gdb/
[binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / value.c
1 /* Low level packing and unpacking of values for GDB, the GNU Debugger.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995,
4 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008,
5 2009, 2010, 2011 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 "gdb_string.h"
25 #include "symtab.h"
26 #include "gdbtypes.h"
27 #include "value.h"
28 #include "gdbcore.h"
29 #include "command.h"
30 #include "gdbcmd.h"
31 #include "target.h"
32 #include "language.h"
33 #include "demangle.h"
34 #include "doublest.h"
35 #include "gdb_assert.h"
36 #include "regcache.h"
37 #include "block.h"
38 #include "dfp.h"
39 #include "objfiles.h"
40 #include "valprint.h"
41 #include "cli/cli-decode.h"
42 #include "exceptions.h"
43 #include "python/python.h"
44 #include <ctype.h>
45 #include "tracepoint.h"
46
47 /* Prototypes for exported functions. */
48
49 void _initialize_values (void);
50
51 /* Definition of a user function. */
52 struct internal_function
53 {
54 /* The name of the function. It is a bit odd to have this in the
55 function itself -- the user might use a differently-named
56 convenience variable to hold the function. */
57 char *name;
58
59 /* The handler. */
60 internal_function_fn handler;
61
62 /* User data for the handler. */
63 void *cookie;
64 };
65
66 /* Defines an [OFFSET, OFFSET + LENGTH) range. */
67
68 struct range
69 {
70 /* Lowest offset in the range. */
71 int offset;
72
73 /* Length of the range. */
74 int length;
75 };
76
77 typedef struct range range_s;
78
79 DEF_VEC_O(range_s);
80
81 /* Returns true if the ranges defined by [offset1, offset1+len1) and
82 [offset2, offset2+len2) overlap. */
83
84 static int
85 ranges_overlap (int offset1, int len1,
86 int offset2, int len2)
87 {
88 ULONGEST h, l;
89
90 l = max (offset1, offset2);
91 h = min (offset1 + len1, offset2 + len2);
92 return (l < h);
93 }
94
95 /* Returns true if the first argument is strictly less than the
96 second, useful for VEC_lower_bound. We keep ranges sorted by
97 offset and coalesce overlapping and contiguous ranges, so this just
98 compares the starting offset. */
99
100 static int
101 range_lessthan (const range_s *r1, const range_s *r2)
102 {
103 return r1->offset < r2->offset;
104 }
105
106 /* Returns true if RANGES contains any range that overlaps [OFFSET,
107 OFFSET+LENGTH). */
108
109 static int
110 ranges_contain (VEC(range_s) *ranges, int offset, int length)
111 {
112 range_s what;
113 int i;
114
115 what.offset = offset;
116 what.length = length;
117
118 /* We keep ranges sorted by offset and coalesce overlapping and
119 contiguous ranges, so to check if a range list contains a given
120 range, we can do a binary search for the position the given range
121 would be inserted if we only considered the starting OFFSET of
122 ranges. We call that position I. Since we also have LENGTH to
123 care for (this is a range afterall), we need to check if the
124 _previous_ range overlaps the I range. E.g.,
125
126 R
127 |---|
128 |---| |---| |------| ... |--|
129 0 1 2 N
130
131 I=1
132
133 In the case above, the binary search would return `I=1', meaning,
134 this OFFSET should be inserted at position 1, and the current
135 position 1 should be pushed further (and before 2). But, `0'
136 overlaps with R.
137
138 Then we need to check if the I range overlaps the I range itself.
139 E.g.,
140
141 R
142 |---|
143 |---| |---| |-------| ... |--|
144 0 1 2 N
145
146 I=1
147 */
148
149 i = VEC_lower_bound (range_s, ranges, &what, range_lessthan);
150
151 if (i > 0)
152 {
153 struct range *bef = VEC_index (range_s, ranges, i - 1);
154
155 if (ranges_overlap (bef->offset, bef->length, offset, length))
156 return 1;
157 }
158
159 if (i < VEC_length (range_s, ranges))
160 {
161 struct range *r = VEC_index (range_s, ranges, i);
162
163 if (ranges_overlap (r->offset, r->length, offset, length))
164 return 1;
165 }
166
167 return 0;
168 }
169
170 static struct cmd_list_element *functionlist;
171
172 struct value
173 {
174 /* Type of value; either not an lval, or one of the various
175 different possible kinds of lval. */
176 enum lval_type lval;
177
178 /* Is it modifiable? Only relevant if lval != not_lval. */
179 int modifiable;
180
181 /* Location of value (if lval). */
182 union
183 {
184 /* If lval == lval_memory, this is the address in the inferior.
185 If lval == lval_register, this is the byte offset into the
186 registers structure. */
187 CORE_ADDR address;
188
189 /* Pointer to internal variable. */
190 struct internalvar *internalvar;
191
192 /* If lval == lval_computed, this is a set of function pointers
193 to use to access and describe the value, and a closure pointer
194 for them to use. */
195 struct
196 {
197 struct lval_funcs *funcs; /* Functions to call. */
198 void *closure; /* Closure for those functions to use. */
199 } computed;
200 } location;
201
202 /* Describes offset of a value within lval of a structure in bytes.
203 If lval == lval_memory, this is an offset to the address. If
204 lval == lval_register, this is a further offset from
205 location.address within the registers structure. Note also the
206 member embedded_offset below. */
207 int offset;
208
209 /* Only used for bitfields; number of bits contained in them. */
210 int bitsize;
211
212 /* Only used for bitfields; position of start of field. For
213 gdbarch_bits_big_endian=0 targets, it is the position of the LSB. For
214 gdbarch_bits_big_endian=1 targets, it is the position of the MSB. */
215 int bitpos;
216
217 /* Only used for bitfields; the containing value. This allows a
218 single read from the target when displaying multiple
219 bitfields. */
220 struct value *parent;
221
222 /* Frame register value is relative to. This will be described in
223 the lval enum above as "lval_register". */
224 struct frame_id frame_id;
225
226 /* Type of the value. */
227 struct type *type;
228
229 /* If a value represents a C++ object, then the `type' field gives
230 the object's compile-time type. If the object actually belongs
231 to some class derived from `type', perhaps with other base
232 classes and additional members, then `type' is just a subobject
233 of the real thing, and the full object is probably larger than
234 `type' would suggest.
235
236 If `type' is a dynamic class (i.e. one with a vtable), then GDB
237 can actually determine the object's run-time type by looking at
238 the run-time type information in the vtable. When this
239 information is available, we may elect to read in the entire
240 object, for several reasons:
241
242 - When printing the value, the user would probably rather see the
243 full object, not just the limited portion apparent from the
244 compile-time type.
