint %d is hit, one per line.",
715 bnum);
716 struct cleanup *cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, tmpbuf);
717 l = read_command_lines (tmpbuf, from_tty, 1);
718 do_cleanups (cleanups);
719 breakpoint_set_commands (b, l);
720 return;
721 }
722 error (_("No breakpoint number %d."), bnum);
723 }
724
725 /* Like commands_command, but instead of reading the commands from
726 input stream, takes them from an already parsed command structure.
727
728 This is used by cli-script.c to DTRT with breakpoint commands
729 that are part of if and while bodies. */
730 enum command_control_type
731 commands_from_control_command (char *arg, struct command_line *cmd)
732 {
733 struct breakpoint *b;
734 char *p;
735 int bnum;
736
737 /* If we allowed this, we would have problems with when to
738 free the storage, if we change the commands currently
739 being read from. */
740
741 if (executing_breakpoint_commands)
742 error (_("Can't use the \"commands\" command among a breakpoint's commands."));
743
744 /* An empty string for the breakpoint number means the last
745 breakpoint, but get_number expects a NULL pointer. */
746 if (arg && !*arg)
747 p = NULL;
748 else
749 p = arg;
750 bnum = get_number (&p);
751
752 if (p && *p)
753 error (_("Unexpected extra arguments following breakpoint number."));
754
755 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
756 if (b->number == bnum)
757 {
758 free_command_lines (&b->commands);
759 if (cmd->body_count != 1)
760 error (_("Invalid \"commands\" block structure."));
761 /* We need to copy the commands because if/while will free the
762 list after it finishes execution. */
763 b->commands = copy_command_lines (cmd->body_list[0]);
764 breakpoints_changed ();
765 observer_notify_breakpoint_modified (b->number);
766 return simple_control;
767 }
768 error (_("No breakpoint number %d."), bnum);
769 }
770
771 /* Return non-zero if BL->TARGET_INFO contains valid information. */
772
773 static int
774 bp_location_has_shadow (struct bp_location *bl)
775 {
776 if (bl->loc_type != bp_loc_software_breakpoint)
777 return 0;
778 if (!bl->inserted)
779 return 0;
780 if (bl->target_info.shadow_len == 0)
781 /* bp isn't valid, or doesn't shadow memory. */
782 return 0;
783 return 1;
784 }
785
786 /* Update BUF, which is LEN bytes read from the target address MEMADDR,
787 by replacing any memory breakpoints with their shadowed contents.
788
789 The range of shadowed area by each bp_location is:
790 b->address - bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max
791 up to b->address + bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max
792 The range we were requested to resolve shadows for is:
793 memaddr ... memaddr + len
794 Thus the safe cutoff boundaries for performance optimization are
795 memaddr + len <= b->address - bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max
796 and:
797 b->address + bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max <= memaddr */
798
799 void
800 breakpoint_restore_shadows (gdb_byte *buf, ULONGEST memaddr, LONGEST len)
801 {
802 /* Left boundary, right boundary and median element of our binary search. */
803 unsigned bc_l, bc_r, bc;
804
805 /* Find BC_L which is a leftmost element which may affect BUF content. It is
806 safe to report lower value but a failure to report higher one. */
807
808 bc_l = 0;
809 bc_r = bp_location_count;
810 while (bc_l + 1 < bc_r)
811 {
812 struct bp_location *b;
813
814 bc = (bc_l + bc_r) / 2;
815 b = bp_location[bc];
816
817 /* Check first B->ADDRESS will not overflow due to the added constant.
818 Then advance the left boundary only if we are sure the BC element can
819 in no way affect the BUF content (MEMADDR to MEMADDR + LEN range).
820
821 Use the BP_LOCATION_SHADOW_LEN_AFTER_ADDRESS_MAX safety offset so that
822 we cannot miss a breakpoint with its shadow range tail still reaching
823 MEMADDR. */
824
825 if (b->address + bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max >= b->address
826 && b->address + bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max <= memaddr)
827 bc_l = bc;
828 else
829 bc_r = bc;
830 }
831
832 /* Now do full processing of the found relevant range of elements. */
833
834 for (bc = bc_l; bc < bp_location_count; bc++)
835 {
836 struct bp_location *b = bp_location[bc];
837 CORE_ADDR bp_addr = 0;
838 int bp_size = 0;
839 int bptoffset = 0;
840
841 if (b->owner->type == bp_none)
842 warning (_("reading through apparently deleted breakpoint #%d?"),
843 b->owner->number);
844
845 /* Performance optimization: any futher element can no longer affect BUF
846 content. */
847
848 if (b->address >= bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max
849 && memaddr + len <= b->address
850 - bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max)
851 break;
852
853 if (!bp_location_has_shadow (b))
854 continue;
855 if (!breakpoint_address_match (b->target_info.placed_address_space, 0,
856 current_program_space->aspace, 0))
857 continue;
858
859 /* Addresses and length of the part of the breakpoint that
860 we need to copy. */
861 bp_addr = b->target_info.placed_address;
862 bp_size = b->target_info.shadow_len;
863
864 if (bp_addr + bp_size <= memaddr)
865 /* The breakpoint is entirely before the chunk of memory we
866 are reading. */
867 continue;
868
869 if (bp_addr >= memaddr + len)
870 /* The breakpoint is entirely after the chunk of memory we are
871 reading. */
872 continue;
873
874 /* Offset within shadow_contents. */
875 if (bp_addr < memaddr)
876 {
877 /* Only copy the second part of the breakpoint. */
878 bp_size -= memaddr - bp_addr;
879 bptoffset = memaddr - bp_addr;
880 bp_addr = memaddr;
881 }
882
883 if (bp_addr + bp_size > memaddr + len)
884 {
885 /* Only copy the first part of the breakpoint. */
886 bp_size -= (bp_addr + bp_size) - (memaddr + len);
887 }
888
889 memcpy (buf + bp_addr - memaddr,
890 b->target_info.shadow_contents + bptoffset, bp_size);
891 }
892 }
893 \f
894
895 /* A wrapper function for inserting catchpoints. */
896 static void
897 insert_catchpoint (struct ui_out *uo, void *args)
898 {
899 struct breakpoint *b = (struct breakpoint *) args;
900 int val = -1;
901
902 gdb_assert (b->type == bp_catchpoint);
903 gdb_assert (b->ops != NULL && b->ops->insert != NULL);
904
905 b->ops->insert (b);
906 }
907
908 static int
909 is_hardware_watchpoint (struct breakpoint *bpt)
910 {
911 return (bpt->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint
912 || bpt->type == bp_read_watchpoint
913 || bpt->type == bp_access_watchpoint);
914 }
915
916 /* Find the current value of a watchpoint on EXP. Return the value in
917 *VALP and *RESULTP and the chain of intermediate and final values
918 in *VAL_CHAIN. RESULTP and VAL_CHAIN may be NULL if the caller does
919 not need them.
920
921 If a memory error occurs while evaluating the expression, *RESULTP will
922 be set to NULL. *RESULTP may be a lazy value, if the result could
923 not be read from memory. It is used to determine whether a value
924 is user-specified (we should watch the whole value) or intermediate
925 (we should watch only the bit used to locate the final value).
926
927 If the final value, or any intermediate value, could not be read
928 from memory, *VALP will be set to NULL. *VAL_CHAIN will still be
929 set to any referenced values. *VALP will never be a lazy value.
930 This is the value which we store in struct breakpoint.
931
932 If VAL_CHAIN is non-NULL, *VAL_CHAIN will be released from the
933 value chain. The caller must free the values individually. If
934 VAL_CHAIN is NULL, all generated values will be left on the value
935 chain. */
936
937 static void
938 fetch_watchpoint_value (struct expression *exp, struct value **valp,
939 struct value **resultp, struct value **val_chain)
940 {
941 struct value *mark, *new_mark, *result;
942 volatile struct gdb_exception ex;
943
944 *valp = NULL;
945 if (resultp)
946 *resultp = NULL;
947 if (val_chain)
948 *val_chain = NULL;
949
950 /* Evaluate the expression. */
951 mark = value_mark ();
952 result = NULL;
953
954 TRY_CATCH (ex, RETURN_MASK_ALL)
955 {
956 result = evaluate_expression (exp);
957 }
958 if (ex.reason < 0)
959 {
960 /* Ignore memory errors, we want watchpoints pointing at
961 inaccessible memory to still be created; otherwise, throw the
962 error to some higher catcher. */
963 switch (ex.error)
964 {
965 case MEMORY_ERROR:
966 break;
967 default:
968 throw_exception (ex);
969 break;
970 }
971 }
972
973 new_mark = value_mark ();
974 if (mark == new_mark)
975 return;
976 if (resultp)
977 *resultp = result;
978
979 /* Make sure it's not lazy, so that after the target stops again we
980 have a non-lazy previous value to compare with. */
981 if (result != NULL
982 && (!value_lazy (result) || gdb_value_fetch_lazy (result)))
983 *valp = result;
984
985 if (val_chain)
986 {
987 /* Return the chain of intermediate values. We use this to
988 decide which addresses to watch. */
989 *val_chain = new_mark;
990 value_release_to_mark (mark);
991 }
992 }
993
994 /* Assuming that B is a watchpoint: returns true if the current thread
995 and its running state are safe to evaluate or update watchpoint B.
996 Watchpoints on local expressions need to be evaluated in the
997 context of the thread that was current when the watchpoint was
998 created, and, that thread needs to be stopped to be able to select
999 the correct frame context. Watchpoints on global expressions can
1000 be evaluated on any thread, and in any state. It is presently left
1001 to the target allowing memory accesses when threads are
1002 running. */
1003
1004 static int
1005 watchpoint_in_thread_scope (struct breakpoint *b)
1006 {
1007 return (ptid_equal (b->watchpoint_thread, null_ptid)
1008 || (ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, b->watchpoint_thread)
1009 && !is_executing (inferior_ptid)));
1010 }
1011
1012 /* Assuming that B is a watchpoint:
1013 - Reparse watchpoint expression, if REPARSE is non-zero
1014 - Evaluate expression and store the result in B->val
1015 - Evaluate the condition if there is one, and store the result
1016 in b->loc->cond.
1017 - Update the list of values that must be watched in B->loc.
1018
1019 If the watchpoint disposition is disp_del_at_next_stop, then do nothing.
1020 If this is local watchpoint that is out of scope, delete it.
1021
1022 Even with `set breakpoint always-inserted on' the watchpoints are removed
1023 + inserted on each stop here. Normal breakpoints must never be removed
1024 because they might be missed by a running thread when debugging in non-stop
1025 mode. On the other hand, hardware watchpoints (is_hardware_watchpoint;
1026 processed here) are specific to each LWP since they are stored in each LWP's
1027 hardware debug registers. Therefore, such LWP must be stopped first in
1028 order to be able to modify its hardware watchpoints.
1029
1030 Hardware watchpoints must be reset exactly once after being presented to the
1031 user. It cannot be done sooner, because it would reset the data used to
1032 present the watchpoint hit to the user. And it must not be done later
1033 because it could display the same single watchpoint hit during multiple GDB
1034 stops. Note that the latter is relevant only to the hardware watchpoint
1035 types bp_read_watchpoint and bp_access_watchpoint. False hit by
1036 bp_hardware_watchpoint is not user-visible - its hit is suppressed if the
1037 memory content has not changed.
1038
1039 The following constraints influence the location where we can reset hardware
1040 watchpoints:
1041
1042 * target_stopped_by_watchpoint and target_stopped_data_address are called
1043 several times when GDB stops.
1044
1045 [linux]
1046 * Multiple hardware watchpoints can be hit at the same time, causing GDB to
1047 stop. GDB only presents one hardware watchpoint hit at a time as the
1048 reason for stopping, and all the other hits are presented later, one after
1049 the other, each time the user requests the execution to be resumed.
1050 Execution is not resumed for the threads still having pending hit event
1051 stored in LWP_INFO->STATUS. While the watchpoint is already removed from
1052 the inferior on the first stop the thread hit event is kept being reported
1053 from its cached value by linux_nat_stopped_data_address until the real
1054 thread resume happens after the watchpoint gets presented and thus its
1055 LWP_INFO->STATUS gets reset.
1056
1057 Therefore the hardware watchpoint hit can get safely reset on the watchpoint
1058 removal from inferior. */
1059
1060 static void
1061 update_watchpoint (struct breakpoint *b, int reparse)
1062 {
1063 int within_current_scope;
1064 struct frame_id saved_frame_id;
1065 struct bp_location *loc;
1066 int frame_saved;
1067 bpstat bs;
1068
1069 /* If this is a local watchpoint, we only want to check if the
1070 watchpoint frame is in scope if the current thread is the thread
1071 that was used to create the watchpoint. */
1072 if (!watchpoint_in_thread_scope (b))
1073 return;
1074
1075 /* We don't free locations. They are stored in bp_location array and
1076 update_global_locations will eventually delete them and remove
1077 breakpoints if needed. */
1078 b->loc = NULL;
1079
1080 if (b->disposition == disp_del_at_next_stop)
1081 return;
1082
1083 frame_saved = 0;
1084
1085 /* Determine if the watchpoint is within scope. */
1086 if (b->exp_valid_block == NULL)
1087 within_current_scope = 1;
1088 else
1089 {
1090 struct frame_info *fi;
1091
1092 /* Save the current frame's ID so we can restore it after
1093 evaluating the watchpoint expression on its own frame. */
1094 /* FIXME drow/2003-09-09: It would be nice if evaluate_expression
1095 took a frame parameter, so that we didn't have to change the
1096 selected frame. */
1097 frame_saved = 1;
1098 saved_frame_id = get_frame_id (get_selected_frame (NULL));
1099
1100 fi = frame_find_by_id (b->watchpoint_frame);
1101 within_current_scope = (fi != NULL);
1102 if (within_current_scope)
1103 select_frame (fi);
1104 }
1105
1106 if (within_current_scope && reparse)
1107 {
1108 char *s;
1109 if (b->exp)
1110 {
1111 xfree (b->exp);
1112 b->exp = NULL;
1113 }
1114 s = b->exp_string;
1115 b->exp = parse_exp_1 (&s, b->exp_valid_block, 0);
1116 /* If the meaning of expression itself changed, the old value is
1117 no longer relevant. We don't want to report a watchpoint hit
1118 to the user when the old value and the new value may actually
1119 be completely different objects. */
1120 value_free (b->val);
1121 b->val = NULL;
1122 b->val_valid = 0;
1123 }
1124
1125 /* If we failed to parse the expression, for example because
1126 it refers to a global variable in a not-yet-loaded shared library,
1127 don't try to insert watchpoint. We don't automatically delete
1128 such watchpoint, though, since failure to parse expression
1129 is different from out-of-scope watchpoint. */
1130 if ( !target_has_execution)
1131 {
1132 /* Without execution, memory can't change. No use to try and
1133 set watchpoint locations. The watchpoint will be reset when
1134 the target gains execution, through breakpoint_re_set. */
1135 }
1136 else if (within_current_scope && b->exp)
1137 {
1138 struct value *val_chain, *v, *result, *next;
1139 struct program_space *frame_pspace;
1140
1141 fetch_watchpoint_value (b->exp, &v, &result, &val_chain);
1142
1143 /* Avoid setting b->val if it's already set. The meaning of
1144 b->val is 'the last value' user saw, and we should update
1145 it only if we reported that last value to user. As it
1146 happens, the code that reports it updates b->val directly. */
1147 if (!b->val_valid)
1148 {
1149 b->val = v;
1150 b->val_valid = 1;
1151 }
1152
1153 /* Change the type of breakpoint between hardware assisted or an
1154 ordinary watchpoint depending on the hardware support and free
1155 hardware slots. REPARSE is set when the inferior is started. */
1156 if ((b->type == bp_watchpoint || b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint)
1157 && reparse)
1158 {
1159 int i, mem_cnt, other_type_used;
1160
1161 /* We need to determine how many resources are already used
1162 for all other hardware watchpoints to see if we still have
1163 enough resources to also fit this watchpoint in as well.
1164 To avoid the hw_watchpoint_used_count call below from counting
1165 this watchpoint, make sure that it is marked as a software
1166 watchpoint. */
1167 b->type = bp_watchpoint;
1168 i = hw_watchpoint_used_count (bp_hardware_watchpoint,
1169 &other_type_used);
1170 mem_cnt = can_use_hardware_watchpoint (val_chain);
1171
1172 if (!mem_cnt)
1173 b->type = bp_watchpoint;
1174 else
1175 {
1176 int target_resources_ok = target_can_use_hardware_watchpoint
1177 (bp_hardware_watchpoint, i + mem_cnt, other_type_used);
1178 if (target_resources_ok <= 0)
1179 b->type = bp_watchpoint;
1180 else
1181 b->type = bp_hardware_watchpoint;
1182 }
1183 }
1184
1185 frame_pspace = get_frame_program_space (get_selected_frame (NULL));
1186
1187 /* Look at each value on the value chain. */
1188 for (v = val_chain; v; v = next)
1189 {
1190 /* If it's a memory location, and GDB actually needed
1191 its contents to evaluate the expression, then we
1192 must watch it. If the first value returned is
1193 still lazy, that means an error occurred reading it;
1194 watch it anyway in case it becomes readable. */
1195 if (VALUE_LVAL (v) == lval_memory
1196 && (v == val_chain || ! value_lazy (v)))
1197 {
1198 struct type *vtype = check_typedef (value_type (v));
1199
1200 /* We only watch structs and arrays if user asked
1201 for it explicitly, never if they just happen to
1202 appear in the middle of some value chain. */
1203 if (v == result
1204 || (TYPE_CODE (vtype) != TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
1205 && TYPE_CODE (vtype) != TYPE_CODE_ARRAY))
1206 {
1207 CORE_ADDR addr;
1208 int len, type;
1209 struct bp_location *loc, **tmp;
1210
1211 addr = value_address (v);
1212 len = TYPE_LENGTH (value_type (v));
1213 type = hw_write;
1214 if (b->type == bp_read_watchpoint)
1215 type = hw_read;
1216 else if (b->type == bp_access_watchpoint)
1217 type = hw_access;
1218
1219 loc = allocate_bp_location (b);
1220 for (tmp = &(b->loc); *tmp != NULL; tmp = &((*tmp)->next))
1221 ;
1222 *tmp = loc;
1223 loc->gdbarch = get_type_arch (value_type (v));
1224
1225 loc->pspace = frame_pspace;
1226 loc->address = addr;
1227 loc->length = len;
1228 loc->watchpoint_type = type;
1229 }
1230 }
1231
1232 next = value_next (v);
1233 if (v != b->val)
1234 value_free (v);
1235 }
1236
1237 /* We just regenerated the list of breakpoint locations.
1238 The new location does not have its condition field set to anything
1239 and therefore, we must always reparse the cond_string, independently
1240 of the value of the reparse flag. */
1241 if (b->cond_string != NULL)
1242 {
1243 char *s = b->cond_string;
1244 b->loc->cond = parse_exp_1 (&s, b->exp_valid_block, 0);
1245 }
1246 }
1247 else if (!within_current_scope)
1248 {
1249 printf_filtered (_("\
1250 Watchpoint %d deleted because the program has left the block \n\
1251 in which its expression is valid.\n"),
1252 b->number);
1253 if (b->related_breakpoint)
1254 b->related_breakpoint->disposition = disp_del_at_next_stop;
1255 b->disposition = disp_del_at_next_stop;
1256 }
1257
1258 /* Restore the selected frame. */
1259 if (frame_saved)
1260 select_frame (frame_find_by_id (saved_frame_id));
1261 }
1262
1263
1264 /* Returns 1 iff breakpoint location should be
1265 inserted in the inferior. */
1266 static int
1267 should_be_inserted (struct bp_location *bpt)
1268 {
1269 if (!breakpoint_enabled (bpt->owner))
1270 return 0;
1271
1272 if (bpt->owner->disposition == disp_del_at_next_stop)
1273 return 0;
1274
1275 if (!bpt->enabled || bpt->shlib_disabled || bpt->duplicate)
1276 return 0;
1277
1278 /* This is set for example, when we're attached to the parent of a
1279 vfork, and have detached from the child. The child is running
1280 free, and we expect it to do an exec or exit, at which point the
1281 OS makes the parent schedulable again (and the target reports
1282 that the vfork is done). Until the child is done with the shared
1283 memory region, do not insert breakpoints in the parent, otherwise
1284 the child could still trip on the parent's breakpoints. Since
1285 the parent is blocked anyway, it won't miss any breakpoint. */
1286 if (bpt->pspace->breakpoints_not_allowed)
1287 return 0;
1288
1289 /* Tracepoints are inserted by the target at a time of its choosing,
1290 not by us. */
1291 if (tracepoint_type (bpt->owner))
1292 return 0;
1293
1294 return 1;
1295 }
1296
1297 /* Insert a low-level "breakpoint" of some type. BPT is the breakpoint.
1298 Any error messages are printed to TMP_ERROR_STREAM; and DISABLED_BREAKS,
1299 and HW_BREAKPOINT_ERROR are used to report problems.
1300
1301 NOTE drow/2003-09-09: This routine could be broken down to an object-style
1302 method for each breakpoint or catchpoint type. */
1303 static int
1304 insert_bp_location (struct bp_location *bpt,
1305 struct ui_file *tmp_error_stream,
1306 int *disabled_breaks,
1307 int *hw_breakpoint_error)
1308 {
1309 int val = 0;
1310
1311 if (!should_be_inserted (bpt) || bpt->inserted)
1312 return 0;
1313
1314 /* Initialize the target-specific information. */
1315 memset (&bpt->target_info, 0, sizeof (bpt->target_info));
1316 bpt->target_info.placed_address = bpt->address;
1317 bpt->target_info.placed_address_space = bpt->pspace->aspace;
1318
1319 if (bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_software_breakpoint
1320 || bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
1321 {
1322 if (bpt->owner->type != bp_hardware_breakpoint)
1323 {
1324 /* If the explicitly specified breakpoint type
1325 is not hardware breakpoint, check the memory map to see
1326 if the breakpoint address is in read only memory or not.
1327 Two important cases are:
1328 - location type is not hardware breakpoint, memory
1329 is readonly. We change the type of the location to
1330 hardware breakpoint.
1331 - location type is hardware breakpoint, memory is read-write.
1332 This means we've previously made the location hardware one, but
1333 then the memory map changed, so we undo.
1334
1335 When breakpoints are removed, remove_breakpoints will
1336 use location types we've just set here, the only possible
1337 problem is that memory map has changed during running program,
1338 but it's not going to work anyway with current gdb. */
1339 struct mem_region *mr
1340 = lookup_mem_region (bpt->target_info.placed_address);
1341
1342 if (mr)
1343 {
1344 if (automatic_hardware_breakpoints)
1345 {
1346 int changed = 0;
1347 enum bp_loc_type new_type;
1348
1349 if (mr->attrib.mode != MEM_RW)
1350 new_type = bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint;
1351 else
1352 new_type = bp_loc_software_breakpoint;
1353
1354 if (new_type != bpt->loc_type)
1355 {
1356 static int said = 0;
1357 bpt->loc_type = new_type;
1358 if (!said)
1359 {
1360 fprintf_filtered (gdb_stdout, _("\
1361 Note: automatically using hardware breakpoints for read-only addresses.\n"));
1362 said = 1;
1363 }
1364 }
1365 }
1366 else if (bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_software_breakpoint
1367 && mr->attrib.mode != MEM_RW)
1368 warning (_("cannot set software breakpoint at readonly address %s"),
1369 paddress (bpt->gdbarch, bpt->address));
1370 }
1371 }
1372
1373 /* First check to see if we have to handle an overlay. */
1374 if (overlay_debugging == ovly_off
1375 || bpt->section == NULL
1376 || !(section_is_overlay (bpt->section)))
1377 {
1378 /* No overlay handling: just set the breakpoint. */
1379
1380 if (bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
1381 val = target_insert_hw_breakpoint (bpt->gdbarch,
1382 &bpt->target_info);
1383 else
1384 val = target_insert_breakpoint (bpt->gdbarch,
1385 &bpt->target_info);
1386 }
1387 else
1388 {
1389 /* This breakpoint is in an overlay section.
1390 Shall we set a breakpoint at the LMA? */
1391 if (!overlay_events_enabled)
1392 {
1393 /* Yes -- overlay event support is not active,
1394 so we must try to set a breakpoint at the LMA.
1395 This will not work for a hardware breakpoint. */
1396 if (bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
1397 warning (_("hardware breakpoint %d not supported in overlay!"),
1398 bpt->owner->number);
1399 else
1400 {
1401 CORE_ADDR addr = overlay_unmapped_address (bpt->address,
1402 bpt->section);
1403 /* Set a software (trap) breakpoint at the LMA. */
1404 bpt->overlay_target_info = bpt->target_info;
1405 bpt->overlay_target_info.placed_address = addr;
1406 val = target_insert_breakpoint (bpt->gdbarch,
1407 &bpt->overlay_target_info);
1408 if (val != 0)
1409 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
1410 "Overlay breakpoint %d failed: in ROM?\n",
1411 bpt->owner->number);
1412 }
1413 }
1414 /* Shall we set a breakpoint at the VMA? */
1415 if (section_is_mapped (bpt->section))
1416 {
1417 /* Yes. This overlay section is mapped into memory. */
1418 if (bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
1419 val = target_insert_hw_breakpoint (bpt->gdbarch,
1420 &bpt->target_info);
1421 else
1422 val = target_insert_breakpoint (bpt->gdbarch,
1423 &bpt->target_info);
1424 }
1425 else
1426 {
1427 /* No. This breakpoint will not be inserted.
1428 No error, but do not mark the bp as 'inserted'. */
1429 return 0;
1430 }
1431 }
1432
1433 if (val)
1434 {
1435 /* Can't set the breakpoint. */
1436 if (solib_name_from_address (bpt->pspace, bpt->address))
1437 {
1438 /* See also: disable_breakpoints_in_shlibs. */
1439 val = 0;
1440 bpt->shlib_disabled = 1;
1441 if (!*disabled_breaks)
1442 {
1443 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
1444 "Cannot insert breakpoint %d.\n",
1445 bpt->owner->number);
1446 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
1447 "Temporarily disabling shared library breakpoints:\n");
1448 }
1449 *disabled_breaks = 1;
1450 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
1451 "breakpoint #%d\n", bpt->owner->number);
1452 }
1453 else
1454 {
1455 if (bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
1456 {
1457 *hw_breakpoint_error = 1;
1458 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
1459 "Cannot insert hardware breakpoint %d.\n",
1460 bpt->owner->number);
1461 }
1462 else
1463 {
1464 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
1465 "Cannot insert breakpoint %d.\n",
1466 bpt->owner->number);
1467 fprintf_filtered (tmp_error_stream,
1468 "Error accessing memory address ");
1469 fputs_filtered (paddress (bpt->gdbarch, bpt->address),
1470 tmp_error_stream);
1471 fprintf_filtered (tmp_error_stream, ": %s.\n",
1472 safe_strerror (val));
1473 }
1474
1475 }
1476 }
1477 else
1478 bpt->inserted = 1;
1479
1480 return val;
1481 }
1482
1483 else if (bpt->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_watchpoint
1484 /* NOTE drow/2003-09-08: This state only exists for removing
1485 watchpoints. It's not clear that it's necessary... */
1486 && bpt->owner->disposition != disp_del_at_next_stop)
1487 {
1488 val = target_insert_watchpoint (bpt->address,
1489 bpt->length,
1490 bpt->watchpoint_type);
1491 bpt->inserted = (val != -1);
1492 }
1493
1494 else if (bpt->owner->type == bp_catchpoint)
1495 {
1496 struct gdb_exception e = catch_exception (uiout, insert_catchpoint,
1497 bpt->owner, RETURN_MASK_ERROR);
1498 exception_fprintf (gdb_stderr, e, "warning: inserting catchpoint %d: ",
1499 bpt->owner->number);
1500 if (e.reason < 0)
1501 bpt->owner->enable_state = bp_disabled;
1502 else
1503 bpt->inserted = 1;
1504
1505 /* We've already printed an error message if there was a problem
1506 inserting this catchpoint, and we've disabled the catchpoint,
1507 so just return success. */
1508 return 0;
1509 }
1510
1511 return 0;
1512 }
1513
1514 /* This function is called when program space PSPACE is about to be
1515 deleted. It takes care of updating breakpoints to not reference
1516 PSPACE anymore. */
1517
1518 void
1519 breakpoint_program_space_exit (struct program_space *pspace)
1520 {
1521 struct breakpoint *b, *b_temp;
1522 struct bp_location *loc, **loc_temp;
1523
1524 /* Remove any breakpoint that was set through this program space. */
1525 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, b_temp)
1526 {
1527 if (b->pspace == pspace)
1528 delete_breakpoint (b);
1529 }
1530
1531 /* Breakpoints set through other program spaces could have locations
1532 bound to PSPACE as well. Remove those. */
1533 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (loc, loc_temp)
1534 {
1535 struct bp_location *tmp;
1536
1537 if (loc->pspace == pspace)
1538 {
1539 if (loc->owner->loc == loc)
1540 loc->owner->loc = loc->next;
1541 else
1542 for (tmp = loc->owner->loc; tmp->next != NULL; tmp = tmp->next)
1543 if (tmp->next == loc)
1544 {
1545 tmp->next = loc->next;
1546 break;
1547 }
1548 }
1549 }
1550
1551 /* Now update the global location list to permanently delete the
1552 removed locations above. */
1553 update_global_location_list (0);
1554 }
1555
1556 /* Make sure all breakpoints are inserted in inferior.
1557 Throws exception on any error.
1558 A breakpoint that is already inserted won't be inserted
1559 again, so calling this function twice is safe. */
1560 void
1561 insert_breakpoints (void)
1562 {
1563 struct breakpoint *bpt;
1564
1565 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bpt)
1566 if (is_hardware_watchpoint (bpt))
1567 update_watchpoint (bpt, 0 /* don't reparse. */);
1568
1569 update_global_location_list (1);
1570
1571 /* update_global_location_list does not insert breakpoints when
1572 always_inserted_mode is not enabled. Explicitly insert them
1573 now. */
1574 if (!breakpoints_always_inserted_mode ())
1575 insert_breakpoint_locations ();
1576 }
1577
1578 /* insert_breakpoints is used when starting or continuing the program.
1579 remove_breakpoints is used when the program stops.
1580 Both return zero if successful,
1581 or an `errno' value if could not write the inferior. */
1582
1583 static void
1584 insert_breakpoint_locations (void)
1585 {
1586 struct breakpoint *bpt;
1587 struct bp_location *b, **bp_tmp;
1588 int error = 0;
1589 int val = 0;
1590 int disabled_breaks = 0;
1591 int hw_breakpoint_error = 0;
1592
1593 struct ui_file *tmp_error_stream = mem_fileopen ();
1594 struct cleanup *cleanups = make_cleanup_ui_file_delete (tmp_error_stream);
1595
1596 /* Explicitly mark the warning -- this will only be printed if
1597 there was an error. */
1598 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream, "Warning:\n");
1599
1600 save_current_space_and_thread ();
1601
1602 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (b, bp_tmp)
1603 {
1604 struct thread_info *tp;
1605 CORE_ADDR last_addr;
1606
1607 if (!should_be_inserted (b) || b->inserted)
1608 continue;
1609
1610 /* There is no point inserting thread-specific breakpoints if the
1611 thread no longer exists. */
1612 if (b->owner->thread != -1
1613 && !valid_thread_id (b->owner->thread))
1614 continue;
1615
1616 switch_to_program_space_and_thread (b->pspace);
1617
1618 /* For targets that support global breakpoints, there's no need
1619 to select an inferior to insert breakpoint to. In fact, even
1620 if we aren't attached to any process yet, we should still
1621 insert breakpoints. */
1622 if (!gdbarch_has_global_breakpoints (target_gdbarch)
1623 && ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, null_ptid))
1624 continue;
1625
1626 val = insert_bp_location (b, tmp_error_stream,
1627 &disabled_breaks,
1628 &hw_breakpoint_error);
1629 if (val)
1630 error = val;
1631 }
1632
1633 /* If we failed to insert all locations of a watchpoint,
1634 remove them, as half-inserted watchpoint is of limited use. */
1635 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bpt)
1636 {
1637 int some_failed = 0;
1638 struct bp_location *loc;
1639
1640 if (!is_hardware_watchpoint (bpt))
1641 continue;
1642
1643 if (!breakpoint_enabled (bpt))
1644 continue;
1645
1646 if (bpt->disposition == disp_del_at_next_stop)
1647 continue;
1648
1649 for (loc = bpt->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
1650 if (!loc->inserted && should_be_inserted (loc))
1651 {
1652 some_failed = 1;
1653 break;
1654 }
1655 if (some_failed)
1656 {
1657 for (loc = bpt->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
1658 if (loc->inserted)
1659 remove_breakpoint (loc, mark_uninserted);
1660
1661 hw_breakpoint_error = 1;
1662 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
1663 "Could not insert hardware watchpoint %d.\n",
1664 bpt->number);
1665 error = -1;
1666 }
1667 }
1668
1669 if (error)
1670 {
1671 /* If a hardware breakpoint or watchpoint was inserted, add a
1672 message about possibly exhausted resources. */
1673 if (hw_breakpoint_error)
1674 {
1675 fprintf_unfiltered (tmp_error_stream,
1676 "Could not insert hardware breakpoints:\n\
1677 You may have requested too many hardware breakpoints/watchpoints.\n");
1678 }
1679 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
1680 error_stream (tmp_error_stream);
1681 }
1682
1683 do_cleanups (cleanups);
1684 }
1685
1686 int
1687 remove_breakpoints (void)
1688 {
1689 struct bp_location *b, **bp_tmp;
1690 int val = 0;
1691
1692 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (b, bp_tmp)
1693 {
1694 if (b->inserted)
1695 val |= remove_breakpoint (b, mark_uninserted);
1696 }
1697 return val;
1698 }
1699
1700 /* Remove breakpoints of process PID. */
1701
1702 int
1703 remove_breakpoints_pid (int pid)
1704 {
1705 struct bp_location *b, **b_tmp;
1706 int val;
1707 struct inferior *inf = find_inferior_pid (pid);
1708
1709 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (b, b_tmp)
1710 {
1711 if (b->pspace != inf->pspace)
1712 continue;
1713
1714 if (b->inserted)
1715 {
1716 val = remove_breakpoint (b, mark_uninserted);
1717 if (val != 0)
1718 return val;
1719 }
1720 }
1721 return 0;
1722 }
1723
1724 int
1725 remove_hw_watchpoints (void)
1726 {
1727 struct bp_location *b, **bp_tmp;
1728 int val = 0;
1729
1730 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (b, bp_tmp)
1731 {
1732 if (b->inserted && b->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_watchpoint)
1733 val |= remove_breakpoint (b, mark_uninserted);
1734 }
1735 return val;
1736 }
1737
1738 int
1739 reattach_breakpoints (int pid)
1740 {
1741 struct cleanup *old_chain;
1742 struct bp_location *b, **bp_tmp;
1743 int val;
1744 struct ui_file *tmp_error_stream = mem_fileopen ();
1745 int dummy1 = 0, dummy2 = 0;
1746 struct inferior *inf;
1747 struct thread_info *tp;
1748
1749 tp = any_live_thread_of_process (pid);
1750 if (tp == NULL)
1751 return 1;
1752
1753 inf = find_inferior_pid (pid);
1754 old_chain = save_inferior_ptid ();
1755
1756 inferior_ptid = tp->ptid;
1757
1758 make_cleanup_ui_file_delete (tmp_error_stream);
1759
1760 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (b, bp_tmp)
1761 {
1762 if (b->pspace != inf->pspace)
1763 continue;
1764
1765 if (b->inserted)
1766 {
1767 b->inserted = 0;
1768 val = insert_bp_location (b, tmp_error_stream,
1769 &dummy1, &dummy2);
1770 if (val != 0)
1771 {
1772 do_cleanups (old_chain);
1773 return val;
1774 }
1775 }
1776 }
1777 do_cleanups (old_chain);
1778 return 0;
1779 }
1780
1781 static int internal_breakpoint_number = -1;
1782
1783 static struct breakpoint *
1784 create_internal_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
1785 CORE_ADDR address, enum bptype type)
1786 {
1787 struct symtab_and_line sal;
1788 struct breakpoint *b;
1789
1790 init_sal (&sal); /* initialize to zeroes */
1791
1792 sal.pc = address;
1793 sal.section = find_pc_overlay (sal.pc);
1794 sal.pspace = current_program_space;
1795
1796 b = set_raw_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, type);
1797 b->number = internal_breakpoint_number--;
1798 b->disposition = disp_donttouch;
1799
1800 return b;
1801 }
1802
1803 static void
1804 create_overlay_event_breakpoint (char *func_name)
1805 {
1806 struct objfile *objfile;
1807
1808 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile)
1809 {
1810 struct breakpoint *b;
1811 struct minimal_symbol *m;
1812
1813 m = lookup_minimal_symbol_text (func_name, objfile);
1814 if (m == NULL)
1815 continue;
1816
1817 b = create_internal_breakpoint (get_objfile_arch (objfile),
1818 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (m),
1819 bp_overlay_event);
1820 b->addr_string = xstrdup (func_name);
1821
1822 if (overlay_debugging == ovly_auto)
1823 {
1824 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
1825 overlay_events_enabled = 1;
1826 }
1827 else
1828 {
1829 b->enable_state = bp_disabled;
1830 overlay_events_enabled = 0;
1831 }
1832 }
1833 update_global_location_list (1);
1834 }
1835
1836 static void
1837 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint (char *func_name)
1838 {
1839 struct program_space *pspace;
1840 struct objfile *objfile;
1841 struct cleanup *old_chain;
1842
1843 old_chain = save_current_program_space ();
1844
1845 ALL_PSPACES (pspace)
1846 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile)
1847 {
1848 struct breakpoint *b;
1849 struct minimal_symbol *m;
1850
1851 if (!gdbarch_get_longjmp_target_p (get_objfile_arch (objfile)))
1852 continue;
1853
1854 set_current_program_space (pspace);
1855
1856 m = lookup_minimal_symbol_text (func_name, objfile);
1857 if (m == NULL)
1858 continue;
1859
1860 b = create_internal_breakpoint (get_objfile_arch (objfile),
1861 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (m),
1862 bp_longjmp_master);
1863 b->addr_string = xstrdup (func_name);
1864 b->enable_state = bp_disabled;
1865 }
1866 update_global_location_list (1);
1867
1868 do_cleanups (old_chain);
1869 }
1870
1871 void
1872 update_breakpoints_after_exec (void)
1873 {
1874 struct breakpoint *b;
1875 struct breakpoint *temp;
1876 struct bp_location *bploc, **bplocp_tmp;
1877
1878 /* We're about to delete breakpoints from GDB's lists. If the
1879 INSERTED flag is true, GDB will try to lift the breakpoints by
1880 writing the breakpoints' "shadow contents" back into memory. The
1881 "shadow contents" are NOT valid after an exec, so GDB should not
1882 do that. Instead, the target is responsible from marking
1883 breakpoints out as soon as it detects an exec. We don't do that
1884 here instead, because there may be other attempts to delete
1885 breakpoints after detecting an exec and before reaching here. */
1886 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bploc, bplocp_tmp)
1887 if (bploc->pspace == current_program_space)
1888 gdb_assert (!bploc->inserted);
1889
1890 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
1891 {
1892 if (b->pspace != current_program_space)
1893 continue;
1894
1895 /* Solib breakpoints must be explicitly reset after an exec(). */
1896 if (b->type == bp_shlib_event)
1897 {
1898 delete_breakpoint (b);
1899 continue;
1900 }
1901
1902 /* JIT breakpoints must be explicitly reset after an exec(). */
1903 if (b->type == bp_jit_event)
1904 {
1905 delete_breakpoint (b);
1906 continue;
1907 }
1908
1909 /* Thread event breakpoints must be set anew after an exec(),
1910 as must overlay event and longjmp master breakpoints. */
1911 if (b->type == bp_thread_event || b->type == bp_overlay_event
1912 || b->type == bp_longjmp_master)
1913 {
1914 delete_breakpoint (b);
1915 continue;
1916 }
1917
1918 /* Step-resume breakpoints are meaningless after an exec(). */
1919 if (b->type == bp_step_resume)
1920 {
1921 delete_breakpoint (b);
1922 continue;
1923 }
1924
1925 /* Longjmp and longjmp-resume breakpoints are also meaningless
1926 after an exec. */
1927 if (b->type == bp_longjmp || b->type == bp_longjmp_resume)
1928 {
1929 delete_breakpoint (b);
1930 continue;
1931 }
1932
1933 if (b->type == bp_catchpoint)
1934 {
1935 /* For now, none of the bp_catchpoint breakpoints need to
1936 do anything at this point. In the future, if some of
1937 the catchpoints need to something, we will need to add
1938 a new method, and call this method from here. */
1939 continue;
1940 }
1941
1942 /* bp_finish is a special case. The only way we ought to be able
1943 to see one of these when an exec() has happened, is if the user
1944 caught a vfork, and then said "finish". Ordinarily a finish just
1945 carries them to the call-site of the current callee, by setting
1946 a temporary bp there and resuming. But in this case, the finish
1947 will carry them entirely through the vfork & exec.
1948
1949 We don't want to allow a bp_finish to remain inserted now. But
1950 we can't safely delete it, 'cause finish_command has a handle to
1951 the bp on a bpstat, and will later want to delete it. There's a
1952 chance (and I've seen it happen) that if we delete the bp_finish
1953 here, that its storage will get reused by the time finish_command
1954 gets 'round to deleting the "use to be a bp_finish" breakpoint.
1955 We really must allow finish_command to delete a bp_finish.
1956
1957 In the absense of a general solution for the "how do we know
1958 it's safe to delete something others may have handles to?"
1959 problem, what we'll do here is just uninsert the bp_finish, and
1960 let finish_command delete it.