245
246 - If `type' has virtual base classes, then even printing `type'
247 alone may require reaching outside the `type' portion of the
248 object to wherever the virtual base class has been stored.
249
250 When we store the entire object, `enclosing_type' is the run-time
251 type -- the complete object -- and `embedded_offset' is the
252 offset of `type' within that larger type, in bytes. The
253 value_contents() macro takes `embedded_offset' into account, so
254 most GDB code continues to see the `type' portion of the value,
255 just as the inferior would.
256
257 If `type' is a pointer to an object, then `enclosing_type' is a
258 pointer to the object's run-time type, and `pointed_to_offset' is
259 the offset in bytes from the full object to the pointed-to object
260 -- that is, the value `embedded_offset' would have if we followed
261 the pointer and fetched the complete object. (I don't really see
262 the point. Why not just determine the run-time type when you
263 indirect, and avoid the special case? The contents don't matter
264 until you indirect anyway.)
265
266 If we're not doing anything fancy, `enclosing_type' is equal to
267 `type', and `embedded_offset' is zero, so everything works
268 normally. */
269 struct type *enclosing_type;
270 int embedded_offset;
271 int pointed_to_offset;
272
273 /* Values are stored in a chain, so that they can be deleted easily
274 over calls to the inferior. Values assigned to internal
275 variables, put into the value history or exposed to Python are
276 taken off this list. */
277 struct value *next;
278
279 /* Register number if the value is from a register. */
280 short regnum;
281
282 /* If zero, contents of this value are in the contents field. If
283 nonzero, contents are in inferior. If the lval field is lval_memory,
284 the contents are in inferior memory at location.address plus offset.
285 The lval field may also be lval_register.
286
287 WARNING: This field is used by the code which handles watchpoints
288 (see breakpoint.c) to decide whether a particular value can be
289 watched by hardware watchpoints. If the lazy flag is set for
290 some member of a value chain, it is assumed that this member of
291 the chain doesn't need to be watched as part of watching the
292 value itself. This is how GDB avoids watching the entire struct
293 or array when the user wants to watch a single struct member or
294 array element. If you ever change the way lazy flag is set and
295 reset, be sure to consider this use as well! */
296 char lazy;
297
298 /* If nonzero, this is the value of a variable which does not
299 actually exist in the program. */
300 char optimized_out;
301
302 /* If value is a variable, is it initialized or not. */
303 int initialized;
304
305 /* If value is from the stack. If this is set, read_stack will be
306 used instead of read_memory to enable extra caching. */
307 int stack;
308
309 /* Actual contents of the value. Target byte-order. NULL or not
310 valid if lazy is nonzero. */
311 gdb_byte *contents;
312
313 /* Unavailable ranges in CONTENTS. We mark unavailable ranges,
314 rather than available, since the common and default case is for a
315 value to be available. This is filled in at value read time. */
316 VEC(range_s) *unavailable;
317
318 /* The number of references to this value. When a value is created,
319 the value chain holds a reference, so REFERENCE_COUNT is 1. If
320 release_value is called, this value is removed from the chain but
321 the caller of release_value now has a reference to this value.
322 The caller must arrange for a call to value_free later. */
323 int reference_count;
324 };
325
326 int
327 value_bytes_available (const struct value *value, int offset, int length)
328 {
329 gdb_assert (!value->lazy);
330
331 return !ranges_contain (value->unavailable, offset, length);
332 }
333
334 int
335 value_entirely_available (struct value *value)
336 {
337 /* We can only tell whether the whole value is available when we try
338 to read it. */
339 if (value->lazy)
340 value_fetch_lazy (value);
341
342 if (VEC_empty (range_s, value->unavailable))
343 return 1;
344 return 0;
345 }
346
347 void
348 mark_value_bytes_unavailable (struct value *value, int offset, int length)
349 {
350 range_s newr;
351 int i;
352
353 /* Insert the range sorted. If there's overlap or the new range
354 would be contiguous with an existing range, merge. */
355
356 newr.offset = offset;
357 newr.length = length;
358
359 /* Do a binary search for the position the given range would be
360 inserted if we only considered the starting OFFSET of ranges.
361 Call that position I. Since we also have LENGTH to care for
362 (this is a range afterall), we need to check if the _previous_
363 range overlaps the I range. E.g., calling R the new range:
364
365 #1 - overlaps with previous
366
367 R
368 |-...-|
369 |---| |---| |------| ... |--|
370 0 1 2 N
371
372 I=1
373
374 In the case #1 above, the binary search would return `I=1',
375 meaning, this OFFSET should be inserted at position 1, and the
376 current position 1 should be pushed further (and become 2). But,
377 note that `0' overlaps with R, so we want to merge them.
378
379 A similar consideration needs to be taken if the new range would
380 be contiguous with the previous range:
381
382 #2 - contiguous with previous
383
384 R
385 |-...-|
386 |--| |---| |------| ... |--|
387 0 1 2 N
388
389 I=1
390
391 If there's no overlap with the previous range, as in:
392
393 #3 - not overlapping and not contiguous
394
395 R
396 |-...-|
397 |--| |---| |------| ... |--|
398 0 1 2 N
399
400 I=1
401
402 or if I is 0:
403
404 #4 - R is the range with lowest offset
405
406 R
407 |-...-|
408 |--| |---| |------| ... |--|
409 0 1 2 N
410
411 I=0
412
413 ... we just push the new range to I.