1961
1962 (We know the bp_finish is "doomed" in the sense that it's
1963 momentary, and will be deleted as soon as finish_command sees
1964 the inferior stopped. So it doesn't matter that the bp's
1965 address is probably bogus in the new a.out, unlike e.g., the
1966 solib breakpoints.) */
1967
1968 if (b->type == bp_finish)
1969 {
1970 continue;
1971 }
1972
1973 /* Without a symbolic address, we have little hope of the
1974 pre-exec() address meaning the same thing in the post-exec()
1975 a.out. */
1976 if (b->addr_string == NULL)
1977 {
1978 delete_breakpoint (b);
1979 continue;
1980 }
1981 }
1982 /* FIXME what about longjmp breakpoints? Re-create them here? */
1983 create_overlay_event_breakpoint ("_ovly_debug_event");
1984 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("longjmp");
1985 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("_longjmp");
1986 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("siglongjmp");
1987 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("_siglongjmp");
1988 }
1989
1990 int
1991 detach_breakpoints (int pid)
1992 {
1993 struct bp_location *b, **bp_tmp;
1994 int val = 0;
1995 struct cleanup *old_chain = save_inferior_ptid ();
1996 struct inferior *inf = current_inferior ();
1997
1998 if (pid == PIDGET (inferior_ptid))
1999 error (_("Cannot detach breakpoints of inferior_ptid"));
2000
2001 /* Set inferior_ptid; remove_breakpoint_1 uses this global. */
2002 inferior_ptid = pid_to_ptid (pid);
2003 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (b, bp_tmp)
2004 {
2005 if (b->pspace != inf->pspace)
2006 continue;
2007
2008 if (b->inserted)
2009 val |= remove_breakpoint_1 (b, mark_inserted);
2010 }
2011 do_cleanups (old_chain);
2012 return val;
2013 }
2014
2015 /* Remove the breakpoint location B from the current address space.
2016 Note that this is used to detach breakpoints from a child fork.
2017 When we get here, the child isn't in the inferior list, and neither
2018 do we have objects to represent its address space --- we should
2019 *not* look at b->pspace->aspace here. */
2020
2021 static int
2022 remove_breakpoint_1 (struct bp_location *b, insertion_state_t is)
2023 {
2024 int val;
2025 struct cleanup *old_chain;
2026
2027 if (b->owner->enable_state == bp_permanent)
2028 /* Permanent breakpoints cannot be inserted or removed. */
2029 return 0;
2030
2031 /* The type of none suggests that owner is actually deleted.
2032 This should not ever happen. */
2033 gdb_assert (b->owner->type != bp_none);
2034
2035 if (b->loc_type == bp_loc_software_breakpoint
2036 || b->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
2037 {
2038 /* "Normal" instruction breakpoint: either the standard
2039 trap-instruction bp (bp_breakpoint), or a
2040 bp_hardware_breakpoint. */
2041
2042 /* First check to see if we have to handle an overlay. */
2043 if (overlay_debugging == ovly_off
2044 || b->section == NULL
2045 || !(section_is_overlay (b->section)))
2046 {
2047 /* No overlay handling: just remove the breakpoint. */
2048
2049 if (b->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
2050 val = target_remove_hw_breakpoint (b->gdbarch, &b->target_info);
2051 else
2052 val = target_remove_breakpoint (b->gdbarch, &b->target_info);
2053 }
2054 else
2055 {
2056 /* This breakpoint is in an overlay section.
2057 Did we set a breakpoint at the LMA? */
2058 if (!overlay_events_enabled)
2059 {
2060 /* Yes -- overlay event support is not active, so we
2061 should have set a breakpoint at the LMA. Remove it.
2062 */
2063 /* Ignore any failures: if the LMA is in ROM, we will
2064 have already warned when we failed to insert it. */
2065 if (b->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
2066 target_remove_hw_breakpoint (b->gdbarch,
2067 &b->overlay_target_info);
2068 else
2069 target_remove_breakpoint (b->gdbarch,
2070 &b->overlay_target_info);
2071 }
2072 /* Did we set a breakpoint at the VMA?
2073 If so, we will have marked the breakpoint 'inserted'. */
2074 if (b->inserted)
2075 {
2076 /* Yes -- remove it. Previously we did not bother to
2077 remove the breakpoint if the section had been
2078 unmapped, but let's not rely on that being safe. We
2079 don't know what the overlay manager might do. */
2080 if (b->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
2081 val = target_remove_hw_breakpoint (b->gdbarch,
2082 &b->target_info);
2083
2084 /* However, we should remove *software* breakpoints only
2085 if the section is still mapped, or else we overwrite
2086 wrong code with the saved shadow contents. */
2087 else if (section_is_mapped (b->section))
2088 val = target_remove_breakpoint (b->gdbarch,
2089 &b->target_info);
2090 else
2091 val = 0;
2092 }
2093 else
2094 {
2095 /* No -- not inserted, so no need to remove. No error. */
2096 val = 0;
2097 }
2098 }
2099
2100 /* In some cases, we might not be able to remove a breakpoint
2101 in a shared library that has already been removed, but we
2102 have not yet processed the shlib unload event. */
2103 if (val && solib_name_from_address (b->pspace, b->address))
2104 val = 0;
2105
2106 if (val)
2107 return val;
2108 b->inserted = (is == mark_inserted);
2109 }
2110 else if (b->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_watchpoint)
2111 {
2112 struct value *v;
2113 struct value *n;
2114
2115 b->inserted = (is == mark_inserted);
2116 val = target_remove_watchpoint (b->address, b->length,
2117 b->watchpoint_type);
2118
2119 /* Failure to remove any of the hardware watchpoints comes here. */
2120 if ((is == mark_uninserted) && (b->inserted))
2121 warning (_("Could not remove hardware watchpoint %d."),
2122 b->owner->number);
2123 }
2124 else if (b->owner->type == bp_catchpoint
2125 && breakpoint_enabled (b->owner)
2126 && !b->duplicate)
2127 {
2128 gdb_assert (b->owner->ops != NULL && b->owner->ops->remove != NULL);
2129
2130 val = b->owner->ops->remove (b->owner);
2131 if (val)
2132 return val;
2133 b->inserted = (is == mark_inserted);
2134 }
2135
2136 return 0;
2137 }
2138
2139 static int
2140 remove_breakpoint (struct bp_location *b, insertion_state_t is)
2141 {
2142 int ret;
2143 struct cleanup *old_chain;
2144
2145 if (b->owner->enable_state == bp_permanent)
2146 /* Permanent breakpoints cannot be inserted or removed. */
2147 return 0;
2148
2149 /* The type of none suggests that owner is actually deleted.
2150 This should not ever happen. */
2151 gdb_assert (b->owner->type != bp_none);
2152
2153 old_chain = save_current_space_and_thread ();
2154
2155 switch_to_program_space_and_thread (b->pspace);
2156
2157 ret = remove_breakpoint_1 (b, is);
2158
2159 do_cleanups (old_chain);
2160 return ret;
2161 }
2162
2163 /* Clear the "inserted" flag in all breakpoints. */
2164
2165 void
2166 mark_breakpoints_out (void)
2167 {
2168 struct bp_location *bpt, **bptp_tmp;
2169
2170 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bpt, bptp_tmp)
2171 if (bpt->pspace == current_program_space)
2172 bpt->inserted = 0;
2173 }
2174
2175 /* Clear the "inserted" flag in all breakpoints and delete any
2176 breakpoints which should go away between runs of the program.
2177
2178 Plus other such housekeeping that has to be done for breakpoints
2179 between runs.
2180
2181 Note: this function gets called at the end of a run (by
2182 generic_mourn_inferior) and when a run begins (by
2183 init_wait_for_inferior). */
2184
2185
2186
2187 void
2188 breakpoint_init_inferior (enum inf_context context)
2189 {
2190 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
2191 struct bp_location *bpt, **bptp_tmp;
2192 int ix;
2193 struct program_space *pspace = current_program_space;
2194
2195 /* If breakpoint locations are shared across processes, then there's
2196 nothing to do. */
2197 if (gdbarch_has_global_breakpoints (target_gdbarch))
2198 return;
2199
2200 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bpt, bptp_tmp)
2201 {
2202 if (bpt->pspace == pspace
2203 && bpt->owner->enable_state != bp_permanent)
2204 bpt->inserted = 0;
2205 }
2206
2207 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
2208 {
2209 if (b->loc && b->loc->pspace != pspace)
2210 continue;
2211
2212 switch (b->type)
2213 {
2214 case bp_call_dummy:
2215 case bp_watchpoint_scope:
2216
2217 /* If the call dummy breakpoint is at the entry point it will
2218 cause problems when the inferior is rerun, so we better
2219 get rid of it.
2220
2221 Also get rid of scope breakpoints. */
2222 delete_breakpoint (b);
2223 break;
2224
2225 case bp_watchpoint:
2226 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
2227 case bp_read_watchpoint:
2228 case bp_access_watchpoint:
2229
2230 /* Likewise for watchpoints on local expressions. */
2231 if (b->exp_valid_block != NULL)
2232 delete_breakpoint (b);
2233 else if (context == inf_starting)
2234 {
2235 /* Reset val field to force reread of starting value
2236 in insert_breakpoints. */
2237 if (b->val)
2238 value_free (b->val);
2239 b->val = NULL;
2240 b->val_valid = 0;
2241 }
2242 break;
2243 default:
2244 break;
2245 }
2246 }
2247
2248 /* Get rid of the moribund locations. */
2249 for (ix = 0; VEC_iterate (bp_location_p, moribund_locations, ix, bpt); ++ix)
2250 free_bp_location (bpt);
2251 VEC_free (bp_location_p, moribund_locations);
2252 }
2253
2254 /* These functions concern about actual breakpoints inserted in the
2255 target --- to e.g. check if we need to do decr_pc adjustment or if
2256 we need to hop over the bkpt --- so we check for address space
2257 match, not program space. */
2258
2259 /* breakpoint_here_p (PC) returns non-zero if an enabled breakpoint
2260 exists at PC. It returns ordinary_breakpoint_here if it's an
2261 ordinary breakpoint, or permanent_breakpoint_here if it's a
2262 permanent breakpoint.
2263 - When continuing from a location with an ordinary breakpoint, we
2264 actually single step once before calling insert_breakpoints.
2265 - When continuing from a localion with a permanent breakpoint, we
2266 need to use the `SKIP_PERMANENT_BREAKPOINT' macro, provided by
2267 the target, to advance the PC past the breakpoint. */
2268
2269 enum breakpoint_here
2270 breakpoint_here_p (struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc)
2271 {
2272 struct bp_location *bpt, **bptp_tmp;
2273 int any_breakpoint_here = 0;
2274
2275 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bpt, bptp_tmp)
2276 {
2277 if (bpt->loc_type != bp_loc_software_breakpoint
2278 && bpt->loc_type != bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
2279 continue;
2280
2281 if ((breakpoint_enabled (bpt->owner)
2282 || bpt->owner->enable_state == bp_permanent)
2283 && breakpoint_address_match (bpt->pspace->aspace, bpt->address,
2284 aspace, pc))
2285 {
2286 if (overlay_debugging
2287 && section_is_overlay (bpt->section)
2288 && !section_is_mapped (bpt->section))
2289 continue; /* unmapped overlay -- can't be a match */
2290 else if (bpt->owner->enable_state == bp_permanent)
2291 return permanent_breakpoint_here;
2292 else
2293 any_breakpoint_here = 1;
2294 }
2295 }
2296
2297 return any_breakpoint_here ? ordinary_breakpoint_here : 0;
2298 }
2299
2300 /* Return true if there's a moribund breakpoint at PC. */
2301
2302 int
2303 moribund_breakpoint_here_p (struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc)
2304 {
2305 struct bp_location *loc;
2306 int ix;
2307
2308 for (ix = 0; VEC_iterate (bp_location_p, moribund_locations, ix, loc); ++ix)
2309 if (breakpoint_address_match (loc->pspace->aspace, loc->address,
2310 aspace, pc))
2311 return 1;
2312
2313 return 0;
2314 }
2315
2316 /* Returns non-zero if there's a breakpoint inserted at PC, which is
2317 inserted using regular breakpoint_chain / bp_location array mechanism.
2318 This does not check for single-step breakpoints, which are
2319 inserted and removed using direct target manipulation. */
2320
2321 int
2322 regular_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc)
2323 {
2324 struct bp_location *bpt, **bptp_tmp;
2325
2326 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bpt, bptp_tmp)
2327 {
2328 if (bpt->loc_type != bp_loc_software_breakpoint
2329 && bpt->loc_type != bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
2330 continue;
2331
2332 if (bpt->inserted
2333 && breakpoint_address_match (bpt->pspace->aspace, bpt->address,
2334 aspace, pc))
2335 {
2336 if (overlay_debugging
2337 && section_is_overlay (bpt->section)
2338 && !section_is_mapped (bpt->section))
2339 continue; /* unmapped overlay -- can't be a match */
2340 else
2341 return 1;
2342 }
2343 }
2344 return 0;
2345 }
2346
2347 /* Returns non-zero iff there's either regular breakpoint
2348 or a single step breakpoint inserted at PC. */
2349
2350 int
2351 breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc)
2352 {
2353 if (regular_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (aspace, pc))
2354 return 1;
2355
2356 if (single_step_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (aspace, pc))
2357 return 1;
2358
2359 return 0;
2360 }
2361
2362 /* This function returns non-zero iff there is a software breakpoint
2363 inserted at PC. */
2364
2365 int
2366 software_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc)
2367 {
2368 struct bp_location *bpt, **bptp_tmp;
2369 int any_breakpoint_here = 0;
2370
2371 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bpt, bptp_tmp)
2372 {
2373 if (bpt->loc_type != bp_loc_software_breakpoint)
2374 continue;
2375
2376 if (bpt->inserted
2377 && breakpoint_address_match (bpt->pspace->aspace, bpt->address,
2378 aspace, pc))
2379 {
2380 if (overlay_debugging
2381 && section_is_overlay (bpt->section)
2382 && !section_is_mapped (bpt->section))
2383 continue; /* unmapped overlay -- can't be a match */
2384 else
2385 return 1;
2386 }
2387 }
2388
2389 /* Also check for software single-step breakpoints. */
2390 if (single_step_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (aspace, pc))
2391 return 1;
2392
2393 return 0;
2394 }
2395
2396 int
2397 hardware_watchpoint_inserted_in_range (struct address_space *aspace,
2398 CORE_ADDR addr, ULONGEST len)
2399 {
2400 struct breakpoint *bpt;
2401
2402 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bpt)
2403 {
2404 struct bp_location *loc;
2405
2406 if (bpt->type != bp_hardware_watchpoint
2407 && bpt->type != bp_access_watchpoint)
2408 continue;
2409
2410 if (!breakpoint_enabled (bpt))
2411 continue;
2412
2413 for (loc = bpt->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
2414 if (loc->pspace->aspace == aspace && loc->inserted)
2415 {
2416 CORE_ADDR l, h;
2417
2418 /* Check for intersection. */
2419 l = max (loc->address, addr);
2420 h = min (loc->address + loc->length, addr + len);
2421 if (l < h)
2422 return 1;
2423 }
2424 }
2425 return 0;
2426 }
2427
2428 /* breakpoint_thread_match (PC, PTID) returns true if the breakpoint at
2429 PC is valid for process/thread PTID. */
2430
2431 int
2432 breakpoint_thread_match (struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc,
2433 ptid_t ptid)
2434 {
2435 struct bp_location *bpt, **bptp_tmp;
2436 /* The thread and task IDs associated to PTID, computed lazily. */
2437 int thread = -1;
2438 int task = 0;
2439
2440 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bpt, bptp_tmp)
2441 {
2442 if (bpt->loc_type != bp_loc_software_breakpoint
2443 && bpt->loc_type != bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint)
2444 continue;
2445
2446 if (!breakpoint_enabled (bpt->owner)
2447 && bpt->owner->enable_state != bp_permanent)
2448 continue;
2449
2450 if (!breakpoint_address_match (bpt->pspace->aspace, bpt->address,
2451 aspace, pc))
2452 continue;
2453
2454 if (bpt->owner->thread != -1)
2455 {
2456 /* This is a thread-specific breakpoint. Check that ptid
2457 matches that thread. If thread hasn't been computed yet,
2458 it is now time to do so. */
2459 if (thread == -1)
2460 thread = pid_to_thread_id (ptid);
2461 if (bpt->owner->thread != thread)
2462 continue;
2463 }
2464
2465 if (bpt->owner->task != 0)
2466 {
2467 /* This is a task-specific breakpoint. Check that ptid
2468 matches that task. If task hasn't been computed yet,
2469 it is now time to do so. */
2470 if (task == 0)
2471 task = ada_get_task_number (ptid);
2472 if (bpt->owner->task != task)
2473 continue;
2474 }
2475
2476 if (overlay_debugging
2477 && section_is_overlay (bpt->section)
2478 && !section_is_mapped (bpt->section))
2479 continue; /* unmapped overlay -- can't be a match */
2480
2481 return 1;
2482 }
2483
2484 return 0;
2485 }
2486 \f
2487
2488 /* bpstat stuff. External routines' interfaces are documented
2489 in breakpoint.h. */
2490
2491 int
2492 ep_is_catchpoint (struct breakpoint *ep)
2493 {
2494 return (ep->type == bp_catchpoint);
2495 }
2496
2497 void
2498 bpstat_free (bpstat bs)
2499 {
2500 if (bs->old_val != NULL)
2501 value_free (bs->old_val);
2502 free_command_lines (&bs->commands);
2503 xfree (bs);
2504 }
2505
2506 /* Clear a bpstat so that it says we are not at any breakpoint.
2507 Also free any storage that is part of a bpstat. */
2508
2509 void
2510 bpstat_clear (bpstat *bsp)
2511 {
2512 bpstat p;
2513 bpstat q;
2514
2515 if (bsp == 0)
2516 return;
2517 p = *bsp;
2518 while (p != NULL)
2519 {
2520 q = p->next;
2521 bpstat_free (p);
2522 p = q;
2523 }
2524 *bsp = NULL;
2525 }
2526
2527 /* Return a copy of a bpstat. Like "bs1 = bs2" but all storage that
2528 is part of the bpstat is copied as well. */
2529
2530 bpstat
2531 bpstat_copy (bpstat bs)
2532 {
2533 bpstat p = NULL;
2534 bpstat tmp;
2535 bpstat retval = NULL;
2536
2537 if (bs == NULL)
2538 return bs;
2539
2540 for (; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
2541 {
2542 tmp = (bpstat) xmalloc (sizeof (*tmp));
2543 memcpy (tmp, bs, sizeof (*tmp));
2544 if (bs->commands != NULL)
2545 tmp->commands = copy_command_lines (bs->commands);
2546 if (bs->old_val != NULL)
2547 {
2548 tmp->old_val = value_copy (bs->old_val);
2549 release_value (tmp->old_val);
2550 }
2551
2552 if (p == NULL)
2553 /* This is the first thing in the chain. */
2554 retval = tmp;
2555 else
2556 p->next = tmp;
2557 p = tmp;
2558 }
2559 p->next = NULL;
2560 return retval;
2561 }
2562
2563 /* Find the bpstat associated with this breakpoint */
2564
2565 bpstat
2566 bpstat_find_breakpoint (bpstat bsp, struct breakpoint *breakpoint)
2567 {
2568 if (bsp == NULL)
2569 return NULL;
2570
2571 for (; bsp != NULL; bsp = bsp->next)
2572 {
2573 if (bsp->breakpoint_at && bsp->breakpoint_at->owner == breakpoint)
2574 return bsp;
2575 }
2576 return NULL;
2577 }
2578
2579 /* Find a step_resume breakpoint associated with this bpstat.
2580 (If there are multiple step_resume bp's on the list, this function
2581 will arbitrarily pick one.)
2582
2583 It is an error to use this function if BPSTAT doesn't contain a
2584 step_resume breakpoint.
2585
2586 See wait_for_inferior's use of this function. */
2587 struct breakpoint *
2588 bpstat_find_step_resume_breakpoint (bpstat bsp)
2589 {
2590 int current_thread;
2591
2592 gdb_assert (bsp != NULL);
2593
2594 current_thread = pid_to_thread_id (inferior_ptid);
2595
2596 for (; bsp != NULL; bsp = bsp->next)
2597 {
2598 if ((bsp->breakpoint_at != NULL)
2599 && (bsp->breakpoint_at->owner->type == bp_step_resume)
2600 && (bsp->breakpoint_at->owner->thread == current_thread
2601 || bsp->breakpoint_at->owner->thread == -1))
2602 return bsp->breakpoint_at->owner;
2603 }
2604
2605 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("No step_resume breakpoint found."));
2606 }
2607
2608
2609 /* Put in *NUM the breakpoint number of the first breakpoint we are stopped
2610 at. *BSP upon return is a bpstat which points to the remaining
2611 breakpoints stopped at (but which is not guaranteed to be good for
2612 anything but further calls to bpstat_num).
2613 Return 0 if passed a bpstat which does not indicate any breakpoints.
2614 Return -1 if stopped at a breakpoint that has been deleted since
2615 we set it.
2616 Return 1 otherwise. */
2617
2618 int
2619 bpstat_num (bpstat *bsp, int *num)
2620 {
2621 struct breakpoint *b;
2622
2623 if ((*bsp) == NULL)
2624 return 0; /* No more breakpoint values */
2625
2626 /* We assume we'll never have several bpstats that
2627 correspond to a single breakpoint -- otherwise,
2628 this function might return the same number more
2629 than once and this will look ugly. */
2630 b = (*bsp)->breakpoint_at ? (*bsp)->breakpoint_at->owner : NULL;
2631 *bsp = (*bsp)->next;
2632 if (b == NULL)
2633 return -1; /* breakpoint that's been deleted since */
2634
2635 *num = b->number; /* We have its number */
2636 return 1;
2637 }
2638
2639 /* Modify BS so that the actions will not be performed. */
2640
2641 void
2642 bpstat_clear_actions (bpstat bs)
2643 {
2644 for (; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
2645 {
2646 free_command_lines (&bs->commands);
2647 if (bs->old_val != NULL)
2648 {
2649 value_free (bs->old_val);
2650 bs->old_val = NULL;
2651 }
2652 }
2653 }
2654
2655 /* Called when a command is about to proceed the inferior. */
2656
2657 static void
2658 breakpoint_about_to_proceed (void)
2659 {
2660 if (!ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, null_ptid))
2661 {
2662 struct thread_info *tp = inferior_thread ();
2663
2664 /* Allow inferior function calls in breakpoint commands to not
2665 interrupt the command list. When the call finishes
2666 successfully, the inferior will be standing at the same
2667 breakpoint as if nothing happened. */
2668 if (tp->in_infcall)
2669 return;
2670 }
2671
2672 breakpoint_proceeded = 1;
2673 }
2674
2675 /* Stub for cleaning up our state if we error-out of a breakpoint command */
2676 static void
2677 cleanup_executing_breakpoints (void *ignore)
2678 {
2679 executing_breakpoint_commands = 0;
2680 }
2681
2682 /* Execute all the commands associated with all the breakpoints at this
2683 location. Any of these commands could cause the process to proceed
2684 beyond this point, etc. We look out for such changes by checking
2685 the global "breakpoint_proceeded" after each command.
2686
2687 Returns true if a breakpoint command resumed the inferior. In that
2688 case, it is the caller's responsibility to recall it again with the
2689 bpstat of the current thread. */
2690
2691 static int
2692 bpstat_do_actions_1 (bpstat *bsp)
2693 {
2694 bpstat bs;
2695 struct cleanup *old_chain;
2696 int again = 0;
2697
2698 /* Avoid endless recursion if a `source' command is contained
2699 in bs->commands. */
2700 if (executing_breakpoint_commands)
2701 return 0;
2702
2703 executing_breakpoint_commands = 1;
2704 old_chain = make_cleanup (cleanup_executing_breakpoints, 0);
2705
2706 /* This pointer will iterate over the list of bpstat's. */
2707 bs = *bsp;
2708
2709 breakpoint_proceeded = 0;
2710 for (; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
2711 {
2712 struct command_line *cmd;
2713 struct cleanup *this_cmd_tree_chain;
2714
2715 /* Take ownership of the BSP's command tree, if it has one.
2716
2717 The command tree could legitimately contain commands like
2718 'step' and 'next', which call clear_proceed_status, which
2719 frees stop_bpstat's command tree. To make sure this doesn't
2720 free the tree we're executing out from under us, we need to
2721 take ownership of the tree ourselves. Since a given bpstat's
2722 commands are only executed once, we don't need to copy it; we
2723 can clear the pointer in the bpstat, and make sure we free
2724 the tree when we're done. */
2725 cmd = bs->commands;
2726 bs->commands = 0;
2727 this_cmd_tree_chain = make_cleanup_free_command_lines (&cmd);
2728
2729 while (cmd != NULL)
2730 {
2731 execute_control_command (cmd);
2732
2733 if (breakpoint_proceeded)
2734 break;
2735 else
2736 cmd = cmd->next;
2737 }
2738
2739 /* We can free this command tree now. */
2740 do_cleanups (this_cmd_tree_chain);
2741
2742 if (breakpoint_proceeded)
2743 {
2744 if (target_can_async_p ())
2745 /* If we are in async mode, then the target might be still
2746 running, not stopped at any breakpoint, so nothing for
2747 us to do here -- just return to the event loop. */
2748 ;
2749 else
2750 /* In sync mode, when execute_control_command returns
2751 we're already standing on the next breakpoint.
2752 Breakpoint commands for that stop were not run, since
2753 execute_command does not run breakpoint commands --
2754 only command_line_handler does, but that one is not
2755 involved in execution of breakpoint commands. So, we
2756 can now execute breakpoint commands. It should be
2757 noted that making execute_command do bpstat actions is
2758 not an option -- in this case we'll have recursive
2759 invocation of bpstat for each breakpoint with a
2760 command, and can easily blow up GDB stack. Instead, we
2761 return true, which will trigger the caller to recall us
2762 with the new stop_bpstat. */
2763 again = 1;
2764 break;
2765 }
2766 }
2767 do_cleanups (old_chain);
2768 return again;
2769 }
2770
2771 void
2772 bpstat_do_actions (void)
2773 {
2774 /* Do any commands attached to breakpoint we are stopped at. */
2775 while (!ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, null_ptid)
2776 && target_has_execution
2777 && !is_exited (inferior_ptid)
2778 && !is_executing (inferior_ptid))
2779 /* Since in sync mode, bpstat_do_actions may resume the inferior,
2780 and only return when it is stopped at the next breakpoint, we
2781 keep doing breakpoint actions until it returns false to
2782 indicate the inferior was not resumed. */
2783 if (!bpstat_do_actions_1 (&inferior_thread ()->stop_bpstat))
2784 break;
2785 }
2786
2787 /* Print out the (old or new) value associated with a watchpoint. */
2788
2789 static void
2790 watchpoint_value_print (struct value *val, struct ui_file *stream)
2791 {
2792 if (val == NULL)
2793 fprintf_unfiltered (stream, _("<unreadable>"));
2794 else
2795 {
2796 struct value_print_options opts;
2797 get_user_print_options (&opts);
2798 value_print (val, stream, &opts);
2799 }
2800 }
2801
2802 /* This is the normal print function for a bpstat. In the future,
2803 much of this logic could (should?) be moved to bpstat_stop_status,
2804 by having it set different print_it values.
2805
2806 Current scheme: When we stop, bpstat_print() is called. It loops
2807 through the bpstat list of things causing this stop, calling the
2808 print_bp_stop_message function on each one. The behavior of the
2809 print_bp_stop_message function depends on the print_it field of
2810 bpstat. If such field so indicates, call this function here.
2811
2812 Return values from this routine (ultimately used by bpstat_print()
2813 and normal_stop() to decide what to do):
2814 PRINT_NOTHING: Means we already printed all we needed to print,
2815 don't print anything else.
2816 PRINT_SRC_ONLY: Means we printed something, and we do *not* desire
2817 that something to be followed by a location.
2818 PRINT_SCR_AND_LOC: Means we printed something, and we *do* desire
2819 that something to be followed by a location.
2820 PRINT_UNKNOWN: Means we printed nothing or we need to do some more
2821 analysis. */
2822
2823 static enum print_stop_action
2824 print_it_typical (bpstat bs)
2825 {
2826 struct cleanup *old_chain;
2827 struct breakpoint *b;
2828 const struct bp_location *bl;
2829 struct ui_stream *stb;
2830 int bp_temp = 0;
2831 enum print_stop_action result;
2832
2833 /* bs->breakpoint_at can be NULL if it was a momentary breakpoint
2834 which has since been deleted. */
2835 if (bs->breakpoint_at == NULL)
2836 return PRINT_UNKNOWN;
2837 bl = bs->breakpoint_at;
2838 b = bl->owner;
2839
2840 stb = ui_out_stream_new (uiout);
2841 old_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_stream_delete (stb);
2842
2843 switch (b->type)
2844 {
2845 case bp_breakpoint:
2846 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
2847 bp_temp = bs->breakpoint_at->owner->disposition == disp_del;
2848 if (bl->address != bl->requested_address)
2849 breakpoint_adjustment_warning (bl->requested_address,
2850 bl->address,
2851 b->number, 1);
2852 annotate_breakpoint (b->number);
2853 if (bp_temp)
2854 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nTemporary breakpoint ");
2855 else
2856 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nBreakpoint ");
2857 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
2858 {
2859 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "reason",
2860 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_BREAKPOINT_HIT));
2861 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "disp", bpdisp_text (b->disposition));
2862 }
2863 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "bkptno", b->number);
2864 ui_out_text (uiout, ", ");
2865 result = PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC;
2866 break;
2867
2868 case bp_shlib_event:
2869 /* Did we stop because the user set the stop_on_solib_events
2870 variable? (If so, we report this as a generic, "Stopped due
2871 to shlib event" message.) */
2872 printf_filtered (_("Stopped due to shared library event\n"));
2873 result = PRINT_NOTHING;
2874 break;
2875
2876 case bp_thread_event:
2877 /* Not sure how we will get here.
2878 GDB should not stop for these breakpoints. */
2879 printf_filtered (_("Thread Event Breakpoint: gdb should not stop!\n"));
2880 result = PRINT_NOTHING;
2881 break;
2882
2883 case bp_overlay_event:
2884 /* By analogy with the thread event, GDB should not stop for these. */
2885 printf_filtered (_("Overlay Event Breakpoint: gdb should not stop!\n"));
2886 result = PRINT_NOTHING;
2887 break;
2888
2889 case bp_longjmp_master:
2890 /* These should never be enabled. */
2891 printf_filtered (_("Longjmp Master Breakpoint: gdb should not stop!\n"));
2892 result = PRINT_NOTHING;
2893 break;
2894
2895 case bp_watchpoint:
2896 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
2897 annotate_watchpoint (b->number);
2898 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
2899 ui_out_field_string
2900 (uiout, "reason",
2901 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_WATCHPOINT_TRIGGER));
2902 mention (b);
2903 make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "value");
2904 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nOld value = ");
2905 watchpoint_value_print (bs->old_val, stb->stream);
2906 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "old", stb);
2907 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nNew value = ");
2908 watchpoint_value_print (b->val, stb->stream);
2909 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "new", stb);
2910 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
2911 /* More than one watchpoint may have been triggered. */
2912 result = PRINT_UNKNOWN;
2913 break;
2914
2915 case bp_read_watchpoint:
2916 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
2917 ui_out_field_string
2918 (uiout, "reason",
2919 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_READ_WATCHPOINT_TRIGGER));
2920 mention (b);
2921 make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "value");
2922 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nValue = ");
2923 watchpoint_value_print (b->val, stb->stream);
2924 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "value", stb);
2925 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
2926 result = PRINT_UNKNOWN;
2927 break;
2928
2929 case bp_access_watchpoint:
2930 if (bs->old_val != NULL)
2931 {
2932 annotate_watchpoint (b->number);
2933 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
2934 ui_out_field_string
2935 (uiout, "reason",
2936 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_ACCESS_WATCHPOINT_TRIGGER));
2937 mention (b);
2938 make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "value");
2939 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nOld value = ");
2940 watchpoint_value_print (bs->old_val, stb->stream);
2941 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "old", stb);
2942 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nNew value = ");
2943 }
2944 else
2945 {
2946 mention (b);
2947 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
2948 ui_out_field_string
2949 (uiout, "reason",
2950 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_ACCESS_WATCHPOINT_TRIGGER));
2951 make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "value");
2952 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nValue = ");
2953 }
2954 watchpoint_value_print (b->val, stb->stream);
2955 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "new", stb);
2956 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
2957 result = PRINT_UNKNOWN;
2958 break;
2959
2960 /* Fall through, we don't deal with these types of breakpoints
2961 here. */
2962
2963 case bp_finish:
2964 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
2965 ui_out_field_string
2966 (uiout, "reason",
2967 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_FUNCTION_FINISHED));
2968 result = PRINT_UNKNOWN;
2969 break;
2970
2971 case bp_until:
2972 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
2973 ui_out_field_string
2974 (uiout, "reason",
2975 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_LOCATION_REACHED));
2976 result = PRINT_UNKNOWN;
2977 break;
2978
2979 case bp_none:
2980 case bp_longjmp:
2981 case bp_longjmp_resume:
2982 case bp_step_resume:
2983 case bp_watchpoint_scope:
2984 case bp_call_dummy:
2985 case bp_tracepoint:
2986 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
2987 case bp_jit_event:
2988 default:
2989 result = PRINT_UNKNOWN;
2990 break;
2991 }
2992
2993 do_cleanups (old_chain);
2994 return result;
2995 }
2996
2997 /* Generic routine for printing messages indicating why we
2998 stopped. The behavior of this function depends on the value
2999 'print_it' in the bpstat structure. Under some circumstances we
3000 may decide not to print anything here and delegate the task to
3001 normal_stop(). */
3002
3003 static enum print_stop_action
3004 print_bp_stop_message (bpstat bs)
3005 {
3006 switch (bs->print_it)
3007 {
3008 case print_it_noop:
3009 /* Nothing should be printed for this bpstat entry. */
3010 return PRINT_UNKNOWN;
3011 break;
3012
3013 case print_it_done:
3014 /* We still want to print the frame, but we already printed the
3015 relevant messages. */
3016 return PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC;
3017 break;
3018
3019 case print_it_normal:
3020 {
3021 const struct bp_location *bl = bs->breakpoint_at;
3022 struct breakpoint *b = bl ? bl->owner : NULL;
3023
3024 /* Normal case. Call the breakpoint's print_it method, or
3025 print_it_typical. */
3026 /* FIXME: how breakpoint can ever be NULL here? */
3027 if (b != NULL && b->ops != NULL && b->ops->print_it != NULL)
3028 return b->ops->print_it (b);
3029 else
3030 return print_it_typical (bs);
3031 }
3032 break;
3033
3034 default:
3035 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
3036 _("print_bp_stop_message: unrecognized enum value"));
3037 break;
3038 }
3039 }
3040
3041 /* Print a message indicating what happened. This is called from
3042 normal_stop(). The input to this routine is the head of the bpstat
3043 list - a list of the eventpoints that caused this stop. This
3044 routine calls the generic print routine for printing a message
3045 about reasons for stopping. This will print (for example) the
3046 "Breakpoint n," part of the output. The return value of this
3047 routine is one of:
3048
3049 PRINT_UNKNOWN: Means we printed nothing
3050 PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC: Means we printed something, and expect subsequent
3051 code to print the location. An example is
3052 "Breakpoint 1, " which should be followed by
3053 the location.
3054 PRINT_SRC_ONLY: Means we printed something, but there is no need
3055 to also print the location part of the message.
3056 An example is the catch/throw messages, which
3057 don't require a location appended to the end.
3058 PRINT_NOTHING: We have done some printing and we don't need any
3059 further info to be printed.*/
3060
3061 enum print_stop_action
3062 bpstat_print (bpstat bs)
3063 {
3064 int val;
3065
3066 /* Maybe another breakpoint in the chain caused us to stop.
3067 (Currently all watchpoints go on the bpstat whether hit or not.
3068 That probably could (should) be changed, provided care is taken
3069 with respect to bpstat_explains_signal). */
3070 for (; bs; bs = bs->next)
3071 {
3072 val = print_bp_stop_message (bs);
3073 if (val == PRINT_SRC_ONLY
3074 || val == PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC
3075 || val == PRINT_NOTHING)
3076 return val;
3077 }
3078
3079 /* We reached the end of the chain, or we got a null BS to start
3080 with and nothing was printed. */
3081 return PRINT_UNKNOWN;
3082 }
3083
3084 /* Evaluate the expression EXP and return 1 if value is zero.
3085 This is used inside a catch_errors to evaluate the breakpoint condition.
3086 The argument is a "struct expression *" that has been cast to char * to
3087 make it pass through catch_errors. */
3088
3089 static int
3090 breakpoint_cond_eval (void *exp)
3091 {
3092 struct value *mark = value_mark ();
3093 int i = !value_true (evaluate_expression ((struct expression *) exp));
3094 value_free_to_mark (mark);
3095 return i;
3096 }
3097
3098 /* Allocate a new bpstat and chain it to the current one. */
3099
3100 static bpstat
3101 bpstat_alloc (const struct bp_location *bl, bpstat cbs /* Current "bs" value */ )
3102 {
3103 bpstat bs;
3104
3105 bs = (bpstat) xmalloc (sizeof (*bs));
3106 cbs->next = bs;
3107 bs->breakpoint_at = bl;
3108 /* If the condition is false, etc., don't do the commands. */
3109 bs->commands = NULL;
3110 bs->old_val = NULL;
3111 bs->print_it = print_it_normal;
3112 return bs;
3113 }
3114 \f
3115 /* The target has stopped with waitstatus WS. Check if any hardware
3116 watchpoints have triggered, according to the target. */
3117
3118 int
3119 watchpoints_triggered (struct target_waitstatus *ws)
3120 {
3121 int stopped_by_watchpoint = target_stopped_by_watchpoint ();
3122 CORE_ADDR addr;
3123 struct breakpoint *b;
3124
3125 if (!stopped_by_watchpoint)
3126 {
3127 /* We were not stopped by a watchpoint. Mark all watchpoints
3128 as not triggered. */
3129 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
3130 if (b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint
3131 || b->type == bp_read_watchpoint
3132 || b->type == bp_access_watchpoint)
3133 b->watchpoint_triggered = watch_triggered_no;
3134
3135 return 0;
3136 }
3137
3138 if (!target_stopped_data_address (&current_target, &addr))
3139 {
3140 /* We were stopped by a watchpoint, but we don't know where.
3141 Mark all watchpoints as unknown. */
3142 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
3143 if (b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint
3144 || b->type == bp_read_watchpoint
3145 || b->type == bp_access_watchpoint)
3146 b->watchpoint_triggered = watch_triggered_unknown;
3147
3148 return stopped_by_watchpoint;
3149 }
3150
3151 /* The target could report the data address. Mark watchpoints
3152 affected by this data address as triggered, and all others as not
3153 triggered. */
3154
3155 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
3156 if (b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint
3157 || b->type == bp_read_watchpoint
3158 || b->type == bp_access_watchpoint)
3159 {
3160 struct bp_location *loc;
3161 struct value *v;
3162
3163 b->watchpoint_triggered = watch_triggered_no;
3164 for (loc = b->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
3165 /* Exact match not required. Within range is
3166 sufficient. */
3167 if (target_watchpoint_addr_within_range (&current_target,
3168 addr, loc->address,
3169 loc->length))
3170 {
3171 b->watchpoint_triggered = watch_triggered_yes;
3172 break;
3173 }
3174 }
3175
3176 return 1;
3177 }
3178
3179 /* Possible return values for watchpoint_check (this can't be an enum
3180 because of check_errors). */
3181 /* The watchpoint has been deleted. */
3182 #define WP_DELETED 1
3183 /* The value has changed. */
3184 #define WP_VALUE_CHANGED 2
3185 /* The value has not changed. */
3186 #define WP_VALUE_NOT_CHANGED 3
3187
3188 #define BP_TEMPFLAG 1
3189 #define BP_HARDWAREFLAG 2
3190
3191 /* Evaluate watchpoint condition expression and check if its value changed.
3192
3193 P should be a pointer to struct bpstat, but is defined as a void *
3194 in order for this function to be usable with catch_errors. */
3195
3196 static int
3197 watchpoint_check (void *p)
3198 {
3199 bpstat bs = (bpstat) p;
3200 struct breakpoint *b;
3201 struct frame_info *fr;
3202 int within_current_scope;
3203
3204 b = bs->breakpoint_at->owner;
3205
3206 /* If this is a local watchpoint, we only want to check if the
3207 watchpoint frame is in scope if the current thread is the thread
3208 that was used to create the watchpoint. */
3209 if (!watchpoint_in_thread_scope (b))
3210 return WP_VALUE_NOT_CHANGED;
3211
3212 if (b->exp_valid_block == NULL)
3213 within_current_scope = 1;
3214 else
3215 {
3216 struct frame_info *frame = get_current_frame ();
3217 struct gdbarch *frame_arch = get_frame_arch (frame);
3218 CORE_ADDR frame_pc = get_frame_pc (frame);
3219
3220 fr = frame_find_by_id (b->watchpoint_frame);
3221 within_current_scope = (fr != NULL);
3222
3223 /* If we've gotten confused in the unwinder, we might have
3224 returned a frame that can't describe this variable. */
3225 if (within_current_scope)
3226 {
3227 struct symbol *function;
3228
3229 function = get_frame_function (fr);
3230 if (function == NULL
3231 || !contained_in (b->exp_valid_block,
3232 SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE (function)))
3233 within_current_scope = 0;
3234 }
3235
3236 /* in_function_epilogue_p() returns a non-zero value if we're still
3237 in the function but the stack frame has already been invalidated.
3238 Since we can't rely on the values of local variables after the
3239 stack has been destroyed, we are treating the watchpoint in that
3240 state as `not changed' without further checking. Don't mark
3241 watchpoints as changed if the current frame is in an epilogue -
3242 even if they are in some other frame, our view of the stack
3243 is likely to be wrong. */
3244 if (gdbarch_in_function_epilogue_p (frame_arch, frame_pc))
3245 return WP_VALUE_NOT_CHANGED;
3246
3247 if (within_current_scope)
3248 /* If we end up stopping, the current frame will get selected
3249 in normal_stop. So this call to select_frame won't affect
3250 the user. */
3251 select_frame (fr);
3252 }
3253
3254 if (within_current_scope)
3255 {
3256 /* We use value_{,free_to_}mark because it could be a
3257 *long* time before we return to the command level and
3258 call free_all_values. We can't call free_all_values because
3259 we might be in the middle of evaluating a function call. */
3260
3261 struct value *mark = value_mark ();
3262 struct value *new_val;
3263
3264 fetch_watchpoint_value (b->exp, &new_val, NULL, NULL);
3265
3266 /* We use value_equal_contents instead of value_equal because the latter
3267 coerces an array to a pointer, thus comparing just the address of the
3268 array instead of its contents. This is not what we want. */
3269 if ((b->val != NULL) != (new_val != NULL)
3270 || (b->val != NULL && !value_equal_contents (b->val, new_val)))
3271 {
3272 if (new_val != NULL)
3273 {
3274 release_value (new_val);
3275 value_free_to_mark (mark);
3276 }
3277 bs->old_val = b->val;
3278 b->val = new_val;
3279 b->val_valid = 1;
3280 /* We will stop here */
3281 return WP_VALUE_CHANGED;
3282 }
3283 else
3284 {
3285 /* Nothing changed, don't do anything. */
3286 value_free_to_mark (mark);
3287 /* We won't stop here */
3288 return WP_VALUE_NOT_CHANGED;
3289 }
3290 }
3291 else
3292 {
3293 /* This seems like the only logical thing to do because
3294 if we temporarily ignored the watchpoint, then when
3295 we reenter the block in which it is valid it contains
3296 garbage (in the case of a function, it may have two
3297 garbage values, one before and one after the prologue).
3298 So we can't even detect the first assignment to it and
3299 watch after that (since the garbage may or may not equal
3300 the first value assigned). */
3301 /* We print all the stop information in print_it_typical(), but
3302 in this case, by the time we call print_it_typical() this bp
3303 will be deleted already. So we have no choice but print the
3304 information here. */
3305 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3306 ui_out_field_string
3307 (uiout, "reason", async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_WATCHPOINT_SCOPE));
3308 ui_out_text (uiout, "\nWatchpoint ");
3309 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "wpnum", b->number);
3310 ui_out_text (uiout, " deleted because the program has left the block in\n\
3311 which its expression is valid.\n");
3312
3313 if (b->related_breakpoint)
3314 b->related_breakpoint->disposition = disp_del_at_next_stop;
3315 b->disposition = disp_del_at_next_stop;
3316
3317 return WP_DELETED;
3318 }
3319 }
3320
3321 /* Return true if it looks like target has stopped due to hitting
3322 breakpoint location BL. This function does not check if we
3323 should stop, only if BL explains the stop. */
3324 static int
3325 bpstat_check_location (const struct bp_location *bl,
3326 struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR bp_addr)
3327 {
3328 struct breakpoint *b = bl->owner;
3329
3330 /* By definition, the inferior does not report stops at
3331 tracepoints. */
3332 if (tracepoint_type (b))
3333 return 0;
3334
3335 if (b->type != bp_watchpoint
3336 && b->type != bp_hardware_watchpoint
3337 && b->type != bp_read_watchpoint
3338 && b->type != bp_access_watchpoint
3339 && b->type != bp_hardware_breakpoint
3340 && b->type != bp_catchpoint) /* a non-watchpoint bp */
3341 {
3342 if (!breakpoint_address_match (bl->pspace->aspace, bl->address,
3343 aspace, bp_addr))
3344 return 0;
3345 if (overlay_debugging /* unmapped overlay section */
3346 && section_is_overlay (bl->section)
3347 && !section_is_mapped (bl->section))
3348 return 0;
3349 }
3350
3351 /* Continuable hardware watchpoints are treated as non-existent if the
3352 reason we stopped wasn't a hardware watchpoint (we didn't stop on
3353 some data address). Otherwise gdb won't stop on a break instruction
3354 in the code (not from a breakpoint) when a hardware watchpoint has
3355 been defined. Also skip watchpoints which we know did not trigger
3356 (did not match the data address). */
3357
3358 if ((b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint
3359 || b->type == bp_read_watchpoint
3360 || b->type == bp_access_watchpoint)
3361 && b->watchpoint_triggered == watch_triggered_no)
3362 return 0;
3363
3364 if (b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
3365 {
3366 if (bl->address != bp_addr)
3367 return 0;
3368 if (overlay_debugging /* unmapped overlay section */
3369 && section_is_overlay (bl->section)
3370 && !section_is_mapped (bl->section))
3371 return 0;
3372 }
3373
3374 if (b->type == bp_catchpoint)
3375 {
3376 gdb_assert (b->ops != NULL && b->ops->breakpoint_hit != NULL);
3377 if (!b->ops->breakpoint_hit (b))
3378 return 0;
3379 }
3380
3381 return 1;
3382 }
3383
3384 /* If BS refers to a watchpoint, determine if the watched values
3385 has actually changed, and we should stop. If not, set BS->stop
3386 to 0. */
3387 static void
3388 bpstat_check_watchpoint (bpstat bs)
3389 {
3390 const struct bp_location *bl = bs->breakpoint_at;
3391 struct breakpoint *b = bl->owner;
3392
3393 if (b->type == bp_watchpoint
3394 || b->type == bp_read_watchpoint
3395 || b->type == bp_access_watchpoint
3396 || b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint)
3397 {
3398 CORE_ADDR addr;
3399 struct value *v;
3400 int must_check_value = 0;
3401
3402 if (b->type == bp_watchpoint)
3403 /* For a software watchpoint, we must always check the
3404 watched value. */
3405 must_check_value = 1;
3406 else if (b->watchpoint_triggered == watch_triggered_yes)
3407 /* We have a hardware watchpoint (read, write, or access)
3408 and the target earlier reported an address watched by
3409 this watchpoint. */
3410 must_check_value = 1;
3411 else if (b->watchpoint_triggered == watch_triggered_unknown
3412 && b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint)
3413 /* We were stopped by a hardware watchpoint, but the target could
3414 not report the data address. We must check the watchpoint's
3415 value. Access and read watchpoints are out of luck; without
3416 a data address, we can't figure it out. */
3417 must_check_value = 1;
3418
3419 if (must_check_value)
3420 {
3421 char *message = xstrprintf ("Error evaluating expression for watchpoint %d\n",
3422 b->number);
3423 struct cleanup *cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, message);
3424 int e = catch_errors (watchpoint_check, bs, message,
3425 RETURN_MASK_ALL);
3426 do_cleanups (cleanups);
3427 switch (e)
3428 {
3429 case WP_DELETED:
3430 /* We've already printed what needs to be printed. */
3431 bs->print_it = print_it_done;
3432 /* Stop. */
3433 break;
3434 case WP_VALUE_CHANGED:
3435 if (b->type == bp_read_watchpoint)
3436 {
3437 /* Don't stop: read watchpoints shouldn't fire if
3438 the value has changed. This is for targets
3439 which cannot set read-only watchpoints. */
3440 bs->print_it = print_it_noop;
3441 bs->stop = 0;
3442 }
3443 break;
3444 case WP_VALUE_NOT_CHANGED:
3445 if (b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint
3446 || b->type == bp_watchpoint)
3447 {
3448 /* Don't stop: write watchpoints shouldn't fire if
3449 the value hasn't changed. */
3450 bs->print_it = print_it_noop;
3451 bs->stop = 0;
3452 }
3453 /* Stop. */
3454 break;
3455 default:
3456 /* Can't happen. */
3457 case 0:
3458 /* Error from catch_errors. */
3459 printf_filtered (_("Watchpoint %d deleted.\n"), b->number);
3460 if (b->related_breakpoint)
3461 b->related_breakpoint->disposition = disp_del_at_next_stop;
3462 b->disposition = disp_del_at_next_stop;
3463 /* We've already printed what needs to be printed. */
3464 bs->print_it = print_it_done;
3465 break;
3466 }
3467 }
3468 else /* must_check_value == 0 */
3469 {
3470 /* This is a case where some watchpoint(s) triggered, but
3471 not at the address of this watchpoint, or else no
3472 watchpoint triggered after all. So don't print
3473 anything for this watchpoint. */
3474 bs->print_it = print_it_noop;
3475 bs->stop = 0;
3476 }
3477 }
3478 }
3479
3480
3481 /* Check conditions (condition proper, frame, thread and ignore count)
3482 of breakpoint referred to by BS. If we should not stop for this
3483 breakpoint, set BS->stop to 0. */
3484 static void
3485 bpstat_check_breakpoint_conditions (bpstat bs, ptid_t ptid)
3486 {
3487 int thread_id = pid_to_thread_id (ptid);
3488 const struct bp_location *bl = bs->breakpoint_at;
3489 struct breakpoint *b = bl->owner;
3490
3491 if (frame_id_p (b->frame_id)
3492 && !frame_id_eq (b->frame_id, get_stack_frame_id (get_current_frame ())))
3493 bs->stop = 0;
3494 else if (bs->stop)
3495 {
3496 int value_is_zero = 0;
3497
3498 /* If this is a scope breakpoint, mark the associated
3499 watchpoint as triggered so that we will handle the
3500 out-of-scope event. We'll get to the watchpoint next
3501 iteration. */
3502 if (b->type == bp_watchpoint_scope)
3503 b->related_breakpoint->watchpoint_triggered = watch_triggered_yes;
3504
3505 if (bl->cond && bl->owner->disposition != disp_del_at_next_stop)
3506 {
3507 /* We use value_mark and value_free_to_mark because it could
3508 be a long time before we return to the command level and
3509 call free_all_values. We can't call free_all_values
3510 because we might be in the middle of evaluating a
3511 function call. */
3512 struct value *mark = value_mark ();
3513
3514 /* Need to select the frame, with all that implies so that
3515 the conditions will have the right context. Because we
3516 use the frame, we will not see an inlined function's
3517 variables when we arrive at a breakpoint at the start
3518 of the inlined function; the current frame will be the
3519 call site. */
3520 select_frame (get_current_frame ());
3521 value_is_zero
3522 = catch_errors (breakpoint_cond_eval, (bl->cond),
3523 "Error in testing breakpoint condition:\n",
3524 RETURN_MASK_ALL);
3525 /* FIXME-someday, should give breakpoint # */
3526 value_free_to_mark (mark);
3527 }
3528 if (bl->cond && value_is_zero)
3529 {
3530 bs->stop = 0;
3531 }
3532 else if (b->thread != -1 && b->thread != thread_id)
3533 {
3534 bs->stop = 0;
3535 }
3536 else if (b->ignore_count > 0)
3537 {
3538 b->ignore_count--;
3539 annotate_ignore_count_change ();
3540 bs->stop = 0;
3541 /* Increase the hit count even though we don't
3542 stop. */
3543 ++(b->hit_count);
3544 }
3545 }
3546 }
3547
3548
3549 /* Get a bpstat associated with having just stopped at address
3550 BP_ADDR in thread PTID.
3551
3552 Determine whether we stopped at a breakpoint, etc, or whether we
3553 don't understand this stop. Result is a chain of bpstat's such that:
3554
3555 if we don't understand the stop, the result is a null pointer.
3556
3557 if we understand why we stopped, the result is not null.
3558
3559 Each element of the chain refers to a particular breakpoint or
3560 watchpoint at which we have stopped. (We may have stopped for
3561 several reasons concurrently.)
3562
3563 Each element of the chain has valid next, breakpoint_at,
3564 commands, FIXME??? fields. */
3565
3566 bpstat
3567 bpstat_stop_status (struct address_space *aspace,
3568 CORE_ADDR bp_addr, ptid_t ptid)
3569 {
3570 struct breakpoint *b = NULL;
3571 struct bp_location *bl, **blp_tmp;
3572 struct bp_location *loc;
3573 /* Root of the chain of bpstat's */
3574 struct bpstats root_bs[1];
3575 /* Pointer to the last thing in the chain currently. */
3576 bpstat bs = root_bs;
3577 int ix;
3578 int need_remove_insert;
3579
3580 /* ALL_BP_LOCATIONS iteration would break across
3581 update_global_location_list possibly executed by
3582 bpstat_check_breakpoint_conditions's inferior call. */
3583
3584 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
3585 {
3586 if (!breakpoint_enabled (b) && b->enable_state != bp_permanent)
3587 continue;
3588
3589 for (bl = b->loc; bl != NULL; bl = bl->next)
3590 {
3591 /* For hardware watchpoints, we look only at the first location.
3592 The watchpoint_check function will work on entire expression,
3593 not the individual locations. For read watchopints, the
3594 watchpoints_triggered function have checked all locations
3595 already. */
3596 if (b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint && bl != b->loc)
3597 break;
3598
3599 if (bl->shlib_disabled)
3600 continue;
3601
3602 if (!bpstat_check_location (bl, aspace, bp_addr))
3603 continue;
3604
3605 /* Come here if it's a watchpoint, or if the break address matches */
3606
3607 bs = bpstat_alloc (bl, bs); /* Alloc a bpstat to explain stop */
3608
3609 /* Assume we stop. Should we find watchpoint that is not actually
3610 triggered, or if condition of breakpoint is false, we'll reset
3611 'stop' to 0. */
3612 bs->stop = 1;
3613 bs->print = 1;
3614
3615 bpstat_check_watchpoint (bs);
3616 if (!bs->stop)
3617 continue;
3618
3619 if (b->type == bp_thread_event || b->type == bp_overlay_event
3620 || b->type == bp_longjmp_master)
3621 /* We do not stop for these. */
3622 bs->stop = 0;
3623 else
3624 bpstat_check_breakpoint_conditions (bs, ptid);
3625
3626 if (bs->stop)
3627 {
3628 ++(b->hit_count);
3629
3630 /* We will stop here */
3631 if (b->disposition == disp_disable)
3632 {
3633 if (b->enable_state != bp_permanent)
3634 b->enable_state = bp_disabled;
3635 update_global_location_list (0);
3636 }
3637 if (b->silent)
3638 bs->print = 0;
3639 bs->commands = b->commands;
3640 if (bs->commands
3641 && (strcmp ("silent", bs->commands->line) == 0
3642 || (xdb_commands && strcmp ("Q",
3643 bs->commands->line) == 0)))
3644 {
3645 bs->commands = bs->commands->next;
3646 bs->print = 0;
3647 }
3648 bs->commands = copy_command_lines (bs->commands);
3649 }
3650
3651 /* Print nothing for this entry if we dont stop or dont print. */
3652 if (bs->stop == 0 || bs->print == 0)
3653 bs->print_it = print_it_noop;
3654 }
3655 }
3656
3657 for (ix = 0; VEC_iterate (bp_location_p, moribund_locations, ix, loc); ++ix)
3658 {
3659 if (breakpoint_address_match (loc->pspace->aspace, loc->address,
3660 aspace, bp_addr))
3661 {
3662 bs = bpstat_alloc (loc, bs);
3663 /* For hits of moribund locations, we should just proceed. */
3664 bs->stop = 0;
3665 bs->print = 0;
3666 bs->print_it = print_it_noop;
3667 }
3668 }
3669
3670 bs->next = NULL; /* Terminate the chain */
3671 bs = root_bs->next; /* Re-grab the head of the chain */
3672
3673 /* If we aren't stopping, the value of some hardware watchpoint may
3674 not have changed, but the intermediate memory locations we are
3675 watching may have. Don't bother if we're stopping; this will get
3676 done later. */
3677 for (bs = root_bs->next; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
3678 if (bs->stop)
3679 break;
3680
3681 need_remove_insert = 0;
3682 if (bs == NULL)
3683 for (bs = root_bs->next; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
3684 if (!bs->stop
3685 && bs->breakpoint_at->owner
3686 && is_hardware_watchpoint (bs->breakpoint_at->owner))
3687 {
3688 update_watchpoint (bs->breakpoint_at->owner, 0 /* don't reparse. */);
3689 /* Updating watchpoints invalidates bs->breakpoint_at.
3690 Prevent further code from trying to use it. */
3691 bs->breakpoint_at = NULL;
3692 need_remove_insert = 1;
3693 }
3694
3695 if (need_remove_insert)
3696 update_global_location_list (1);
3697
3698 return root_bs->next;
3699 }
3700 \f
3701 /* Tell what to do about this bpstat. */
3702 struct bpstat_what
3703 bpstat_what (bpstat bs)
3704 {
3705 /* Classify each bpstat as one of the following. */
3706 enum class
3707 {
3708 /* This bpstat element has no effect on the main_action. */
3709 no_effect = 0,
3710
3711 /* There was a watchpoint, stop but don't print. */
3712 wp_silent,
3713
3714 /* There was a watchpoint, stop and print. */
3715 wp_noisy,
3716
3717 /* There was a breakpoint but we're not stopping. */
3718 bp_nostop,
3719
3720 /* There was a breakpoint, stop but don't print. */
3721 bp_silent,
3722
3723 /* There was a breakpoint, stop and print. */
3724 bp_noisy,
3725
3726 /* We hit the longjmp breakpoint. */
3727 long_jump,
3728
3729 /* We hit the longjmp_resume breakpoint. */
3730 long_resume,
3731
3732 /* We hit the step_resume breakpoint. */
3733 step_resume,
3734
3735 /* We hit the shared library event breakpoint. */
3736 shlib_event,
3737
3738 /* We hit the jit event breakpoint. */
3739 jit_event,
3740
3741 /* This is just used to count how many enums there are. */
3742 class_last
3743 };
3744
3745 /* Here is the table which drives this routine. So that we can
3746 format it pretty, we define some abbreviations for the
3747 enum bpstat_what codes. */
3748 #define kc BPSTAT_WHAT_KEEP_CHECKING
3749 #define ss BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_SILENT
3750 #define sn BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_NOISY
3751 #define sgl BPSTAT_WHAT_SINGLE
3752 #define slr BPSTAT_WHAT_SET_LONGJMP_RESUME
3753 #define clr BPSTAT_WHAT_CLEAR_LONGJMP_RESUME
3754 #define sr BPSTAT_WHAT_STEP_RESUME
3755 #define shl BPSTAT_WHAT_CHECK_SHLIBS
3756 #define jit BPSTAT_WHAT_CHECK_JIT
3757
3758 /* "Can't happen." Might want to print an error message.
3759 abort() is not out of the question, but chances are GDB is just
3760 a bit confused, not unusable. */
3761 #define err BPSTAT_WHAT_STOP_NOISY
3762
3763 /* Given an old action and a class, come up with a new action. */
3764 /* One interesting property of this table is that wp_silent is the same
3765 as bp_silent and wp_noisy is the same as bp_noisy. That is because
3766 after stopping, the check for whether to step over a breakpoint
3767 (BPSTAT_WHAT_SINGLE type stuff) is handled in proceed() without
3768 reference to how we stopped. We retain separate wp_silent and
3769 bp_silent codes in case we want to change that someday.
3770
3771 Another possibly interesting property of this table is that
3772 there's a partial ordering, priority-like, of the actions. Once
3773 you've decided that some action is appropriate, you'll never go
3774 back and decide something of a lower priority is better. The
3775 ordering is:
3776
3777 kc < jit clr sgl shl slr sn sr ss
3778 sgl < jit shl slr sn sr ss
3779 slr < jit err shl sn sr ss
3780 clr < jit err shl sn sr ss
3781 ss < jit shl sn sr
3782 sn < jit shl sr
3783 jit < shl sr
3784 shl < sr
3785 sr <
3786
3787 What I think this means is that we don't need a damned table
3788 here. If you just put the rows and columns in the right order,
3789 it'd look awfully regular. We could simply walk the bpstat list
3790 and choose the highest priority action we find, with a little
3791 logic to handle the 'err' cases. */
3792
3793 /* step_resume entries: a step resume breakpoint overrides another
3794 breakpoint of signal handling (see comment in wait_for_inferior
3795 at where we set the step_resume breakpoint). */
3796
3797 static const enum bpstat_what_main_action
3798 table[(int) class_last][(int) BPSTAT_WHAT_LAST] =
3799 {
3800 /* old action */
3801 /* kc ss sn sgl slr clr sr shl jit */
3802 /* no_effect */ {kc, ss, sn, sgl, slr, clr, sr, shl, jit},
3803 /* wp_silent */ {ss, ss, sn, ss, ss, ss, sr, shl, jit},
3804 /* wp_noisy */ {sn, sn, sn, sn, sn, sn, sr, shl, jit},
3805 /* bp_nostop */ {sgl, ss, sn, sgl, slr, slr, sr, shl, jit},
3806 /* bp_silent */ {ss, ss, sn, ss, ss, ss, sr, shl, jit},
3807 /* bp_noisy */ {sn, sn, sn, sn, sn, sn, sr, shl, jit},
3808 /* long_jump */ {slr, ss, sn, slr, slr, err, sr, shl, jit},
3809 /* long_resume */ {clr, ss, sn, err, err, err, sr, shl, jit},
3810 /* step_resume */ {sr, sr, sr, sr, sr, sr, sr, sr, sr },
3811 /* shlib */ {shl, shl, shl, shl, shl, shl, sr, shl, shl},
3812 /* jit_event */ {jit, jit, jit, jit, jit, jit, sr, jit, jit}
3813 };
3814
3815 #undef kc
3816 #undef ss
3817 #undef sn
3818 #undef sgl
3819 #undef slr
3820 #undef clr
3821 #undef err
3822 #undef sr
3823 #undef ts
3824 #undef shl
3825 #undef jit
3826 enum bpstat_what_main_action current_action = BPSTAT_WHAT_KEEP_CHECKING;
3827 struct bpstat_what retval;
3828
3829 retval.call_dummy = 0;
3830 for (; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
3831 {
3832 enum class bs_class = no_effect;
3833 if (bs->breakpoint_at == NULL)
3834 /* I suspect this can happen if it was a momentary breakpoint
3835 which has since been deleted. */
3836 continue;
3837 if (bs->breakpoint_at->owner == NULL)
3838 bs_class = bp_nostop;
3839 else
3840 switch (bs->breakpoint_at->owner->type)
3841 {
3842 case bp_none:
3843 continue;
3844
3845 case bp_breakpoint:
3846 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
3847 case bp_until:
3848 case bp_finish:
3849 if (bs->stop)
3850 {
3851 if (bs->print)
3852 bs_class = bp_noisy;
3853 else
3854 bs_class = bp_silent;
3855 }
3856 else
3857 bs_class = bp_nostop;
3858 break;
3859 case bp_watchpoint:
3860 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
3861 case bp_read_watchpoint:
3862 case bp_access_watchpoint:
3863 if (bs->stop)
3864 {
3865 if (bs->print)
3866 bs_class = wp_noisy;
3867 else
3868 bs_class = wp_silent;
3869 }
3870 else
3871 /* There was a watchpoint, but we're not stopping.
3872 This requires no further action. */
3873 bs_class = no_effect;
3874 break;
3875 case bp_longjmp:
3876 bs_class = long_jump;
3877 break;
3878 case bp_longjmp_resume:
3879 bs_class = long_resume;
3880 break;
3881 case bp_step_resume:
3882 if (bs->stop)
3883 {
3884 bs_class = step_resume;
3885 }
3886 else
3887 /* It is for the wrong frame. */
3888 bs_class = bp_nostop;
3889 break;
3890 case bp_watchpoint_scope:
3891 bs_class = bp_nostop;
3892 break;
3893 case bp_shlib_event:
3894 bs_class = shlib_event;
3895 break;
3896 case bp_jit_event:
3897 bs_class = jit_event;
3898 break;
3899 case bp_thread_event:
3900 case bp_overlay_event:
3901 case bp_longjmp_master:
3902 bs_class = bp_nostop;
3903 break;
3904 case bp_catchpoint:
3905 if (bs->stop)
3906 {
3907 if (bs->print)
3908 bs_class = bp_noisy;
3909 else
3910 bs_class = bp_silent;
3911 }
3912 else
3913 /* There was a catchpoint, but we're not stopping.
3914 This requires no further action. */
3915 bs_class = no_effect;
3916 break;
3917 case bp_call_dummy:
3918 /* Make sure the action is stop (silent or noisy),
3919 so infrun.c pops the dummy frame. */
3920 bs_class = bp_silent;
3921 retval.call_dummy = 1;
3922 break;
3923 case bp_tracepoint:
3924 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
3925 /* Tracepoint hits should not be reported back to GDB, and
3926 if one got through somehow, it should have been filtered
3927 out already. */
3928 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
3929 _("bpstat_what: tracepoint encountered"));
3930 break;
3931 }
3932 current_action = table[(int) bs_class][(int) current_action];
3933 }
3934 retval.main_action = current_action;
3935 return retval;
3936 }
3937
3938 /* Nonzero if we should step constantly (e.g. watchpoints on machines
3939 without hardware support). This isn't related to a specific bpstat,
3940 just to things like whether watchpoints are set. */
3941
3942 int
3943 bpstat_should_step (void)
3944 {
3945 struct breakpoint *b;
3946 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
3947 if (breakpoint_enabled (b) && b->type == bp_watchpoint && b->loc != NULL)
3948 return 1;
3949 return 0;
3950 }
3951
3952 int
3953 bpstat_causes_stop (bpstat bs)
3954 {
3955 for (; bs != NULL; bs = bs->next)
3956 if (bs->stop)
3957 return 1;
3958
3959 return 0;
3960 }
3961
3962 \f
3963
3964 /* Print the LOC location out of the list of B->LOC locations. */
3965
3966 static void print_breakpoint_location (struct breakpoint *b,
3967 struct bp_location *loc,
3968 char *wrap_indent,
3969 struct ui_stream *stb)
3970 {
3971 struct cleanup *old_chain = save_current_program_space ();
3972
3973 if (loc != NULL && loc->shlib_disabled)
3974 loc = NULL;
3975
3976 if (loc != NULL)
3977 set_current_program_space (loc->pspace);
3978
3979 if (b->source_file && loc)
3980 {
3981 struct symbol *sym
3982 = find_pc_sect_function (loc->address, loc->section);
3983 if (sym)
3984 {
3985 ui_out_text (uiout, "in ");
3986 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "func",
3987 SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (sym));
3988 ui_out_wrap_hint (uiout, wrap_indent);
3989 ui_out_text (uiout, " at ");
3990 }
3991 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "file", b->source_file);
3992 ui_out_text (uiout, ":");
3993
3994 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
3995 {
3996 struct symtab_and_line sal = find_pc_line (loc->address, 0);
3997 char *fullname = symtab_to_fullname (sal.symtab);
3998
3999 if (fullname)
4000 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "fullname", fullname);
4001 }
4002
4003 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "line", b->line_number);
4004 }
4005 else if (loc)
4006 {
4007 print_address_symbolic (loc->gdbarch, loc->address, stb->stream,
4008 demangle, "");
4009 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "at", stb);
4010 }
4011 else
4012 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "pending", b->addr_string);
4013
4014 do_cleanups (old_chain);
4015 }
4016
4017 /* Print B to gdb_stdout. */
4018 static void
4019 print_one_breakpoint_location (struct breakpoint *b,
4020 struct bp_location *loc,
4021 int loc_number,
4022 struct bp_location **last_loc,
4023 int print_address_bits,
4024 int allflag)
4025 {
4026 struct command_line *l;
4027 struct symbol *sym;
4028 struct ep_type_description
4029 {
4030 enum bptype type;
4031 char *description;
4032 };
4033 static struct ep_type_description bptypes[] =
4034 {
4035 {bp_none, "?deleted?"},
4036 {bp_breakpoint, "breakpoint"},
4037 {bp_hardware_breakpoint, "hw breakpoint"},
4038 {bp_until, "until"},
4039 {bp_finish, "finish"},
4040 {bp_watchpoint, "watchpoint"},
4041 {bp_hardware_watchpoint, "hw watchpoint"},
4042 {bp_read_watchpoint, "read watchpoint"},
4043 {bp_access_watchpoint, "acc watchpoint"},
4044 {bp_longjmp, "longjmp"},
4045 {bp_longjmp_resume, "longjmp resume"},
4046 {bp_step_resume, "step resume"},
4047 {bp_watchpoint_scope, "watchpoint scope"},
4048 {bp_call_dummy, "call dummy"},
4049 {bp_shlib_event, "shlib events"},
4050 {bp_thread_event, "thread events"},
4051 {bp_overlay_event, "overlay events"},
4052 {bp_longjmp_master, "longjmp master"},
4053 {bp_catchpoint, "catchpoint"},
4054 {bp_tracepoint, "tracepoint"},
4055 {bp_fast_tracepoint, "fast tracepoint"},
4056 {bp_jit_event, "jit events"},
4057 };
4058
4059 static char bpenables[] = "nynny";
4060 char wrap_indent[80];
4061 struct ui_stream *stb = ui_out_stream_new (uiout);
4062 struct cleanup *old_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_stream_delete (stb);
4063 struct cleanup *bkpt_chain;
4064
4065 int header_of_multiple = 0;
4066 int part_of_multiple = (loc != NULL);
4067 struct value_print_options opts;
4068
4069 get_user_print_options (&opts);
4070
4071 gdb_assert (!loc || loc_number != 0);
4072 /* See comment in print_one_breakpoint concerning
4073 treatment of breakpoints with single disabled
4074 location. */
4075 if (loc == NULL
4076 && (b->loc != NULL
4077 && (b->loc->next != NULL || !b->loc->enabled)))
4078 header_of_multiple = 1;
4079 if (loc == NULL)
4080 loc = b->loc;
4081
4082 annotate_record ();
4083 bkpt_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "bkpt");
4084
4085 /* 1 */
4086 annotate_field (0);
4087 if (part_of_multiple)
4088 {
4089 char *formatted;
4090 formatted = xstrprintf ("%d.%d", b->number, loc_number);
4091 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "number", formatted);
4092 xfree (formatted);
4093 }
4094 else
4095 {
4096 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "number", b->number);
4097 }
4098
4099 /* 2 */
4100 annotate_field (1);
4101 if (part_of_multiple)
4102 ui_out_field_skip (uiout, "type");
4103 else
4104 {
4105 if (((int) b->type >= (sizeof (bptypes) / sizeof (bptypes[0])))
4106 || ((int) b->type != bptypes[(int) b->type].type))
4107 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
4108 _("bptypes table does not describe type #%d."),
4109 (int) b->type);
4110 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "type", bptypes[(int) b->type].description);
4111 }
4112
4113 /* 3 */
4114 annotate_field (2);
4115 if (part_of_multiple)
4116 ui_out_field_skip (uiout, "disp");
4117 else
4118 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "disp", bpdisp_text (b->disposition));
4119
4120
4121 /* 4 */
4122 annotate_field (3);
4123 if (part_of_multiple)
4124 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "enabled", loc->enabled ? "y" : "n");
4125 else
4126 ui_out_field_fmt (uiout, "enabled", "%c",
4127 bpenables[(int) b->enable_state]);
4128 ui_out_spaces (uiout, 2);
4129
4130
4131 /* 5 and 6 */
4132 strcpy (wrap_indent, " ");
4133 if (opts.addressprint)
4134 {
4135 if (print_address_bits <= 32)
4136 strcat (wrap_indent, " ");
4137 else
4138 strcat (wrap_indent, " ");
4139 }
4140
4141 if (b->ops != NULL && b->ops->print_one != NULL)
4142 {
4143 /* Although the print_one can possibly print
4144 all locations, calling it here is not likely
4145 to get any nice result. So, make sure there's
4146 just one location. */
4147 gdb_assert (b->loc == NULL || b->loc->next == NULL);
4148 b->ops->print_one (b, last_loc);
4149 }
4150 else
4151 switch (b->type)
4152 {
4153 case bp_none:
4154 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
4155 _("print_one_breakpoint: bp_none encountered\n"));
4156 break;
4157
4158 case bp_watchpoint:
4159 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
4160 case bp_read_watchpoint:
4161 case bp_access_watchpoint:
4162 /* Field 4, the address, is omitted (which makes the columns
4163 not line up too nicely with the headers, but the effect
4164 is relatively readable). */
4165 if (opts.addressprint)
4166 ui_out_field_skip (uiout, "addr");
4167 annotate_field (5);
4168 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", b->exp_string);
4169 break;
4170
4171 case bp_breakpoint:
4172 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
4173 case bp_until:
4174 case bp_finish:
4175 case bp_longjmp:
4176 case bp_longjmp_resume:
4177 case bp_step_resume:
4178 case bp_watchpoint_scope:
4179 case bp_call_dummy:
4180 case bp_shlib_event:
4181 case bp_thread_event:
4182 case bp_overlay_event:
4183 case bp_longjmp_master:
4184 case bp_tracepoint:
4185 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
4186 case bp_jit_event:
4187 if (opts.addressprint)
4188 {
4189 annotate_field (4);
4190 if (header_of_multiple)
4191 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "addr", "<MULTIPLE>");
4192 else if (b->loc == NULL || loc->shlib_disabled)
4193 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "addr", "<PENDING>");
4194 else
4195 ui_out_field_core_addr (uiout, "addr",
4196 loc->gdbarch, loc->address);
4197 }
4198 annotate_field (5);
4199 if (!header_of_multiple)
4200 print_breakpoint_location (b, loc, wrap_indent, stb);
4201 if (b->loc)
4202 *last_loc = b->loc;
4203 break;
4204 }
4205
4206
4207 /* For backward compatibility, don't display inferiors unless there
4208 are several. */
4209 if (loc != NULL
4210 && !header_of_multiple
4211 && (allflag
4212 || (!gdbarch_has_global_breakpoints (target_gdbarch)
4213 && (number_of_program_spaces () > 1
4214 || number_of_inferiors () > 1)
4215 && loc->owner->type != bp_catchpoint)))
4216 {
4217 struct inferior *inf;
4218 int first = 1;
4219
4220 for (inf = inferior_list; inf != NULL; inf = inf->next)
4221 {
4222 if (inf->pspace == loc->pspace)
4223 {
4224 if (first)
4225 {
4226 first = 0;
4227 ui_out_text (uiout, " inf ");
4228 }
4229 else
4230 ui_out_text (uiout, ", ");
4231 ui_out_text (uiout, plongest (inf->num));
4232 }
4233 }
4234 }
4235
4236 if (!part_of_multiple)
4237 {
4238 if (b->thread != -1)
4239 {
4240 /* FIXME: This seems to be redundant and lost here; see the
4241 "stop only in" line a little further down. */
4242 ui_out_text (uiout, " thread ");
4243 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "thread", b->thread);
4244 }
4245 else if (b->task != 0)
4246 {
4247 ui_out_text (uiout, " task ");
4248 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "task", b->task);
4249 }
4250 }
4251
4252 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
4253
4254 if (part_of_multiple && frame_id_p (b->frame_id))
4255 {
4256 annotate_field (6);
4257 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tstop only in stack frame at ");
4258 /* FIXME: cagney/2002-12-01: Shouldn't be poeking around inside
4259 the frame ID. */
4260 ui_out_field_core_addr (uiout, "frame",
4261 b->gdbarch, b->frame_id.stack_addr);
4262 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
4263 }
4264
4265 if (!part_of_multiple && b->cond_string && !ada_exception_catchpoint_p (b))
4266 {
4267 /* We do not print the condition for Ada exception catchpoints
4268 because the condition is an internal implementation detail
4269 that we do not want to expose to the user. */
4270 annotate_field (7);
4271 if (tracepoint_type (b))
4272 ui_out_text (uiout, "\ttrace only if ");
4273 else
4274 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tstop only if ");
4275 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "cond", b->cond_string);
4276 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
4277 }
4278
4279 if (!part_of_multiple && b->thread != -1)
4280 {
4281 /* FIXME should make an annotation for this */
4282 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tstop only in thread ");
4283 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "thread", b->thread);
4284 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
4285 }
4286
4287 if (!part_of_multiple && b->hit_count)
4288 {
4289 /* FIXME should make an annotation for this */
4290 if (ep_is_catchpoint (b))
4291 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tcatchpoint");
4292 else
4293 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tbreakpoint");
4294 ui_out_text (uiout, " already hit ");
4295 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "times", b->hit_count);
4296 if (b->hit_count == 1)
4297 ui_out_text (uiout, " time\n");
4298 else
4299 ui_out_text (uiout, " times\n");
4300 }
4301
4302 /* Output the count also if it is zero, but only if this is
4303 mi. FIXME: Should have a better test for this. */
4304 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
4305 if (!part_of_multiple && b->hit_count == 0)
4306 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "times", b->hit_count);
4307
4308 if (!part_of_multiple && b->ignore_count)
4309 {
4310 annotate_field (8);
4311 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tignore next ");
4312 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "ignore", b->ignore_count);
4313 ui_out_text (uiout, " hits\n");
4314 }
4315
4316 l = b->commands;
4317 if (!part_of_multiple && l)
4318 {
4319 struct cleanup *script_chain;
4320
4321 annotate_field (9);
4322 script_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "script");
4323 print_command_lines (uiout, l, 4);
4324 do_cleanups (script_chain);
4325 }
4326
4327 if (!part_of_multiple && b->pass_count)
4328 {
4329 annotate_field (10);
4330 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tpass count ");
4331 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "pass", b->pass_count);
4332 ui_out_text (uiout, " \n");
4333 }
4334
4335 if (!part_of_multiple && b->step_count)
4336 {
4337 annotate_field (11);
4338 ui_out_text (uiout, "\tstep count ");
4339 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "step", b->step_count);
4340 ui_out_text (uiout, " \n");
4341 }
4342
4343 if (!part_of_multiple && b->actions)
4344 {
4345 struct action_line *action;
4346 annotate_field (12);
4347 for (action = b->actions; action; action = action->next)
4348 {
4349 ui_out_text (uiout, " A\t");
4350 ui_out_text (uiout, action->action);
4351 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
4352 }
4353 }
4354
4355 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout) && !part_of_multiple)
4356 {
4357 if (b->addr_string)
4358 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "original-location", b->addr_string);
4359 else if (b->exp_string)
4360 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "original-location", b->exp_string);
4361 }
4362
4363 do_cleanups (bkpt_chain);
4364 do_cleanups (old_chain);
4365 }
4366
4367 static void
4368 print_one_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *b,
4369 struct bp_location **last_loc, int print_address_bits,
4370 int allflag)
4371 {
4372 print_one_breakpoint_location (b, NULL, 0, last_loc,
4373 print_address_bits, allflag);
4374
4375 /* If this breakpoint has custom print function,
4376 it's already printed. Otherwise, print individual
4377 locations, if any. */
4378 if (b->ops == NULL || b->ops->print_one == NULL)
4379 {
4380 /* If breakpoint has a single location that is
4381 disabled, we print it as if it had
4382 several locations, since otherwise it's hard to
4383 represent "breakpoint enabled, location disabled"
4384 situation.
4385 Note that while hardware watchpoints have
4386 several locations internally, that's no a property
4387 exposed to user. */
4388 if (b->loc
4389 && !is_hardware_watchpoint (b)
4390 && (b->loc->next || !b->loc->enabled)
4391 && !ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
4392 {
4393 struct bp_location *loc;
4394 int n = 1;
4395 for (loc = b->loc; loc; loc = loc->next, ++n)
4396 print_one_breakpoint_location (b, loc, n, last_loc,
4397 print_address_bits, allflag);
4398 }
4399 }
4400 }
4401
4402 static int
4403 breakpoint_address_bits (struct breakpoint *b)
4404 {
4405 int print_address_bits = 0;
4406 struct bp_location *loc;
4407
4408 for (loc = b->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
4409 {
4410 int addr_bit = gdbarch_addr_bit (loc->gdbarch);
4411 if (addr_bit > print_address_bits)
4412 print_address_bits = addr_bit;
4413 }
4414
4415 return print_address_bits;
4416 }
4417
4418 struct captured_breakpoint_query_args
4419 {
4420 int bnum;
4421 };
4422
4423 static int
4424 do_captured_breakpoint_query (struct ui_out *uiout, void *data)
4425 {
4426 struct captured_breakpoint_query_args *args = data;
4427 struct breakpoint *b;
4428 struct bp_location *dummy_loc = NULL;
4429 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
4430 {
4431 if (args->bnum == b->number)
4432 {
4433 int print_address_bits = breakpoint_address_bits (b);
4434 print_one_breakpoint (b, &dummy_loc, print_address_bits, 0);
4435 return GDB_RC_OK;
4436 }
4437 }
4438 return GDB_RC_NONE;
4439 }
4440
4441 enum gdb_rc
4442 gdb_breakpoint_query (struct ui_out *uiout, int bnum, char **error_message)
4443 {
4444 struct captured_breakpoint_query_args args;
4445 args.bnum = bnum;
4446 /* For the moment we don't trust print_one_breakpoint() to not throw
4447 an error. */
4448 if (catch_exceptions_with_msg (uiout, do_captured_breakpoint_query, &args,
4449 error_message, RETURN_MASK_ALL) < 0)
4450 return GDB_RC_FAIL;
4451 else
4452 return GDB_RC_OK;
4453 }
4454
4455 /* Return non-zero if B is user settable (breakpoints, watchpoints,
4456 catchpoints, et.al.). */
4457
4458 static int
4459 user_settable_breakpoint (const struct breakpoint *b)
4460 {
4461 return (b->type == bp_breakpoint
4462 || b->type == bp_catchpoint
4463 || b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint
4464 || tracepoint_type (b)
4465 || b->type == bp_watchpoint
4466 || b->type == bp_read_watchpoint
4467 || b->type == bp_access_watchpoint
4468 || b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint);
4469 }
4470
4471 /* Print information on user settable breakpoint (watchpoint, etc)
4472 number BNUM. If BNUM is -1 print all user settable breakpoints.