414
415 All the 4 cases above need to consider that the new range may
416 also overlap several of the ranges that follow, or that R may be
417 contiguous with the following range, and merge. E.g.,
418
419 #5 - overlapping following ranges
420
421 R
422 |------------------------|
423 |--| |---| |------| ... |--|
424 0 1 2 N
425
426 I=0
427
428 or:
429
430 R
431 |-------|
432 |--| |---| |------| ... |--|
433 0 1 2 N
434
435 I=1
436
437 */
438
439 i = VEC_lower_bound (range_s, value->unavailable, &newr, range_lessthan);
440 if (i > 0)
441 {
442 struct range *bef = VEC_index (range_s, value->unavailable, i - 1);
443
444 if (ranges_overlap (bef->offset, bef->length, offset, length))
445 {
446 /* #1 */
447 ULONGEST l = min (bef->offset, offset);
448 ULONGEST h = max (bef->offset + bef->length, offset + length);
449
450 bef->offset = l;
451 bef->length = h - l;
452 i--;
453 }
454 else if (offset == bef->offset + bef->length)
455 {
456 /* #2 */
457 bef->length += length;
458 i--;
459 }
460 else
461 {
462 /* #3 */
463 VEC_safe_insert (range_s, value->unavailable, i, &newr);
464 }
465 }
466 else
467 {
468 /* #4 */
469 VEC_safe_insert (range_s, value->unavailable, i, &newr);
470 }
471
472 /* Check whether the ranges following the one we've just added or
473 touched can be folded in (#5 above). */
474 if (i + 1 < VEC_length (range_s, value->unavailable))
475 {
476 struct range *t;
477 struct range *r;
478 int removed = 0;
479 int next = i + 1;
480
481 /* Get the range we just touched. */
482 t = VEC_index (range_s, value->unavailable, i);
483 removed = 0;
484
485 i = next;
486 for (; VEC_iterate (range_s, value->unavailable, i, r); i++)
487 if (r->offset <= t->offset + t->length)
488 {
489 ULONGEST l, h;
490
491 l = min (t->offset, r->offset);
492 h = max (t->offset + t->length, r->offset + r->length);
493
494 t->offset = l;
495 t->length = h - l;
496
497 removed++;
498 }
499 else
500 {
501 /* If we couldn't merge this one, we won't be able to
502 merge following ones either, since the ranges are
503 always sorted by OFFSET. */
504 break;
505 }
506
507 if (removed != 0)
508 VEC_block_remove (range_s, value->unavailable, next, removed);
509 }
510 }
511
512 /* Find the first range in RANGES that overlaps the range defined by
513 OFFSET and LENGTH, starting at element POS in the RANGES vector,
514 Returns the index into RANGES where such overlapping range was
515 found, or -1 if none was found. */
516
517 static int
518 find_first_range_overlap (VEC(range_s) *ranges, int pos,
519 int offset, int length)
520 {
521 range_s *r;
522 int i;
523
524 for (i = pos; VEC_iterate (range_s, ranges, i, r); i++)
525 if (ranges_overlap (r->offset, r->length, offset, length))
526 return i;
527
528 return -1;
529 }
530
531 int
532 value_available_contents_eq (const struct value *val1, int offset1,
533 const struct value *val2, int offset2,
534 int length)
535 {
536 int idx1 = 0, idx2 = 0;
537
538 /* This routine is used by printing routines, where we should
539 already have read the value. Note that we only know whether a
540 value chunk is available if we've tried to read it. */
541 gdb_assert (!val1->lazy && !val2->lazy);
542
543 while (length > 0)
544 {
545 range_s *r1, *r2;
546 ULONGEST l1, h1;
547 ULONGEST l2, h2;
548
549 idx1 = find_first_range_overlap (val1->unavailable, idx1,
550 offset1, length);
551 idx2 = find_first_range_overlap (val2->unavailable, idx2,
552 offset2, length);
553
554 /* The usual case is for both values to be completely available. */
555 if (idx1 == -1 && idx2 == -1)
556 return (memcmp (val1->contents + offset1,
557 val2->contents + offset2,
558 length) == 0);
559 /* The contents only match equal if the available set matches as
560 well. */
561 else if (idx1 == -1 || idx2 == -1)
562 return 0;
563
564 gdb_assert (idx1 != -1 && idx2 != -1);
565
566 r1 = VEC_index (range_s, val1->unavailable, idx1);
567 r2 = VEC_index (range_s, val2->unavailable, idx2);
568
569 /* Get the unavailable windows intersected by the incoming
570 ranges. The first and last ranges that overlap the argument
571 range may be wider than said incoming arguments ranges. */
572 l1 = max (offset1, r1->offset);
573 h1 = min (offset1 + length, r1->offset + r1->length);
574
575 l2 = max (offset2, r2->offset);
576 h2 = min (offset2 + length, r2->offset + r2->length);
577
578 /* Make them relative to the respective start offsets, so we can
579 compare them for equality. */
580 l1 -= offset1;
581 h1 -= offset1;
582
583 l2 -= offset2;
584 h2 -= offset2;
585
586 /* Different availability, no match. */
587 if (l1 != l2 || h1 != h2)
588 return 0;
589
590 /* Compare the _available_ contents. */
591 if (memcmp (val1->contents + offset1,
592 val2->contents + offset2,
593 l1) != 0)
594 return 0;
595
596 length -= h1;
597 offset1 += h1;
598 offset2 += h1;
599 }
600
601 return 1;
602 }
603
604 /* Prototypes for local functions. */
605
606 static void show_values (char *, int);
607
608 static void show_convenience (char *, int);
609
610
611 /* The value-history records all the values printed
612 by print commands during this session. Each chunk
613 records 60 consecutive values. The first chunk on
614 the chain records the most recent values.