4473 If ALLFLAG is non-zero, include non- user settable breakpoints. */
4474
4475 static void
4476 breakpoint_1 (int bnum, int allflag)
4477 {
4478 struct breakpoint *b;
4479 struct bp_location *last_loc = NULL;
4480 int nr_printable_breakpoints;
4481 struct cleanup *bkpttbl_chain;
4482 struct value_print_options opts;
4483 int print_address_bits = 0;
4484
4485 get_user_print_options (&opts);
4486
4487 /* Compute the number of rows in the table, as well as the
4488 size required for address fields. */
4489 nr_printable_breakpoints = 0;
4490 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
4491 if (bnum == -1
4492 || bnum == b->number)
4493 {
4494 if (allflag || user_settable_breakpoint (b))
4495 {
4496 int addr_bit = breakpoint_address_bits (b);
4497 if (addr_bit > print_address_bits)
4498 print_address_bits = addr_bit;
4499
4500 nr_printable_breakpoints++;
4501 }
4502 }
4503
4504 if (opts.addressprint)
4505 bkpttbl_chain
4506 = make_cleanup_ui_out_table_begin_end (uiout, 6, nr_printable_breakpoints,
4507 "BreakpointTable");
4508 else
4509 bkpttbl_chain
4510 = make_cleanup_ui_out_table_begin_end (uiout, 5, nr_printable_breakpoints,
4511 "BreakpointTable");
4512
4513 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4514 annotate_breakpoints_headers ();
4515 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4516 annotate_field (0);
4517 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 7, ui_left, "number", "Num"); /* 1 */
4518 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4519 annotate_field (1);
4520 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 14, ui_left, "type", "Type"); /* 2 */
4521 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4522 annotate_field (2);
4523 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 4, ui_left, "disp", "Disp"); /* 3 */
4524 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4525 annotate_field (3);
4526 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 3, ui_left, "enabled", "Enb"); /* 4 */
4527 if (opts.addressprint)
4528 {
4529 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4530 annotate_field (4);
4531 if (print_address_bits <= 32)
4532 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 10, ui_left, "addr", "Address");/* 5 */
4533 else
4534 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 18, ui_left, "addr", "Address");/* 5 */
4535 }
4536 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4537 annotate_field (5);
4538 ui_out_table_header (uiout, 40, ui_noalign, "what", "What"); /* 6 */
4539 ui_out_table_body (uiout);
4540 if (nr_printable_breakpoints > 0)
4541 annotate_breakpoints_table ();
4542
4543 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
4544 if (bnum == -1
4545 || bnum == b->number)
4546 {
4547 /* We only print out user settable breakpoints unless the
4548 allflag is set. */
4549 if (allflag || user_settable_breakpoint (b))
4550 print_one_breakpoint (b, &last_loc, print_address_bits, allflag);
4551 }
4552
4553 do_cleanups (bkpttbl_chain);
4554
4555 if (nr_printable_breakpoints == 0)
4556 {
4557 if (bnum == -1)
4558 ui_out_message (uiout, 0, "No breakpoints or watchpoints.\n");
4559 else
4560 ui_out_message (uiout, 0, "No breakpoint or watchpoint number %d.\n",
4561 bnum);
4562 }
4563 else
4564 {
4565 if (last_loc && !server_command)
4566 set_next_address (last_loc->gdbarch, last_loc->address);
4567 }
4568
4569 /* FIXME? Should this be moved up so that it is only called when
4570 there have been breakpoints? */
4571 annotate_breakpoints_table_end ();
4572 }
4573
4574 static void
4575 breakpoints_info (char *bnum_exp, int from_tty)
4576 {
4577 int bnum = -1;
4578
4579 if (bnum_exp)
4580 bnum = parse_and_eval_long (bnum_exp);
4581
4582 breakpoint_1 (bnum, 0);
4583 }
4584
4585 static void
4586 maintenance_info_breakpoints (char *bnum_exp, int from_tty)
4587 {
4588 int bnum = -1;
4589
4590 if (bnum_exp)
4591 bnum = parse_and_eval_long (bnum_exp);
4592
4593 breakpoint_1 (bnum, 1);
4594 }
4595
4596 static int
4597 breakpoint_has_pc (struct breakpoint *b,
4598 struct program_space *pspace,
4599 CORE_ADDR pc, struct obj_section *section)
4600 {
4601 struct bp_location *bl = b->loc;
4602 for (; bl; bl = bl->next)
4603 {
4604 if (bl->pspace == pspace
4605 && bl->address == pc
4606 && (!overlay_debugging || bl->section == section))
4607 return 1;
4608 }
4609 return 0;
4610 }
4611
4612 /* Print a message describing any breakpoints set at PC. This
4613 concerns with logical breakpoints, so we match program spaces, not
4614 address spaces. */
4615
4616 static void
4617 describe_other_breakpoints (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
4618 struct program_space *pspace, CORE_ADDR pc,
4619 struct obj_section *section, int thread)
4620 {
4621 int others = 0;
4622 struct breakpoint *b;
4623
4624 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
4625 others += breakpoint_has_pc (b, pspace, pc, section);
4626 if (others > 0)
4627 {
4628 if (others == 1)
4629 printf_filtered (_("Note: breakpoint "));
4630 else /* if (others == ???) */
4631 printf_filtered (_("Note: breakpoints "));
4632 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
4633 if (breakpoint_has_pc (b, pspace, pc, section))
4634 {
4635 others--;
4636 printf_filtered ("%d", b->number);
4637 if (b->thread == -1 && thread != -1)
4638 printf_filtered (" (all threads)");
4639 else if (b->thread != -1)
4640 printf_filtered (" (thread %d)", b->thread);
4641 printf_filtered ("%s%s ",
4642 ((b->enable_state == bp_disabled
4643 || b->enable_state == bp_call_disabled
4644 || b->enable_state == bp_startup_disabled)
4645 ? " (disabled)"
4646 : b->enable_state == bp_permanent
4647 ? " (permanent)"
4648 : ""),
4649 (others > 1) ? ","
4650 : ((others == 1) ? " and" : ""));
4651 }
4652 printf_filtered (_("also set at pc "));
4653 fputs_filtered (paddress (gdbarch, pc), gdb_stdout);
4654 printf_filtered (".\n");
4655 }
4656 }
4657 \f
4658 /* Set the default place to put a breakpoint
4659 for the `break' command with no arguments. */
4660
4661 void
4662 set_default_breakpoint (int valid, struct program_space *pspace,
4663 CORE_ADDR addr, struct symtab *symtab,
4664 int line)
4665 {
4666 default_breakpoint_valid = valid;
4667 default_breakpoint_pspace = pspace;
4668 default_breakpoint_address = addr;
4669 default_breakpoint_symtab = symtab;
4670 default_breakpoint_line = line;
4671 }
4672
4673 /* Return true iff it is meaningful to use the address member of
4674 BPT. For some breakpoint types, the address member is irrelevant
4675 and it makes no sense to attempt to compare it to other addresses
4676 (or use it for any other purpose either).
4677
4678 More specifically, each of the following breakpoint types will always
4679 have a zero valued address and we don't want to mark breakpoints of any of
4680 these types to be a duplicate of an actual breakpoint at address zero:
4681
4682 bp_watchpoint
4683 bp_catchpoint
4684
4685 */
4686
4687 static int
4688 breakpoint_address_is_meaningful (struct breakpoint *bpt)
4689 {
4690 enum bptype type = bpt->type;
4691
4692 return (type != bp_watchpoint && type != bp_catchpoint);
4693 }
4694
4695 /* Assuming LOC1 and LOC2's owners are hardware watchpoints, returns
4696 true if LOC1 and LOC2 represent the same watchpoint location. */
4697
4698 static int
4699 watchpoint_locations_match (struct bp_location *loc1, struct bp_location *loc2)
4700 {
4701 return (loc1->owner->type == loc2->owner->type
4702 && loc1->pspace->aspace == loc2->pspace->aspace
4703 && loc1->address == loc2->address
4704 && loc1->length == loc2->length);
4705 }
4706
4707 /* Returns true if {ASPACE1,ADDR1} and {ASPACE2,ADDR2} represent the
4708 same breakpoint location. In most targets, this can only be true
4709 if ASPACE1 matches ASPACE2. On targets that have global
4710 breakpoints, the address space doesn't really matter. */
4711
4712 static int
4713 breakpoint_address_match (struct address_space *aspace1, CORE_ADDR addr1,
4714 struct address_space *aspace2, CORE_ADDR addr2)
4715 {
4716 return ((gdbarch_has_global_breakpoints (target_gdbarch)
4717 || aspace1 == aspace2)
4718 && addr1 == addr2);
4719 }
4720
4721 /* Assuming LOC1 and LOC2's types' have meaningful target addresses
4722 (breakpoint_address_is_meaningful), returns true if LOC1 and LOC2
4723 represent the same location. */
4724
4725 static int
4726 breakpoint_locations_match (struct bp_location *loc1, struct bp_location *loc2)
4727 {
4728 int hw_point1 = is_hardware_watchpoint (loc1->owner);
4729 int hw_point2 = is_hardware_watchpoint (loc2->owner);
4730
4731 if (hw_point1 != hw_point2)
4732 return 0;
4733 else if (hw_point1)
4734 return watchpoint_locations_match (loc1, loc2);
4735 else
4736 return breakpoint_address_match (loc1->pspace->aspace, loc1->address,
4737 loc2->pspace->aspace, loc2->address);
4738 }
4739
4740 static void
4741 breakpoint_adjustment_warning (CORE_ADDR from_addr, CORE_ADDR to_addr,
4742 int bnum, int have_bnum)
4743 {
4744 char astr1[40];
4745 char astr2[40];
4746
4747 strcpy (astr1, hex_string_custom ((unsigned long) from_addr, 8));
4748 strcpy (astr2, hex_string_custom ((unsigned long) to_addr, 8));
4749 if (have_bnum)
4750 warning (_("Breakpoint %d address previously adjusted from %s to %s."),
4751 bnum, astr1, astr2);
4752 else
4753 warning (_("Breakpoint address adjusted from %s to %s."), astr1, astr2);
4754 }
4755
4756 /* Adjust a breakpoint's address to account for architectural constraints
4757 on breakpoint placement. Return the adjusted address. Note: Very
4758 few targets require this kind of adjustment. For most targets,
4759 this function is simply the identity function. */
4760
4761 static CORE_ADDR
4762 adjust_breakpoint_address (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
4763 CORE_ADDR bpaddr, enum bptype bptype)
4764 {
4765 if (!gdbarch_adjust_breakpoint_address_p (gdbarch))
4766 {
4767 /* Very few targets need any kind of breakpoint adjustment. */
4768 return bpaddr;
4769 }
4770 else if (bptype == bp_watchpoint
4771 || bptype == bp_hardware_watchpoint
4772 || bptype == bp_read_watchpoint
4773 || bptype == bp_access_watchpoint
4774 || bptype == bp_catchpoint)
4775 {
4776 /* Watchpoints and the various bp_catch_* eventpoints should not
4777 have their addresses modified. */
4778 return bpaddr;
4779 }
4780 else
4781 {
4782 CORE_ADDR adjusted_bpaddr;
4783
4784 /* Some targets have architectural constraints on the placement
4785 of breakpoint instructions. Obtain the adjusted address. */
4786 adjusted_bpaddr = gdbarch_adjust_breakpoint_address (gdbarch, bpaddr);
4787
4788 /* An adjusted breakpoint address can significantly alter
4789 a user's expectations. Print a warning if an adjustment
4790 is required. */
4791 if (adjusted_bpaddr != bpaddr)
4792 breakpoint_adjustment_warning (bpaddr, adjusted_bpaddr, 0, 0);
4793
4794 return adjusted_bpaddr;
4795 }
4796 }
4797
4798 /* Allocate a struct bp_location. */
4799
4800 static struct bp_location *
4801 allocate_bp_location (struct breakpoint *bpt)
4802 {
4803 struct bp_location *loc, *loc_p;
4804
4805 loc = xmalloc (sizeof (struct bp_location));
4806 memset (loc, 0, sizeof (*loc));
4807
4808 loc->owner = bpt;
4809 loc->cond = NULL;
4810 loc->shlib_disabled = 0;
4811 loc->enabled = 1;
4812
4813 switch (bpt->type)
4814 {
4815 case bp_breakpoint:
4816 case bp_tracepoint:
4817 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
4818 case bp_until:
4819 case bp_finish:
4820 case bp_longjmp:
4821 case bp_longjmp_resume:
4822 case bp_step_resume:
4823 case bp_watchpoint_scope:
4824 case bp_call_dummy:
4825 case bp_shlib_event:
4826 case bp_thread_event:
4827 case bp_overlay_event:
4828 case bp_jit_event:
4829 case bp_longjmp_master:
4830 loc->loc_type = bp_loc_software_breakpoint;
4831 break;
4832 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
4833 loc->loc_type = bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint;
4834 break;
4835 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
4836 case bp_read_watchpoint:
4837 case bp_access_watchpoint:
4838 loc->loc_type = bp_loc_hardware_watchpoint;
4839 break;
4840 case bp_watchpoint:
4841 case bp_catchpoint:
4842 loc->loc_type = bp_loc_other;
4843 break;
4844 default:
4845 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("unknown breakpoint type"));
4846 }
4847
4848 return loc;
4849 }
4850
4851 static void free_bp_location (struct bp_location *loc)
4852 {
4853 if (loc->cond)
4854 xfree (loc->cond);
4855
4856 if (loc->function_name)
4857 xfree (loc->function_name);
4858
4859 xfree (loc);
4860 }
4861
4862 /* Helper to set_raw_breakpoint below. Creates a breakpoint
4863 that has type BPTYPE and has no locations as yet. */
4864 /* This function is used in gdbtk sources and thus can not be made static. */
4865
4866 static struct breakpoint *
4867 set_raw_breakpoint_without_location (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
4868 enum bptype bptype)
4869 {
4870 struct breakpoint *b, *b1;
4871
4872 b = (struct breakpoint *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct breakpoint));
4873 memset (b, 0, sizeof (*b));
4874
4875 b->type = bptype;
4876 b->gdbarch = gdbarch;
4877 b->language = current_language->la_language;
4878 b->input_radix = input_radix;
4879 b->thread = -1;
4880 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
4881 b->next = 0;
4882 b->silent = 0;
4883 b->ignore_count = 0;
4884 b->commands = NULL;
4885 b->frame_id = null_frame_id;
4886 b->forked_inferior_pid = null_ptid;
4887 b->exec_pathname = NULL;
4888 b->syscalls_to_be_caught = NULL;
4889 b->ops = NULL;
4890 b->condition_not_parsed = 0;
4891
4892 /* Add this breakpoint to the end of the chain
4893 so that a list of breakpoints will come out in order
4894 of increasing numbers. */
4895
4896 b1 = breakpoint_chain;
4897 if (b1 == 0)
4898 breakpoint_chain = b;
4899 else
4900 {
4901 while (b1->next)
4902 b1 = b1->next;
4903 b1->next = b;
4904 }
4905 return b;
4906 }
4907
4908 /* Initialize loc->function_name. */
4909 static void
4910 set_breakpoint_location_function (struct bp_location *loc)
4911 {
4912 if (loc->owner->type == bp_breakpoint
4913 || loc->owner->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint
4914 || tracepoint_type (loc->owner))
4915 {
4916 find_pc_partial_function (loc->address, &(loc->function_name),
4917 NULL, NULL);
4918 if (loc->function_name)
4919 loc->function_name = xstrdup (loc->function_name);
4920 }
4921 }
4922
4923 /* Attempt to determine architecture of location identified by SAL. */
4924 static struct gdbarch *
4925 get_sal_arch (struct symtab_and_line sal)
4926 {
4927 if (sal.section)
4928 return get_objfile_arch (sal.section->objfile);
4929 if (sal.symtab)
4930 return get_objfile_arch (sal.symtab->objfile);
4931
4932 return NULL;
4933 }
4934
4935 /* set_raw_breakpoint is a low level routine for allocating and
4936 partially initializing a breakpoint of type BPTYPE. The newly
4937 created breakpoint's address, section, source file name, and line
4938 number are provided by SAL. The newly created and partially
4939 initialized breakpoint is added to the breakpoint chain and
4940 is also returned as the value of this function.
4941
4942 It is expected that the caller will complete the initialization of
4943 the newly created breakpoint struct as well as output any status
4944 information regarding the creation of a new breakpoint. In
4945 particular, set_raw_breakpoint does NOT set the breakpoint
4946 number! Care should be taken to not allow an error to occur
4947 prior to completing the initialization of the breakpoint. If this
4948 should happen, a bogus breakpoint will be left on the chain. */
4949
4950 struct breakpoint *
4951 set_raw_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
4952 struct symtab_and_line sal, enum bptype bptype)
4953 {
4954 struct breakpoint *b = set_raw_breakpoint_without_location (gdbarch, bptype);
4955 CORE_ADDR adjusted_address;
4956 struct gdbarch *loc_gdbarch;
4957
4958 loc_gdbarch = get_sal_arch (sal);
4959 if (!loc_gdbarch)
4960 loc_gdbarch = b->gdbarch;
4961
4962 if (bptype != bp_catchpoint)
4963 gdb_assert (sal.pspace != NULL);
4964
4965 /* Adjust the breakpoint's address prior to allocating a location.
4966 Once we call allocate_bp_location(), that mostly uninitialized
4967 location will be placed on the location chain. Adjustment of the
4968 breakpoint may cause target_read_memory() to be called and we do
4969 not want its scan of the location chain to find a breakpoint and
4970 location that's only been partially initialized. */
4971 adjusted_address = adjust_breakpoint_address (loc_gdbarch, sal.pc, b->type);
4972
4973 b->loc = allocate_bp_location (b);
4974 b->loc->gdbarch = loc_gdbarch;
4975 b->loc->requested_address = sal.pc;
4976 b->loc->address = adjusted_address;
4977 b->loc->pspace = sal.pspace;
4978
4979 /* Store the program space that was used to set the breakpoint, for
4980 breakpoint resetting. */
4981 b->pspace = sal.pspace;
4982
4983 if (sal.symtab == NULL)
4984 b->source_file = NULL;
4985 else
4986 b->source_file = xstrdup (sal.symtab->filename);
4987 b->loc->section = sal.section;
4988 b->line_number = sal.line;
4989
4990 set_breakpoint_location_function (b->loc);
4991
4992 breakpoints_changed ();
4993
4994 return b;
4995 }
4996
4997
4998 /* Note that the breakpoint object B describes a permanent breakpoint
4999 instruction, hard-wired into the inferior's code. */
5000 void
5001 make_breakpoint_permanent (struct breakpoint *b)
5002 {
5003 struct bp_location *bl;
5004 b->enable_state = bp_permanent;
5005
5006 /* By definition, permanent breakpoints are already present in the code.
5007 Mark all locations as inserted. For now, make_breakpoint_permanent
5008 is called in just one place, so it's hard to say if it's reasonable
5009 to have permanent breakpoint with multiple locations or not,
5010 but it's easy to implmement. */
5011 for (bl = b->loc; bl; bl = bl->next)
5012 bl->inserted = 1;
5013 }
5014
5015 /* Call this routine when stepping and nexting to enable a breakpoint
5016 if we do a longjmp() in THREAD. When we hit that breakpoint, call
5017 set_longjmp_resume_breakpoint() to figure out where we are going. */
5018
5019 void
5020 set_longjmp_breakpoint (int thread)
5021 {
5022 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
5023
5024 /* To avoid having to rescan all objfile symbols at every step,
5025 we maintain a list of continually-inserted but always disabled
5026 longjmp "master" breakpoints. Here, we simply create momentary
5027 clones of those and enable them for the requested thread. */
5028 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
5029 if (b->pspace == current_program_space
5030 && b->type == bp_longjmp_master)
5031 {
5032 struct breakpoint *clone = clone_momentary_breakpoint (b);
5033 clone->type = bp_longjmp;
5034 clone->thread = thread;
5035 }
5036 }
5037
5038 /* Delete all longjmp breakpoints from THREAD. */
5039 void
5040 delete_longjmp_breakpoint (int thread)
5041 {
5042 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
5043
5044 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
5045 if (b->type == bp_longjmp)
5046 {
5047 if (b->thread == thread)
5048 delete_breakpoint (b);
5049 }
5050 }
5051
5052 void
5053 enable_overlay_breakpoints (void)
5054 {
5055 struct breakpoint *b;
5056
5057 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
5058 if (b->type == bp_overlay_event)
5059 {
5060 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
5061 update_global_location_list (1);
5062 overlay_events_enabled = 1;
5063 }
5064 }
5065
5066 void
5067 disable_overlay_breakpoints (void)
5068 {
5069 struct breakpoint *b;
5070
5071 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
5072 if (b->type == bp_overlay_event)
5073 {
5074 b->enable_state = bp_disabled;
5075 update_global_location_list (0);
5076 overlay_events_enabled = 0;
5077 }
5078 }
5079
5080 struct breakpoint *
5081 create_thread_event_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR address)
5082 {
5083 struct breakpoint *b;
5084
5085 b = create_internal_breakpoint (gdbarch, address, bp_thread_event);
5086
5087 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
5088 /* addr_string has to be used or breakpoint_re_set will delete me. */
5089 b->addr_string
5090 = xstrprintf ("*%s", paddress (b->loc->gdbarch, b->loc->address));
5091
5092 update_global_location_list_nothrow (1);
5093
5094 return b;
5095 }
5096
5097 void
5098 remove_thread_event_breakpoints (void)
5099 {
5100 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
5101
5102 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
5103 if (b->type == bp_thread_event
5104 && b->loc->pspace == current_program_space)
5105 delete_breakpoint (b);
5106 }
5107
5108 struct captured_parse_breakpoint_args
5109 {
5110 char **arg_p;
5111 struct symtabs_and_lines *sals_p;
5112 char ***addr_string_p;
5113 int *not_found_ptr;
5114 };
5115
5116 struct lang_and_radix
5117 {
5118 enum language lang;
5119 int radix;
5120 };
5121
5122 /* Create a breakpoint for JIT code registration and unregistration. */
5123
5124 struct breakpoint *
5125 create_jit_event_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR address)
5126 {
5127 struct breakpoint *b;
5128
5129 b = create_internal_breakpoint (gdbarch, address, bp_jit_event);
5130 update_global_location_list_nothrow (1);
5131 return b;
5132 }
5133
5134 void
5135 remove_solib_event_breakpoints (void)
5136 {
5137 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
5138
5139 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
5140 if (b->type == bp_shlib_event
5141 && b->loc->pspace == current_program_space)
5142 delete_breakpoint (b);
5143 }
5144
5145 struct breakpoint *
5146 create_solib_event_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR address)
5147 {
5148 struct breakpoint *b;
5149
5150 b = create_internal_breakpoint (gdbarch, address, bp_shlib_event);
5151 update_global_location_list_nothrow (1);
5152 return b;
5153 }
5154
5155 /* Disable any breakpoints that are on code in shared libraries. Only
5156 apply to enabled breakpoints, disabled ones can just stay disabled. */
5157
5158 void
5159 disable_breakpoints_in_shlibs (void)
5160 {
5161 struct bp_location *loc, **locp_tmp;
5162
5163 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (loc, locp_tmp)
5164 {
5165 struct breakpoint *b = loc->owner;
5166 /* We apply the check to all breakpoints, including disabled
5167 for those with loc->duplicate set. This is so that when breakpoint
5168 becomes enabled, or the duplicate is removed, gdb will try to insert
5169 all breakpoints. If we don't set shlib_disabled here, we'll try
5170 to insert those breakpoints and fail. */
5171 if (((b->type == bp_breakpoint)
5172 || (b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
5173 || (tracepoint_type (b)))
5174 && loc->pspace == current_program_space
5175 && !loc->shlib_disabled
5176 #ifdef PC_SOLIB
5177 && PC_SOLIB (loc->address)
5178 #else
5179 && solib_name_from_address (loc->pspace, loc->address)
5180 #endif
5181 )
5182 {
5183 loc->shlib_disabled = 1;
5184 }
5185 }
5186 }
5187
5188 /* Disable any breakpoints that are in in an unloaded shared library. Only
5189 apply to enabled breakpoints, disabled ones can just stay disabled. */
5190
5191 static void
5192 disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib (struct so_list *solib)
5193 {
5194 struct bp_location *loc, **locp_tmp;
5195 int disabled_shlib_breaks = 0;
5196
5197 /* SunOS a.out shared libraries are always mapped, so do not
5198 disable breakpoints; they will only be reported as unloaded
5199 through clear_solib when GDB discards its shared library
5200 list. See clear_solib for more information. */
5201 if (exec_bfd != NULL
5202 && bfd_get_flavour (exec_bfd) == bfd_target_aout_flavour)
5203 return;
5204
5205 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (loc, locp_tmp)
5206 {
5207 struct breakpoint *b = loc->owner;
5208 if ((loc->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_breakpoint
5209 || loc->loc_type == bp_loc_software_breakpoint)
5210 && solib->pspace == loc->pspace
5211 && !loc->shlib_disabled
5212 && (b->type == bp_breakpoint || b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
5213 && solib_contains_address_p (solib, loc->address))
5214 {
5215 loc->shlib_disabled = 1;
5216 /* At this point, we cannot rely on remove_breakpoint
5217 succeeding so we must mark the breakpoint as not inserted
5218 to prevent future errors occurring in remove_breakpoints. */
5219 loc->inserted = 0;
5220 if (!disabled_shlib_breaks)
5221 {
5222 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
5223 warning (_("Temporarily disabling breakpoints for unloaded shared library \"%s\""),
5224 solib->so_name);
5225 }
5226 disabled_shlib_breaks = 1;
5227 }
5228 }
5229 }
5230
5231 /* FORK & VFORK catchpoints. */
5232
5233 /* Implement the "insert" breakpoint_ops method for fork catchpoints. */
5234
5235 static void
5236 insert_catch_fork (struct breakpoint *b)
5237 {
5238 target_insert_fork_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
5239 }
5240
5241 /* Implement the "remove" breakpoint_ops method for fork catchpoints. */
5242
5243 static int
5244 remove_catch_fork (struct breakpoint *b)
5245 {
5246 return target_remove_fork_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
5247 }
5248
5249 /* Implement the "breakpoint_hit" breakpoint_ops method for fork
5250 catchpoints. */
5251
5252 static int
5253 breakpoint_hit_catch_fork (struct breakpoint *b)
5254 {
5255 return inferior_has_forked (inferior_ptid, &b->forked_inferior_pid);
5256 }
5257
5258 /* Implement the "print_it" breakpoint_ops method for fork catchpoints. */
5259
5260 static enum print_stop_action
5261 print_it_catch_fork (struct breakpoint *b)
5262 {
5263 annotate_catchpoint (b->number);
5264 printf_filtered (_("\nCatchpoint %d (forked process %d), "),
5265 b->number, ptid_get_pid (b->forked_inferior_pid));
5266 return PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC;
5267 }
5268
5269 /* Implement the "print_one" breakpoint_ops method for fork catchpoints. */
5270
5271 static void
5272 print_one_catch_fork (struct breakpoint *b, struct bp_location **last_loc)
5273 {
5274 struct value_print_options opts;
5275
5276 get_user_print_options (&opts);
5277
5278 /* Field 4, the address, is omitted (which makes the columns
5279 not line up too nicely with the headers, but the effect
5280 is relatively readable). */
5281 if (opts.addressprint)
5282 ui_out_field_skip (uiout, "addr");
5283 annotate_field (5);
5284 ui_out_text (uiout, "fork");
5285 if (!ptid_equal (b->forked_inferior_pid, null_ptid))
5286 {
5287 ui_out_text (uiout, ", process ");
5288 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "what",
5289 ptid_get_pid (b->forked_inferior_pid));
5290 ui_out_spaces (uiout, 1);
5291 }
5292 }
5293
5294 /* Implement the "print_mention" breakpoint_ops method for fork
5295 catchpoints. */
5296
5297 static void
5298 print_mention_catch_fork (struct breakpoint *b)
5299 {
5300 printf_filtered (_("Catchpoint %d (fork)"), b->number);
5301 }
5302
5303 /* The breakpoint_ops structure to be used in fork catchpoints. */
5304
5305 static struct breakpoint_ops catch_fork_breakpoint_ops =
5306 {
5307 insert_catch_fork,
5308 remove_catch_fork,
5309 breakpoint_hit_catch_fork,
5310 print_it_catch_fork,
5311 print_one_catch_fork,
5312 print_mention_catch_fork
5313 };
5314
5315 /* Implement the "insert" breakpoint_ops method for vfork catchpoints. */
5316
5317 static void
5318 insert_catch_vfork (struct breakpoint *b)
5319 {
5320 target_insert_vfork_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
5321 }
5322
5323 /* Implement the "remove" breakpoint_ops method for vfork catchpoints. */
5324
5325 static int
5326 remove_catch_vfork (struct breakpoint *b)
5327 {
5328 return target_remove_vfork_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
5329 }
5330
5331 /* Implement the "breakpoint_hit" breakpoint_ops method for vfork
5332 catchpoints. */
5333
5334 static int
5335 breakpoint_hit_catch_vfork (struct breakpoint *b)
5336 {
5337 return inferior_has_vforked (inferior_ptid, &b->forked_inferior_pid);
5338 }
5339
5340 /* Implement the "print_it" breakpoint_ops method for vfork catchpoints. */
5341
5342 static enum print_stop_action
5343 print_it_catch_vfork (struct breakpoint *b)
5344 {
5345 annotate_catchpoint (b->number);
5346 printf_filtered (_("\nCatchpoint %d (vforked process %d), "),
5347 b->number, ptid_get_pid (b->forked_inferior_pid));
5348 return PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC;
5349 }
5350
5351 /* Implement the "print_one" breakpoint_ops method for vfork catchpoints. */
5352
5353 static void
5354 print_one_catch_vfork (struct breakpoint *b, struct bp_location **last_loc)
5355 {
5356 struct value_print_options opts;
5357
5358 get_user_print_options (&opts);
5359 /* Field 4, the address, is omitted (which makes the columns
5360 not line up too nicely with the headers, but the effect
5361 is relatively readable). */
5362 if (opts.addressprint)
5363 ui_out_field_skip (uiout, "addr");
5364 annotate_field (5);
5365 ui_out_text (uiout, "vfork");
5366 if (!ptid_equal (b->forked_inferior_pid, null_ptid))
5367 {
5368 ui_out_text (uiout, ", process ");
5369 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "what",
5370 ptid_get_pid (b->forked_inferior_pid));
5371 ui_out_spaces (uiout, 1);
5372 }
5373 }
5374
5375 /* Implement the "print_mention" breakpoint_ops method for vfork
5376 catchpoints. */
5377
5378 static void
5379 print_mention_catch_vfork (struct breakpoint *b)
5380 {
5381 printf_filtered (_("Catchpoint %d (vfork)"), b->number);
5382 }
5383
5384 /* The breakpoint_ops structure to be used in vfork catchpoints. */
5385
5386 static struct breakpoint_ops catch_vfork_breakpoint_ops =
5387 {
5388 insert_catch_vfork,
5389 remove_catch_vfork,
5390 breakpoint_hit_catch_vfork,
5391 print_it_catch_vfork,
5392 print_one_catch_vfork,
5393 print_mention_catch_vfork
5394 };
5395
5396 /* Implement the "insert" breakpoint_ops method for syscall
5397 catchpoints. */
5398
5399 static void
5400 insert_catch_syscall (struct breakpoint *b)
5401 {
5402 struct inferior *inf = current_inferior ();
5403
5404 ++inf->total_syscalls_count;
5405 if (!b->syscalls_to_be_caught)
5406 ++inf->any_syscall_count;
5407 else
5408 {
5409 int i, iter;
5410 for (i = 0;
5411 VEC_iterate (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught, i, iter);
5412 i++)
5413 {
5414 int elem;
5415 if (iter >= VEC_length (int, inf->syscalls_counts))
5416 {
5417 int old_size = VEC_length (int, inf->syscalls_counts);
5418 uintptr_t vec_addr_offset = old_size * ((uintptr_t) sizeof (int));
5419 uintptr_t vec_addr;
5420 VEC_safe_grow (int, inf->syscalls_counts, iter + 1);
5421 vec_addr = (uintptr_t) VEC_address (int, inf->syscalls_counts) +
5422 vec_addr_offset;
5423 memset ((void *) vec_addr, 0,
5424 (iter + 1 - old_size) * sizeof (int));
5425 }
5426 elem = VEC_index (int, inf->syscalls_counts, iter);
5427 VEC_replace (int, inf->syscalls_counts, iter, ++elem);
5428 }
5429 }
5430
5431 target_set_syscall_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid),
5432 inf->total_syscalls_count != 0,
5433 inf->any_syscall_count,
5434 VEC_length (int, inf->syscalls_counts),
5435 VEC_address (int, inf->syscalls_counts));
5436 }
5437
5438 /* Implement the "remove" breakpoint_ops method for syscall
5439 catchpoints. */
5440
5441 static int
5442 remove_catch_syscall (struct breakpoint *b)
5443 {
5444 struct inferior *inf = current_inferior ();
5445
5446 --inf->total_syscalls_count;
5447 if (!b->syscalls_to_be_caught)
5448 --inf->any_syscall_count;
5449 else
5450 {
5451 int i, iter;
5452 for (i = 0;
5453 VEC_iterate (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught, i, iter);
5454 i++)
5455 {
5456 int elem;
5457 if (iter >= VEC_length (int, inf->syscalls_counts))
5458 /* Shouldn't happen. */
5459 continue;
5460 elem = VEC_index (int, inf->syscalls_counts, iter);
5461 VEC_replace (int, inf->syscalls_counts, iter, --elem);
5462 }
5463 }
5464
5465 return target_set_syscall_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid),
5466 inf->total_syscalls_count != 0,
5467 inf->any_syscall_count,
5468 VEC_length (int, inf->syscalls_counts),
5469 VEC_address (int, inf->syscalls_counts));
5470 }
5471
5472 /* Implement the "breakpoint_hit" breakpoint_ops method for syscall
5473 catchpoints. */
5474
5475 static int
5476 breakpoint_hit_catch_syscall (struct breakpoint *b)
5477 {
5478 /* We must check if we are catching specific syscalls in this breakpoint.
5479 If we are, then we must guarantee that the called syscall is the same
5480 syscall we are catching. */
5481 int syscall_number = 0;
5482
5483 if (!inferior_has_called_syscall (inferior_ptid, &syscall_number))
5484 return 0;
5485
5486 /* Now, checking if the syscall is the same. */
5487 if (b->syscalls_to_be_caught)
5488 {
5489 int i, iter;
5490 for (i = 0;
5491 VEC_iterate (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught, i, iter);
5492 i++)
5493 if (syscall_number == iter)
5494 break;
5495 /* Not the same. */
5496 if (!iter)
5497 return 0;
5498 }
5499
5500 return 1;
5501 }
5502
5503 /* Implement the "print_it" breakpoint_ops method for syscall
5504 catchpoints. */
5505
5506 static enum print_stop_action
5507 print_it_catch_syscall (struct breakpoint *b)
5508 {
5509 /* These are needed because we want to know in which state a
5510 syscall is. It can be in the TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY
5511 or TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_RETURN, and depending on it we
5512 must print "called syscall" or "returned from syscall". */
5513 ptid_t ptid;
5514 struct target_waitstatus last;
5515 struct syscall s;
5516 struct cleanup *old_chain;
5517 char *syscall_id;
5518
5519 get_last_target_status (&ptid, &last);
5520
5521 get_syscall_by_number (last.value.syscall_number, &s);
5522
5523 annotate_catchpoint (b->number);
5524
5525 if (s.name == NULL)
5526 syscall_id = xstrprintf ("%d", last.value.syscall_number);
5527 else
5528 syscall_id = xstrprintf ("'%s'", s.name);
5529
5530 old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, syscall_id);
5531
5532 if (last.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_ENTRY)
5533 printf_filtered (_("\nCatchpoint %d (call to syscall %s), "),
5534 b->number, syscall_id);
5535 else if (last.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_SYSCALL_RETURN)
5536 printf_filtered (_("\nCatchpoint %d (returned from syscall %s), "),
5537 b->number, syscall_id);
5538
5539 do_cleanups (old_chain);
5540
5541 return PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC;
5542 }
5543
5544 /* Implement the "print_one" breakpoint_ops method for syscall
5545 catchpoints. */
5546
5547 static void
5548 print_one_catch_syscall (struct breakpoint *b,
5549 struct bp_location **last_loc)
5550 {
5551 struct value_print_options opts;
5552
5553 get_user_print_options (&opts);
5554 /* Field 4, the address, is omitted (which makes the columns
5555 not line up too nicely with the headers, but the effect
5556 is relatively readable). */
5557 if (opts.addressprint)
5558 ui_out_field_skip (uiout, "addr");
5559 annotate_field (5);
5560
5561 if (b->syscalls_to_be_caught
5562 && VEC_length (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught) > 1)
5563 ui_out_text (uiout, "syscalls \"");
5564 else
5565 ui_out_text (uiout, "syscall \"");
5566
5567 if (b->syscalls_to_be_caught)
5568 {
5569 int i, iter;
5570 char *text = xstrprintf ("%s", "");
5571 for (i = 0;
5572 VEC_iterate (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught, i, iter);
5573 i++)
5574 {
5575 char *x = text;
5576 struct syscall s;
5577 get_syscall_by_number (iter, &s);
5578
5579 if (s.name != NULL)
5580 text = xstrprintf ("%s%s, ", text, s.name);
5581 else
5582 text = xstrprintf ("%s%d, ", text, iter);
5583
5584 /* We have to xfree the last 'text' (now stored at 'x')
5585 because xstrprintf dinamically allocates new space for it
5586 on every call. */
5587 xfree (x);
5588 }
5589 /* Remove the last comma. */
5590 text[strlen (text) - 2] = '\0';
5591 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", text);
5592 }
5593 else
5594 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", "<any syscall>");
5595 ui_out_text (uiout, "\" ");
5596 }
5597
5598 /* Implement the "print_mention" breakpoint_ops method for syscall
5599 catchpoints. */
5600
5601 static void
5602 print_mention_catch_syscall (struct breakpoint *b)
5603 {
5604 if (b->syscalls_to_be_caught)
5605 {
5606 int i, iter;
5607
5608 if (VEC_length (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught) > 1)
5609 printf_filtered (_("Catchpoint %d (syscalls"), b->number);
5610 else
5611 printf_filtered (_("Catchpoint %d (syscall"), b->number);
5612
5613 for (i = 0;
5614 VEC_iterate (int, b->syscalls_to_be_caught, i, iter);
5615 i++)
5616 {
5617 struct syscall s;
5618 get_syscall_by_number (iter, &s);
5619
5620 if (s.name)
5621 printf_filtered (" '%s' [%d]", s.name, s.number);
5622 else
5623 printf_filtered (" %d", s.number);
5624 }
5625 printf_filtered (")");
5626 }
5627 else
5628 printf_filtered (_("Catchpoint %d (any syscall)"),
5629 b->number);
5630 }
5631
5632 /* The breakpoint_ops structure to be used in syscall catchpoints. */
5633
5634 static struct breakpoint_ops catch_syscall_breakpoint_ops =
5635 {
5636 insert_catch_syscall,
5637 remove_catch_syscall,
5638 breakpoint_hit_catch_syscall,
5639 print_it_catch_syscall,
5640 print_one_catch_syscall,
5641 print_mention_catch_syscall
5642 };
5643
5644 /* Returns non-zero if 'b' is a syscall catchpoint. */
5645
5646 static int
5647 syscall_catchpoint_p (struct breakpoint *b)
5648 {
5649 return (b->ops == &catch_syscall_breakpoint_ops);
5650 }
5651
5652 /* Create a new breakpoint of the bp_catchpoint kind and return it,
5653 but does NOT mention it nor update the global location list.
5654 This is useful if you need to fill more fields in the
5655 struct breakpoint before calling mention.
5656
5657 If TEMPFLAG is non-zero, then make the breakpoint temporary.
5658 If COND_STRING is not NULL, then store it in the breakpoint.
5659 OPS, if not NULL, is the breakpoint_ops structure associated
5660 to the catchpoint. */
5661
5662 static struct breakpoint *
5663 create_catchpoint_without_mention (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int tempflag,
5664 char *cond_string,
5665 struct breakpoint_ops *ops)
5666 {
5667 struct symtab_and_line sal;
5668 struct breakpoint *b;
5669
5670 init_sal (&sal);
5671 sal.pspace = current_program_space;
5672
5673 b = set_raw_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, bp_catchpoint);
5674 set_breakpoint_count (breakpoint_count + 1);
5675 b->number = breakpoint_count;
5676
5677 b->cond_string = (cond_string == NULL) ? NULL : xstrdup (cond_string);
5678 b->thread = -1;
5679 b->addr_string = NULL;
5680 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
5681 b->disposition = tempflag ? disp_del : disp_donttouch;
5682 b->ops = ops;
5683
5684 return b;
5685 }
5686
5687 /* Create a new breakpoint of the bp_catchpoint kind and return it.
5688
5689 If TEMPFLAG is non-zero, then make the breakpoint temporary.
5690 If COND_STRING is not NULL, then store it in the breakpoint.
5691 OPS, if not NULL, is the breakpoint_ops structure associated
5692 to the catchpoint. */
5693
5694 static struct breakpoint *
5695 create_catchpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int tempflag,
5696 char *cond_string, struct breakpoint_ops *ops)
5697 {
5698 struct breakpoint *b =
5699 create_catchpoint_without_mention (gdbarch, tempflag, cond_string, ops);
5700
5701 mention (b);
5702 update_global_location_list (1);
5703
5704 return b;
5705 }
5706
5707 static void
5708 create_fork_vfork_event_catchpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
5709 int tempflag, char *cond_string,
5710 struct breakpoint_ops *ops)
5711 {
5712 struct breakpoint *b
5713 = create_catchpoint (gdbarch, tempflag, cond_string, ops);
5714
5715 /* FIXME: We should put this information in a breakpoint private data
5716 area. */
5717 b->forked_inferior_pid = null_ptid;
5718 }
5719
5720 /* Exec catchpoints. */
5721
5722 static void
5723 insert_catch_exec (struct breakpoint *b)
5724 {
5725 target_insert_exec_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
5726 }
5727
5728 static int
5729 remove_catch_exec (struct breakpoint *b)
5730 {
5731 return target_remove_exec_catchpoint (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
5732 }
5733
5734 static int
5735 breakpoint_hit_catch_exec (struct breakpoint *b)
5736 {
5737 return inferior_has_execd (inferior_ptid, &b->exec_pathname);
5738 }
5739
5740 static enum print_stop_action
5741 print_it_catch_exec (struct breakpoint *b)
5742 {
5743 annotate_catchpoint (b->number);
5744 printf_filtered (_("\nCatchpoint %d (exec'd %s), "), b->number,
5745 b->exec_pathname);
5746 return PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC;
5747 }
5748
5749 static void
5750 print_one_catch_exec (struct breakpoint *b, struct bp_location **last_loc)
5751 {
5752 struct value_print_options opts;
5753
5754 get_user_print_options (&opts);
5755
5756 /* Field 4, the address, is omitted (which makes the columns
5757 not line up too nicely with the headers, but the effect
5758 is relatively readable). */
5759 if (opts.addressprint)
5760 ui_out_field_skip (uiout, "addr");
5761 annotate_field (5);
5762 ui_out_text (uiout, "exec");
5763 if (b->exec_pathname != NULL)
5764 {
5765 ui_out_text (uiout, ", program \"");
5766 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", b->exec_pathname);
5767 ui_out_text (uiout, "\" ");
5768 }
5769 }
5770
5771 static void
5772 print_mention_catch_exec (struct breakpoint *b)
5773 {
5774 printf_filtered (_("Catchpoint %d (exec)"), b->number);
5775 }
5776
5777 static struct breakpoint_ops catch_exec_breakpoint_ops =
5778 {
5779 insert_catch_exec,
5780 remove_catch_exec,
5781 breakpoint_hit_catch_exec,
5782 print_it_catch_exec,
5783 print_one_catch_exec,
5784 print_mention_catch_exec
5785 };
5786
5787 static void
5788 create_syscall_event_catchpoint (int tempflag, VEC(int) *filter,
5789 struct breakpoint_ops *ops)
5790 {
5791 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_current_arch ();
5792 struct breakpoint *b =
5793 create_catchpoint_without_mention (gdbarch, tempflag, NULL, ops);
5794
5795 b->syscalls_to_be_caught = filter;
5796
5797 /* Now, we have to mention the breakpoint and update the global
5798 location list. */
5799 mention (b);
5800 update_global_location_list (1);
5801 }
5802
5803 static int
5804 hw_breakpoint_used_count (void)
5805 {
5806 struct breakpoint *b;
5807 int i = 0;
5808
5809 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
5810 {
5811 if (b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint && breakpoint_enabled (b))
5812 i++;
5813 }
5814
5815 return i;
5816 }
5817
5818 static int
5819 hw_watchpoint_used_count (enum bptype type, int *other_type_used)
5820 {
5821 struct breakpoint *b;
5822 int i = 0;
5823
5824 *other_type_used = 0;
5825 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
5826 {
5827 if (breakpoint_enabled (b))
5828 {
5829 if (b->type == type)
5830 i++;
5831 else if ((b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint
5832 || b->type == bp_read_watchpoint
5833 || b->type == bp_access_watchpoint))
5834 *other_type_used = 1;
5835 }
5836 }
5837 return i;
5838 }
5839
5840 void
5841 disable_watchpoints_before_interactive_call_start (void)
5842 {
5843 struct breakpoint *b;
5844
5845 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
5846 {
5847 if (((b->type == bp_watchpoint)
5848 || (b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint)
5849 || (b->type == bp_read_watchpoint)
5850 || (b->type == bp_access_watchpoint))
5851 && breakpoint_enabled (b))
5852 {
5853 b->enable_state = bp_call_disabled;
5854 update_global_location_list (0);
5855 }
5856 }
5857 }
5858
5859 void
5860 enable_watchpoints_after_interactive_call_stop (void)
5861 {
5862 struct breakpoint *b;
5863
5864 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
5865 {
5866 if (((b->type == bp_watchpoint)
5867 || (b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint)
5868 || (b->type == bp_read_watchpoint)
5869 || (b->type == bp_access_watchpoint))
5870 && (b->enable_state == bp_call_disabled))
5871 {
5872 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
5873 update_global_location_list (1);
5874 }
5875 }
5876 }
5877
5878 void
5879 disable_breakpoints_before_startup (void)
5880 {
5881 struct breakpoint *b;
5882 int found = 0;
5883
5884 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
5885 {
5886 if (b->pspace != current_program_space)
5887 continue;
5888
5889 if ((b->type == bp_breakpoint
5890 || b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
5891 && breakpoint_enabled (b))
5892 {
5893 b->enable_state = bp_startup_disabled;
5894 found = 1;
5895 }
5896 }
5897
5898 if (found)
5899 update_global_location_list (0);
5900
5901 current_program_space->executing_startup = 1;
5902 }
5903
5904 void
5905 enable_breakpoints_after_startup (void)
5906 {
5907 struct breakpoint *b;
5908 int found = 0;
5909
5910 current_program_space->executing_startup = 0;
5911
5912 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
5913 {
5914 if (b->pspace != current_program_space)
5915 continue;
5916
5917 if ((b->type == bp_breakpoint
5918 || b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
5919 && b->enable_state == bp_startup_disabled)
5920 {
5921 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
5922 found = 1;
5923 }
5924 }
5925
5926 if (found)
5927 breakpoint_re_set ();
5928 }
5929
5930
5931 /* Set a breakpoint that will evaporate an end of command
5932 at address specified by SAL.