615 The total number of values is in value_history_count. */
616
617 #define VALUE_HISTORY_CHUNK 60
618
619 struct value_history_chunk
620 {
621 struct value_history_chunk *next;
622 struct value *values[VALUE_HISTORY_CHUNK];
623 };
624
625 /* Chain of chunks now in use. */
626
627 static struct value_history_chunk *value_history_chain;
628
629 static int value_history_count; /* Abs number of last entry stored. */
630
631 \f
632 /* List of all value objects currently allocated
633 (except for those released by calls to release_value)
634 This is so they can be freed after each command. */
635
636 static struct value *all_values;
637
638 /* Allocate a lazy value for type TYPE. Its actual content is
639 "lazily" allocated too: the content field of the return value is
640 NULL; it will be allocated when it is fetched from the target. */
641
642 struct value *
643 allocate_value_lazy (struct type *type)
644 {
645 struct value *val;
646
647 /* Call check_typedef on our type to make sure that, if TYPE
648 is a TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF, its length is set to the length
649 of the target type instead of zero. However, we do not
650 replace the typedef type by the target type, because we want
651 to keep the typedef in order to be able to set the VAL's type
652 description correctly. */
653 check_typedef (type);
654
655 val = (struct value *) xzalloc (sizeof (struct value));
656 val->contents = NULL;
657 val->next = all_values;
658 all_values = val;
659 val->type = type;
660 val->enclosing_type = type;
661 VALUE_LVAL (val) = not_lval;
662 val->location.address = 0;
663 VALUE_FRAME_ID (val) = null_frame_id;
664 val->offset = 0;
665 val->bitpos = 0;
666 val->bitsize = 0;
667 VALUE_REGNUM (val) = -1;
668 val->lazy = 1;
669 val->optimized_out = 0;
670 val->embedded_offset = 0;
671 val->pointed_to_offset = 0;
672 val->modifiable = 1;
673 val->initialized = 1; /* Default to initialized. */
674
675 /* Values start out on the all_values chain. */
676 val->reference_count = 1;
677
678 return val;
679 }
680
681 /* Allocate the contents of VAL if it has not been allocated yet. */
682
683 void
684 allocate_value_contents (struct value *val)
685 {
686 if (!val->contents)
687 val->contents = (gdb_byte *) xzalloc (TYPE_LENGTH (val->enclosing_type));
688 }
689
690 /* Allocate a value and its contents for type TYPE. */
691
692 struct value *
693 allocate_value (struct type *type)
694 {
695 struct value *val = allocate_value_lazy (type);
696
697 allocate_value_contents (val);
698 val->lazy = 0;
699 return val;
700 }
701
702 /* Allocate a value that has the correct length
703 for COUNT repetitions of type TYPE. */
704
705 struct value *
706 allocate_repeat_value (struct type *type, int count)
707 {
708 int low_bound = current_language->string_lower_bound; /* ??? */
709 /* FIXME-type-allocation: need a way to free this type when we are
710 done with it. */
711 struct type *array_type
712 = lookup_array_range_type (type, low_bound, count + low_bound - 1);
713
714 return allocate_value (array_type);
715 }
716
717 struct value *
718 allocate_computed_value (struct type *type,
719 struct lval_funcs *funcs,
720 void *closure)
721 {
722 struct value *v = allocate_value_lazy (type);
723
724 VALUE_LVAL (v) = lval_computed;
725 v->location.computed.funcs = funcs;
726 v->location.computed.closure = closure;
727
728 return v;
729 }
730
731 /* Allocate NOT_LVAL value for type TYPE being OPTIMIZED_OUT. */
732
733 struct value *
734 allocate_optimized_out_value (struct type *type)
735 {
736 struct value *retval = allocate_value_lazy (type);
737
738 set_value_optimized_out (retval, 1);
739
740 return retval;
741 }
742
743 /* Accessor methods. */
744
745 struct value *
746 value_next (struct value *value)
747 {
748 return value->next;
749 }
750
751 struct type *
752 value_type (const struct value *value)
753 {
754 return value->type;
755 }
756 void
757 deprecated_set_value_type (struct value *value, struct type *type)
758 {
759 value->type = type;
760 }
761
762 int
763 value_offset (const struct value *value)
764 {
765 return value->offset;
766 }
767 void
768 set_value_offset (struct value *value, int offset)
769 {
770 value->offset = offset;
771 }
772
773 int
774 value_bitpos (const struct value *value)
775 {
776 return value->bitpos;
777 }
778 void
779 set_value_bitpos (struct value *value, int bit)
780 {
781 value->bitpos = bit;
782 }
783
784 int
785 value_bitsize (const struct value *value)
786 {
787 return value->bitsize;
788 }
789 void
790 set_value_bitsize (struct value *value, int bit)
791 {
792 value->bitsize = bit;
793 }
794
795 struct value *
796 value_parent (struct value *value)
797 {
798 return value->parent;
799 }
800
801 gdb_byte *
802 value_contents_raw (struct value *value)
803 {
804 allocate_value_contents (value);
805 return value->contents + value->embedded_offset;
806 }
807
808 gdb_byte *
809 value_contents_all_raw (struct value *value)
810 {
811 allocate_value_contents (value);
812 return value->contents;
813 }
814
815 struct type *
816 value_enclosing_type (struct value *value)
817 {
818 return value->enclosing_type;
819 }
820
821 static void
822 require_not_optimized_out (const struct value *value)
823 {
824 if (value->optimized_out)
825 error (_("value has been optimized out"));
826 }
827
828 static void
829 require_available (const struct value *value)
830 {
831 if (!VEC_empty (range_s, value->unavailable))
832 throw_error (NOT_AVAILABLE_ERROR, _("value is not available"));
833 }
834
835 const gdb_byte *
836 value_contents_for_printing (struct value *value)
837 {
838 if (value->lazy)
839 value_fetch_lazy (value);
840 return value->contents;
841 }
842
843 const gdb_byte *
844 value_contents_for_printing_const (const struct value *value)
845 {
846 gdb_assert (!value->lazy);
847 return value->contents;
848 }
849
850 const gdb_byte *
851 value_contents_all (struct value *value)
852 {
853 const gdb_byte *result = value_contents_for_printing (value);
854 require_not_optimized_out (value);
855 require_available (value);
856 return result;
857 }
858
859 /* Copy LENGTH bytes of SRC value's (all) contents
860 (value_contents_all) starting at SRC_OFFSET, into DST value's (all)
861 contents, starting at DST_OFFSET. If unavailable contents are
862 being copied from SRC, the corresponding DST contents are marked
863 unavailable accordingly. Neither DST nor SRC may be lazy
864 values.
865
866 It is assumed the contents of DST in the [DST_OFFSET,
867 DST_OFFSET+LENGTH) range are wholly available. */
868
869 void
870 value_contents_copy_raw (struct value *dst, int dst_offset,
871 struct value *src, int src_offset, int length)
872 {
873 range_s *r;
874 int i;
875
876 /* A lazy DST would make that this copy operation useless, since as
877 soon as DST's contents were un-lazied (by a later value_contents
878 call, say), the contents would be overwritten. A lazy SRC would
879 mean we'd be copying garbage. */
880 gdb_assert (!dst->lazy && !src->lazy);
881
882 /* The overwritten DST range gets unavailability ORed in, not
883 replaced. Make sure to remember to implement replacing if it
884 turns out actually necessary. */
885 gdb_assert (value_bytes_available (dst, dst_offset, length));
886
887 /* Copy the data. */
888 memcpy (value_contents_all_raw (dst) + dst_offset,
889 value_contents_all_raw (src) + src_offset,
890 length);
891
892 /* Copy the meta-data, adjusted. */
893 for (i = 0; VEC_iterate (range_s, src->unavailable, i, r); i++)
894 {
895 ULONGEST h, l;
896
897 l = max (r->offset, src_offset);
898 h = min (r->offset + r->length, src_offset + length);
899
900 if (l < h)
901 mark_value_bytes_unavailable (dst,
902 dst_offset + (l - src_offset),
903 h - l);
904 }
905 }
906
907 /* Copy LENGTH bytes of SRC value's (all) contents
908 (value_contents_all) starting at SRC_OFFSET byte, into DST value's
909 (all) contents, starting at DST_OFFSET. If unavailable contents
910 are being copied from SRC, the corresponding DST contents are
911 marked unavailable accordingly. DST must not be lazy. If SRC is
912 lazy, it will be fetched now. If SRC is not valid (is optimized
913 out), an error is thrown.