5933 Restrict it to frame FRAME if FRAME is nonzero. */
5934
5935 struct breakpoint *
5936 set_momentary_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct symtab_and_line sal,
5937 struct frame_id frame_id, enum bptype type)
5938 {
5939 struct breakpoint *b;
5940
5941 /* If FRAME_ID is valid, it should be a real frame, not an inlined
5942 one. */
5943 gdb_assert (!frame_id_inlined_p (frame_id));
5944
5945 b = set_raw_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, type);
5946 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
5947 b->disposition = disp_donttouch;
5948 b->frame_id = frame_id;
5949
5950 /* If we're debugging a multi-threaded program, then we
5951 want momentary breakpoints to be active in only a
5952 single thread of control. */
5953 if (in_thread_list (inferior_ptid))
5954 b->thread = pid_to_thread_id (inferior_ptid);
5955
5956 update_global_location_list_nothrow (1);
5957
5958 return b;
5959 }
5960
5961 /* Make a deep copy of momentary breakpoint ORIG. Returns NULL if
5962 ORIG is NULL. */
5963
5964 struct breakpoint *
5965 clone_momentary_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *orig)
5966 {
5967 struct breakpoint *copy;
5968
5969 /* If there's nothing to clone, then return nothing. */
5970 if (orig == NULL)
5971 return NULL;
5972
5973 copy = set_raw_breakpoint_without_location (orig->gdbarch, orig->type);
5974 copy->loc = allocate_bp_location (copy);
5975 set_breakpoint_location_function (copy->loc);
5976
5977 copy->loc->gdbarch = orig->loc->gdbarch;
5978 copy->loc->requested_address = orig->loc->requested_address;
5979 copy->loc->address = orig->loc->address;
5980 copy->loc->section = orig->loc->section;
5981 copy->loc->pspace = orig->loc->pspace;
5982
5983 if (orig->source_file == NULL)
5984 copy->source_file = NULL;
5985 else
5986 copy->source_file = xstrdup (orig->source_file);
5987
5988 copy->line_number = orig->line_number;
5989 copy->frame_id = orig->frame_id;
5990 copy->thread = orig->thread;
5991 copy->pspace = orig->pspace;
5992
5993 copy->enable_state = bp_enabled;
5994 copy->disposition = disp_donttouch;
5995 copy->number = internal_breakpoint_number--;
5996
5997 update_global_location_list_nothrow (0);
5998 return copy;
5999 }
6000
6001 struct breakpoint *
6002 set_momentary_breakpoint_at_pc (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR pc,
6003 enum bptype type)
6004 {
6005 struct symtab_and_line sal;
6006
6007 sal = find_pc_line (pc, 0);
6008 sal.pc = pc;
6009 sal.section = find_pc_overlay (pc);
6010 sal.explicit_pc = 1;
6011
6012 return set_momentary_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, null_frame_id, type);
6013 }
6014 \f
6015
6016 /* Tell the user we have just set a breakpoint B. */
6017
6018 static void
6019 mention (struct breakpoint *b)
6020 {
6021 int say_where = 0;
6022 struct cleanup *ui_out_chain;
6023 struct value_print_options opts;
6024
6025 get_user_print_options (&opts);
6026
6027 /* FIXME: This is misplaced; mention() is called by things (like
6028 hitting a watchpoint) other than breakpoint creation. It should
6029 be possible to clean this up and at the same time replace the
6030 random calls to breakpoint_changed with this hook. */
6031 observer_notify_breakpoint_created (b->number);
6032
6033 if (b->ops != NULL && b->ops->print_mention != NULL)
6034 b->ops->print_mention (b);
6035 else
6036 switch (b->type)
6037 {
6038 case bp_none:
6039 printf_filtered (_("(apparently deleted?) Eventpoint %d: "), b->number);
6040 break;
6041 case bp_watchpoint:
6042 ui_out_text (uiout, "Watchpoint ");
6043 ui_out_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "wpt");
6044 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "number", b->number);
6045 ui_out_text (uiout, ": ");
6046 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "exp", b->exp_string);
6047 do_cleanups (ui_out_chain);
6048 break;
6049 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
6050 ui_out_text (uiout, "Hardware watchpoint ");
6051 ui_out_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "wpt");
6052 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "number", b->number);
6053 ui_out_text (uiout, ": ");
6054 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "exp", b->exp_string);
6055 do_cleanups (ui_out_chain);
6056 break;
6057 case bp_read_watchpoint:
6058 ui_out_text (uiout, "Hardware read watchpoint ");
6059 ui_out_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "hw-rwpt");
6060 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "number", b->number);
6061 ui_out_text (uiout, ": ");
6062 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "exp", b->exp_string);
6063 do_cleanups (ui_out_chain);
6064 break;
6065 case bp_access_watchpoint:
6066 ui_out_text (uiout, "Hardware access (read/write) watchpoint ");
6067 ui_out_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "hw-awpt");
6068 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "number", b->number);
6069 ui_out_text (uiout, ": ");
6070 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "exp", b->exp_string);
6071 do_cleanups (ui_out_chain);
6072 break;
6073 case bp_breakpoint:
6074 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
6075 {
6076 say_where = 0;
6077 break;
6078 }
6079 if (b->disposition == disp_del)
6080 printf_filtered (_("Temporary breakpoint"));
6081 else
6082 printf_filtered (_("Breakpoint"));
6083 printf_filtered (_(" %d"), b->number);
6084 say_where = 1;
6085 break;
6086 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
6087 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
6088 {
6089 say_where = 0;
6090 break;
6091 }
6092 printf_filtered (_("Hardware assisted breakpoint %d"), b->number);
6093 say_where = 1;
6094 break;
6095 case bp_tracepoint:
6096 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
6097 {
6098 say_where = 0;
6099 break;
6100 }
6101 printf_filtered (_("Tracepoint"));
6102 printf_filtered (_(" %d"), b->number);
6103 say_where = 1;
6104 break;
6105 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
6106 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
6107 {
6108 say_where = 0;
6109 break;
6110 }
6111 printf_filtered (_("Fast tracepoint"));
6112 printf_filtered (_(" %d"), b->number);
6113 say_where = 1;
6114 break;
6115
6116 case bp_until:
6117 case bp_finish:
6118 case bp_longjmp:
6119 case bp_longjmp_resume:
6120 case bp_step_resume:
6121 case bp_call_dummy:
6122 case bp_watchpoint_scope:
6123 case bp_shlib_event:
6124 case bp_thread_event:
6125 case bp_overlay_event:
6126 case bp_jit_event:
6127 case bp_longjmp_master:
6128 break;
6129 }
6130
6131 if (say_where)
6132 {
6133 /* i18n: cagney/2005-02-11: Below needs to be merged into a
6134 single string. */
6135 if (b->loc == NULL)
6136 {
6137 printf_filtered (_(" (%s) pending."), b->addr_string);
6138 }
6139 else
6140 {
6141 if (opts.addressprint || b->source_file == NULL)
6142 {
6143 printf_filtered (" at ");
6144 fputs_filtered (paddress (b->loc->gdbarch, b->loc->address),
6145 gdb_stdout);
6146 }
6147 if (b->source_file)
6148 printf_filtered (": file %s, line %d.",
6149 b->source_file, b->line_number);
6150
6151 if (b->loc->next)
6152 {
6153 struct bp_location *loc = b->loc;
6154 int n = 0;
6155 for (; loc; loc = loc->next)
6156 ++n;
6157 printf_filtered (" (%d locations)", n);
6158 }
6159
6160 }
6161 }
6162 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
6163 return;
6164 printf_filtered ("\n");
6165 }
6166 \f
6167
6168 static struct bp_location *
6169 add_location_to_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *b,
6170 const struct symtab_and_line *sal)
6171 {
6172 struct bp_location *loc, **tmp;
6173
6174 loc = allocate_bp_location (b);
6175 for (tmp = &(b->loc); *tmp != NULL; tmp = &((*tmp)->next))
6176 ;
6177 *tmp = loc;
6178 loc->gdbarch = get_sal_arch (*sal);
6179 if (!loc->gdbarch)
6180 loc->gdbarch = b->gdbarch;
6181 loc->requested_address = sal->pc;
6182 loc->address = adjust_breakpoint_address (loc->gdbarch,
6183 loc->requested_address, b->type);
6184 loc->pspace = sal->pspace;
6185 gdb_assert (loc->pspace != NULL);
6186 loc->section = sal->section;
6187
6188 set_breakpoint_location_function (loc);
6189 return loc;
6190 }
6191 \f
6192
6193 /* Return 1 if LOC is pointing to a permanent breakpoint,
6194 return 0 otherwise. */
6195
6196 static int
6197 bp_loc_is_permanent (struct bp_location *loc)
6198 {
6199 int len;
6200 CORE_ADDR addr;
6201 const gdb_byte *brk;
6202 gdb_byte *target_mem;
6203 struct cleanup *cleanup;
6204 int retval = 0;
6205
6206 gdb_assert (loc != NULL);
6207
6208 addr = loc->address;
6209 brk = gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc (loc->gdbarch, &addr, &len);
6210
6211 /* Software breakpoints unsupported? */
6212 if (brk == NULL)
6213 return 0;
6214
6215 target_mem = alloca (len);
6216
6217 /* Enable the automatic memory restoration from breakpoints while
6218 we read the memory. Otherwise we could say about our temporary
6219 breakpoints they are permanent. */
6220 cleanup = save_current_space_and_thread ();
6221
6222 switch_to_program_space_and_thread (loc->pspace);
6223 make_show_memory_breakpoints_cleanup (0);
6224
6225 if (target_read_memory (loc->address, target_mem, len) == 0
6226 && memcmp (target_mem, brk, len) == 0)
6227 retval = 1;
6228
6229 do_cleanups (cleanup);
6230
6231 return retval;
6232 }
6233
6234
6235
6236 /* Create a breakpoint with SAL as location. Use ADDR_STRING
6237 as textual description of the location, and COND_STRING
6238 as condition expression. */
6239
6240 static void
6241 create_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
6242 struct symtabs_and_lines sals, char *addr_string,
6243 char *cond_string,
6244 enum bptype type, enum bpdisp disposition,
6245 int thread, int task, int ignore_count,
6246 struct breakpoint_ops *ops, int from_tty, int enabled)
6247 {
6248 struct breakpoint *b = NULL;
6249 int i;
6250
6251 if (type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
6252 {
6253 int i = hw_breakpoint_used_count ();
6254 int target_resources_ok =
6255 target_can_use_hardware_watchpoint (bp_hardware_breakpoint,
6256 i + 1, 0);
6257 if (target_resources_ok == 0)
6258 error (_("No hardware breakpoint support in the target."));
6259 else if (target_resources_ok < 0)
6260 error (_("Hardware breakpoints used exceeds limit."));
6261 }
6262
6263 gdb_assert (sals.nelts > 0);
6264
6265 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; ++i)
6266 {
6267 struct symtab_and_line sal = sals.sals[i];
6268 struct bp_location *loc;
6269
6270 if (from_tty)
6271 {
6272 struct gdbarch *loc_gdbarch = get_sal_arch (sal);
6273 if (!loc_gdbarch)
6274 loc_gdbarch = gdbarch;
6275
6276 describe_other_breakpoints (loc_gdbarch,
6277 sal.pspace, sal.pc, sal.section, thread);
6278 }
6279
6280 if (i == 0)
6281 {
6282 b = set_raw_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, type);
6283 set_breakpoint_count (breakpoint_count + 1);
6284 b->number = breakpoint_count;
6285 b->thread = thread;
6286 b->task = task;
6287
6288 b->cond_string = cond_string;
6289 b->ignore_count = ignore_count;
6290 b->enable_state = enabled ? bp_enabled : bp_disabled;
6291 b->disposition = disposition;
6292
6293 b->pspace = sals.sals[0].pspace;
6294
6295 if (enabled && b->pspace->executing_startup
6296 && (b->type == bp_breakpoint
6297 || b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint))
6298 b->enable_state = bp_startup_disabled;
6299
6300 loc = b->loc;
6301 }
6302 else
6303 {
6304 loc = add_location_to_breakpoint (b, &sal);
6305 }
6306
6307 if (bp_loc_is_permanent (loc))
6308 make_breakpoint_permanent (b);
6309
6310 if (b->cond_string)
6311 {
6312 char *arg = b->cond_string;
6313 loc->cond = parse_exp_1 (&arg, block_for_pc (loc->address), 0);
6314 if (*arg)
6315 error (_("Garbage %s follows condition"), arg);
6316 }
6317 }
6318
6319 if (addr_string)
6320 b->addr_string = addr_string;
6321 else
6322 /* addr_string has to be used or breakpoint_re_set will delete
6323 me. */
6324 b->addr_string
6325 = xstrprintf ("*%s", paddress (b->loc->gdbarch, b->loc->address));
6326
6327 b->ops = ops;
6328 mention (b);
6329 }
6330
6331 /* Remove element at INDEX_TO_REMOVE from SAL, shifting other
6332 elements to fill the void space. */
6333 static void
6334 remove_sal (struct symtabs_and_lines *sal, int index_to_remove)
6335 {
6336 int i = index_to_remove+1;
6337 int last_index = sal->nelts-1;
6338
6339 for (;i <= last_index; ++i)
6340 sal->sals[i-1] = sal->sals[i];
6341
6342 --(sal->nelts);
6343 }
6344
6345 /* If appropriate, obtains all sals that correspond to the same file
6346 and line as SAL, in all program spaces. Users debugging with IDEs,
6347 will want to set a breakpoint at foo.c:line, and not really care
6348 about program spaces. This is done only if SAL does not have
6349 explicit PC and has line and file information. If we got just a
6350 single expanded sal, return the original.
6351
6352 Otherwise, if SAL.explicit_line is not set, filter out all sals for
6353 which the name of enclosing function is different from SAL. This
6354 makes sure that if we have breakpoint originally set in template
6355 instantiation, say foo<int>(), we won't expand SAL to locations at
6356 the same line in all existing instantiations of 'foo'. */
6357
6358 static struct symtabs_and_lines
6359 expand_line_sal_maybe (struct symtab_and_line sal)
6360 {
6361 struct symtabs_and_lines expanded;
6362 CORE_ADDR original_pc = sal.pc;
6363 char *original_function = NULL;
6364 int found;
6365 int i;
6366 struct cleanup *old_chain;
6367
6368 /* If we have explicit pc, don't expand.
6369 If we have no line number, we can't expand. */
6370 if (sal.explicit_pc || sal.line == 0 || sal.symtab == NULL)
6371 {
6372 expanded.nelts = 1;
6373 expanded.sals = xmalloc (sizeof (struct symtab_and_line));
6374 expanded.sals[0] = sal;
6375 return expanded;
6376 }
6377
6378 sal.pc = 0;
6379
6380 old_chain = save_current_space_and_thread ();
6381
6382 switch_to_program_space_and_thread (sal.pspace);
6383
6384 find_pc_partial_function (original_pc, &original_function, NULL, NULL);
6385
6386 /* Note that expand_line_sal visits *all* program spaces. */
6387 expanded = expand_line_sal (sal);
6388
6389 if (expanded.nelts == 1)
6390 {
6391 /* We had one sal, we got one sal. Return that sal, adjusting it
6392 past the function prologue if necessary. */
6393 xfree (expanded.sals);
6394 expanded.nelts = 1;
6395 expanded.sals = xmalloc (sizeof (struct symtab_and_line));
6396 sal.pc = original_pc;
6397 expanded.sals[0] = sal;
6398 skip_prologue_sal (&expanded.sals[0]);
6399 do_cleanups (old_chain);
6400 return expanded;
6401 }
6402
6403 if (!sal.explicit_line)
6404 {
6405 CORE_ADDR func_addr, func_end;
6406 for (i = 0; i < expanded.nelts; ++i)
6407 {
6408 CORE_ADDR pc = expanded.sals[i].pc;
6409 char *this_function;
6410
6411 /* We need to switch threads as well since we're about to
6412 read memory. */
6413 switch_to_program_space_and_thread (expanded.sals[i].pspace);
6414
6415 if (find_pc_partial_function (pc, &this_function,
6416 &func_addr, &func_end))
6417 {
6418 if (this_function
6419 && strcmp (this_function, original_function) != 0)
6420 {
6421 remove_sal (&expanded, i);
6422 --i;
6423 }
6424 else if (func_addr == pc)
6425 {
6426 /* We're at beginning of a function, and should
6427 skip prologue. */
6428 struct symbol *sym = find_pc_function (pc);
6429 if (sym)
6430 expanded.sals[i] = find_function_start_sal (sym, 1);
6431 else
6432 {
6433 /* Since find_pc_partial_function returned true,
6434 we should really always find the section here. */
6435 struct obj_section *section = find_pc_section (pc);
6436 if (section)
6437 {
6438 struct gdbarch *gdbarch
6439 = get_objfile_arch (section->objfile);
6440 expanded.sals[i].pc
6441 = gdbarch_skip_prologue (gdbarch, pc);
6442 }
6443 }
6444 }
6445 }
6446 }
6447 }
6448 else
6449 {
6450 for (i = 0; i < expanded.nelts; ++i)
6451 {
6452 /* If this SAL corresponds to a breakpoint inserted using a
6453 line number, then skip the function prologue if necessary. */
6454 skip_prologue_sal (&expanded.sals[i]);
6455 }
6456 }
6457
6458 do_cleanups (old_chain);
6459
6460 if (expanded.nelts <= 1)
6461 {
6462 /* This is un ugly workaround. If we get zero
6463 expanded sals then something is really wrong.
6464 Fix that by returnign the original sal. */
6465 xfree (expanded.sals);
6466 expanded.nelts = 1;
6467 expanded.sals = xmalloc (sizeof (struct symtab_and_line));
6468 sal.pc = original_pc;
6469 expanded.sals[0] = sal;
6470 return expanded;
6471 }
6472
6473 if (original_pc)
6474 {
6475 found = 0;
6476 for (i = 0; i < expanded.nelts; ++i)
6477 if (expanded.sals[i].pc == original_pc)
6478 {
6479 found = 1;
6480 break;
6481 }
6482 gdb_assert (found);
6483 }
6484
6485 return expanded;
6486 }
6487
6488 /* Add SALS.nelts breakpoints to the breakpoint table. For each
6489 SALS.sal[i] breakpoint, include the corresponding ADDR_STRING[i]
6490 value. COND_STRING, if not NULL, specified the condition to be
6491 used for all breakpoints. Essentially the only case where
6492 SALS.nelts is not 1 is when we set a breakpoint on an overloaded
6493 function. In that case, it's still not possible to specify
6494 separate conditions for different overloaded functions, so
6495 we take just a single condition string.
6496
6497 NOTE: If the function succeeds, the caller is expected to cleanup
6498 the arrays ADDR_STRING, COND_STRING, and SALS (but not the
6499 array contents). If the function fails (error() is called), the
6500 caller is expected to cleanups both the ADDR_STRING, COND_STRING,
6501 COND and SALS arrays and each of those arrays contents. */
6502
6503 static void
6504 create_breakpoints (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
6505 struct symtabs_and_lines sals, char **addr_string,
6506 char *cond_string,
6507 enum bptype type, enum bpdisp disposition,
6508 int thread, int task, int ignore_count,
6509 struct breakpoint_ops *ops, int from_tty,
6510 int enabled)
6511 {
6512 int i;
6513 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; ++i)
6514 {
6515 struct symtabs_and_lines expanded =
6516 expand_line_sal_maybe (sals.sals[i]);
6517
6518 create_breakpoint (gdbarch, expanded, addr_string[i],
6519 cond_string, type, disposition,
6520 thread, task, ignore_count, ops, from_tty, enabled);
6521 }
6522 }
6523
6524 /* Parse ARG which is assumed to be a SAL specification possibly
6525 followed by conditionals. On return, SALS contains an array of SAL
6526 addresses found. ADDR_STRING contains a vector of (canonical)
6527 address strings. ARG points to the end of the SAL. */
6528
6529 static void
6530 parse_breakpoint_sals (char **address,
6531 struct symtabs_and_lines *sals,
6532 char ***addr_string,
6533 int *not_found_ptr)
6534 {
6535 char *addr_start = *address;
6536 *addr_string = NULL;
6537 /* If no arg given, or if first arg is 'if ', use the default
6538 breakpoint. */
6539 if ((*address) == NULL
6540 || (strncmp ((*address), "if", 2) == 0 && isspace ((*address)[2])))
6541 {
6542 if (default_breakpoint_valid)
6543 {
6544 struct symtab_and_line sal;
6545 init_sal (&sal); /* initialize to zeroes */
6546 sals->sals = (struct symtab_and_line *)
6547 xmalloc (sizeof (struct symtab_and_line));
6548 sal.pc = default_breakpoint_address;
6549 sal.line = default_breakpoint_line;
6550 sal.symtab = default_breakpoint_symtab;
6551 sal.pspace = default_breakpoint_pspace;
6552 sal.section = find_pc_overlay (sal.pc);
6553
6554 /* "break" without arguments is equivalent to "break *PC" where PC is
6555 the default_breakpoint_address. So make sure to set
6556 sal.explicit_pc to prevent GDB from trying to expand the list of
6557 sals to include all other instances with the same symtab and line.
6558 */
6559 sal.explicit_pc = 1;
6560
6561 sals->sals[0] = sal;
6562 sals->nelts = 1;
6563 }
6564 else
6565 error (_("No default breakpoint address now."));
6566 }
6567 else
6568 {
6569 /* Force almost all breakpoints to be in terms of the
6570 current_source_symtab (which is decode_line_1's default). This
6571 should produce the results we want almost all of the time while
6572 leaving default_breakpoint_* alone.
6573 ObjC: However, don't match an Objective-C method name which
6574 may have a '+' or '-' succeeded by a '[' */
6575
6576 struct symtab_and_line cursal = get_current_source_symtab_and_line ();
6577
6578 if (default_breakpoint_valid
6579 && (!cursal.symtab
6580 || ((strchr ("+-", (*address)[0]) != NULL)
6581 && ((*address)[1] != '['))))
6582 *sals = decode_line_1 (address, 1, default_breakpoint_symtab,
6583 default_breakpoint_line, addr_string,
6584 not_found_ptr);
6585 else
6586 *sals = decode_line_1 (address, 1, (struct symtab *) NULL, 0,
6587 addr_string, not_found_ptr);
6588 }
6589 /* For any SAL that didn't have a canonical string, fill one in. */
6590 if (sals->nelts > 0 && *addr_string == NULL)
6591 *addr_string = xcalloc (sals->nelts, sizeof (char **));
6592 if (addr_start != (*address))
6593 {
6594 int i;
6595 for (i = 0; i < sals->nelts; i++)
6596 {
6597 /* Add the string if not present. */
6598 if ((*addr_string)[i] == NULL)
6599 (*addr_string)[i] = savestring (addr_start, (*address) - addr_start);
6600 }
6601 }
6602 }
6603
6604
6605 /* Convert each SAL into a real PC. Verify that the PC can be
6606 inserted as a breakpoint. If it can't throw an error. */
6607
6608 static void
6609 breakpoint_sals_to_pc (struct symtabs_and_lines *sals,
6610 char *address)
6611 {
6612 int i;
6613 for (i = 0; i < sals->nelts; i++)
6614 resolve_sal_pc (&sals->sals[i]);
6615 }
6616
6617 /* Fast tracepoints may have restrictions on valid locations. For
6618 instance, a fast tracepoint using a jump instead of a trap will
6619 likely have to overwrite more bytes than a trap would, and so can
6620 only be placed where the instruction is longer than the jump, or a
6621 multi-instruction sequence does not have a jump into the middle of
6622 it, etc. */
6623
6624 static void
6625 check_fast_tracepoint_sals (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
6626 struct symtabs_and_lines *sals)
6627 {
6628 int i, rslt;
6629 struct symtab_and_line *sal;
6630 char *msg;
6631 struct cleanup *old_chain;
6632
6633 for (i = 0; i < sals->nelts; i++)
6634 {
6635 sal = &sals->sals[i];
6636
6637 rslt = gdbarch_fast_tracepoint_valid_at (gdbarch, sal->pc,
6638 NULL, &msg);
6639 old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, msg);
6640
6641 if (!rslt)
6642 error (_("May not have a fast tracepoint at 0x%s%s"),
6643 paddress (gdbarch, sal->pc), (msg ? msg : ""));
6644
6645 do_cleanups (old_chain);
6646 }
6647 }
6648
6649 static void
6650 do_captured_parse_breakpoint (struct ui_out *ui, void *data)
6651 {
6652 struct captured_parse_breakpoint_args *args = data;
6653
6654 parse_breakpoint_sals (args->arg_p, args->sals_p, args->addr_string_p,
6655 args->not_found_ptr);
6656 }
6657
6658 /* Given TOK, a string specification of condition and thread, as
6659 accepted by the 'break' command, extract the condition
6660 string and thread number and set *COND_STRING and *THREAD.
6661 PC identifies the context at which the condition should be parsed.
6662 If no condition is found, *COND_STRING is set to NULL.
6663 If no thread is found, *THREAD is set to -1. */
6664 static void
6665 find_condition_and_thread (char *tok, CORE_ADDR pc,
6666 char **cond_string, int *thread, int *task)
6667 {
6668 *cond_string = NULL;
6669 *thread = -1;
6670 while (tok && *tok)
6671 {
6672 char *end_tok;
6673 int toklen;
6674 char *cond_start = NULL;
6675 char *cond_end = NULL;
6676 while (*tok == ' ' || *tok == '\t')
6677 tok++;
6678
6679 end_tok = tok;
6680
6681 while (*end_tok != ' ' && *end_tok != '\t' && *end_tok != '\000')
6682 end_tok++;
6683
6684 toklen = end_tok - tok;
6685
6686 if (toklen >= 1 && strncmp (tok, "if", toklen) == 0)
6687 {
6688 struct expression *expr;
6689
6690 tok = cond_start = end_tok + 1;
6691 expr = parse_exp_1 (&tok, block_for_pc (pc), 0);
6692 xfree (expr);
6693 cond_end = tok;
6694 *cond_string = savestring (cond_start,
6695 cond_end - cond_start);
6696 }
6697 else if (toklen >= 1 && strncmp (tok, "thread", toklen) == 0)
6698 {
6699 char *tmptok;
6700
6701 tok = end_tok + 1;
6702 tmptok = tok;
6703 *thread = strtol (tok, &tok, 0);
6704 if (tok == tmptok)
6705 error (_("Junk after thread keyword."));
6706 if (!valid_thread_id (*thread))
6707 error (_("Unknown thread %d."), *thread);
6708 }
6709 else if (toklen >= 1 && strncmp (tok, "task", toklen) == 0)
6710 {
6711 char *tmptok;
6712
6713 tok = end_tok + 1;
6714 tmptok = tok;
6715 *task = strtol (tok, &tok, 0);
6716 if (tok == tmptok)
6717 error (_("Junk after task keyword."));
6718 if (!valid_task_id (*task))
6719 error (_("Unknown task %d."), *task);
6720 }
6721 else
6722 error (_("Junk at end of arguments."));
6723 }
6724 }
6725
6726 /* Set a breakpoint. This function is shared between
6727 CLI and MI functions for setting a breakpoint.
6728 This function has two major modes of operations,
6729 selected by the PARSE_CONDITION_AND_THREAD parameter.
6730 If non-zero, the function will parse arg, extracting
6731 breakpoint location, address and thread. Otherwise,
6732 ARG is just the location of breakpoint, with condition
6733 and thread specified by the COND_STRING and THREAD
6734 parameters. */
6735
6736 static void
6737 break_command_really (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
6738 char *arg, char *cond_string, int thread,
6739 int parse_condition_and_thread,
6740 int tempflag, int hardwareflag, int traceflag,
6741 int ignore_count,
6742 enum auto_boolean pending_break_support,
6743 struct breakpoint_ops *ops,
6744 int from_tty,
6745 int enabled)
6746 {
6747 struct gdb_exception e;
6748 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
6749 struct symtab_and_line pending_sal;
6750 char *copy_arg;
6751 char *err_msg;
6752 char *addr_start = arg;
6753 char **addr_string;
6754 struct cleanup *old_chain;
6755 struct cleanup *bkpt_chain = NULL;
6756 struct captured_parse_breakpoint_args parse_args;
6757 int i;
6758 int pending = 0;
6759 int not_found = 0;
6760 enum bptype type_wanted;
6761 int task = 0;
6762
6763 sals.sals = NULL;
6764 sals.nelts = 0;
6765 addr_string = NULL;
6766
6767 parse_args.arg_p = &arg;
6768 parse_args.sals_p = &sals;
6769 parse_args.addr_string_p = &addr_string;
6770 parse_args.not_found_ptr = &not_found;
6771
6772 e = catch_exception (uiout, do_captured_parse_breakpoint,
6773 &parse_args, RETURN_MASK_ALL);
6774
6775 /* If caller is interested in rc value from parse, set value. */
6776 switch (e.reason)
6777 {
6778 case RETURN_QUIT:
6779 throw_exception (e);
6780 case RETURN_ERROR:
6781 switch (e.error)
6782 {
6783 case NOT_FOUND_ERROR:
6784
6785 /* If pending breakpoint support is turned off, throw
6786 error. */
6787
6788 if (pending_break_support == AUTO_BOOLEAN_FALSE)
6789 throw_exception (e);
6790
6791 exception_print (gdb_stderr, e);
6792
6793 /* If pending breakpoint support is auto query and the user
6794 selects no, then simply return the error code. */
6795 if (pending_break_support == AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO
6796 && !nquery ("Make breakpoint pending on future shared library load? "))
6797 return;
6798
6799 /* At this point, either the user was queried about setting
6800 a pending breakpoint and selected yes, or pending
6801 breakpoint behavior is on and thus a pending breakpoint
6802 is defaulted on behalf of the user. */
6803 copy_arg = xstrdup (addr_start);
6804 addr_string = &copy_arg;
6805 sals.nelts = 1;
6806 sals.sals = &pending_sal;
6807 pending_sal.pc = 0;
6808 pending = 1;
6809 break;
6810 default:
6811 throw_exception (e);
6812 }
6813 default:
6814 if (!sals.nelts)
6815 return;
6816 }
6817
6818 /* Create a chain of things that always need to be cleaned up. */
6819 old_chain = make_cleanup (null_cleanup, 0);
6820
6821 if (!pending)
6822 {
6823 /* Make sure that all storage allocated to SALS gets freed. */
6824 make_cleanup (xfree, sals.sals);
6825
6826 /* Cleanup the addr_string array but not its contents. */
6827 make_cleanup (xfree, addr_string);
6828 }
6829
6830 /* ----------------------------- SNIP -----------------------------
6831 Anything added to the cleanup chain beyond this point is assumed
6832 to be part of a breakpoint. If the breakpoint create succeeds
6833 then the memory is not reclaimed. */
6834 bkpt_chain = make_cleanup (null_cleanup, 0);
6835
6836 /* Mark the contents of the addr_string for cleanup. These go on
6837 the bkpt_chain and only occur if the breakpoint create fails. */
6838 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; i++)
6839 {
6840 if (addr_string[i] != NULL)
6841 make_cleanup (xfree, addr_string[i]);
6842 }
6843
6844 /* Resolve all line numbers to PC's and verify that the addresses
6845 are ok for the target. */
6846 if (!pending)
6847 breakpoint_sals_to_pc (&sals, addr_start);
6848
6849 type_wanted = (traceflag
6850 ? (hardwareflag ? bp_fast_tracepoint : bp_tracepoint)
6851 : (hardwareflag ? bp_hardware_breakpoint : bp_breakpoint));
6852
6853 /* Fast tracepoints may have additional restrictions on location. */
6854 if (type_wanted == bp_fast_tracepoint)
6855 check_fast_tracepoint_sals (gdbarch, &sals);
6856
6857 /* Verify that condition can be parsed, before setting any
6858 breakpoints. Allocate a separate condition expression for each
6859 breakpoint. */
6860 if (!pending)
6861 {
6862 if (parse_condition_and_thread)
6863 {
6864 /* Here we only parse 'arg' to separate condition
6865 from thread number, so parsing in context of first
6866 sal is OK. When setting the breakpoint we'll
6867 re-parse it in context of each sal. */
6868 cond_string = NULL;
6869 thread = -1;
6870 find_condition_and_thread (arg, sals.sals[0].pc, &cond_string,
6871 &thread, &task);
6872 if (cond_string)
6873 make_cleanup (xfree, cond_string);
6874 }
6875 else
6876 {
6877 /* Create a private copy of condition string. */
6878 if (cond_string)
6879 {
6880 cond_string = xstrdup (cond_string);
6881 make_cleanup (xfree, cond_string);
6882 }
6883 }
6884 create_breakpoints (gdbarch, sals, addr_string, cond_string, type_wanted,
6885 tempflag ? disp_del : disp_donttouch,
6886 thread, task, ignore_count, ops, from_tty, enabled);
6887 }
6888 else
6889 {
6890 struct symtab_and_line sal = {0};
6891 struct breakpoint *b;
6892
6893 make_cleanup (xfree, copy_arg);
6894
6895 b = set_raw_breakpoint_without_location (gdbarch, type_wanted);
6896 set_breakpoint_count (breakpoint_count + 1);
6897 b->number = breakpoint_count;
6898 b->thread = -1;
6899 b->addr_string = addr_string[0];
6900 b->cond_string = NULL;
6901 b->ignore_count = ignore_count;
6902 b->disposition = tempflag ? disp_del : disp_donttouch;
6903 b->condition_not_parsed = 1;
6904 b->ops = ops;
6905 b->enable_state = enabled ? bp_enabled : bp_disabled;
6906 b->pspace = current_program_space;
6907
6908 if (enabled && b->pspace->executing_startup
6909 && (b->type == bp_breakpoint
6910 || b->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint))
6911 b->enable_state = bp_startup_disabled;
6912
6913 mention (b);
6914 }
6915
6916 if (sals.nelts > 1)
6917 warning (_("Multiple breakpoints were set.\n"
6918 "Use the \"delete\" command to delete unwanted breakpoints."));
6919 /* That's it. Discard the cleanups for data inserted into the
6920 breakpoint. */
6921 discard_cleanups (bkpt_chain);
6922 /* But cleanup everything else. */
6923 do_cleanups (old_chain);
6924
6925 /* error call may happen here - have BKPT_CHAIN already discarded. */
6926 update_global_location_list (1);
6927 }
6928
6929 /* Set a breakpoint.
6930 ARG is a string describing breakpoint address,
6931 condition, and thread.
6932 FLAG specifies if a breakpoint is hardware on,
6933 and if breakpoint is temporary, using BP_HARDWARE_FLAG
6934 and BP_TEMPFLAG. */
6935
6936 static void
6937 break_command_1 (char *arg, int flag, int from_tty)
6938 {
6939 int hardwareflag = flag & BP_HARDWAREFLAG;
6940 int tempflag = flag & BP_TEMPFLAG;
6941
6942 break_command_really (get_current_arch (),
6943 arg,
6944 NULL, 0, 1 /* parse arg */,
6945 tempflag, hardwareflag, 0 /* traceflag */,
6946 0 /* Ignore count */,
6947 pending_break_support,
6948 NULL /* breakpoint_ops */,
6949 from_tty,
6950 1 /* enabled */);
6951 }
6952
6953
6954 void
6955 set_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
6956 char *address, char *condition,
6957 int hardwareflag, int tempflag,
6958 int thread, int ignore_count,
6959 int pending, int enabled)
6960 {
6961 break_command_really (gdbarch,
6962 address, condition, thread,
6963 0 /* condition and thread are valid. */,
6964 tempflag, hardwareflag, 0 /* traceflag */,
6965 ignore_count,
6966 pending
6967 ? AUTO_BOOLEAN_TRUE : AUTO_BOOLEAN_FALSE,
6968 NULL, 0, enabled);
6969 }
6970
6971 /* Adjust SAL to the first instruction past the function prologue.
6972 The end of the prologue is determined using the line table from
6973 the debugging information. explicit_pc and explicit_line are
6974 not modified.
6975
6976 If SAL is already past the prologue, then do nothing. */
6977
6978 static void
6979 skip_prologue_sal (struct symtab_and_line *sal)
6980 {
6981 struct symbol *sym;
6982 struct symtab_and_line start_sal;
6983 struct cleanup *old_chain;
6984
6985 old_chain = save_current_space_and_thread ();
6986
6987 sym = find_pc_function (sal->pc);
6988 if (sym != NULL)
6989 {
6990 start_sal = find_function_start_sal (sym, 1);
6991 if (sal->pc < start_sal.pc)
6992 {
6993 start_sal.explicit_line = sal->explicit_line;
6994 start_sal.explicit_pc = sal->explicit_pc;
6995 *sal = start_sal;
6996 }
6997 }
6998
6999 do_cleanups (old_chain);
7000 }
7001
7002 /* Helper function for break_command_1 and disassemble_command. */
7003
7004 void
7005 resolve_sal_pc (struct symtab_and_line *sal)
7006 {
7007 CORE_ADDR pc;
7008
7009 if (sal->pc == 0 && sal->symtab != NULL)
7010 {
7011 if (!find_line_pc (sal->symtab, sal->line, &pc))
7012 error (_("No line %d in file \"%s\"."),
7013 sal->line, sal->symtab->filename);
7014 sal->pc = pc;
7015
7016 /* If this SAL corresponds to a breakpoint inserted using
7017 a line number, then skip the function prologue if necessary. */
7018 if (sal->explicit_line)
7019 {
7020 /* Preserve the original line number. */
7021 int saved_line = sal->line;
7022 skip_prologue_sal (sal);
7023 sal->line = saved_line;
7024 }
7025 }
7026
7027 if (sal->section == 0 && sal->symtab != NULL)
7028 {
7029 struct blockvector *bv;
7030 struct block *b;
7031 struct symbol *sym;
7032
7033 bv = blockvector_for_pc_sect (sal->pc, 0, &b, sal->symtab);
7034 if (bv != NULL)
7035 {
7036 sym = block_linkage_function (b);
7037 if (sym != NULL)
7038 {
7039 fixup_symbol_section (sym, sal->symtab->objfile);
7040 sal->section = SYMBOL_OBJ_SECTION (sym);
7041 }
7042 else
7043 {
7044 /* It really is worthwhile to have the section, so we'll just
7045 have to look harder. This case can be executed if we have
7046 line numbers but no functions (as can happen in assembly
7047 source). */
7048
7049 struct minimal_symbol *msym;
7050 struct cleanup *old_chain = save_current_space_and_thread ();
7051
7052 switch_to_program_space_and_thread (sal->pspace);
7053
7054 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (sal->pc);
7055 if (msym)
7056 sal->section = SYMBOL_OBJ_SECTION (msym);
7057
7058 do_cleanups (old_chain);
7059 }
7060 }
7061 }
7062 }
7063
7064 void
7065 break_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7066 {
7067 break_command_1 (arg, 0, from_tty);
7068 }
7069
7070 void
7071 tbreak_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7072 {
7073 break_command_1 (arg, BP_TEMPFLAG, from_tty);
7074 }
7075
7076 static void
7077 hbreak_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7078 {
7079 break_command_1 (arg, BP_HARDWAREFLAG, from_tty);
7080 }
7081
7082 static void
7083 thbreak_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7084 {
7085 break_command_1 (arg, (BP_TEMPFLAG | BP_HARDWAREFLAG), from_tty);
7086 }
7087
7088 static void
7089 stop_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7090 {
7091 printf_filtered (_("Specify the type of breakpoint to set.\n\
7092 Usage: stop in <function | address>\n\
7093 stop at <line>\n"));
7094 }
7095
7096 static void
7097 stopin_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7098 {
7099 int badInput = 0;
7100
7101 if (arg == (char *) NULL)
7102 badInput = 1;
7103 else if (*arg != '*')
7104 {
7105 char *argptr = arg;
7106 int hasColon = 0;
7107
7108 /* look for a ':'. If this is a line number specification, then
7109 say it is bad, otherwise, it should be an address or
7110 function/method name */
7111 while (*argptr && !hasColon)
7112 {
7113 hasColon = (*argptr == ':');
7114 argptr++;
7115 }
7116
7117 if (hasColon)
7118 badInput = (*argptr != ':'); /* Not a class::method */
7119 else
7120 badInput = isdigit (*arg); /* a simple line number */
7121 }
7122
7123 if (badInput)
7124 printf_filtered (_("Usage: stop in <function | address>\n"));
7125 else
7126 break_command_1 (arg, 0, from_tty);
7127 }
7128
7129 static void
7130 stopat_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7131 {
7132 int badInput = 0;
7133
7134 if (arg == (char *) NULL || *arg == '*') /* no line number */
7135 badInput = 1;
7136 else
7137 {
7138 char *argptr = arg;
7139 int hasColon = 0;
7140
7141 /* look for a ':'. If there is a '::' then get out, otherwise
7142 it is probably a line number. */
7143 while (*argptr && !hasColon)
7144 {
7145 hasColon = (*argptr == ':');
7146 argptr++;
7147 }
7148
7149 if (hasColon)
7150 badInput = (*argptr == ':'); /* we have class::method */
7151 else
7152 badInput = !isdigit (*arg); /* not a line number */
7153 }
7154
7155 if (badInput)
7156 printf_filtered (_("Usage: stop at <line>\n"));
7157 else
7158 break_command_1 (arg, 0, from_tty);
7159 }
7160
7161 /* accessflag: hw_write: watch write,
7162 hw_read: watch read,
7163 hw_access: watch access (read or write) */
7164 static void
7165 watch_command_1 (char *arg, int accessflag, int from_tty)
7166 {
7167 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_current_arch ();
7168 struct breakpoint *b, *scope_breakpoint = NULL;
7169 struct expression *exp;
7170 struct block *exp_valid_block;
7171 struct value *val, *mark;
7172 struct frame_info *frame;
7173 char *exp_start = NULL;
7174 char *exp_end = NULL;
7175 char *tok, *id_tok_start, *end_tok;
7176 int toklen;
7177 char *cond_start = NULL;
7178 char *cond_end = NULL;
7179 int i, other_type_used, target_resources_ok = 0;
7180 enum bptype bp_type;
7181 int mem_cnt = 0;
7182 int thread = -1;
7183
7184 /* Make sure that we actually have parameters to parse. */
7185 if (arg != NULL && arg[0] != '\0')
7186 {
7187 toklen = strlen (arg); /* Size of argument list. */
7188
7189 /* Points tok to the end of the argument list. */
7190 tok = arg + toklen - 1;
7191
7192 /* Go backwards in the parameters list. Skip the last parameter.