914
915 It is assumed the contents of DST in the [DST_OFFSET,
916 DST_OFFSET+LENGTH) range are wholly available. */
917
918 void
919 value_contents_copy (struct value *dst, int dst_offset,
920 struct value *src, int src_offset, int length)
921 {
922 require_not_optimized_out (src);
923
924 if (src->lazy)
925 value_fetch_lazy (src);
926
927 value_contents_copy_raw (dst, dst_offset, src, src_offset, length);
928 }
929
930 int
931 value_lazy (struct value *value)
932 {
933 return value->lazy;
934 }
935
936 void
937 set_value_lazy (struct value *value, int val)
938 {
939 value->lazy = val;
940 }
941
942 int
943 value_stack (struct value *value)
944 {
945 return value->stack;
946 }
947
948 void
949 set_value_stack (struct value *value, int val)
950 {
951 value->stack = val;
952 }
953
954 const gdb_byte *
955 value_contents (struct value *value)
956 {
957 const gdb_byte *result = value_contents_writeable (value);
958 require_not_optimized_out (value);
959 require_available (value);
960 return result;
961 }
962
963 gdb_byte *
964 value_contents_writeable (struct value *value)
965 {
966 if (value->lazy)
967 value_fetch_lazy (value);
968 return value_contents_raw (value);
969 }
970
971 /* Return non-zero if VAL1 and VAL2 have the same contents. Note that
972 this function is different from value_equal; in C the operator ==
973 can return 0 even if the two values being compared are equal. */
974
975 int
976 value_contents_equal (struct value *val1, struct value *val2)
977 {
978 struct type *type1;
979 struct type *type2;
980 int len;
981
982 type1 = check_typedef (value_type (val1));
983 type2 = check_typedef (value_type (val2));
984 len = TYPE_LENGTH (type1);
985 if (len != TYPE_LENGTH (type2))
986 return 0;
987
988 return (memcmp (value_contents (val1), value_contents (val2), len) == 0);
989 }
990
991 int
992 value_optimized_out (struct value *value)
993 {
994 return value->optimized_out;
995 }
996
997 void
998 set_value_optimized_out (struct value *value, int val)
999 {
1000 value->optimized_out = val;
1001 }
1002
1003 int
1004 value_entirely_optimized_out (const struct value *value)
1005 {
1006 if (!value->optimized_out)
1007 return 0;
1008 if (value->lval != lval_computed
1009 || !value->location.computed.funcs->check_any_valid)
1010 return 1;
1011 return !value->location.computed.funcs->check_any_valid (value);
1012 }
1013
1014 int
1015 value_bits_valid (const struct value *value, int offset, int length)
1016 {
1017 if (!value->optimized_out)
1018 return 1;
1019 if (value->lval != lval_computed
1020 || !value->location.computed.funcs->check_validity)
1021 return 0;
1022 return value->location.computed.funcs->check_validity (value, offset,
1023 length);
1024 }
1025
1026 int
1027 value_bits_synthetic_pointer (const struct value *value,
1028 int offset, int length)
1029 {
1030 if (value->lval != lval_computed
1031 || !value->location.computed.funcs->check_synthetic_pointer)
1032 return 0;
1033 return value->location.computed.funcs->check_synthetic_pointer (value,
1034 offset,
1035 length);
1036 }
1037
1038 int
1039 value_embedded_offset (struct value *value)
1040 {
1041 return value->embedded_offset;
1042 }
1043
1044 void
1045 set_value_embedded_offset (struct value *value, int val)
1046 {
1047 value->embedded_offset = val;
1048 }
1049
1050 int
1051 value_pointed_to_offset (struct value *value)
1052 {
1053 return value->pointed_to_offset;
1054 }
1055
1056 void
1057 set_value_pointed_to_offset (struct value *value, int val)
1058 {
1059 value->pointed_to_offset = val;
1060 }
1061
1062 struct lval_funcs *
1063 value_computed_funcs (struct value *v)
1064 {
1065 gdb_assert (VALUE_LVAL (v) == lval_computed);
1066
1067 return v->location.computed.funcs;
1068 }
1069
1070 void *
1071 value_computed_closure (const struct value *v)
1072 {
1073 gdb_assert (v->lval == lval_computed);
1074
1075 return v->location.computed.closure;
1076 }
1077
1078 enum lval_type *
1079 deprecated_value_lval_hack (struct value *value)
1080 {
1081 return &value->lval;
1082 }
1083
1084 CORE_ADDR
1085 value_address (const struct value *value)
1086 {
1087 if (value->lval == lval_internalvar
1088 || value->lval == lval_internalvar_component)
1089 return 0;
1090 return value->location.address + value->offset;
1091 }
1092
1093 CORE_ADDR
1094 value_raw_address (struct value *value)
1095 {
1096 if (value->lval == lval_internalvar
1097 || value->lval == lval_internalvar_component)
1098 return 0;
1099 return value->location.address;
1100 }
1101
1102 void
1103 set_value_address (struct value *value, CORE_ADDR addr)
1104 {
1105 gdb_assert (value->lval != lval_internalvar
1106 && value->lval != lval_internalvar_component);
1107 value->location.address = addr;
1108 }
1109
1110 struct internalvar **
1111 deprecated_value_internalvar_hack (struct value *value)
1112 {
1113 return &value->location.internalvar;
1114 }
1115
1116 struct frame_id *
1117 deprecated_value_frame_id_hack (struct value *value)
1118 {
1119 return &value->frame_id;
1120 }
1121
1122 short *
1123 deprecated_value_regnum_hack (struct value *value)
1124 {
1125 return &value->regnum;
1126 }
1127
1128 int
1129 deprecated_value_modifiable (struct value *value)
1130 {
1131 return value->modifiable;
1132 }
1133 void
1134 deprecated_set_value_modifiable (struct value *value, int modifiable)
1135 {
1136 value->modifiable = modifiable;
1137 }
1138 \f
1139 /* Return a mark in the value chain. All values allocated after the
1140 mark is obtained (except for those released) are subject to being freed
1141 if a subsequent value_free_to_mark is passed the mark. */
1142 struct value *
1143 value_mark (void)
1144 {
1145 return all_values;
1146 }
1147
1148 /* Take a reference to VAL. VAL will not be deallocated until all
1149 references are released. */
1150
1151 void
1152 value_incref (struct value *val)
1153 {
1154 val->reference_count++;
1155 }
1156
1157 /* Release a reference to VAL, which was acquired with value_incref.