7193 If we're expecting a 'thread <thread_num>' parameter, this should
7194 be the thread identifier. */
7195 while (tok > arg && (*tok == ' ' || *tok == '\t'))
7196 tok--;
7197 while (tok > arg && (*tok != ' ' && *tok != '\t'))
7198 tok--;
7199
7200 /* Points end_tok to the beginning of the last token. */
7201 id_tok_start = tok + 1;
7202
7203 /* Go backwards in the parameters list. Skip one more parameter.
7204 If we're expecting a 'thread <thread_num>' parameter, we should
7205 reach a "thread" token. */
7206 while (tok > arg && (*tok == ' ' || *tok == '\t'))
7207 tok--;
7208
7209 end_tok = tok;
7210
7211 while (tok > arg && (*tok != ' ' && *tok != '\t'))
7212 tok--;
7213
7214 /* Move the pointer forward to skip the whitespace and
7215 calculate the length of the token. */
7216 tok++;
7217 toklen = end_tok - tok;
7218
7219 if (toklen >= 1 && strncmp (tok, "thread", toklen) == 0)
7220 {
7221 /* At this point we've found a "thread" token, which means
7222 the user is trying to set a watchpoint that triggers
7223 only in a specific thread. */
7224 char *endp;
7225
7226 /* Extract the thread ID from the next token. */
7227 thread = strtol (id_tok_start, &endp, 0);
7228
7229 /* Check if the user provided a valid numeric value for the
7230 thread ID. */
7231 if (*endp != ' ' && *endp != '\t' && *endp != '\0')
7232 error (_("Invalid thread ID specification %s."), id_tok_start);
7233
7234 /* Check if the thread actually exists. */
7235 if (!valid_thread_id (thread))
7236 error (_("Unknown thread %d."), thread);
7237
7238 /* Truncate the string and get rid of the thread <thread_num>
7239 parameter before the parameter list is parsed by the
7240 evaluate_expression() function. */
7241 *tok = '\0';
7242 }
7243 }
7244
7245 /* Parse the rest of the arguments. */
7246 innermost_block = NULL;
7247 exp_start = arg;
7248 exp = parse_exp_1 (&arg, 0, 0);
7249 exp_end = arg;
7250 /* Remove trailing whitespace from the expression before saving it.
7251 This makes the eventual display of the expression string a bit
7252 prettier. */
7253 while (exp_end > exp_start && (exp_end[-1] == ' ' || exp_end[-1] == '\t'))
7254 --exp_end;
7255
7256 exp_valid_block = innermost_block;
7257 mark = value_mark ();
7258 fetch_watchpoint_value (exp, &val, NULL, NULL);
7259 if (val != NULL)
7260 release_value (val);
7261
7262 tok = arg;
7263 while (*tok == ' ' || *tok == '\t')
7264 tok++;
7265 end_tok = tok;
7266
7267 while (*end_tok != ' ' && *end_tok != '\t' && *end_tok != '\000')
7268 end_tok++;
7269
7270 toklen = end_tok - tok;
7271 if (toklen >= 1 && strncmp (tok, "if", toklen) == 0)
7272 {
7273 struct expression *cond;
7274
7275 tok = cond_start = end_tok + 1;
7276 cond = parse_exp_1 (&tok, 0, 0);
7277 xfree (cond);
7278 cond_end = tok;
7279 }
7280 if (*tok)
7281 error (_("Junk at end of command."));
7282
7283 if (accessflag == hw_read)
7284 bp_type = bp_read_watchpoint;
7285 else if (accessflag == hw_access)
7286 bp_type = bp_access_watchpoint;
7287 else
7288 bp_type = bp_hardware_watchpoint;
7289
7290 mem_cnt = can_use_hardware_watchpoint (val);
7291 if (mem_cnt == 0 && bp_type != bp_hardware_watchpoint)
7292 error (_("Expression cannot be implemented with read/access watchpoint."));
7293 if (mem_cnt != 0)
7294 {
7295 i = hw_watchpoint_used_count (bp_type, &other_type_used);
7296 target_resources_ok =
7297 target_can_use_hardware_watchpoint (bp_type, i + mem_cnt,
7298 other_type_used);
7299 if (target_resources_ok == 0 && bp_type != bp_hardware_watchpoint)
7300 error (_("Target does not support this type of hardware watchpoint."));
7301
7302 if (target_resources_ok < 0 && bp_type != bp_hardware_watchpoint)
7303 error (_("Target can only support one kind of HW watchpoint at a time."));
7304 }
7305
7306 /* Change the type of breakpoint to an ordinary watchpoint if a hardware
7307 watchpoint could not be set. */
7308 if (!mem_cnt || target_resources_ok <= 0)
7309 bp_type = bp_watchpoint;
7310
7311 frame = block_innermost_frame (exp_valid_block);
7312
7313 /* If the expression is "local", then set up a "watchpoint scope"
7314 breakpoint at the point where we've left the scope of the watchpoint
7315 expression. Create the scope breakpoint before the watchpoint, so
7316 that we will encounter it first in bpstat_stop_status. */
7317 if (innermost_block && frame)
7318 {
7319 if (frame_id_p (frame_unwind_caller_id (frame)))
7320 {
7321 scope_breakpoint
7322 = create_internal_breakpoint (frame_unwind_caller_arch (frame),
7323 frame_unwind_caller_pc (frame),
7324 bp_watchpoint_scope);
7325
7326 scope_breakpoint->enable_state = bp_enabled;
7327
7328 /* Automatically delete the breakpoint when it hits. */
7329 scope_breakpoint->disposition = disp_del;
7330
7331 /* Only break in the proper frame (help with recursion). */
7332 scope_breakpoint->frame_id = frame_unwind_caller_id (frame);
7333
7334 /* Set the address at which we will stop. */
7335 scope_breakpoint->loc->gdbarch
7336 = frame_unwind_caller_arch (frame);
7337 scope_breakpoint->loc->requested_address
7338 = frame_unwind_caller_pc (frame);
7339 scope_breakpoint->loc->address
7340 = adjust_breakpoint_address (scope_breakpoint->loc->gdbarch,
7341 scope_breakpoint->loc->requested_address,
7342 scope_breakpoint->type);
7343 }
7344 }
7345
7346 /* Now set up the breakpoint. */
7347 b = set_raw_breakpoint_without_location (NULL, bp_type);
7348 set_breakpoint_count (breakpoint_count + 1);
7349 b->number = breakpoint_count;
7350 b->thread = thread;
7351 b->disposition = disp_donttouch;
7352 b->exp = exp;
7353 b->exp_valid_block = exp_valid_block;
7354 b->exp_string = savestring (exp_start, exp_end - exp_start);
7355 b->val = val;
7356 b->val_valid = 1;
7357 if (cond_start)
7358 b->cond_string = savestring (cond_start, cond_end - cond_start);
7359 else
7360 b->cond_string = 0;
7361
7362 if (frame)
7363 {
7364 b->watchpoint_frame = get_frame_id (frame);
7365 b->watchpoint_thread = inferior_ptid;
7366 }
7367 else
7368 {
7369 b->watchpoint_frame = null_frame_id;
7370 b->watchpoint_thread = null_ptid;
7371 }
7372
7373 if (scope_breakpoint != NULL)
7374 {
7375 /* The scope breakpoint is related to the watchpoint. We will
7376 need to act on them together. */
7377 b->related_breakpoint = scope_breakpoint;
7378 scope_breakpoint->related_breakpoint = b;
7379 }
7380
7381 value_free_to_mark (mark);
7382
7383 /* Finally update the new watchpoint. This creates the locations
7384 that should be inserted. */
7385 update_watchpoint (b, 1);
7386
7387 mention (b);
7388 update_global_location_list (1);
7389 }
7390
7391 /* Return count of locations need to be watched and can be handled
7392 in hardware. If the watchpoint can not be handled
7393 in hardware return zero. */
7394
7395 static int
7396 can_use_hardware_watchpoint (struct value *v)
7397 {
7398 int found_memory_cnt = 0;
7399 struct value *head = v;
7400
7401 /* Did the user specifically forbid us to use hardware watchpoints? */
7402 if (!can_use_hw_watchpoints)
7403 return 0;
7404
7405 /* Make sure that the value of the expression depends only upon
7406 memory contents, and values computed from them within GDB. If we
7407 find any register references or function calls, we can't use a
7408 hardware watchpoint.
7409
7410 The idea here is that evaluating an expression generates a series
7411 of values, one holding the value of every subexpression. (The
7412 expression a*b+c has five subexpressions: a, b, a*b, c, and
7413 a*b+c.) GDB's values hold almost enough information to establish
7414 the criteria given above --- they identify memory lvalues,
7415 register lvalues, computed values, etcetera. So we can evaluate
7416 the expression, and then scan the chain of values that leaves
7417 behind to decide whether we can detect any possible change to the
7418 expression's final value using only hardware watchpoints.
7419
7420 However, I don't think that the values returned by inferior
7421 function calls are special in any way. So this function may not
7422 notice that an expression involving an inferior function call
7423 can't be watched with hardware watchpoints. FIXME. */
7424 for (; v; v = value_next (v))
7425 {
7426 if (VALUE_LVAL (v) == lval_memory)
7427 {
7428 if (value_lazy (v))
7429 /* A lazy memory lvalue is one that GDB never needed to fetch;
7430 we either just used its address (e.g., `a' in `a.b') or
7431 we never needed it at all (e.g., `a' in `a,b'). */
7432 ;
7433 else
7434 {
7435 /* Ahh, memory we actually used! Check if we can cover
7436 it with hardware watchpoints. */
7437 struct type *vtype = check_typedef (value_type (v));
7438
7439 /* We only watch structs and arrays if user asked for it
7440 explicitly, never if they just happen to appear in a
7441 middle of some value chain. */
7442 if (v == head
7443 || (TYPE_CODE (vtype) != TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
7444 && TYPE_CODE (vtype) != TYPE_CODE_ARRAY))
7445 {
7446 CORE_ADDR vaddr = value_address (v);
7447 int len = TYPE_LENGTH (value_type (v));
7448
7449 if (!target_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint (vaddr, len))
7450 return 0;
7451 else
7452 found_memory_cnt++;
7453 }
7454 }
7455 }
7456 else if (VALUE_LVAL (v) != not_lval
7457 && deprecated_value_modifiable (v) == 0)
7458 return 0; /* ??? What does this represent? */
7459 else if (VALUE_LVAL (v) == lval_register)
7460 return 0; /* cannot watch a register with a HW watchpoint */
7461 }
7462
7463 /* The expression itself looks suitable for using a hardware
7464 watchpoint, but give the target machine a chance to reject it. */
7465 return found_memory_cnt;
7466 }
7467
7468 void
7469 watch_command_wrapper (char *arg, int from_tty)
7470 {
7471 watch_command (arg, from_tty);
7472 }
7473
7474 static void
7475 watch_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7476 {
7477 watch_command_1 (arg, hw_write, from_tty);
7478 }
7479
7480 void
7481 rwatch_command_wrapper (char *arg, int from_tty)
7482 {
7483 rwatch_command (arg, from_tty);
7484 }
7485
7486 static void
7487 rwatch_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7488 {
7489 watch_command_1 (arg, hw_read, from_tty);
7490 }
7491
7492 void
7493 awatch_command_wrapper (char *arg, int from_tty)
7494 {
7495 awatch_command (arg, from_tty);
7496 }
7497
7498 static void
7499 awatch_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
7500 {
7501 watch_command_1 (arg, hw_access, from_tty);
7502 }
7503 \f
7504
7505 /* Helper routines for the until_command routine in infcmd.c. Here
7506 because it uses the mechanisms of breakpoints. */
7507
7508 struct until_break_command_continuation_args
7509 {
7510 struct breakpoint *breakpoint;
7511 struct breakpoint *breakpoint2;
7512 };
7513
7514 /* This function is called by fetch_inferior_event via the
7515 cmd_continuation pointer, to complete the until command. It takes
7516 care of cleaning up the temporary breakpoints set up by the until
7517 command. */
7518 static void
7519 until_break_command_continuation (void *arg)
7520 {
7521 struct until_break_command_continuation_args *a = arg;
7522
7523 delete_breakpoint (a->breakpoint);
7524 if (a->breakpoint2)
7525 delete_breakpoint (a->breakpoint2);
7526 }
7527
7528 void
7529 until_break_command (char *arg, int from_tty, int anywhere)
7530 {
7531 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
7532 struct symtab_and_line sal;
7533 struct frame_info *frame = get_selected_frame (NULL);
7534 struct breakpoint *breakpoint;
7535 struct breakpoint *breakpoint2 = NULL;
7536 struct cleanup *old_chain;
7537
7538 clear_proceed_status ();
7539
7540 /* Set a breakpoint where the user wants it and at return from
7541 this function */
7542
7543 if (default_breakpoint_valid)
7544 sals = decode_line_1 (&arg, 1, default_breakpoint_symtab,
7545 default_breakpoint_line, (char ***) NULL, NULL);
7546 else
7547 sals = decode_line_1 (&arg, 1, (struct symtab *) NULL,
7548 0, (char ***) NULL, NULL);
7549
7550 if (sals.nelts != 1)
7551 error (_("Couldn't get information on specified line."));
7552
7553 sal = sals.sals[0];
7554 xfree (sals.sals); /* malloc'd, so freed */
7555
7556 if (*arg)
7557 error (_("Junk at end of arguments."));
7558
7559 resolve_sal_pc (&sal);
7560
7561 if (anywhere)
7562 /* If the user told us to continue until a specified location,
7563 we don't specify a frame at which we need to stop. */
7564 breakpoint = set_momentary_breakpoint (get_frame_arch (frame), sal,
7565 null_frame_id, bp_until);
7566 else
7567 /* Otherwise, specify the selected frame, because we want to stop only
7568 at the very same frame. */
7569 breakpoint = set_momentary_breakpoint (get_frame_arch (frame), sal,
7570 get_stack_frame_id (frame),
7571 bp_until);
7572
7573 old_chain = make_cleanup_delete_breakpoint (breakpoint);
7574
7575 /* Keep within the current frame, or in frames called by the current
7576 one. */
7577
7578 if (frame_id_p (frame_unwind_caller_id (frame)))
7579 {
7580 sal = find_pc_line (frame_unwind_caller_pc (frame), 0);
7581 sal.pc = frame_unwind_caller_pc (frame);
7582 breakpoint2 = set_momentary_breakpoint (frame_unwind_caller_arch (frame),
7583 sal,
7584 frame_unwind_caller_id (frame),
7585 bp_until);
7586 make_cleanup_delete_breakpoint (breakpoint2);
7587 }
7588
7589 proceed (-1, TARGET_SIGNAL_DEFAULT, 0);
7590
7591 /* If we are running asynchronously, and proceed call above has actually
7592 managed to start the target, arrange for breakpoints to be
7593 deleted when the target stops. Otherwise, we're already stopped and
7594 delete breakpoints via cleanup chain. */
7595
7596 if (target_can_async_p () && is_running (inferior_ptid))
7597 {
7598 struct until_break_command_continuation_args *args;
7599 args = xmalloc (sizeof (*args));
7600
7601 args->breakpoint = breakpoint;
7602 args->breakpoint2 = breakpoint2;
7603
7604 discard_cleanups (old_chain);
7605 add_continuation (inferior_thread (),
7606 until_break_command_continuation, args,
7607 xfree);
7608 }
7609 else
7610 do_cleanups (old_chain);
7611 }
7612
7613 static void
7614 ep_skip_leading_whitespace (char **s)
7615 {
7616 if ((s == NULL) || (*s == NULL))
7617 return;
7618 while (isspace (**s))
7619 *s += 1;
7620 }
7621
7622 /* This function attempts to parse an optional "if <cond>" clause
7623 from the arg string. If one is not found, it returns NULL.
7624
7625 Else, it returns a pointer to the condition string. (It does not
7626 attempt to evaluate the string against a particular block.) And,
7627 it updates arg to point to the first character following the parsed
7628 if clause in the arg string. */
7629
7630 static char *
7631 ep_parse_optional_if_clause (char **arg)
7632 {
7633 char *cond_string;
7634
7635 if (((*arg)[0] != 'i') || ((*arg)[1] != 'f') || !isspace ((*arg)[2]))
7636 return NULL;
7637
7638 /* Skip the "if" keyword. */
7639 (*arg) += 2;
7640
7641 /* Skip any extra leading whitespace, and record the start of the
7642 condition string. */
7643 ep_skip_leading_whitespace (arg);
7644 cond_string = *arg;
7645
7646 /* Assume that the condition occupies the remainder of the arg string. */
7647 (*arg) += strlen (cond_string);
7648
7649 return cond_string;
7650 }
7651
7652 /* Commands to deal with catching events, such as signals, exceptions,
7653 process start/exit, etc. */
7654
7655 typedef enum
7656 {
7657 catch_fork_temporary, catch_vfork_temporary,
7658 catch_fork_permanent, catch_vfork_permanent
7659 }
7660 catch_fork_kind;
7661
7662 static void
7663 catch_fork_command_1 (char *arg, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *command)
7664 {
7665 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_current_arch ();
7666 char *cond_string = NULL;
7667 catch_fork_kind fork_kind;
7668 int tempflag;
7669
7670 fork_kind = (catch_fork_kind) (uintptr_t) get_cmd_context (command);
7671 tempflag = (fork_kind == catch_fork_temporary
7672 || fork_kind == catch_vfork_temporary);
7673
7674 if (!arg)
7675 arg = "";
7676 ep_skip_leading_whitespace (&arg);
7677
7678 /* The allowed syntax is:
7679 catch [v]fork
7680 catch [v]fork if <cond>
7681
7682 First, check if there's an if clause. */
7683 cond_string = ep_parse_optional_if_clause (&arg);
7684
7685 if ((*arg != '\0') && !isspace (*arg))
7686 error (_("Junk at end of arguments."));
7687
7688 /* If this target supports it, create a fork or vfork catchpoint
7689 and enable reporting of such events. */
7690 switch (fork_kind)
7691 {
7692 case catch_fork_temporary:
7693 case catch_fork_permanent:
7694 create_fork_vfork_event_catchpoint (gdbarch, tempflag, cond_string,
7695 &catch_fork_breakpoint_ops);
7696 break;
7697 case catch_vfork_temporary:
7698 case catch_vfork_permanent:
7699 create_fork_vfork_event_catchpoint (gdbarch, tempflag, cond_string,
7700 &catch_vfork_breakpoint_ops);
7701 break;
7702 default:
7703 error (_("unsupported or unknown fork kind; cannot catch it"));
7704 break;
7705 }
7706 }
7707
7708 static void
7709 catch_exec_command_1 (char *arg, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *command)
7710 {
7711 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_current_arch ();
7712 int tempflag;
7713 char *cond_string = NULL;
7714
7715 tempflag = get_cmd_context (command) == CATCH_TEMPORARY;
7716
7717 if (!arg)
7718 arg = "";
7719 ep_skip_leading_whitespace (&arg);
7720
7721 /* The allowed syntax is:
7722 catch exec
7723 catch exec if <cond>
7724
7725 First, check if there's an if clause. */
7726 cond_string = ep_parse_optional_if_clause (&arg);
7727
7728 if ((*arg != '\0') && !isspace (*arg))
7729 error (_("Junk at end of arguments."));
7730
7731 /* If this target supports it, create an exec catchpoint
7732 and enable reporting of such events. */
7733 create_catchpoint (gdbarch, tempflag, cond_string,
7734 &catch_exec_breakpoint_ops);
7735 }
7736
7737 static enum print_stop_action
7738 print_exception_catchpoint (struct breakpoint *b)
7739 {
7740 int bp_temp, bp_throw;
7741
7742 annotate_catchpoint (b->number);
7743
7744 bp_throw = strstr (b->addr_string, "throw") != NULL;
7745 if (b->loc->address != b->loc->requested_address)
7746 breakpoint_adjustment_warning (b->loc->requested_address,
7747 b->loc->address,
7748 b->number, 1);
7749 bp_temp = b->disposition == disp_del;
7750 ui_out_text (uiout,
7751 bp_temp ? "Temporary catchpoint "
7752 : "Catchpoint ");
7753 if (!ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
7754 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "bkptno", b->number);
7755 ui_out_text (uiout,
7756 bp_throw ? " (exception thrown), "
7757 : " (exception caught), ");
7758 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
7759 {
7760 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "reason",
7761 async_reason_lookup (EXEC_ASYNC_BREAKPOINT_HIT));
7762 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "disp", bpdisp_text (b->disposition));
7763 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "bkptno", b->number);
7764 }
7765 return PRINT_SRC_AND_LOC;
7766 }
7767
7768 static void
7769 print_one_exception_catchpoint (struct breakpoint *b, struct bp_location **last_loc)
7770 {
7771 struct value_print_options opts;
7772 get_user_print_options (&opts);
7773 if (opts.addressprint)
7774 {
7775 annotate_field (4);
7776 if (b->loc == NULL || b->loc->shlib_disabled)
7777 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "addr", "<PENDING>");
7778 else
7779 ui_out_field_core_addr (uiout, "addr",
7780 b->loc->gdbarch, b->loc->address);
7781 }
7782 annotate_field (5);
7783 if (b->loc)
7784 *last_loc = b->loc;
7785 if (strstr (b->addr_string, "throw") != NULL)
7786 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", "exception throw");
7787 else
7788 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "what", "exception catch");
7789 }
7790
7791 static void
7792 print_mention_exception_catchpoint (struct breakpoint *b)
7793 {
7794 int bp_temp;
7795 int bp_throw;
7796
7797 bp_temp = b->disposition == disp_del;
7798 bp_throw = strstr (b->addr_string, "throw") != NULL;
7799 ui_out_text (uiout, bp_temp ? _("Temporary catchpoint ")
7800 : _("Catchpoint "));
7801 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "bkptno", b->number);
7802 ui_out_text (uiout, bp_throw ? _(" (throw)")
7803 : _(" (catch)"));
7804 }
7805
7806 static struct breakpoint_ops gnu_v3_exception_catchpoint_ops = {
7807 NULL, /* insert */
7808 NULL, /* remove */
7809 NULL, /* breakpoint_hit */
7810 print_exception_catchpoint,
7811 print_one_exception_catchpoint,
7812 print_mention_exception_catchpoint
7813 };
7814
7815 static int
7816 handle_gnu_v3_exceptions (int tempflag, char *cond_string,
7817 enum exception_event_kind ex_event, int from_tty)
7818 {
7819 char *trigger_func_name;
7820
7821 if (ex_event == EX_EVENT_CATCH)
7822 trigger_func_name = "__cxa_begin_catch";
7823 else
7824 trigger_func_name = "__cxa_throw";
7825
7826 break_command_really (get_current_arch (),
7827 trigger_func_name, cond_string, -1,
7828 0 /* condition and thread are valid. */,
7829 tempflag, 0, 0,
7830 0,
7831 AUTO_BOOLEAN_TRUE /* pending */,
7832 &gnu_v3_exception_catchpoint_ops, from_tty,
7833 1 /* enabled */);
7834
7835 return 1;
7836 }
7837
7838 /* Deal with "catch catch" and "catch throw" commands */
7839
7840 static void
7841 catch_exception_command_1 (enum exception_event_kind ex_event, char *arg,
7842 int tempflag, int from_tty)
7843 {
7844 char *cond_string = NULL;
7845 struct symtab_and_line *sal = NULL;
7846
7847 if (!arg)
7848 arg = "";
7849 ep_skip_leading_whitespace (&arg);
7850
7851 cond_string = ep_parse_optional_if_clause (&arg);
7852
7853 if ((*arg != '\0') && !isspace (*arg))
7854 error (_("Junk at end of arguments."));
7855
7856 if (ex_event != EX_EVENT_THROW
7857 && ex_event != EX_EVENT_CATCH)
7858 error (_("Unsupported or unknown exception event; cannot catch it"));
7859
7860 if (handle_gnu_v3_exceptions (tempflag, cond_string, ex_event, from_tty))
7861 return;
7862
7863 warning (_("Unsupported with this platform/compiler combination."));
7864 }
7865
7866 /* Implementation of "catch catch" command. */
7867
7868 static void
7869 catch_catch_command (char *arg, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *command)
7870 {
7871 int tempflag = get_cmd_context (command) == CATCH_TEMPORARY;
7872 catch_exception_command_1 (EX_EVENT_CATCH, arg, tempflag, from_tty);
7873 }
7874
7875 /* Implementation of "catch throw" command. */
7876
7877 static void
7878 catch_throw_command (char *arg, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *command)
7879 {
7880 int tempflag = get_cmd_context (command) == CATCH_TEMPORARY;
7881 catch_exception_command_1 (EX_EVENT_THROW, arg, tempflag, from_tty);
7882 }
7883
7884 /* Create a breakpoint struct for Ada exception catchpoints. */
7885
7886 static void
7887 create_ada_exception_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
7888 struct symtab_and_line sal,
7889 char *addr_string,
7890 char *exp_string,
7891 char *cond_string,
7892 struct expression *cond,
7893 struct breakpoint_ops *ops,
7894 int tempflag,
7895 int from_tty)
7896 {
7897 struct breakpoint *b;
7898
7899 if (from_tty)
7900 {
7901 struct gdbarch *loc_gdbarch = get_sal_arch (sal);
7902 if (!loc_gdbarch)
7903 loc_gdbarch = gdbarch;
7904
7905 describe_other_breakpoints (loc_gdbarch,
7906 sal.pspace, sal.pc, sal.section, -1);
7907 /* FIXME: brobecker/2006-12-28: Actually, re-implement a special
7908 version for exception catchpoints, because two catchpoints
7909 used for different exception names will use the same address.
7910 In this case, a "breakpoint ... also set at..." warning is
7911 unproductive. Besides. the warning phrasing is also a bit
7912 inapropriate, we should use the word catchpoint, and tell
7913 the user what type of catchpoint it is. The above is good
7914 enough for now, though. */
7915 }
7916
7917 b = set_raw_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, bp_breakpoint);
7918 set_breakpoint_count (breakpoint_count + 1);
7919
7920 b->enable_state = bp_enabled;
7921 b->disposition = tempflag ? disp_del : disp_donttouch;
7922 b->number = breakpoint_count;
7923 b->ignore_count = 0;
7924 b->loc->cond = cond;
7925 b->addr_string = addr_string;
7926 b->language = language_ada;
7927 b->cond_string = cond_string;
7928 b->exp_string = exp_string;
7929 b->thread = -1;
7930 b->ops = ops;
7931
7932 mention (b);
7933 update_global_location_list (1);
7934 }
7935
7936 /* Implement the "catch exception" command. */
7937
7938 static void
7939 catch_ada_exception_command (char *arg, int from_tty,
7940 struct cmd_list_element *command)
7941 {
7942 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_current_arch ();
7943 int tempflag;
7944 struct symtab_and_line sal;
7945 enum bptype type;
7946 char *addr_string = NULL;
7947 char *exp_string = NULL;
7948 char *cond_string = NULL;
7949 struct expression *cond = NULL;
7950 struct breakpoint_ops *ops = NULL;
7951
7952 tempflag = get_cmd_context (command) == CATCH_TEMPORARY;
7953
7954 if (!arg)
7955 arg = "";
7956 sal = ada_decode_exception_location (arg, &addr_string, &exp_string,
7957 &cond_string, &cond, &ops);
7958 create_ada_exception_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, addr_string, exp_string,
7959 cond_string, cond, ops, tempflag,
7960 from_tty);
7961 }
7962
7963 /* Cleanup function for a syscall filter list. */
7964 static void
7965 clean_up_filters (void *arg)
7966 {
7967 VEC(int) *iter = *(VEC(int) **) arg;
7968 VEC_free (int, iter);
7969 }
7970
7971 /* Splits the argument using space as delimiter. Returns an xmalloc'd
7972 filter list, or NULL if no filtering is required. */
7973 static VEC(int) *
7974 catch_syscall_split_args (char *arg)
7975 {
7976 VEC(int) *result = NULL;
7977 struct cleanup *cleanup = make_cleanup (clean_up_filters, &result);
7978
7979 while (*arg != '\0')
7980 {
7981 int i, syscall_number;
7982 char *endptr;
7983 char cur_name[128];
7984 struct syscall s;
7985
7986 /* Skip whitespace. */
7987 while (isspace (*arg))
7988 arg++;
7989
7990 for (i = 0; i < 127 && arg[i] && !isspace (arg[i]); ++i)
7991 cur_name[i] = arg[i];
7992 cur_name[i] = '\0';
7993 arg += i;
7994
7995 /* Check if the user provided a syscall name or a number. */
7996 syscall_number = (int) strtol (cur_name, &endptr, 0);
7997 if (*endptr == '\0')
7998 get_syscall_by_number (syscall_number, &s);
7999 else
8000 {
8001 /* We have a name. Let's check if it's valid and convert it
8002 to a number. */
8003 get_syscall_by_name (cur_name, &s);
8004
8005 if (s.number == UNKNOWN_SYSCALL)
8006 /* Here we have to issue an error instead of a warning, because
8007 GDB cannot do anything useful if there's no syscall number to
8008 be caught. */
8009 error (_("Unknown syscall name '%s'."), cur_name);
8010 }
8011
8012 /* Ok, it's valid. */
8013 VEC_safe_push (int, result, s.number);
8014 }
8015
8016 discard_cleanups (cleanup);
8017 return result;
8018 }
8019
8020 /* Implement the "catch syscall" command. */
8021
8022 static void
8023 catch_syscall_command_1 (char *arg, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *command)
8024 {
8025 int tempflag;
8026 VEC(int) *filter;
8027 struct syscall s;
8028 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_current_arch ();
8029
8030 /* Checking if the feature if supported. */
8031 if (gdbarch_get_syscall_number_p (gdbarch) == 0)
8032 error (_("The feature 'catch syscall' is not supported on \
8033 this architeture yet."));
8034
8035 tempflag = get_cmd_context (command) == CATCH_TEMPORARY;
8036
8037 ep_skip_leading_whitespace (&arg);
8038
8039 /* We need to do this first "dummy" translation in order
8040 to get the syscall XML file loaded or, most important,
8041 to display a warning to the user if there's no XML file
8042 for his/her architecture. */
8043 get_syscall_by_number (0, &s);
8044
8045 /* The allowed syntax is:
8046 catch syscall
8047 catch syscall <name | number> [<name | number> ... <name | number>]
8048
8049 Let's check if there's a syscall name. */
8050
8051 if (arg != NULL)
8052 filter = catch_syscall_split_args (arg);
8053 else
8054 filter = NULL;
8055
8056 create_syscall_event_catchpoint (tempflag, filter,
8057 &catch_syscall_breakpoint_ops);
8058 }
8059
8060 /* Implement the "catch assert" command. */
8061
8062 static void
8063 catch_assert_command (char *arg, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *command)
8064 {
8065 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_current_arch ();
8066 int tempflag;
8067 struct symtab_and_line sal;
8068 char *addr_string = NULL;
8069 struct breakpoint_ops *ops = NULL;
8070
8071 tempflag = get_cmd_context (command) == CATCH_TEMPORARY;
8072
8073 if (!arg)
8074 arg = "";
8075 sal = ada_decode_assert_location (arg, &addr_string, &ops);
8076 create_ada_exception_breakpoint (gdbarch, sal, addr_string, NULL, NULL, NULL,
8077 ops, tempflag, from_tty);
8078 }
8079
8080 static void
8081 catch_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
8082 {
8083 error (_("Catch requires an event name."));
8084 }
8085 \f
8086
8087 static void
8088 tcatch_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
8089 {
8090 error (_("Catch requires an event name."));
8091 }
8092
8093 /* Delete breakpoints by address or line. */
8094
8095 static void
8096 clear_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
8097 {
8098 struct breakpoint *b;
8099 VEC(breakpoint_p) *found = 0;
8100 int ix;
8101 int default_match;
8102 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
8103 struct symtab_and_line sal;
8104 int i;
8105
8106 if (arg)
8107 {
8108 sals = decode_line_spec (arg, 1);
8109 default_match = 0;
8110 }
8111 else
8112 {
8113 sals.sals = (struct symtab_and_line *)
8114 xmalloc (sizeof (struct symtab_and_line));
8115 make_cleanup (xfree, sals.sals);
8116 init_sal (&sal); /* initialize to zeroes */
8117 sal.line = default_breakpoint_line;
8118 sal.symtab = default_breakpoint_symtab;
8119 sal.pc = default_breakpoint_address;
8120 sal.pspace = default_breakpoint_pspace;
8121 if (sal.symtab == 0)
8122 error (_("No source file specified."));
8123
8124 sals.sals[0] = sal;
8125 sals.nelts = 1;
8126
8127 default_match = 1;
8128 }
8129
8130 /* We don't call resolve_sal_pc here. That's not
8131 as bad as it seems, because all existing breakpoints
8132 typically have both file/line and pc set. So, if
8133 clear is given file/line, we can match this to existing
8134 breakpoint without obtaining pc at all.
8135
8136 We only support clearing given the address explicitly
8137 present in breakpoint table. Say, we've set breakpoint
8138 at file:line. There were several PC values for that file:line,
8139 due to optimization, all in one block.
8140 We've picked one PC value. If "clear" is issued with another
8141 PC corresponding to the same file:line, the breakpoint won't
8142 be cleared. We probably can still clear the breakpoint, but
8143 since the other PC value is never presented to user, user
8144 can only find it by guessing, and it does not seem important
8145 to support that. */
8146
8147 /* For each line spec given, delete bps which correspond
8148 to it. Do it in two passes, solely to preserve the current
8149 behavior that from_tty is forced true if we delete more than
8150 one breakpoint. */
8151
8152 found = NULL;
8153 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; i++)
8154 {
8155 /* If exact pc given, clear bpts at that pc.
8156 If line given (pc == 0), clear all bpts on specified line.
8157 If defaulting, clear all bpts on default line
8158 or at default pc.
8159
8160 defaulting sal.pc != 0 tests to do
8161
8162 0 1 pc
8163 1 1 pc _and_ line
8164 0 0 line
8165 1 0 <can't happen> */
8166
8167 sal = sals.sals[i];
8168
8169 /* Find all matching breakpoints and add them to
8170 'found'. */
8171 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
8172 {
8173 int match = 0;
8174 /* Are we going to delete b? */
8175 if (b->type != bp_none
8176 && b->type != bp_watchpoint
8177 && b->type != bp_hardware_watchpoint
8178 && b->type != bp_read_watchpoint
8179 && b->type != bp_access_watchpoint)
8180 {
8181 struct bp_location *loc = b->loc;
8182 for (; loc; loc = loc->next)
8183 {
8184 int pc_match = sal.pc
8185 && (loc->pspace == sal.pspace)
8186 && (loc->address == sal.pc)
8187 && (!section_is_overlay (loc->section)
8188 || loc->section == sal.section);
8189 int line_match = ((default_match || (0 == sal.pc))
8190 && b->source_file != NULL
8191 && sal.symtab != NULL
8192 && sal.pspace == loc->pspace
8193 && strcmp (b->source_file, sal.symtab->filename) == 0
8194 && b->line_number == sal.line);
8195 if (pc_match || line_match)
8196 {
8197 match = 1;
8198 break;
8199 }
8200 }
8201 }
8202
8203 if (match)
8204 VEC_safe_push(breakpoint_p, found, b);
8205 }
8206 }
8207 /* Now go thru the 'found' chain and delete them. */
8208 if (VEC_empty(breakpoint_p, found))
8209 {
8210 if (arg)
8211 error (_("No breakpoint at %s."), arg);
8212 else
8213 error (_("No breakpoint at this line."));
8214 }
8215
8216 if (VEC_length(breakpoint_p, found) > 1)
8217 from_tty = 1; /* Always report if deleted more than one */
8218 if (from_tty)
8219 {
8220 if (VEC_length(breakpoint_p, found) == 1)
8221 printf_unfiltered (_("Deleted breakpoint "));
8222 else
8223 printf_unfiltered (_("Deleted breakpoints "));
8224 }
8225 breakpoints_changed ();
8226
8227 for (ix = 0; VEC_iterate(breakpoint_p, found, ix, b); ix++)
8228 {
8229 if (from_tty)
8230 printf_unfiltered ("%d ", b->number);
8231 delete_breakpoint (b);
8232 }
8233 if (from_tty)
8234 putchar_unfiltered ('\n');
8235 }
8236 \f
8237 /* Delete breakpoint in BS if they are `delete' breakpoints and
8238 all breakpoints that are marked for deletion, whether hit or not.
8239 This is called after any breakpoint is hit, or after errors. */
8240
8241 void
8242 breakpoint_auto_delete (bpstat bs)
8243 {
8244 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
8245
8246 for (; bs; bs = bs->next)
8247 if (bs->breakpoint_at
8248 && bs->breakpoint_at->owner
8249 && bs->breakpoint_at->owner->disposition == disp_del
8250 && bs->stop)
8251 delete_breakpoint (bs->breakpoint_at->owner);
8252
8253 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
8254 {
8255 if (b->disposition == disp_del_at_next_stop)
8256 delete_breakpoint (b);
8257 }
8258 }
8259
8260 /* A comparison function for bp_location AP and BP being interfaced to qsort.
8261 Sort elements primarily by their ADDRESS (no matter what does
8262 breakpoint_address_is_meaningful say for its OWNER), secondarily by ordering
8263 first bp_permanent OWNERed elements and terciarily just ensuring the array
8264 is sorted stable way despite qsort being an instable algorithm. */
8265
8266 static int
8267 bp_location_compare (const void *ap, const void *bp)
8268 {
8269 struct bp_location *a = *(void **) ap;
8270 struct bp_location *b = *(void **) bp;
8271 int a_perm = a->owner->enable_state == bp_permanent;
8272 int b_perm = b->owner->enable_state == bp_permanent;
8273
8274 if (a->address != b->address)
8275 return (a->address > b->address) - (a->address < b->address);
8276
8277 /* Sort permanent breakpoints first. */
8278 if (a_perm != b_perm)
8279 return (a_perm < b_perm) - (a_perm > b_perm);
8280
8281 /* Make the user-visible order stable across GDB runs. Locations of the same
8282 breakpoint can be sorted in arbitrary order. */
8283
8284 if (a->owner->number != b->owner->number)
8285 return (a->owner->number > b->owner->number)
8286 - (a->owner->number < b->owner->number);
8287
8288 return (a > b) - (a < b);
8289 }
8290
8291 /* Set bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max and
8292 bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max according to the current content of
8293 the bp_location array. */
8294
8295 static void
8296 bp_location_target_extensions_update (void)
8297 {
8298 struct bp_location *bl, **blp_tmp;
8299
8300 bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max = 0;
8301 bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max = 0;
8302
8303 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (bl, blp_tmp)
8304 {
8305 CORE_ADDR start, end, addr;
8306
8307 if (!bp_location_has_shadow (bl))
8308 continue;
8309
8310 start = bl->target_info.placed_address;
8311 end = start + bl->target_info.shadow_len;
8312
8313 gdb_assert (bl->address >= start);
8314 addr = bl->address - start;
8315 if (addr > bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max)
8316 bp_location_placed_address_before_address_max = addr;
8317
8318 /* Zero SHADOW_LEN would not pass bp_location_has_shadow. */
8319
8320 gdb_assert (bl->address < end);
8321 addr = end - bl->address;
8322 if (addr > bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max)
8323 bp_location_shadow_len_after_address_max = addr;
8324 }
8325 }
8326
8327 /* If SHOULD_INSERT is false, do not insert any breakpoint locations
8328 into the inferior, only remove already-inserted locations that no
8329 longer should be inserted. Functions that delete a breakpoint or
8330 breakpoints should pass false, so that deleting a breakpoint
8331 doesn't have the side effect of inserting the locations of other
8332 breakpoints that are marked not-inserted, but should_be_inserted
8333 returns true on them.
8334
8335 This behaviour is useful is situations close to tear-down -- e.g.,
8336 after an exec, while the target still has execution, but breakpoint
8337 shadows of the previous executable image should *NOT* be restored
8338 to the new image; or before detaching, where the target still has
8339 execution and wants to delete breakpoints from GDB's lists, and all
8340 breakpoints had already been removed from the inferior. */
8341
8342 static void
8343 update_global_location_list (int should_insert)
8344 {
8345 struct breakpoint *b;
8346 struct bp_location **locp, *loc;
8347 struct cleanup *cleanups;
8348
8349 /* Used in the duplicates detection below. When iterating over all
8350 bp_locations, points to the first bp_location of a given address.