1158 This function is also called to deallocate values from the value
1159 chain. */
1160
1161 void
1162 value_free (struct value *val)
1163 {
1164 if (val)
1165 {
1166 gdb_assert (val->reference_count > 0);
1167 val->reference_count--;
1168 if (val->reference_count > 0)
1169 return;
1170
1171 /* If there's an associated parent value, drop our reference to
1172 it. */
1173 if (val->parent != NULL)
1174 value_free (val->parent);
1175
1176 if (VALUE_LVAL (val) == lval_computed)
1177 {
1178 struct lval_funcs *funcs = val->location.computed.funcs;
1179
1180 if (funcs->free_closure)
1181 funcs->free_closure (val);
1182 }
1183
1184 xfree (val->contents);
1185 VEC_free (range_s, val->unavailable);
1186 }
1187 xfree (val);
1188 }
1189
1190 /* Free all values allocated since MARK was obtained by value_mark
1191 (except for those released). */
1192 void
1193 value_free_to_mark (struct value *mark)
1194 {
1195 struct value *val;
1196 struct value *next;
1197
1198 for (val = all_values; val && val != mark; val = next)
1199 {
1200 next = val->next;
1201 value_free (val);
1202 }
1203 all_values = val;
1204 }
1205
1206 /* Free all the values that have been allocated (except for those released).
1207 Call after each command, successful or not.
1208 In practice this is called before each command, which is sufficient. */
1209
1210 void
1211 free_all_values (void)
1212 {
1213 struct value *val;
1214 struct value *next;
1215
1216 for (val = all_values; val; val = next)
1217 {
1218 next = val->next;
1219 value_free (val);
1220 }
1221
1222 all_values = 0;
1223 }
1224
1225 /* Frees all the elements in a chain of values. */
1226
1227 void
1228 free_value_chain (struct value *v)
1229 {
1230 struct value *next;
1231
1232 for (; v; v = next)
1233 {
1234 next = value_next (v);
1235 value_free (v);
1236 }
1237 }
1238
1239 /* Remove VAL from the chain all_values
1240 so it will not be freed automatically. */
1241
1242 void
1243 release_value (struct value *val)
1244 {
1245 struct value *v;
1246
1247 if (all_values == val)
1248 {
1249 all_values = val->next;
1250 val->next = NULL;
1251 return;
1252 }
1253
1254 for (v = all_values; v; v = v->next)
1255 {
1256 if (v->next == val)
1257 {
1258 v->next = val->next;
1259 val->next = NULL;
1260 break;
1261 }
1262 }
1263 }
1264
1265 /* Release all values up to mark */
1266 struct value *
1267 value_release_to_mark (struct value *mark)
1268 {
1269 struct value *val;
1270 struct value *next;
1271
1272 for (val = next = all_values; next; next = next->next)
1273 if (next->next == mark)
1274 {
1275 all_values = next->next;
1276 next->next = NULL;
1277 return val;
1278 }
1279 all_values = 0;
1280 return val;
1281 }
1282
1283 /* Return a copy of the value ARG.
1284 It contains the same contents, for same memory address,
1285 but it's a different block of storage. */
1286
1287 struct value *
1288 value_copy (struct value *arg)
1289 {
1290 struct type *encl_type = value_enclosing_type (arg);
1291 struct value *val;
1292
1293 if (value_lazy (arg))
1294 val = allocate_value_lazy (encl_type);
1295 else
1296 val = allocate_value (encl_type);
1297 val->type = arg->type;
1298 VALUE_LVAL (val) = VALUE_LVAL (arg);
1299 val->location = arg->location;
1300 val->offset = arg->offset;
1301 val->bitpos = arg->bitpos;
1302 val->bitsize = arg->bitsize;
1303 VALUE_FRAME_ID (val) = VALUE_FRAME_ID (arg);
1304 VALUE_REGNUM (val) = VALUE_REGNUM (arg);
1305 val->lazy = arg->lazy;
1306 val->optimized_out = arg->optimized_out;
1307 val->embedded_offset = value_embedded_offset (arg);
1308 val->pointed_to_offset = arg->pointed_to_offset;
1309 val->modifiable = arg->modifiable;
1310 if (!value_lazy (val))
1311 {
1312 memcpy (value_contents_all_raw (val), value_contents_all_raw (arg),
1313 TYPE_LENGTH (value_enclosing_type (arg)));
1314
1315 }
1316 val->unavailable = VEC_copy (range_s, arg->unavailable);
1317 val->parent = arg->parent;
1318 if (val->parent)
1319 value_incref (val->parent);
1320 if (VALUE_LVAL (val) == lval_computed)
1321 {
1322 struct lval_funcs *funcs = val->location.computed.funcs;
1323
1324 if (funcs->copy_closure)
1325 val->location.computed.closure = funcs->copy_closure (val);
1326 }
1327 return val;
1328 }
1329
1330 /* Return a version of ARG that is non-lvalue. */
1331
1332 struct value *
1333 value_non_lval (struct value *arg)
1334 {
1335 if (VALUE_LVAL (arg) != not_lval)
1336 {
1337 struct type *enc_type = value_enclosing_type (arg);
1338 struct value *val = allocate_value (enc_type);
1339
1340 memcpy (value_contents_all_raw (val), value_contents_all (arg),
1341 TYPE_LENGTH (enc_type));
1342 val->type = arg->type;
1343 set_value_embedded_offset (val, value_embedded_offset (arg));
1344 set_value_pointed_to_offset (val, value_pointed_to_offset (arg));
1345 return val;
1346 }
1347 return arg;
1348 }
1349
1350 void
1351 set_value_component_location (struct value *component,
1352 const struct value *whole)
1353 {
1354 if (whole->lval == lval_internalvar)
1355 VALUE_LVAL (component) = lval_internalvar_component;
1356 else
1357 VALUE_LVAL (component) = whole->lval;
1358
1359 component->location = whole->location;
1360 if (whole->lval == lval_computed)
1361 {
1362 struct lval_funcs *funcs = whole->location.computed.funcs;
1363
1364 if (funcs->copy_closure)
1365 component->location.computed.closure = funcs->copy_closure (whole);
1366 }
1367 }
1368
1369 \f
1370 /* Access to the value history. */
1371
1372 /* Record a new value in the value history.
1373 Returns the absolute history index of the entry.
1374 Result of -1 indicates the value was not saved; otherwise it is the
1375 value history index of this new item. */
1376
1377 int
1378 record_latest_value (struct value *val)
1379 {
1380 int i;
1381
1382 /* We don't want this value to have anything to do with the inferior anymore.