8351 Breakpoints and watchpoints of different types are never
8352 duplicates of each other. Keep one pointer for each type of
8353 breakpoint/watchpoint, so we only need to loop over all locations
8354 once. */
8355 struct bp_location *bp_loc_first; /* breakpoint */
8356 struct bp_location *wp_loc_first; /* hardware watchpoint */
8357 struct bp_location *awp_loc_first; /* access watchpoint */
8358 struct bp_location *rwp_loc_first; /* read watchpoint */
8359
8360 /* Saved former bp_location array which we compare against the newly built
8361 bp_location from the current state of ALL_BREAKPOINTS. */
8362 struct bp_location **old_location, **old_locp;
8363 unsigned old_location_count;
8364
8365 old_location = bp_location;
8366 old_location_count = bp_location_count;
8367 bp_location = NULL;
8368 bp_location_count = 0;
8369 cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, old_location);
8370
8371 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
8372 for (loc = b->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
8373 bp_location_count++;
8374
8375 bp_location = xmalloc (sizeof (*bp_location) * bp_location_count);
8376 locp = bp_location;
8377 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
8378 for (loc = b->loc; loc; loc = loc->next)
8379 *locp++ = loc;
8380 qsort (bp_location, bp_location_count, sizeof (*bp_location),
8381 bp_location_compare);
8382
8383 bp_location_target_extensions_update ();
8384
8385 /* Identify bp_location instances that are no longer present in the new
8386 list, and therefore should be freed. Note that it's not necessary that
8387 those locations should be removed from inferior -- if there's another
8388 location at the same address (previously marked as duplicate),
8389 we don't need to remove/insert the location.
8390
8391 LOCP is kept in sync with OLD_LOCP, each pointing to the current and
8392 former bp_location array state respectively. */
8393
8394 locp = bp_location;
8395 for (old_locp = old_location; old_locp < old_location + old_location_count;
8396 old_locp++)
8397 {
8398 struct bp_location *old_loc = *old_locp;
8399 struct bp_location **loc2p;
8400
8401 /* Tells if 'old_loc' is found amoung the new locations. If not, we
8402 have to free it. */
8403 int found_object = 0;
8404 /* Tells if the location should remain inserted in the target. */
8405 int keep_in_target = 0;
8406 int removed = 0;
8407
8408 /* Skip LOCP entries which will definitely never be needed. Stop either
8409 at or being the one matching OLD_LOC. */
8410 while (locp < bp_location + bp_location_count
8411 && (*locp)->address < old_loc->address)
8412 locp++;
8413
8414 for (loc2p = locp;
8415 (loc2p < bp_location + bp_location_count
8416 && (*loc2p)->address == old_loc->address);
8417 loc2p++)
8418 {
8419 if (*loc2p == old_loc)
8420 {
8421 found_object = 1;
8422 break;
8423 }
8424 }
8425
8426 /* If this location is no longer present, and inserted, look if there's
8427 maybe a new location at the same address. If so, mark that one
8428 inserted, and don't remove this one. This is needed so that we
8429 don't have a time window where a breakpoint at certain location is not
8430 inserted. */
8431
8432 if (old_loc->inserted)
8433 {
8434 /* If the location is inserted now, we might have to remove it. */
8435
8436 if (found_object && should_be_inserted (old_loc))
8437 {
8438 /* The location is still present in the location list, and still
8439 should be inserted. Don't do anything. */
8440 keep_in_target = 1;
8441 }
8442 else
8443 {
8444 /* The location is either no longer present, or got disabled.
8445 See if there's another location at the same address, in which
8446 case we don't need to remove this one from the target. */
8447
8448 if (breakpoint_address_is_meaningful (old_loc->owner))
8449 {
8450 for (loc2p = locp;
8451 (loc2p < bp_location + bp_location_count
8452 && (*loc2p)->address == old_loc->address);
8453 loc2p++)
8454 {
8455 struct bp_location *loc2 = *loc2p;
8456
8457 if (breakpoint_locations_match (loc2, old_loc))
8458 {
8459 /* For the sake of should_be_inserted.
8460 Duplicates check below will fix up this later. */
8461 loc2->duplicate = 0;
8462 if (loc2 != old_loc && should_be_inserted (loc2))
8463 {
8464 loc2->inserted = 1;
8465 loc2->target_info = old_loc->target_info;
8466 keep_in_target = 1;
8467 break;
8468 }
8469 }
8470 }
8471 }
8472 }
8473
8474 if (!keep_in_target)
8475 {
8476 if (remove_breakpoint (old_loc, mark_uninserted))
8477 {
8478 /* This is just about all we can do. We could keep this
8479 location on the global list, and try to remove it next
8480 time, but there's no particular reason why we will
8481 succeed next time.
8482
8483 Note that at this point, old_loc->owner is still valid,
8484 as delete_breakpoint frees the breakpoint only
8485 after calling us. */
8486 printf_filtered (_("warning: Error removing breakpoint %d\n"),
8487 old_loc->owner->number);
8488 }
8489 removed = 1;
8490 }
8491 }
8492
8493 if (!found_object)
8494 {
8495 if (removed && non_stop
8496 && breakpoint_address_is_meaningful (old_loc->owner)
8497 && !is_hardware_watchpoint (old_loc->owner))
8498 {
8499 /* This location was removed from the target. In
8500 non-stop mode, a race condition is possible where
8501 we've removed a breakpoint, but stop events for that
8502 breakpoint are already queued and will arrive later.
8503 We apply an heuristic to be able to distinguish such
8504 SIGTRAPs from other random SIGTRAPs: we keep this
8505 breakpoint location for a bit, and will retire it
8506 after we see some number of events. The theory here
8507 is that reporting of events should, "on the average",
8508 be fair, so after a while we'll see events from all
8509 threads that have anything of interest, and no longer
8510 need to keep this breakpoint location around. We
8511 don't hold locations forever so to reduce chances of
8512 mistaking a non-breakpoint SIGTRAP for a breakpoint
8513 SIGTRAP.
8514
8515 The heuristic failing can be disastrous on
8516 decr_pc_after_break targets.
8517
8518 On decr_pc_after_break targets, like e.g., x86-linux,
8519 if we fail to recognize a late breakpoint SIGTRAP,
8520 because events_till_retirement has reached 0 too
8521 soon, we'll fail to do the PC adjustment, and report
8522 a random SIGTRAP to the user. When the user resumes
8523 the inferior, it will most likely immediately crash
8524 with SIGILL/SIGBUS/SEGSEGV, or worse, get silently
8525 corrupted, because of being resumed e.g., in the
8526 middle of a multi-byte instruction, or skipped a
8527 one-byte instruction. This was actually seen happen
8528 on native x86-linux, and should be less rare on
8529 targets that do not support new thread events, like
8530 remote, due to the heuristic depending on
8531 thread_count.
8532
8533 Mistaking a random SIGTRAP for a breakpoint trap
8534 causes similar symptoms (PC adjustment applied when
8535 it shouldn't), but then again, playing with SIGTRAPs
8536 behind the debugger's back is asking for trouble.
8537
8538 Since hardware watchpoint traps are always
8539 distinguishable from other traps, so we don't need to
8540 apply keep hardware watchpoint moribund locations
8541 around. We simply always ignore hardware watchpoint
8542 traps we can no longer explain. */
8543
8544 old_loc->events_till_retirement = 3 * (thread_count () + 1);
8545 old_loc->owner = NULL;
8546
8547 VEC_safe_push (bp_location_p, moribund_locations, old_loc);
8548 }
8549 else
8550 free_bp_location (old_loc);
8551 }
8552 }
8553
8554 /* Rescan breakpoints at the same address and section, marking the
8555 first one as "first" and any others as "duplicates". This is so
8556 that the bpt instruction is only inserted once. If we have a
8557 permanent breakpoint at the same place as BPT, make that one the
8558 official one, and the rest as duplicates. Permanent breakpoints
8559 are sorted first for the same address.
8560
8561 Do the same for hardware watchpoints, but also considering the
8562 watchpoint's type (regular/access/read) and length. */
8563
8564 bp_loc_first = NULL;
8565 wp_loc_first = NULL;
8566 awp_loc_first = NULL;
8567 rwp_loc_first = NULL;
8568 ALL_BP_LOCATIONS (loc, locp)
8569 {
8570 struct breakpoint *b = loc->owner;
8571 struct bp_location **loc_first_p;
8572
8573 if (b->enable_state == bp_disabled
8574 || b->enable_state == bp_call_disabled
8575 || b->enable_state == bp_startup_disabled
8576 || !loc->enabled
8577 || loc->shlib_disabled
8578 || !breakpoint_address_is_meaningful (b))
8579 continue;
8580
8581 /* Permanent breakpoint should always be inserted. */
8582 if (b->enable_state == bp_permanent && ! loc->inserted)
8583 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
8584 _("allegedly permanent breakpoint is not "
8585 "actually inserted"));
8586
8587 if (b->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint)
8588 loc_first_p = &wp_loc_first;
8589 else if (b->type == bp_read_watchpoint)
8590 loc_first_p = &rwp_loc_first;
8591 else if (b->type == bp_access_watchpoint)
8592 loc_first_p = &awp_loc_first;
8593 else
8594 loc_first_p = &bp_loc_first;
8595
8596 if (*loc_first_p == NULL
8597 || (overlay_debugging && loc->section != (*loc_first_p)->section)
8598 || !breakpoint_locations_match (loc, *loc_first_p))
8599 {
8600 *loc_first_p = loc;
8601 loc->duplicate = 0;
8602 continue;
8603 }
8604
8605 loc->duplicate = 1;
8606
8607 if ((*loc_first_p)->owner->enable_state == bp_permanent && loc->inserted
8608 && b->enable_state != bp_permanent)
8609 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
8610 _("another breakpoint was inserted on top of "
8611 "a permanent breakpoint"));
8612 }
8613
8614 if (breakpoints_always_inserted_mode () && should_insert
8615 && (have_live_inferiors ()
8616 || (gdbarch_has_global_breakpoints (target_gdbarch))))
8617 insert_breakpoint_locations ();
8618
8619 do_cleanups (cleanups);
8620 }
8621
8622 void
8623 breakpoint_retire_moribund (void)
8624 {
8625 struct bp_location *loc;
8626 int ix;
8627
8628 for (ix = 0; VEC_iterate (bp_location_p, moribund_locations, ix, loc); ++ix)
8629 if (--(loc->events_till_retirement) == 0)
8630 {
8631 free_bp_location (loc);
8632 VEC_unordered_remove (bp_location_p, moribund_locations, ix);
8633 --ix;
8634 }
8635 }
8636
8637 static void
8638 update_global_location_list_nothrow (int inserting)
8639 {
8640 struct gdb_exception e;
8641 TRY_CATCH (e, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
8642 update_global_location_list (inserting);
8643 }
8644
8645 /* Clear BPT from a BPS. */
8646 static void
8647 bpstat_remove_breakpoint (bpstat bps, struct breakpoint *bpt)
8648 {
8649 bpstat bs;
8650 for (bs = bps; bs; bs = bs->next)
8651 if (bs->breakpoint_at && bs->breakpoint_at->owner == bpt)
8652 {
8653 bs->breakpoint_at = NULL;
8654 bs->old_val = NULL;
8655 /* bs->commands will be freed later. */
8656 }
8657 }
8658
8659 /* Callback for iterate_over_threads. */
8660 static int
8661 bpstat_remove_breakpoint_callback (struct thread_info *th, void *data)
8662 {
8663 struct breakpoint *bpt = data;
8664 bpstat_remove_breakpoint (th->stop_bpstat, bpt);
8665 return 0;
8666 }
8667
8668 /* Delete a breakpoint and clean up all traces of it in the data
8669 structures. */
8670
8671 void
8672 delete_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *bpt)
8673 {
8674 struct breakpoint *b;
8675 struct bp_location *loc, *next;
8676
8677 gdb_assert (bpt != NULL);
8678
8679 /* Has this bp already been deleted? This can happen because multiple
8680 lists can hold pointers to bp's. bpstat lists are especial culprits.
8681
8682 One example of this happening is a watchpoint's scope bp. When the
8683 scope bp triggers, we notice that the watchpoint is out of scope, and
8684 delete it. We also delete its scope bp. But the scope bp is marked
8685 "auto-deleting", and is already on a bpstat. That bpstat is then
8686 checked for auto-deleting bp's, which are deleted.
8687
8688 A real solution to this problem might involve reference counts in bp's,
8689 and/or giving them pointers back to their referencing bpstat's, and
8690 teaching delete_breakpoint to only free a bp's storage when no more
8691 references were extent. A cheaper bandaid was chosen. */
8692 if (bpt->type == bp_none)
8693 return;
8694
8695 observer_notify_breakpoint_deleted (bpt->number);
8696
8697 if (breakpoint_chain == bpt)
8698 breakpoint_chain = bpt->next;
8699
8700 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
8701 if (b->next == bpt)
8702 {
8703 b->next = bpt->next;
8704 break;
8705 }
8706
8707 free_command_lines (&bpt->commands);
8708 if (bpt->cond_string != NULL)
8709 xfree (bpt->cond_string);
8710 if (bpt->addr_string != NULL)
8711 xfree (bpt->addr_string);
8712 if (bpt->exp != NULL)
8713 xfree (bpt->exp);
8714 if (bpt->exp_string != NULL)
8715 xfree (bpt->exp_string);
8716 if (bpt->val != NULL)
8717 value_free (bpt->val);
8718 if (bpt->source_file != NULL)
8719 xfree (bpt->source_file);
8720 if (bpt->exec_pathname != NULL)
8721 xfree (bpt->exec_pathname);
8722 clean_up_filters (&bpt->syscalls_to_be_caught);
8723
8724 /* Be sure no bpstat's are pointing at it after it's been freed. */
8725 /* FIXME, how can we find all bpstat's?
8726 We just check stop_bpstat for now. Note that we cannot just
8727 remove bpstats pointing at bpt from the stop_bpstat list
8728 entirely, as breakpoint commands are associated with the bpstat;
8729 if we remove it here, then the later call to
8730 bpstat_do_actions (&stop_bpstat);
8731 in event-top.c won't do anything, and temporary breakpoints
8732 with commands won't work. */
8733
8734 iterate_over_threads (bpstat_remove_breakpoint_callback, bpt);
8735
8736 /* Now that breakpoint is removed from breakpoint
8737 list, update the global location list. This
8738 will remove locations that used to belong to
8739 this breakpoint. Do this before freeing
8740 the breakpoint itself, since remove_breakpoint
8741 looks at location's owner. It might be better
8742 design to have location completely self-contained,
8743 but it's not the case now. */
8744 update_global_location_list (0);
8745
8746
8747 /* On the chance that someone will soon try again to delete this same
8748 bp, we mark it as deleted before freeing its storage. */
8749 bpt->type = bp_none;
8750
8751 xfree (bpt);
8752 }
8753
8754 static void
8755 do_delete_breakpoint_cleanup (void *b)
8756 {
8757 delete_breakpoint (b);
8758 }
8759
8760 struct cleanup *
8761 make_cleanup_delete_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *b)
8762 {
8763 return make_cleanup (do_delete_breakpoint_cleanup, b);
8764 }
8765
8766 void
8767 delete_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
8768 {
8769 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
8770
8771 dont_repeat ();
8772
8773 if (arg == 0)
8774 {
8775 int breaks_to_delete = 0;
8776
8777 /* Delete all breakpoints if no argument.
8778 Do not delete internal or call-dummy breakpoints, these
8779 have to be deleted with an explicit breakpoint number argument. */
8780 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
8781 {
8782 if (b->type != bp_call_dummy
8783 && b->type != bp_shlib_event
8784 && b->type != bp_jit_event
8785 && b->type != bp_thread_event
8786 && b->type != bp_overlay_event
8787 && b->type != bp_longjmp_master
8788 && b->number >= 0)
8789 {
8790 breaks_to_delete = 1;
8791 break;
8792 }
8793 }
8794
8795 /* Ask user only if there are some breakpoints to delete. */
8796 if (!from_tty
8797 || (breaks_to_delete && query (_("Delete all breakpoints? "))))
8798 {
8799 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
8800 {
8801 if (b->type != bp_call_dummy
8802 && b->type != bp_shlib_event
8803 && b->type != bp_thread_event
8804 && b->type != bp_jit_event
8805 && b->type != bp_overlay_event
8806 && b->type != bp_longjmp_master
8807 && b->number >= 0)
8808 delete_breakpoint (b);
8809 }
8810 }
8811 }
8812 else
8813 map_breakpoint_numbers (arg, delete_breakpoint);
8814 }
8815
8816 static int
8817 all_locations_are_pending (struct bp_location *loc)
8818 {
8819 for (; loc; loc = loc->next)
8820 if (!loc->shlib_disabled)
8821 return 0;
8822 return 1;
8823 }
8824
8825 /* Subroutine of update_breakpoint_locations to simplify it.
8826 Return non-zero if multiple fns in list LOC have the same name.
8827 Null names are ignored. */
8828
8829 static int
8830 ambiguous_names_p (struct bp_location *loc)
8831 {
8832 struct bp_location *l;
8833 htab_t htab = htab_create_alloc (13, htab_hash_string,
8834 (int (*) (const void *, const void *)) streq,
8835 NULL, xcalloc, xfree);
8836
8837 for (l = loc; l != NULL; l = l->next)
8838 {
8839 const char **slot;
8840 const char *name = l->function_name;
8841
8842 /* Allow for some names to be NULL, ignore them. */
8843 if (name == NULL)
8844 continue;
8845
8846 slot = (const char **) htab_find_slot (htab, (const void *) name,
8847 INSERT);
8848 /* NOTE: We can assume slot != NULL here because xcalloc never returns
8849 NULL. */
8850 if (*slot != NULL)
8851 {
8852 htab_delete (htab);
8853 return 1;
8854 }
8855 *slot = name;
8856 }
8857
8858 htab_delete (htab);
8859 return 0;
8860 }
8861
8862 static void
8863 update_breakpoint_locations (struct breakpoint *b,
8864 struct symtabs_and_lines sals)
8865 {
8866 int i;
8867 char *s;
8868 struct bp_location *existing_locations = b->loc;
8869
8870 /* If there's no new locations, and all existing locations
8871 are pending, don't do anything. This optimizes
8872 the common case where all locations are in the same
8873 shared library, that was unloaded. We'd like to
8874 retain the location, so that when the library
8875 is loaded again, we don't loose the enabled/disabled
8876 status of the individual locations. */
8877 if (all_locations_are_pending (existing_locations) && sals.nelts == 0)
8878 return;
8879
8880 b->loc = NULL;
8881
8882 for (i = 0; i < sals.nelts; ++i)
8883 {
8884 struct bp_location *new_loc =
8885 add_location_to_breakpoint (b, &(sals.sals[i]));
8886
8887 /* Reparse conditions, they might contain references to the
8888 old symtab. */
8889 if (b->cond_string != NULL)
8890 {
8891 struct gdb_exception e;
8892
8893 s = b->cond_string;
8894 TRY_CATCH (e, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
8895 {
8896 new_loc->cond = parse_exp_1 (&s, block_for_pc (sals.sals[i].pc),
8897 0);
8898 }
8899 if (e.reason < 0)
8900 {
8901 warning (_("failed to reevaluate condition for breakpoint %d: %s"),
8902 b->number, e.message);
8903 new_loc->enabled = 0;
8904 }
8905 }
8906
8907 if (b->source_file != NULL)
8908 xfree (b->source_file);
8909 if (sals.sals[i].symtab == NULL)
8910 b->source_file = NULL;
8911 else
8912 b->source_file = xstrdup (sals.sals[i].symtab->filename);
8913
8914 if (b->line_number == 0)
8915 b->line_number = sals.sals[i].line;
8916 }
8917
8918 /* Update locations of permanent breakpoints. */
8919 if (b->enable_state == bp_permanent)
8920 make_breakpoint_permanent (b);
8921
8922 /* If possible, carry over 'disable' status from existing breakpoints. */
8923 {
8924 struct bp_location *e = existing_locations;
8925 /* If there are multiple breakpoints with the same function name,
8926 e.g. for inline functions, comparing function names won't work.
8927 Instead compare pc addresses; this is just a heuristic as things
8928 may have moved, but in practice it gives the correct answer
8929 often enough until a better solution is found. */
8930 int have_ambiguous_names = ambiguous_names_p (b->loc);
8931
8932 for (; e; e = e->next)
8933 {
8934 if (!e->enabled && e->function_name)
8935 {
8936 struct bp_location *l = b->loc;
8937 if (have_ambiguous_names)
8938 {
8939 for (; l; l = l->next)
8940 if (breakpoint_address_match (e->pspace->aspace, e->address,
8941 l->pspace->aspace, l->address))
8942 {
8943 l->enabled = 0;
8944 break;
8945 }
8946 }
8947 else
8948 {
8949 for (; l; l = l->next)
8950 if (l->function_name
8951 && strcmp (e->function_name, l->function_name) == 0)
8952 {
8953 l->enabled = 0;
8954 break;
8955 }
8956 }
8957 }
8958 }
8959 }
8960
8961 update_global_location_list (1);
8962 }
8963
8964
8965 /* Reset a breakpoint given it's struct breakpoint * BINT.
8966 The value we return ends up being the return value from catch_errors.
8967 Unused in this case. */
8968
8969 static int
8970 breakpoint_re_set_one (void *bint)
8971 {
8972 /* get past catch_errs */
8973 struct breakpoint *b = (struct breakpoint *) bint;
8974 struct value *mark;
8975 int i;
8976 int not_found = 0;
8977 int *not_found_ptr = &not_found;
8978 struct symtabs_and_lines sals = {0};
8979 struct symtabs_and_lines expanded = {0};
8980 char *s;
8981 enum enable_state save_enable;
8982 struct gdb_exception e;
8983 struct cleanup *cleanups = make_cleanup (null_cleanup, NULL);
8984
8985 switch (b->type)
8986 {
8987 case bp_none:
8988 warning (_("attempted to reset apparently deleted breakpoint #%d?"),
8989 b->number);
8990 return 0;
8991 case bp_breakpoint:
8992 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
8993 case bp_tracepoint:
8994 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
8995 /* Do not attempt to re-set breakpoints disabled during startup. */
8996 if (b->enable_state == bp_startup_disabled)
8997 return 0;
8998
8999 if (b->addr_string == NULL)
9000 {
9001 /* Anything without a string can't be re-set. */
9002 delete_breakpoint (b);
9003 return 0;
9004 }
9005
9006 set_language (b->language);
9007 input_radix = b->input_radix;
9008 s = b->addr_string;
9009
9010 save_current_space_and_thread ();
9011 switch_to_program_space_and_thread (b->pspace);
9012
9013 TRY_CATCH (e, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
9014 {
9015 sals = decode_line_1 (&s, 1, (struct symtab *) NULL, 0, (char ***) NULL,
9016 not_found_ptr);
9017 }
9018 if (e.reason < 0)
9019 {
9020 int not_found_and_ok = 0;
9021 /* For pending breakpoints, it's expected that parsing
9022 will fail until the right shared library is loaded.
9023 User has already told to create pending breakpoints and
9024 don't need extra messages. If breakpoint is in bp_shlib_disabled
9025 state, then user already saw the message about that breakpoint
9026 being disabled, and don't want to see more errors. */
9027 if (not_found
9028 && (b->condition_not_parsed
9029 || (b->loc && b->loc->shlib_disabled)
9030 || b->enable_state == bp_disabled))
9031 not_found_and_ok = 1;
9032
9033 if (!not_found_and_ok)
9034 {
9035 /* We surely don't want to warn about the same breakpoint
9036 10 times. One solution, implemented here, is disable
9037 the breakpoint on error. Another solution would be to
9038 have separate 'warning emitted' flag. Since this
9039 happens only when a binary has changed, I don't know
9040 which approach is better. */
9041 b->enable_state = bp_disabled;
9042 throw_exception (e);
9043 }
9044 }
9045
9046 if (!not_found)
9047 {
9048 gdb_assert (sals.nelts == 1);
9049
9050 resolve_sal_pc (&sals.sals[0]);
9051 if (b->condition_not_parsed && s && s[0])
9052 {
9053 char *cond_string = 0;
9054 int thread = -1;
9055 int task = 0;
9056
9057 find_condition_and_thread (s, sals.sals[0].pc,
9058 &cond_string, &thread, &task);
9059 if (cond_string)
9060 b->cond_string = cond_string;
9061 b->thread = thread;
9062 b->task = task;
9063 b->condition_not_parsed = 0;
9064 }
9065
9066 expanded = expand_line_sal_maybe (sals.sals[0]);
9067 }
9068
9069 make_cleanup (xfree, sals.sals);
9070 update_breakpoint_locations (b, expanded);
9071 break;
9072
9073 case bp_watchpoint:
9074 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
9075 case bp_read_watchpoint:
9076 case bp_access_watchpoint:
9077 /* Watchpoint can be either on expression using entirely global variables,
9078 or it can be on local variables.
9079
9080 Watchpoints of the first kind are never auto-deleted, and even persist
9081 across program restarts. Since they can use variables from shared
9082 libraries, we need to reparse expression as libraries are loaded
9083 and unloaded.
9084
9085 Watchpoints on local variables can also change meaning as result
9086 of solib event. For example, if a watchpoint uses both a local and
9087 a global variables in expression, it's a local watchpoint, but
9088 unloading of a shared library will make the expression invalid.
9089 This is not a very common use case, but we still re-evaluate
9090 expression, to avoid surprises to the user.
9091
9092 Note that for local watchpoints, we re-evaluate it only if
9093 watchpoints frame id is still valid. If it's not, it means
9094 the watchpoint is out of scope and will be deleted soon. In fact,
9095 I'm not sure we'll ever be called in this case.
9096
9097 If a local watchpoint's frame id is still valid, then
9098 b->exp_valid_block is likewise valid, and we can safely use it.
9099
9100 Don't do anything about disabled watchpoints, since they will
9101 be reevaluated again when enabled. */
9102 update_watchpoint (b, 1 /* reparse */);
9103 break;
9104 /* We needn't really do anything to reset these, since the mask
9105 that requests them is unaffected by e.g., new libraries being
9106 loaded. */
9107 case bp_catchpoint:
9108 break;
9109
9110 default:
9111 printf_filtered (_("Deleting unknown breakpoint type %d\n"), b->type);
9112 /* fall through */
9113 /* Delete overlay event and longjmp master breakpoints; they will be
9114 reset later by breakpoint_re_set. */
9115 case bp_overlay_event:
9116 case bp_longjmp_master:
9117 delete_breakpoint (b);
9118 break;
9119
9120 /* This breakpoint is special, it's set up when the inferior
9121 starts and we really don't want to touch it. */
9122 case bp_shlib_event:
9123
9124 /* Like bp_shlib_event, this breakpoint type is special.
9125 Once it is set up, we do not want to touch it. */
9126 case bp_thread_event:
9127
9128 /* Keep temporary breakpoints, which can be encountered when we step
9129 over a dlopen call and SOLIB_ADD is resetting the breakpoints.
9130 Otherwise these should have been blown away via the cleanup chain
9131 or by breakpoint_init_inferior when we rerun the executable. */
9132 case bp_until:
9133 case bp_finish:
9134 case bp_watchpoint_scope:
9135 case bp_call_dummy:
9136 case bp_step_resume:
9137 case bp_longjmp:
9138 case bp_longjmp_resume:
9139 case bp_jit_event:
9140 break;
9141 }
9142
9143 do_cleanups (cleanups);
9144 return 0;
9145 }
9146
9147 /* Re-set all breakpoints after symbols have been re-loaded. */
9148 void
9149 breakpoint_re_set (void)
9150 {
9151 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
9152 enum language save_language;
9153 int save_input_radix;
9154 struct cleanup *old_chain;
9155
9156 save_language = current_language->la_language;
9157 save_input_radix = input_radix;
9158 old_chain = save_current_program_space ();
9159
9160 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
9161 {
9162 /* Format possible error msg */
9163 char *message = xstrprintf ("Error in re-setting breakpoint %d: ",
9164 b->number);
9165 struct cleanup *cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, message);
9166 catch_errors (breakpoint_re_set_one, b, message, RETURN_MASK_ALL);
9167 do_cleanups (cleanups);
9168 }
9169 set_language (save_language);
9170 input_radix = save_input_radix;
9171
9172 jit_breakpoint_re_set ();
9173
9174 do_cleanups (old_chain);
9175
9176 create_overlay_event_breakpoint ("_ovly_debug_event");
9177 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("longjmp");
9178 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("_longjmp");
9179 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("siglongjmp");
9180 create_longjmp_master_breakpoint ("_siglongjmp");
9181 }
9182 \f
9183 /* Reset the thread number of this breakpoint:
9184
9185 - If the breakpoint is for all threads, leave it as-is.
9186 - Else, reset it to the current thread for inferior_ptid. */
9187 void
9188 breakpoint_re_set_thread (struct breakpoint *b)
9189 {
9190 if (b->thread != -1)
9191 {
9192 if (in_thread_list (inferior_ptid))
9193 b->thread = pid_to_thread_id (inferior_ptid);
9194
9195 /* We're being called after following a fork. The new fork is
9196 selected as current, and unless this was a vfork will have a
9197 different program space from the original thread. Reset that
9198 as well. */
9199 b->loc->pspace = current_program_space;
9200 }
9201 }
9202
9203 /* Set ignore-count of breakpoint number BPTNUM to COUNT.
9204 If from_tty is nonzero, it prints a message to that effect,
9205 which ends with a period (no newline). */
9206
9207 void
9208 set_ignore_count (int bptnum, int count, int from_tty)
9209 {
9210 struct breakpoint *b;
9211
9212 if (count < 0)
9213 count = 0;
9214
9215 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
9216 if (b->number == bptnum)
9217 {
9218 b->ignore_count = count;
9219 if (from_tty)
9220 {
9221 if (count == 0)
9222 printf_filtered (_("Will stop next time breakpoint %d is reached."),
9223 bptnum);
9224 else if (count == 1)
9225 printf_filtered (_("Will ignore next crossing of breakpoint %d."),
9226 bptnum);
9227 else
9228 printf_filtered (_("Will ignore next %d crossings of breakpoint %d."),
9229 count, bptnum);
9230 }
9231 breakpoints_changed ();
9232 observer_notify_breakpoint_modified (b->number);
9233 return;
9234 }
9235
9236 error (_("No breakpoint number %d."), bptnum);
9237 }
9238
9239 void
9240 make_breakpoint_silent (struct breakpoint *b)
9241 {
9242 /* Silence the breakpoint. */
9243 b->silent = 1;
9244 }
9245
9246 /* Command to set ignore-count of breakpoint N to COUNT. */
9247
9248 static void
9249 ignore_command (char *args, int from_tty)
9250 {
9251 char *p = args;
9252 int num;
9253
9254 if (p == 0)
9255 error_no_arg (_("a breakpoint number"));
9256
9257 num = get_number (&p);
9258 if (num == 0)
9259 error (_("bad breakpoint number: '%s'"), args);
9260 if (*p == 0)
9261 error (_("Second argument (specified ignore-count) is missing."));
9262
9263 set_ignore_count (num,
9264 longest_to_int (value_as_long (parse_and_eval (p))),
9265 from_tty);
9266 if (from_tty)
9267 printf_filtered ("\n");
9268 }
9269 \f
9270 /* Call FUNCTION on each of the breakpoints
9271 whose numbers are given in ARGS. */
9272
9273 static void
9274 map_breakpoint_numbers (char *args, void (*function) (struct breakpoint *))
9275 {
9276 char *p = args;
9277 char *p1;
9278 int num;
9279 struct breakpoint *b, *tmp;
9280 int match;
9281
9282 if (p == 0)
9283 error_no_arg (_("one or more breakpoint numbers"));
9284
9285 while (*p)
9286 {
9287 match = 0;
9288 p1 = p;
9289
9290 num = get_number_or_range (&p1);
9291 if (num == 0)
9292 {
9293 warning (_("bad breakpoint number at or near '%s'"), p);
9294 }
9295 else
9296 {
9297 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, tmp)
9298 if (b->number == num)
9299 {
9300 struct breakpoint *related_breakpoint = b->related_breakpoint;
9301 match = 1;
9302 function (b);
9303 if (related_breakpoint)
9304 function (related_breakpoint);
9305 break;
9306 }
9307 if (match == 0)
9308 printf_unfiltered (_("No breakpoint number %d.\n"), num);
9309 }
9310 p = p1;
9311 }
9312 }
9313
9314 static struct bp_location *
9315 find_location_by_number (char *number)
9316 {
9317 char *dot = strchr (number, '.');
9318 char *p1;
9319 int bp_num;
9320 int loc_num;
9321 struct breakpoint *b;
9322 struct bp_location *loc;
9323
9324 *dot = '\0';
9325
9326 p1 = number;
9327 bp_num = get_number_or_range (&p1);
9328 if (bp_num == 0)
9329 error (_("Bad breakpoint number '%s'"), number);
9330
9331 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (b)
9332 if (b->number == bp_num)
9333 {
9334 break;
9335 }
9336
9337 if (!b || b->number != bp_num)
9338 error (_("Bad breakpoint number '%s'"), number);
9339
9340 p1 = dot+1;
9341 loc_num = get_number_or_range (&p1);
9342 if (loc_num == 0)
9343 error (_("Bad breakpoint location number '%s'"), number);
9344
9345 --loc_num;
9346 loc = b->loc;
9347 for (;loc_num && loc; --loc_num, loc = loc->next)
9348 ;
9349 if (!loc)
9350 error (_("Bad breakpoint location number '%s'"), dot+1);
9351
9352 return loc;
9353 }
9354
9355
9356 /* Set ignore-count of breakpoint number BPTNUM to COUNT.
9357 If from_tty is nonzero, it prints a message to that effect,
9358 which ends with a period (no newline). */
9359
9360 void
9361 disable_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *bpt)
9362 {
9363 /* Never disable a watchpoint scope breakpoint; we want to
9364 hit them when we leave scope so we can delete both the
9365 watchpoint and its scope breakpoint at that time. */
9366 if (bpt->type == bp_watchpoint_scope)
9367 return;
9368
9369 /* You can't disable permanent breakpoints. */
9370 if (bpt->enable_state == bp_permanent)
9371 return;
9372
9373 bpt->enable_state = bp_disabled;
9374
9375 update_global_location_list (0);
9376
9377 observer_notify_breakpoint_modified (bpt->number);
9378 }
9379
9380 static void
9381 disable_command (char *args, int from_tty)
9382 {
9383 struct breakpoint *bpt;
9384 if (args == 0)
9385 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bpt)
9386 switch (bpt->type)
9387 {
9388 case bp_none:
9389 warning (_("attempted to disable apparently deleted breakpoint #%d?"),
9390 bpt->number);
9391 continue;
9392 case bp_breakpoint:
9393 case bp_tracepoint:
9394 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
9395 case bp_catchpoint:
9396 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
9397 case bp_watchpoint:
9398 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
9399 case bp_read_watchpoint:
9400 case bp_access_watchpoint:
9401 disable_breakpoint (bpt);
9402 default:
9403 continue;
9404 }
9405 else if (strchr (args, '.'))
9406 {
9407 struct bp_location *loc = find_location_by_number (args);
9408 if (loc)
9409 loc->enabled = 0;
9410 update_global_location_list (0);
9411 }
9412 else
9413 map_breakpoint_numbers (args, disable_breakpoint);
9414 }
9415
9416 static void
9417 do_enable_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *bpt, enum bpdisp disposition)
9418 {
9419 int target_resources_ok, other_type_used;
9420 struct value *mark;
9421
9422 if (bpt->type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
9423 {
9424 int i;
9425 i = hw_breakpoint_used_count ();
9426 target_resources_ok =
9427 target_can_use_hardware_watchpoint (bp_hardware_breakpoint,
9428 i + 1, 0);
9429 if (target_resources_ok == 0)
9430 error (_("No hardware breakpoint support in the target."));
9431 else if (target_resources_ok < 0)
9432 error (_("Hardware breakpoints used exceeds limit."));
9433 }
9434
9435 if (bpt->type == bp_watchpoint
9436 || bpt->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint
9437 || bpt->type == bp_read_watchpoint
9438 || bpt->type == bp_access_watchpoint)
9439 {
9440 struct gdb_exception e;
9441
9442 TRY_CATCH (e, RETURN_MASK_ALL)
9443 {
9444 update_watchpoint (bpt, 1 /* reparse */);
9445 }
9446 if (e.reason < 0)
9447 {
9448 exception_fprintf (gdb_stderr, e, _("Cannot enable watchpoint %d: "),
9449 bpt->number);
9450 return;
9451 }
9452 }
9453
9454 if (bpt->enable_state != bp_permanent)
9455 bpt->enable_state = bp_enabled;
9456 bpt->disposition = disposition;
9457 update_global_location_list (1);
9458 breakpoints_changed ();
9459
9460 observer_notify_breakpoint_modified (bpt->number);
9461 }
9462
9463
9464 void
9465 enable_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *bpt)
9466 {
9467 do_enable_breakpoint (bpt, bpt->disposition);
9468 }
9469
9470 /* The enable command enables the specified breakpoints (or all defined
9471 breakpoints) so they once again become (or continue to be) effective
9472 in stopping the inferior. */
9473
9474 static void
9475 enable_command (char *args, int from_tty)
9476 {
9477 struct breakpoint *bpt;
9478 if (args == 0)
9479 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bpt)
9480 switch (bpt->type)
9481 {
9482 case bp_none:
9483 warning (_("attempted to enable apparently deleted breakpoint #%d?"),
9484 bpt->number);
9485 continue;
9486 case bp_breakpoint:
9487 case bp_tracepoint:
9488 case bp_fast_tracepoint:
9489 case bp_catchpoint:
9490 case bp_hardware_breakpoint:
9491 case bp_watchpoint:
9492 case bp_hardware_watchpoint:
9493 case bp_read_watchpoint:
9494 case bp_access_watchpoint:
9495 enable_breakpoint (bpt);
9496 default:
9497 continue;
9498 }
9499 else if (strchr (args, '.'))
9500 {
9501 struct bp_location *loc = find_location_by_number (args);
9502 if (loc)
9503 loc->enabled = 1;
9504 update_global_location_list (1);
9505 }
9506 else
9507 map_breakpoint_numbers (args, enable_breakpoint);
9508 }
9509
9510 static void
9511 enable_once_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *bpt)
9512 {
9513 do_enable_breakpoint (bpt, disp_disable);
9514 }
9515
9516 static void
9517 enable_once_command (char *args, int from_tty)
9518 {
9519 map_breakpoint_numbers (args, enable_once_breakpoint);
9520 }
9521
9522 static void
9523 enable_delete_breakpoint (struct breakpoint *bpt)
9524 {
9525 do_enable_breakpoint (bpt, disp_del);
9526 }
9527
9528 static void
9529 enable_delete_command (char *args, int from_tty)
9530 {
9531 map_breakpoint_numbers (args, enable_delete_breakpoint);
9532 }
9533 \f
9534 static void
9535 set_breakpoint_cmd (char *args, int from_tty)
9536 {
9537 }
9538
9539 static void
9540 show_breakpoint_cmd (char *args, int from_tty)
9541 {
9542 }
9543
9544 /* Invalidate last known value of any hardware watchpoint if
9545 the memory which that value represents has been written to by
9546 GDB itself. */
9547
9548 static void
9549 invalidate_bp_value_on_memory_change (CORE_ADDR addr, int len,
9550 const bfd_byte *data)
9551 {
9552 struct breakpoint *bp;
9553
9554 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bp)
9555 if (bp->enable_state == bp_enabled
9556 && bp->type == bp_hardware_watchpoint
9557 && bp->val_valid && bp->val)
9558 {
9559 struct bp_location *loc;
9560
9561 for (loc = bp->loc; loc != NULL; loc = loc->next)
9562 if (loc->loc_type == bp_loc_hardware_watchpoint
9563 && loc->address + loc->length > addr
9564 && addr + len > loc->address)
9565 {
9566 value_free (bp->val);
9567 bp->val = NULL;
9568 bp->val_valid = 0;
9569 }
9570 }
9571 }
9572
9573 /* Use default_breakpoint_'s, or nothing if they aren't valid. */
9574
9575 struct symtabs_and_lines
9576 decode_line_spec_1 (char *string, int funfirstline)
9577 {
9578 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
9579 if (string == 0)
9580 error (_("Empty line specification."));
9581 if (default_breakpoint_valid)
9582 sals = decode_line_1 (&string, funfirstline,
9583 default_breakpoint_symtab,
9584 default_breakpoint_line,
9585 (char ***) NULL, NULL);
9586 else
9587 sals = decode_line_1 (&string, funfirstline,
9588 (struct symtab *) NULL, 0, (char ***) NULL, NULL);
9589 if (*string)
9590 error (_("Junk at end of line specification: %s"), string);
9591 return sals;
9592 }
9593
9594 /* Create and insert a raw software breakpoint at PC. Return an
9595 identifier, which should be used to remove the breakpoint later.