1383 In particular, "set $1 = 50" should not affect the variable from which
1384 the value was taken, and fast watchpoints should be able to assume that
1385 a value on the value history never changes. */
1386 if (value_lazy (val))
1387 value_fetch_lazy (val);
1388 /* We preserve VALUE_LVAL so that the user can find out where it was fetched
1389 from. This is a bit dubious, because then *&$1 does not just return $1
1390 but the current contents of that location. c'est la vie... */
1391 val->modifiable = 0;
1392 release_value (val);
1393
1394 /* Here we treat value_history_count as origin-zero
1395 and applying to the value being stored now. */
1396
1397 i = value_history_count % VALUE_HISTORY_CHUNK;
1398 if (i == 0)
1399 {
1400 struct value_history_chunk *new
1401 = (struct value_history_chunk *)
1402
1403 xmalloc (sizeof (struct value_history_chunk));
1404 memset (new->values, 0, sizeof new->values);
1405 new->next = value_history_chain;
1406 value_history_chain = new;
1407 }
1408
1409 value_history_chain->values[i] = val;
1410
1411 /* Now we regard value_history_count as origin-one
1412 and applying to the value just stored. */
1413
1414 return ++value_history_count;
1415 }
1416
1417 /* Return a copy of the value in the history with sequence number NUM. */
1418
1419 struct value *
1420 access_value_history (int num)
1421 {
1422 struct value_history_chunk *chunk;
1423 int i;
1424 int absnum = num;
1425
1426 if (absnum <= 0)
1427 absnum += value_history_count;
1428
1429 if (absnum <= 0)
1430 {
1431 if (num == 0)
1432 error (_("The history is empty."));
1433 else if (num == 1)
1434 error (_("There is only one value in the history."));
1435 else
1436 error (_("History does not go back to $$%d."), -num);
1437 }
1438 if (absnum > value_history_count)
1439 error (_("History has not yet reached $%d."), absnum);
1440
1441 absnum--;
1442
1443 /* Now absnum is always absolute and origin zero. */
1444
1445 chunk = value_history_chain;
1446 for (i = (value_history_count - 1) / VALUE_HISTORY_CHUNK
1447 - absnum / VALUE_HISTORY_CHUNK;
1448 i > 0; i--)
1449 chunk = chunk->next;
1450
1451 return value_copy (chunk->values[absnum % VALUE_HISTORY_CHUNK]);
1452 }
1453
1454 static void
1455 show_values (char *num_exp, int from_tty)
1456 {
1457 int i;
1458 struct value *val;
1459 static int num = 1;
1460
1461 if (num_exp)
1462 {
1463 /* "show values +" should print from the stored position.
1464 "show values <exp>" should print around value number <exp>. */
1465 if (num_exp[0] != '+' || num_exp[1] != '\0')
1466 num = parse_and_eval_long (num_exp) - 5;
1467 }
1468 else
1469 {
1470 /* "show values" means print the last 10 values. */
1471 num = value_history_count - 9;
1472 }
1473
1474 if (num <= 0)
1475 num = 1;
1476
1477 for (i = num; i < num + 10 && i <= value_history_count; i++)
1478 {
1479 struct value_print_options opts;
1480
1481 val = access_value_history (i);
1482 printf_filtered (("$%d = "), i);
1483 get_user_print_options (&opts);
1484 value_print (val, gdb_stdout, &opts);
1485 printf_filtered (("\n"));
1486 }
1487
1488 /* The next "show values +" should start after what we just printed. */
1489 num += 10;
1490
1491 /* Hitting just return after this command should do the same thing as
1492 "show values +". If num_exp is null, this is unnecessary, since
1493 "show values +" is not useful after "show values". */
1494 if (from_tty && num_exp)
1495 {
1496 num_exp[0] = '+';
1497 num_exp[1] = '\0';
1498 }
1499 }
1500 \f
1501 /* Internal variables. These are variables within the debugger
1502 that hold values assigned by debugger commands.
1503 The user refers to them with a '$' prefix
1504 that does not appear in the variable names stored internally. */
1505
1506 struct internalvar
1507 {
1508 struct internalvar *next;
1509 char *name;
1510
1511 /* We support various different kinds of content of an internal variable.
1512 enum internalvar_kind specifies the kind, and union internalvar_data
1513 provides the data associated with this particular kind. */
1514
1515 enum internalvar_kind
1516 {
1517 /* The internal variable is empty. */
1518 INTERNALVAR_VOID,
1519
1520 /* The value of the internal variable is provided directly as
1521 a GDB value object. */
1522 INTERNALVAR_VALUE,
1523
1524 /* A fresh value is computed via a call-back routine on every
1525 access to the internal variable. */
1526 INTERNALVAR_MAKE_VALUE,
1527
1528 /* The internal variable holds a GDB internal convenience function. */
1529 INTERNALVAR_FUNCTION,
1530
1531 /* The variable holds an integer value. */
1532 INTERNALVAR_INTEGER,
1533
1534 /* The variable holds a GDB-provided string. */
1535 INTERNALVAR_STRING,
1536
1537 } kind;
1538
1539 union internalvar_data
1540 {
1541 /* A value object used with INTERNALVAR_VALUE. */
1542 struct value *value;
1543
1544 /* The call-back routine used with INTERNALVAR_MAKE_VALUE. */
1545 internalvar_make_value make_value;
1546
1547 /* The internal function used with INTERNALVAR_FUNCTION. */
1548 struct
1549 {
1550 struct internal_function *function;
1551 /* True if this is the canonical name for the function. */
1552 int canonical;
1553 } fn;
1554
1555 /* An integer value used with INTERNALVAR_INTEGER. */
1556 struct
1557 {
1558 /* If type is non-NULL, it will be used as the type to generate
1559 a value for this internal variable. If type is NULL, a default
1560 integer type for the architecture is used. */
1561 struct type *type;
1562 LONGEST val;
1563 } integer;
1564
1565 /* A string value used with INTERNALVAR_STRING. */
1566 char *string;
1567 } u;
1568 };
1569
1570 static struct internalvar *internalvars;
1571
1572 /* If the variable does not already exist create it and give it the
1573 value given. If no value is given then the default is zero. */
1574 static void
1575 init_if_undefined_command (char* args, int from_tty)
1576 {
1577 struct internalvar* intvar;
1578
1579 /* Parse the expression - this is taken from set_command(). */
1580 struct expression *expr = parse_expression (args);
1581 register struct cleanup *old_chain =
1582 make_cleanup (free_current_contents, &expr);
1583
1584 /* Validate the expression.