9596 In general, places which call this should be using something on the
9597 breakpoint chain instead; this function should be eliminated
9598 someday. */
9599
9600 void *
9601 deprecated_insert_raw_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
9602 struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc)
9603 {
9604 struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt;
9605
9606 bp_tgt = XZALLOC (struct bp_target_info);
9607
9608 bp_tgt->placed_address_space = aspace;
9609 bp_tgt->placed_address = pc;
9610
9611 if (target_insert_breakpoint (gdbarch, bp_tgt) != 0)
9612 {
9613 /* Could not insert the breakpoint. */
9614 xfree (bp_tgt);
9615 return NULL;
9616 }
9617
9618 return bp_tgt;
9619 }
9620
9621 /* Remove a breakpoint BP inserted by deprecated_insert_raw_breakpoint. */
9622
9623 int
9624 deprecated_remove_raw_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, void *bp)
9625 {
9626 struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt = bp;
9627 int ret;
9628
9629 ret = target_remove_breakpoint (gdbarch, bp_tgt);
9630 xfree (bp_tgt);
9631
9632 return ret;
9633 }
9634
9635 /* One (or perhaps two) breakpoints used for software single stepping. */
9636
9637 static void *single_step_breakpoints[2];
9638 static struct gdbarch *single_step_gdbarch[2];
9639
9640 /* Create and insert a breakpoint for software single step. */
9641
9642 void
9643 insert_single_step_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
9644 struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR next_pc)
9645 {
9646 void **bpt_p;
9647
9648 if (single_step_breakpoints[0] == NULL)
9649 {
9650 bpt_p = &single_step_breakpoints[0];
9651 single_step_gdbarch[0] = gdbarch;
9652 }
9653 else
9654 {
9655 gdb_assert (single_step_breakpoints[1] == NULL);
9656 bpt_p = &single_step_breakpoints[1];
9657 single_step_gdbarch[1] = gdbarch;
9658 }
9659
9660 /* NOTE drow/2006-04-11: A future improvement to this function would be
9661 to only create the breakpoints once, and actually put them on the
9662 breakpoint chain. That would let us use set_raw_breakpoint. We could
9663 adjust the addresses each time they were needed. Doing this requires
9664 corresponding changes elsewhere where single step breakpoints are
9665 handled, however. So, for now, we use this. */
9666
9667 *bpt_p = deprecated_insert_raw_breakpoint (gdbarch, aspace, next_pc);
9668 if (*bpt_p == NULL)
9669 error (_("Could not insert single-step breakpoint at %s"),
9670 paddress (gdbarch, next_pc));
9671 }
9672
9673 /* Remove and delete any breakpoints used for software single step. */
9674
9675 void
9676 remove_single_step_breakpoints (void)
9677 {
9678 gdb_assert (single_step_breakpoints[0] != NULL);
9679
9680 /* See insert_single_step_breakpoint for more about this deprecated
9681 call. */
9682 deprecated_remove_raw_breakpoint (single_step_gdbarch[0],
9683 single_step_breakpoints[0]);
9684 single_step_gdbarch[0] = NULL;
9685 single_step_breakpoints[0] = NULL;
9686
9687 if (single_step_breakpoints[1] != NULL)
9688 {
9689 deprecated_remove_raw_breakpoint (single_step_gdbarch[1],
9690 single_step_breakpoints[1]);
9691 single_step_gdbarch[1] = NULL;
9692 single_step_breakpoints[1] = NULL;
9693 }
9694 }
9695
9696 /* Check whether a software single-step breakpoint is inserted at PC. */
9697
9698 static int
9699 single_step_breakpoint_inserted_here_p (struct address_space *aspace, CORE_ADDR pc)
9700 {
9701 int i;
9702
9703 for (i = 0; i < 2; i++)
9704 {
9705 struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt = single_step_breakpoints[i];
9706 if (bp_tgt
9707 && breakpoint_address_match (bp_tgt->placed_address_space,
9708 bp_tgt->placed_address,
9709 aspace, pc))
9710 return 1;
9711 }
9712
9713 return 0;
9714 }
9715
9716 /* Returns 0 if 'bp' is NOT a syscall catchpoint,
9717 non-zero otherwise. */
9718 static int
9719 is_syscall_catchpoint_enabled (struct breakpoint *bp)
9720 {
9721 if (syscall_catchpoint_p (bp)
9722 && bp->enable_state != bp_disabled
9723 && bp->enable_state != bp_call_disabled)
9724 return 1;
9725 else
9726 return 0;
9727 }
9728
9729 int
9730 catch_syscall_enabled (void)
9731 {
9732 struct inferior *inf = current_inferior ();
9733
9734 return inf->total_syscalls_count != 0;
9735 }
9736
9737 int
9738 catching_syscall_number (int syscall_number)
9739 {
9740 struct breakpoint *bp;
9741
9742 ALL_BREAKPOINTS (bp)
9743 if (is_syscall_catchpoint_enabled (bp))
9744 {
9745 if (bp->syscalls_to_be_caught)
9746 {
9747 int i, iter;
9748 for (i = 0;
9749 VEC_iterate (int, bp->syscalls_to_be_caught, i, iter);
9750 i++)
9751 if (syscall_number == iter)
9752 return 1;
9753 }
9754 else
9755 return 1;
9756 }
9757
9758 return 0;
9759 }
9760
9761 /* Complete syscall names. Used by "catch syscall". */
9762 static char **
9763 catch_syscall_completer (struct cmd_list_element *cmd,
9764 char *text, char *word)
9765 {
9766 const char **list = get_syscall_names ();
9767 return (list == NULL) ? NULL : complete_on_enum (list, text, word);
9768 }
9769
9770 /* Tracepoint-specific operations. */
9771
9772 /* Set tracepoint count to NUM. */
9773 static void
9774 set_tracepoint_count (int num)
9775 {
9776 tracepoint_count = num;
9777 set_internalvar_integer (lookup_internalvar ("tpnum"), num);
9778 }
9779
9780 void
9781 trace_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
9782 {
9783 break_command_really (get_current_arch (),
9784 arg,
9785 NULL, 0, 1 /* parse arg */,
9786 0 /* tempflag */, 0 /* hardwareflag */,
9787 1 /* traceflag */,
9788 0 /* Ignore count */,
9789 pending_break_support,
9790 NULL,
9791 from_tty,
9792 1 /* enabled */);
9793 set_tracepoint_count (breakpoint_count);
9794 }
9795
9796 void
9797 ftrace_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
9798 {
9799 break_command_really (get_current_arch (),
9800 arg,
9801 NULL, 0, 1 /* parse arg */,
9802 0 /* tempflag */, 1 /* hardwareflag */,
9803 1 /* traceflag */,
9804 0 /* Ignore count */,
9805 pending_break_support,
9806 NULL,
9807 from_tty,
9808 1 /* enabled */);
9809 set_tracepoint_count (breakpoint_count);
9810 }
9811
9812 /* Given information about a tracepoint as recorded on a target (which
9813 can be either a live system or a trace file), attempt to create an
9814 equivalent GDB tracepoint. This is not a reliable process, since
9815 the target does not necessarily have all the information used when
9816 the tracepoint was originally defined. */
9817
9818 struct breakpoint *
9819 create_tracepoint_from_upload (struct uploaded_tp *utp)
9820 {
9821 char buf[100];
9822 struct breakpoint *tp;
9823
9824 /* In the absence of a source location, fall back to raw address. */
9825 sprintf (buf, "*%s", paddress (get_current_arch(), utp->addr));
9826
9827 break_command_really (get_current_arch (),
9828 buf,
9829 NULL, 0, 1 /* parse arg */,
9830 0 /* tempflag */,
9831 (utp->type == bp_fast_tracepoint) /* hardwareflag */,
9832 1 /* traceflag */,
9833 0 /* Ignore count */,
9834 pending_break_support,
9835 NULL,
9836 0 /* from_tty */,
9837 utp->enabled /* enabled */);
9838 set_tracepoint_count (breakpoint_count);
9839
9840 tp = get_tracepoint (tracepoint_count);
9841
9842 if (utp->pass > 0)
9843 {
9844 sprintf (buf, "%d %d", utp->pass, tp->number);
9845
9846 trace_pass_command (buf, 0);
9847 }
9848
9849 if (utp->cond)
9850 {
9851 printf_filtered ("Want to restore a condition\n");
9852 }
9853
9854 if (utp->numactions > 0)
9855 {
9856 printf_filtered ("Want to restore action list\n");
9857 }
9858
9859 if (utp->num_step_actions > 0)
9860 {
9861 printf_filtered ("Want to restore action list\n");
9862 }
9863
9864 return tp;
9865 }
9866
9867 /* Print information on tracepoint number TPNUM_EXP, or all if
9868 omitted. */
9869
9870 static void
9871 tracepoints_info (char *tpnum_exp, int from_tty)
9872 {
9873 struct breakpoint *b;
9874 int tps_to_list = 0;
9875
9876 /* In the no-arguments case, say "No tracepoints" if none found. */
9877 if (tpnum_exp == 0)
9878 {
9879 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (b)
9880 {
9881 if (b->number >= 0)
9882 {
9883 tps_to_list = 1;
9884 break;
9885 }
9886 }
9887 if (!tps_to_list)
9888 {
9889 ui_out_message (uiout, 0, "No tracepoints.\n");
9890 return;
9891 }
9892 }
9893
9894 /* Otherwise be the same as "info break". */
9895 breakpoints_info (tpnum_exp, from_tty);
9896 }
9897
9898 /* The 'enable trace' command enables tracepoints.
9899 Not supported by all targets. */
9900 static void
9901 enable_trace_command (char *args, int from_tty)
9902 {
9903 enable_command (args, from_tty);
9904 }
9905
9906 /* The 'disable trace' command disables tracepoints.
9907 Not supported by all targets. */
9908 static void
9909 disable_trace_command (char *args, int from_tty)
9910 {
9911 disable_command (args, from_tty);
9912 }
9913
9914 /* Remove a tracepoint (or all if no argument) */
9915 static void
9916 delete_trace_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
9917 {
9918 struct breakpoint *b, *temp;
9919
9920 dont_repeat ();
9921
9922 if (arg == 0)
9923 {
9924 int breaks_to_delete = 0;
9925
9926 /* Delete all breakpoints if no argument.
9927 Do not delete internal or call-dummy breakpoints, these
9928 have to be deleted with an explicit breakpoint number argument. */
9929 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (b)
9930 {
9931 if (b->number >= 0)
9932 {
9933 breaks_to_delete = 1;
9934 break;
9935 }
9936 }
9937
9938 /* Ask user only if there are some breakpoints to delete. */
9939 if (!from_tty
9940 || (breaks_to_delete && query (_("Delete all tracepoints? "))))
9941 {
9942 ALL_BREAKPOINTS_SAFE (b, temp)
9943 {
9944 if (tracepoint_type (b)
9945 && b->number >= 0)
9946 delete_breakpoint (b);
9947 }
9948 }
9949 }
9950 else
9951 map_breakpoint_numbers (arg, delete_breakpoint);
9952 }
9953
9954 /* Set passcount for tracepoint.
9955
9956 First command argument is passcount, second is tracepoint number.
9957 If tracepoint number omitted, apply to most recently defined.
9958 Also accepts special argument "all". */
9959
9960 static void
9961 trace_pass_command (char *args, int from_tty)
9962 {
9963 struct breakpoint *t1 = (struct breakpoint *) -1, *t2;
9964 unsigned int count;
9965 int all = 0;
9966
9967 if (args == 0 || *args == 0)
9968 error (_("passcount command requires an argument (count + optional TP num)"));
9969
9970 count = strtoul (args, &args, 10); /* Count comes first, then TP num. */
9971
9972 while (*args && isspace ((int) *args))
9973 args++;
9974
9975 if (*args && strncasecmp (args, "all", 3) == 0)
9976 {
9977 args += 3; /* Skip special argument "all". */
9978 all = 1;
9979 if (*args)
9980 error (_("Junk at end of arguments."));
9981 }
9982 else
9983 t1 = get_tracepoint_by_number (&args, 1, 1);
9984
9985 do
9986 {
9987 if (t1)
9988 {
9989 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (t2)
9990 if (t1 == (struct breakpoint *) -1 || t1 == t2)
9991 {
9992 t2->pass_count = count;
9993 observer_notify_tracepoint_modified (t2->number);
9994 if (from_tty)
9995 printf_filtered (_("Setting tracepoint %d's passcount to %d\n"),
9996 t2->number, count);
9997 }
9998 if (! all && *args)
9999 t1 = get_tracepoint_by_number (&args, 1, 0);
10000 }
10001 }
10002 while (*args);
10003 }
10004
10005 struct breakpoint *
10006 get_tracepoint (int num)
10007 {
10008 struct breakpoint *t;
10009
10010 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (t)
10011 if (t->number == num)
10012 return t;
10013
10014 return NULL;
10015 }
10016
10017 /* Find the tracepoint with the given target-side number (which may be
10018 different from the tracepoint number after disconnecting and
10019 reconnecting). */
10020
10021 struct breakpoint *
10022 get_tracepoint_by_number_on_target (int num)
10023 {
10024 struct breakpoint *t;
10025
10026 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (t)
10027 if (t->number_on_target == num)
10028 return t;
10029
10030 return NULL;
10031 }
10032
10033 /* Utility: parse a tracepoint number and look it up in the list.
10034 If MULTI_P is true, there might be a range of tracepoints in ARG.
10035 if OPTIONAL_P is true, then if the argument is missing, the most
10036 recent tracepoint (tracepoint_count) is returned. */
10037 struct breakpoint *
10038 get_tracepoint_by_number (char **arg, int multi_p, int optional_p)
10039 {
10040 extern int tracepoint_count;
10041 struct breakpoint *t;
10042 int tpnum;
10043 char *instring = arg == NULL ? NULL : *arg;
10044
10045 if (arg == NULL || *arg == NULL || ! **arg)
10046 {
10047 if (optional_p)
10048 tpnum = tracepoint_count;
10049 else
10050 error_no_arg (_("tracepoint number"));
10051 }
10052 else
10053 tpnum = multi_p ? get_number_or_range (arg) : get_number (arg);
10054
10055 if (tpnum <= 0)
10056 {
10057 if (instring && *instring)
10058 printf_filtered (_("bad tracepoint number at or near '%s'\n"),
10059 instring);
10060 else
10061 printf_filtered (_("Tracepoint argument missing and no previous tracepoint\n"));
10062 return NULL;
10063 }
10064
10065 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (t)
10066 if (t->number == tpnum)
10067 {
10068 return t;
10069 }
10070
10071 /* FIXME: if we are in the middle of a range we don't want to give
10072 a message. The current interface to get_number_or_range doesn't
10073 allow us to discover this. */
10074 printf_unfiltered ("No tracepoint number %d.\n", tpnum);
10075 return NULL;
10076 }
10077
10078 /* save-tracepoints command */
10079 static void
10080 tracepoint_save_command (char *args, int from_tty)
10081 {
10082 struct breakpoint *tp;
10083 int any_tp = 0;
10084 struct action_line *line;
10085 FILE *fp;
10086 char *i1 = " ", *i2 = " ";
10087 char *indent, *actionline, *pathname;
10088 char tmp[40];
10089 struct cleanup *cleanup;
10090
10091 if (args == 0 || *args == 0)
10092 error (_("Argument required (file name in which to save tracepoints)"));
10093
10094 /* See if we have anything to save. */
10095 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (tp)
10096 {
10097 any_tp = 1;
10098 break;
10099 }
10100 if (!any_tp)
10101 {
10102 warning (_("save-tracepoints: no tracepoints to save."));
10103 return;
10104 }
10105
10106 pathname = tilde_expand (args);
10107 cleanup = make_cleanup (xfree, pathname);
10108 fp = fopen (pathname, "w");
10109 if (!fp)
10110 error (_("Unable to open file '%s' for saving tracepoints (%s)"),
10111 args, safe_strerror (errno));
10112 make_cleanup_fclose (fp);
10113
10114 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (tp)
10115 {
10116 if (tp->addr_string)
10117 fprintf (fp, "trace %s\n", tp->addr_string);
10118 else
10119 {
10120 sprintf_vma (tmp, tp->loc->address);
10121 fprintf (fp, "trace *0x%s\n", tmp);
10122 }
10123
10124 if (tp->pass_count)
10125 fprintf (fp, " passcount %d\n", tp->pass_count);
10126
10127 if (tp->actions)
10128 {
10129 fprintf (fp, " actions\n");
10130 indent = i1;
10131 for (line = tp->actions; line; line = line->next)
10132 {
10133 struct cmd_list_element *cmd;
10134
10135 QUIT; /* allow user to bail out with ^C */
10136 actionline = line->action;
10137 while (isspace ((int) *actionline))
10138 actionline++;
10139
10140 fprintf (fp, "%s%s\n", indent, actionline);
10141 if (*actionline != '#') /* skip for comment lines */
10142 {
10143 cmd = lookup_cmd (&actionline, cmdlist, "", -1, 1);
10144 if (cmd == 0)
10145 error (_("Bad action list item: %s"), actionline);
10146 if (cmd_cfunc_eq (cmd, while_stepping_pseudocommand))
10147 indent = i2;
10148 else if (cmd_cfunc_eq (cmd, end_actions_pseudocommand))
10149 indent = i1;
10150 }
10151 }
10152 }
10153 }
10154 do_cleanups (cleanup);
10155 if (from_tty)
10156 printf_filtered (_("Tracepoints saved to file '%s'.\n"), args);
10157 return;
10158 }
10159
10160 /* Create a vector of all tracepoints. */
10161
10162 VEC(breakpoint_p) *
10163 all_tracepoints ()
10164 {
10165 VEC(breakpoint_p) *tp_vec = 0;
10166 struct breakpoint *tp;
10167
10168 ALL_TRACEPOINTS (tp)
10169 {
10170 VEC_safe_push (breakpoint_p, tp_vec, tp);
10171 }
10172
10173 return tp_vec;
10174 }
10175
10176 \f
10177 /* This help string is used for the break, hbreak, tbreak and thbreak commands.
10178 It is defined as a macro to prevent duplication.
10179 COMMAND should be a string constant containing the name of the command. */
10180 #define BREAK_ARGS_HELP(command) \
10181 command" [LOCATION] [thread THREADNUM] [if CONDITION]\n\
10182 LOCATION may be a line number, function name, or \"*\" and an address.\n\
10183 If a line number is specified, break at start of code for that line.\n\
10184 If a function is specified, break at start of code for that function.\n\
10185 If an address is specified, break at that exact address.\n\
10186 With no LOCATION, uses current execution address of selected stack frame.\n\
10187 This is useful for breaking on return to a stack frame.\n\
10188 \n\
10189 THREADNUM is the number from \"info threads\".\n\
10190 CONDITION is a boolean expression.\n\
10191 \n\
10192 Multiple breakpoints at one place are permitted, and useful if conditional.\n\
10193 \n\
10194 Do \"help breakpoints\" for info on other commands dealing with breakpoints."
10195
10196 /* List of subcommands for "catch". */
10197 static struct cmd_list_element *catch_cmdlist;
10198
10199 /* List of subcommands for "tcatch". */
10200 static struct cmd_list_element *tcatch_cmdlist;
10201
10202 /* Like add_cmd, but add the command to both the "catch" and "tcatch"
10203 lists, and pass some additional user data to the command function. */
10204 static void
10205 add_catch_command (char *name, char *docstring,
10206 void (*sfunc) (char *args, int from_tty,
10207 struct cmd_list_element *command),
10208 char **(*completer) (struct cmd_list_element *cmd,
10209 char *text, char *word),
10210 void *user_data_catch,
10211 void *user_data_tcatch)
10212 {
10213 struct cmd_list_element *command;
10214
10215 command = add_cmd (name, class_breakpoint, NULL, docstring,
10216 &catch_cmdlist);
10217 set_cmd_sfunc (command, sfunc);
10218 set_cmd_context (command, user_data_catch);
10219 set_cmd_completer (command, completer);
10220
10221 command = add_cmd (name, class_breakpoint, NULL, docstring,
10222 &tcatch_cmdlist);
10223 set_cmd_sfunc (command, sfunc);
10224 set_cmd_context (command, user_data_tcatch);
10225 set_cmd_completer (command, completer);
10226 }
10227
10228 static void
10229 clear_syscall_counts (int pid)
10230 {
10231 struct inferior *inf = find_inferior_pid (pid);
10232
10233 inf->total_syscalls_count = 0;
10234 inf->any_syscall_count = 0;
10235 VEC_free (int, inf->syscalls_counts);
10236 }
10237
10238 void
10239 _initialize_breakpoint (void)
10240 {
10241 static struct cmd_list_element *breakpoint_set_cmdlist;
10242 static struct cmd_list_element *breakpoint_show_cmdlist;
10243 struct cmd_list_element *c;
10244
10245 observer_attach_solib_unloaded (disable_breakpoints_in_unloaded_shlib);
10246 observer_attach_inferior_exit (clear_syscall_counts);
10247 observer_attach_memory_changed (invalidate_bp_value_on_memory_change);
10248
10249 breakpoint_chain = 0;
10250 /* Don't bother to call set_breakpoint_count. $bpnum isn't useful
10251 before a breakpoint is set. */
10252 breakpoint_count = 0;
10253
10254 tracepoint_count = 0;
10255
10256 add_com ("ignore", class_breakpoint, ignore_command, _("\
10257 Set ignore-count of breakpoint number N to COUNT.\n\
10258 Usage is `ignore N COUNT'."));
10259 if (xdb_commands)
10260 add_com_alias ("bc", "ignore", class_breakpoint, 1);
10261
10262 add_com ("commands", class_breakpoint, commands_command, _("\
10263 Set commands to be executed when a breakpoint is hit.\n\
10264 Give breakpoint number as argument after \"commands\".\n\
10265 With no argument, the targeted breakpoint is the last one set.\n\
10266 The commands themselves follow starting on the next line.\n\
10267 Type a line containing \"end\" to indicate the end of them.\n\
10268 Give \"silent\" as the first line to make the breakpoint silent;\n\
10269 then no output is printed when it is hit, except what the commands print."));
10270
10271 add_com ("condition", class_breakpoint, condition_command, _("\
10272 Specify breakpoint number N to break only if COND is true.\n\
10273 Usage is `condition N COND', where N is an integer and COND is an\n\
10274 expression to be evaluated whenever breakpoint N is reached."));
10275
10276 c = add_com ("tbreak", class_breakpoint, tbreak_command, _("\
10277 Set a temporary breakpoint.\n\
10278 Like \"break\" except the breakpoint is only temporary,\n\
10279 so it will be deleted when hit. Equivalent to \"break\" followed\n\
10280 by using \"enable delete\" on the breakpoint number.\n\
10281 \n"
10282 BREAK_ARGS_HELP ("tbreak")));
10283 set_cmd_completer (c, location_completer);
10284
10285 c = add_com ("hbreak", class_breakpoint, hbreak_command, _("\
10286 Set a hardware assisted breakpoint.\n\
10287 Like \"break\" except the breakpoint requires hardware support,\n\
10288 some target hardware may not have this support.\n\
10289 \n"
10290 BREAK_ARGS_HELP ("hbreak")));
10291 set_cmd_completer (c, location_completer);
10292
10293 c = add_com ("thbreak", class_breakpoint, thbreak_command, _("\
10294 Set a temporary hardware assisted breakpoint.\n\
10295 Like \"hbreak\" except the breakpoint is only temporary,\n\
10296 so it will be deleted when hit.\n\
10297 \n"
10298 BREAK_ARGS_HELP ("thbreak")));
10299 set_cmd_completer (c, location_completer);
10300
10301 add_prefix_cmd ("enable", class_breakpoint, enable_command, _("\
10302 Enable some breakpoints.\n\
10303 Give breakpoint numbers (separated by spaces) as arguments.\n\
10304 With no subcommand, breakpoints are enabled until you command otherwise.\n\
10305 This is used to cancel the effect of the \"disable\" command.\n\
10306 With a subcommand you can enable temporarily."),
10307 &enablelist, "enable ", 1, &cmdlist);
10308 if (xdb_commands)
10309 add_com ("ab", class_breakpoint, enable_command, _("\
10310 Enable some breakpoints.\n\
10311 Give breakpoint numbers (separated by spaces) as arguments.\n\
10312 With no subcommand, breakpoints are enabled until you command otherwise.\n\
10313 This is used to cancel the effect of the \"disable\" command.\n\
10314 With a subcommand you can enable temporarily."));
10315
10316 add_com_alias ("en", "enable", class_breakpoint, 1);
10317
10318 add_abbrev_prefix_cmd ("breakpoints", class_breakpoint, enable_command, _("\
10319 Enable some breakpoints.\n\
10320 Give breakpoint numbers (separated by spaces) as arguments.\n\
10321 This is used to cancel the effect of the \"disable\" command.\n\
10322 May be abbreviated to simply \"enable\".\n"),
10323 &enablebreaklist, "enable breakpoints ", 1, &enablelist);
10324
10325 add_cmd ("once", no_class, enable_once_command, _("\
10326 Enable breakpoints for one hit. Give breakpoint numbers.\n\
10327 If a breakpoint is hit while enabled in this fashion, it becomes disabled."),
10328 &enablebreaklist);
10329
10330 add_cmd ("delete", no_class, enable_delete_command, _("\
10331 Enable breakpoints and delete when hit. Give breakpoint numbers.\n\
10332 If a breakpoint is hit while enabled in this fashion, it is deleted."),
10333 &enablebreaklist);
10334
10335 add_cmd ("delete", no_class, enable_delete_command, _("\
10336 Enable breakpoints and delete when hit. Give breakpoint numbers.\n\
10337 If a breakpoint is hit while enabled in this fashion, it is deleted."),
10338 &enablelist);
10339
10340 add_cmd ("once", no_class, enable_once_command, _("\
10341 Enable breakpoints for one hit. Give breakpoint numbers.\n\
10342 If a breakpoint is hit while enabled in this fashion, it becomes disabled."),
10343 &enablelist);
10344
10345 add_prefix_cmd ("disable", class_breakpoint, disable_command, _("\
10346 Disable some breakpoints.\n\
10347 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
10348 To disable all breakpoints, give no argument.\n\
10349 A disabled breakpoint is not forgotten, but has no effect until reenabled."),
10350 &disablelist, "disable ", 1, &cmdlist);
10351 add_com_alias ("dis", "disable", class_breakpoint, 1);
10352 add_com_alias ("disa", "disable", class_breakpoint, 1);
10353 if (xdb_commands)
10354 add_com ("sb", class_breakpoint, disable_command, _("\
10355 Disable some breakpoints.\n\
10356 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
10357 To disable all breakpoints, give no argument.\n\
10358 A disabled breakpoint is not forgotten, but has no effect until reenabled."));
10359
10360 add_cmd ("breakpoints", class_alias, disable_command, _("\
10361 Disable some breakpoints.\n\
10362 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
10363 To disable all breakpoints, give no argument.\n\
10364 A disabled breakpoint is not forgotten, but has no effect until reenabled.\n\
10365 This command may be abbreviated \"disable\"."),
10366 &disablelist);
10367
10368 add_prefix_cmd ("delete", class_breakpoint, delete_command, _("\
10369 Delete some breakpoints or auto-display expressions.\n\
10370 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
10371 To delete all breakpoints, give no argument.\n\
10372 \n\
10373 Also a prefix command for deletion of other GDB objects.\n\
10374 The \"unset\" command is also an alias for \"delete\"."),
10375 &deletelist, "delete ", 1, &cmdlist);
10376 add_com_alias ("d", "delete", class_breakpoint, 1);
10377 add_com_alias ("del", "delete", class_breakpoint, 1);
10378 if (xdb_commands)
10379 add_com ("db", class_breakpoint, delete_command, _("\
10380 Delete some breakpoints.\n\
10381 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
10382 To delete all breakpoints, give no argument.\n"));
10383
10384 add_cmd ("breakpoints", class_alias, delete_command, _("\
10385 Delete some breakpoints or auto-display expressions.\n\
10386 Arguments are breakpoint numbers with spaces in between.\n\
10387 To delete all breakpoints, give no argument.\n\
10388 This command may be abbreviated \"delete\"."),
10389 &deletelist);
10390
10391 add_com ("clear", class_breakpoint, clear_command, _("\
10392 Clear breakpoint at specified line or function.\n\
10393 Argument may be line number, function name, or \"*\" and an address.\n\
10394 If line number is specified, all breakpoints in that line are cleared.\n\
10395 If function is specified, breakpoints at beginning of function are cleared.\n\
10396 If an address is specified, breakpoints at that address are cleared.\n\
10397 \n\
10398 With no argument, clears all breakpoints in the line that the selected frame\n\
10399 is executing in.\n\
10400 \n\
10401 See also the \"delete\" command which clears breakpoints by number."));
10402
10403 c = add_com ("break", class_breakpoint, break_command, _("\
10404 Set breakpoint at specified line or function.\n"
10405 BREAK_ARGS_HELP ("break")));
10406 set_cmd_completer (c, location_completer);
10407
10408 add_com_alias ("b", "break", class_run, 1);
10409 add_com_alias ("br", "break", class_run, 1);
10410 add_com_alias ("bre", "break", class_run, 1);
10411 add_com_alias ("brea", "break", class_run, 1);
10412
10413 if (xdb_commands)
10414 add_com_alias ("ba", "break", class_breakpoint, 1);
10415
10416 if (dbx_commands)
10417 {
10418 add_abbrev_prefix_cmd ("stop", class_breakpoint, stop_command, _("\
10419 Break in function/address or break at a line in the current file."),
10420 &stoplist, "stop ", 1, &cmdlist);
10421 add_cmd ("in", class_breakpoint, stopin_command,
10422 _("Break in function or address."), &stoplist);
10423 add_cmd ("at", class_breakpoint, stopat_command,
10424 _("Break at a line in the current file."), &stoplist);
10425 add_com ("status", class_info, breakpoints_info, _("\
10426 Status of user-settable breakpoints, or breakpoint number NUMBER.\n\
10427 The \"Type\" column indicates one of:\n\
10428 \tbreakpoint - normal breakpoint\n\
10429 \twatchpoint - watchpoint\n\
10430 The \"Disp\" column contains one of \"keep\", \"del\", or \"dis\" to indicate\n\
10431 the disposition of the breakpoint after it gets hit. \"dis\" means that the\n\
10432 breakpoint will be disabled. The \"Address\" and \"What\" columns indicate the\n\
10433 address and file/line number respectively.\n\
10434 \n\
10435 Convenience variable \"$_\" and default examine address for \"x\"\n\
10436 are set to the address of the last breakpoint listed unless the command\n\
10437 is prefixed with \"server \".\n\n\
10438 Convenience variable \"$bpnum\" contains the number of the last\n\
10439 breakpoint set."));
10440 }
10441
10442 add_info ("breakpoints", breakpoints_info, _("\
10443 Status of user-settable breakpoints, or breakpoint number NUMBER.\n\
10444 The \"Type\" column indicates one of:\n\
10445 \tbreakpoint - normal breakpoint\n\
10446 \twatchpoint - watchpoint\n\
10447 The \"Disp\" column contains one of \"keep\", \"del\", or \"dis\" to indicate\n\
10448 the disposition of the breakpoint after it gets hit. \"dis\" means that the\n\
10449 breakpoint will be disabled. The \"Address\" and \"What\" columns indicate the\n\
10450 address and file/line number respectively.\n\
10451 \n\
10452 Convenience variable \"$_\" and default examine address for \"x\"\n\
10453 are set to the address of the last breakpoint listed unless the command\n\
10454 is prefixed with \"server \".\n\n\
10455 Convenience variable \"$bpnum\" contains the number of the last\n\
10456 breakpoint set."));
10457
10458 add_info_alias ("b", "breakpoints", 1);
10459
10460 if (xdb_commands)
10461 add_com ("lb", class_breakpoint, breakpoints_info, _("\
10462 Status of user-settable breakpoints, or breakpoint number NUMBER.\n\
10463 The \"Type\" column indicates one of:\n\
10464 \tbreakpoint - normal breakpoint\n\
10465 \twatchpoint - watchpoint\n\
10466 The \"Disp\" column contains one of \"keep\", \"del\", or \"dis\" to indicate\n\
10467 the disposition of the breakpoint after it gets hit. \"dis\" means that the\n\
10468 breakpoint will be disabled. The \"Address\" and \"What\" columns indicate the\n\
10469 address and file/line number respectively.\n\
10470 \n\
10471 Convenience variable \"$_\" and default examine address for \"x\"\n\
10472 are set to the address of the last breakpoint listed unless the command\n\
10473 is prefixed with \"server \".\n\n\
10474 Convenience variable \"$bpnum\" contains the number of the last\n\
10475 breakpoint set."));
10476
10477 add_cmd ("breakpoints", class_maintenance, maintenance_info_breakpoints, _("\
10478 Status of all breakpoints, or breakpoint number NUMBER.\n\
10479 The \"Type\" column indicates one of:\n\
10480 \tbreakpoint - normal breakpoint\n\
10481 \twatchpoint - watchpoint\n\
10482 \tlongjmp - internal breakpoint used to step through longjmp()\n\
10483 \tlongjmp resume - internal breakpoint at the target of longjmp()\n\
10484 \tuntil - internal breakpoint used by the \"until\" command\n\
10485 \tfinish - internal breakpoint used by the \"finish\" command\n\
10486 The \"Disp\" column contains one of \"keep\", \"del\", or \"dis\" to indicate\n\
10487 the disposition of the breakpoint after it gets hit. \"dis\" means that the\n\
10488 breakpoint will be disabled. The \"Address\" and \"What\" columns indicate the\n\
10489 address and file/line number respectively.\n\
10490 \n\
10491 Convenience variable \"$_\" and default examine address for \"x\"\n\
10492 are set to the address of the last breakpoint listed unless the command\n\
10493 is prefixed with \"server \".\n\n\
10494 Convenience variable \"$bpnum\" contains the number of the last\n\
10495 breakpoint set."),
10496 &maintenanceinfolist);
10497
10498 add_prefix_cmd ("catch", class_breakpoint, catch_command, _("\
10499 Set catchpoints to catch events."),
10500 &catch_cmdlist, "catch ",
10501 0/*allow-unknown*/, &cmdlist);
10502
10503 add_prefix_cmd ("tcatch", class_breakpoint, tcatch_command, _("\
10504 Set temporary catchpoints to catch events."),
10505 &tcatch_cmdlist, "tcatch ",
10506 0/*allow-unknown*/, &cmdlist);
10507
10508 /* Add catch and tcatch sub-commands. */
10509 add_catch_command ("catch", _("\
10510 Catch an exception, when caught.\n\
10511 With an argument, catch only exceptions with the given name."),
10512 catch_catch_command,
10513 NULL,
10514 CATCH_PERMANENT,
10515 CATCH_TEMPORARY);
10516 add_catch_command ("throw", _("\
10517 Catch an exception, when thrown.\n\
10518 With an argument, catch only exceptions with the given name."),
10519 catch_throw_command,
10520 NULL,
10521 CATCH_PERMANENT,
10522 CATCH_TEMPORARY);
10523 add_catch_command ("fork", _("Catch calls to fork."),
10524 catch_fork_command_1,
10525 NULL,
10526 (void *) (uintptr_t) catch_fork_permanent,
10527 (void *) (uintptr_t) catch_fork_temporary);
10528 add_catch_command ("vfork", _("Catch calls to vfork."),
10529 catch_fork_command_1,
10530 NULL,
10531 (void *) (uintptr_t) catch_vfork_permanent,
10532 (void *) (uintptr_t) catch_vfork_temporary);
10533 add_catch_command ("exec", _("Catch calls to exec."),
10534 catch_exec_command_1,
10535 NULL,
10536 CATCH_PERMANENT,
10537 CATCH_TEMPORARY);
10538 add_catch_command ("syscall", _("\
10539 Catch system calls by their names and/or numbers.\n\
10540 Arguments say which system calls to catch. If no arguments\n\
10541 are given, every system call will be caught.\n\
10542 Arguments, if given, should be one or more system call names\n\
10543 (if your system supports that), or system call numbers."),
10544 catch_syscall_command_1,
10545 catch_syscall_completer,
10546 CATCH_PERMANENT,
10547 CATCH_TEMPORARY);
10548 add_catch_command ("exception", _("\
10549 Catch Ada exceptions, when raised.\n\
10550 With an argument, catch only exceptions with the given name."),
10551 catch_ada_exception_command,
10552 NULL,
10553 CATCH_PERMANENT,
10554 CATCH_TEMPORARY);
10555 add_catch_command ("assert", _("\
10556 Catch failed Ada assertions, when raised.\n\
10557 With an argument, catch only exceptions with the given name."),
10558 catch_assert_command,
10559 NULL,
10560 CATCH_PERMANENT,
10561 CATCH_TEMPORARY);
10562
10563 c = add_com ("watch", class_breakpoint, watch_command, _("\
10564 Set a watchpoint for an expression.\n\
10565 A watchpoint stops execution of your program whenever the value of\n\
10566 an expression changes."));
10567 set_cmd_completer (c, expression_completer);
10568
10569 c = add_com ("rwatch", class_breakpoint, rwatch_command, _("\
10570 Set a read watchpoint for an expression.\n\
10571 A watchpoint stops execution of your program whenever the value of\n\
10572 an expression is read."));
10573 set_cmd_completer (c, expression_completer);
10574
10575 c = add_com ("awatch", class_breakpoint, awatch_command, _("\
10576 Set a watchpoint for an expression.\n\
10577 A watchpoint stops execution of your program whenever the value of\n\
10578 an expression is either read or written."));
10579 set_cmd_completer (c, expression_completer);
10580
10581 add_info ("watchpoints", breakpoints_info,
10582 _("Synonym for ``info breakpoints''."));
10583
10584
10585 /* XXX: cagney/2005-02-23: This should be a boolean, and should
10586 respond to changes - contrary to the description. */
10587 add_setshow_zinteger_cmd ("can-use-hw-watchpoints", class_support,
10588 &can_use_hw_watchpoints, _("\
10589 Set debugger's willingness to use watchpoint hardware."), _("\
10590 Show debugger's willingness to use watchpoint hardware."), _("\
10591 If zero, gdb will not use hardware for new watchpoints, even if\n\
10592 such is available. (However, any hardware watchpoints that were\n\
10593 created before setting this to nonzero, will continue to use watchpoint\n\
10594 hardware.)"),
10595 NULL,
10596 show_can_use_hw_watchpoints,
10597 &setlist, &showlist);
10598
10599 can_use_hw_watchpoints = 1;
10600
10601 /* Tracepoint manipulation commands. */
10602
10603 c = add_com ("trace", class_breakpoint, trace_command, _("\
10604 Set a tracepoint at specified line or function.\n\
10605 \n"
10606 BREAK_ARGS_HELP ("trace") "\n\
10607 Do \"help tracepoints\" for info on other tracepoint commands."));
10608 set_cmd_completer (c, location_completer);
10609
10610 add_com_alias ("tp", "trace", class_alias, 0);
10611 add_com_alias ("tr", "trace", class_alias, 1);
10612 add_com_alias ("tra", "trace", class_alias, 1);
10613 add_com_alias ("trac", "trace", class_alias, 1);
10614
10615 c = add_com ("ftrace", class_breakpoint, ftrace_command, _("\
10616 Set a fast tracepoint at specified line or function.\n\
10617 \n"
10618 BREAK_ARGS_HELP ("ftrace") "\n\
10619 Do \"help tracepoints\" for info on other tracepoint commands."));
10620 set_cmd_completer (c, location_completer);
10621
10622 add_info ("tracepoints", tracepoints_info, _("\
10623 Status of tracepoints, or tracepoint number NUMBER.\n\
10624 Convenience variable \"$tpnum\" contains the number of the\n\
10625 last tracepoint set."));
10626
10627 add_info_alias ("tp", "tracepoints", 1);
10628
10629 add_cmd ("tracepoints", class_trace, delete_trace_command, _("\
10630 Delete specified tracepoints.\n\
10631 Arguments are tracepoint numbers, separated by spaces.\n\
10632 No argument means delete all tracepoints."),
10633 &deletelist);
10634
10635 c = add_cmd ("tracepoints", class_trace, disable_trace_command, _("\
10636 Disable specified tracepoints.\n\
10637 Arguments are tracepoint numbers, separated by spaces.\n\
10638 No argument means disable all tracepoints."),
10639 &disablelist);
10640 deprecate_cmd (c, "disable");
10641
10642 c = add_cmd ("tracepoints", class_trace, enable_trace_command, _("\
10643 Enable specified tracepoints.\n\
10644 Arguments are tracepoint numbers, separated by spaces.\n\
10645 No argument means enable all tracepoints."),
10646 &enablelist);
10647 deprecate_cmd (c, "enable");
10648
10649 add_com ("passcount", class_trace, trace_pass_command, _("\
10650 Set the passcount for a tracepoint.\n\
10651 The trace will end when the tracepoint has been passed 'count' times.\n\
10652 Usage: passcount COUNT TPNUM, where TPNUM may also be \"all\";\n\
10653 if TPNUM is omitted, passcount refers to the last tracepoint defined."));
10654
10655 c = add_com ("save-tracepoints", class_trace, tracepoint_save_command, _("\
10656 Save current tracepoint definitions as a script.\n\
10657 Use the 'source' command in another debug session to restore them."));
10658 set_cmd_completer (c, filename_completer);
10659
10660 add_prefix_cmd ("breakpoint", class_maintenance, set_breakpoint_cmd, _("\
10661 Breakpoint specific settings\n\
10662 Configure various breakpoint-specific variables such as\n\
10663 pending breakpoint behavior"),
10664 &breakpoint_set_cmdlist, "set breakpoint ",
10665 0/*allow-unknown*/, &setlist);
10666 add_prefix_cmd ("breakpoint", class_maintenance, show_breakpoint_cmd, _("\
10667 Breakpoint specific settings\n\
10668 Configure various breakpoint-specific variables such as\n\
10669 pending breakpoint behavior"),
10670 &breakpoint_show_cmdlist, "show breakpoint ",
10671 0/*allow-unknown*/, &showlist);
10672
10673 add_setshow_auto_boolean_cmd ("pending", no_class,
10674 &pending_break_support, _("\
10675 Set debugger's behavior regarding pending breakpoints."), _("\
10676 Show debugger's behavior regarding pending breakpoints."), _("\
10677 If on, an unrecognized breakpoint location will cause gdb to create a\n\
10678 pending breakpoint. If off, an unrecognized breakpoint location results in\n\
10679 an error. If auto, an unrecognized breakpoint location results in a\n\
10680 user-query to see if a pending breakpoint should be created."),
10681 NULL,
10682 show_pending_break_support,
10683 &breakpoint_set_cmdlist,
10684 &breakpoint_show_cmdlist);
10685
10686 pending_break_support = AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO;
10687
10688 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("auto-hw", no_class,
10689 &automatic_hardware_breakpoints, _("\
10690 Set automatic usage of hardware breakpoints."), _("\
10691 Show automatic usage of hardware breakpoints."), _("\
10692 If set, the debugger will automatically use hardware breakpoints for\n\
10693 breakpoints set with \"break\" but falling in read-only memory. If not set,\n\
10694 a warning will be emitted for such breakpoints."),
10695 NULL,
10696 show_automatic_hardware_breakpoints,
10697 &breakpoint_set_cmdlist,
10698 &breakpoint_show_cmdlist);
10699
10700 add_setshow_enum_cmd ("always-inserted", class_support,
10701 always_inserted_enums, &always_inserted_mode, _("\
10702 Set mode for inserting breakpoints."), _("\
10703 Show mode for inserting breakpoints."), _("\
10704 When this mode is off, breakpoints are inserted in inferior when it is\n\
10705 resumed, and removed when execution stops. When this mode is on,\n\
10706 breakpoints are inserted immediately and removed only when the user\n\
10707 deletes the breakpoint. When this mode is auto (which is the default),\n\
10708 the behaviour depends on the non-stop setting (see help set non-stop).\n\
10709 In this case, if gdb is controlling the inferior in non-stop mode, gdb\n\
10710 behaves as if always-inserted mode is on; if gdb is controlling the\n\
10711 inferior in all-stop mode, gdb behaves as if always-inserted mode is off."),
10712 NULL,
10713 &show_always_inserted_mode,
10714 &breakpoint_set_cmdlist,
10715 &breakpoint_show_cmdlist);
10716
10717 automatic_hardware_breakpoints = 1;
10718
10719 observer_attach_about_to_proceed (breakpoint_about_to_proceed);
10720 }