1585 Was the expression an assignment?
1586 Or even an expression at all? */
1587 if (expr->nelts == 0 || expr->elts[0].opcode != BINOP_ASSIGN)
1588 error (_("Init-if-undefined requires an assignment expression."));
1589
1590 /* Extract the variable from the parsed expression.
1591 In the case of an assign the lvalue will be in elts[1] and elts[2]. */
1592 if (expr->elts[1].opcode != OP_INTERNALVAR)
1593 error (_("The first parameter to init-if-undefined "
1594 "should be a GDB variable."));
1595 intvar = expr->elts[2].internalvar;
1596
1597 /* Only evaluate the expression if the lvalue is void.
1598 This may still fail if the expresssion is invalid. */
1599 if (intvar->kind == INTERNALVAR_VOID)
1600 evaluate_expression (expr);
1601
1602 do_cleanups (old_chain);
1603 }
1604
1605
1606 /* Look up an internal variable with name NAME. NAME should not
1607 normally include a dollar sign.
1608
1609 If the specified internal variable does not exist,
1610 the return value is NULL. */
1611
1612 struct internalvar *
1613 lookup_only_internalvar (const char *name)
1614 {
1615 struct internalvar *var;
1616
1617 for (var = internalvars; var; var = var->next)
1618 if (strcmp (var->name, name) == 0)
1619 return var;
1620
1621 return NULL;
1622 }
1623
1624
1625 /* Create an internal variable with name NAME and with a void value.
1626 NAME should not normally include a dollar sign. */
1627
1628 struct internalvar *
1629 create_internalvar (const char *name)
1630 {
1631 struct internalvar *var;
1632
1633 var = (struct internalvar *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct internalvar));
1634 var->name = concat (name, (char *)NULL);
1635 var->kind = INTERNALVAR_VOID;
1636 var->next = internalvars;
1637 internalvars = var;
1638 return var;
1639 }
1640
1641 /* Create an internal variable with name NAME and register FUN as the
1642 function that value_of_internalvar uses to create a value whenever
1643 this variable is referenced. NAME should not normally include a
1644 dollar sign. */
1645
1646 struct internalvar *
1647 create_internalvar_type_lazy (char *name, internalvar_make_value fun)
1648 {
1649 struct internalvar *var = create_internalvar (name);
1650
1651 var->kind = INTERNALVAR_MAKE_VALUE;
1652 var->u.make_value = fun;
1653 return var;
1654 }
1655
1656 /* Look up an internal variable with name NAME. NAME should not
1657 normally include a dollar sign.
1658
1659 If the specified internal variable does not exist,
1660 one is created, with a void value. */
1661
1662 struct internalvar *
1663 lookup_internalvar (const char *name)
1664 {
1665 struct internalvar *var;
1666
1667 var = lookup_only_internalvar (name);
1668 if (var)
1669 return var;
1670
1671 return create_internalvar (name);
1672 }
1673
1674 /* Return current value of internal variable VAR. For variables that
1675 are not inherently typed, use a value type appropriate for GDBARCH. */
1676
1677 struct value *
1678 value_of_internalvar (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct internalvar *var)
1679 {
1680 struct value *val;
1681 struct trace_state_variable *tsv;
1682
1683 /* If there is a trace state variable of the same name, assume that
1684 is what we really want to see. */
1685 tsv = find_trace_state_variable (var->name);
1686 if (tsv)
1687 {
1688 tsv->value_known = target_get_trace_state_variable_value (tsv->number,
1689 &(tsv->value));
1690 if (tsv->value_known)
1691 val = value_from_longest (builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_int64,
1692 tsv->value);
1693 else
1694 val = allocate_value (builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_void);
1695 return val;
1696 }
1697
1698 switch (var->kind)
1699 {
1700 case INTERNALVAR_VOID:
1701 val = allocate_value (builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_void);
1702 break;
1703
1704 case INTERNALVAR_FUNCTION:
1705 val = allocate_value (builtin_type (gdbarch)->internal_fn);
1706 break;
1707
1708 case INTERNALVAR_INTEGER:
1709 if (!var->u.integer.type)
1710 val = value_from_longest (builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_int,
1711 var->u.integer.val);
1712 else
1713 val = value_from_longest (var->u.integer.type, var->u.integer.val);
1714 break;
1715
1716 case INTERNALVAR_STRING:
1717 val = value_cstring (var->u.string, strlen (var->u.string),
1718 builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_char);
1719 break;
1720
1721 case INTERNALVAR_VALUE:
1722 val = value_copy (var->u.value);
1723 if (value_lazy (val))
1724 value_fetch_lazy (val);
1725 break;
1726
1727 case INTERNALVAR_MAKE_VALUE:
1728 val = (*var->u.make_value) (gdbarch, var);
1729 break;
1730
1731 default:
1732 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("bad kind"));
1733 }
1734
1735 /* Change the VALUE_LVAL to lval_internalvar so that future operations
1736 on this value go back to affect the original internal variable.
1737
1738 Do not do this for INTERNALVAR_MAKE_VALUE variables, as those have
1739 no underlying modifyable state in the internal variable.
1740
1741 Likewise, if the variable's value is a computed lvalue, we want
1742 references to it to produce another computed lvalue, where
1743 references and assignments actually operate through the
1744 computed value's functions.
1745
1746 This means that internal variables with computed values
1747 behave a little differently from other internal variables:
1748 assignments to them don't just replace the previous value
1749 altogether. At the moment, this seems like the behavior we
1750 want. */
1751
1752 if (var->kind != INTERNALVAR_MAKE_VALUE
1753 && val->lval != lval_computed)
1754 {
1755 VALUE_LVAL (val) = lval_internalvar;
1756 VALUE_INTERNALVAR (val) = var;
1757 }
1758
1759 return val;
1760 }
1761
1762 int
1763 get_internalvar_integer (struct internalvar *var, LONGEST *result)
1764 {
1765 if (var->kind == INTERNALVAR_INTEGER)
1766 {
1767 *result = var->u.integer.val;
1768 return 1;
1769 }
1770
1771 if (var->kind == INTERNALVAR_VALUE)
1772 {
1773 struct type *type = check_typedef (value_type (var->u.value));
1774
1775 if (TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_INT)
1776 {
1777 *result = value_as_long (var->u.value);
1778 return 1;
1779 }
1780 }
1781
1782 return 0;
1783 }
1784
1785 static int
1786 get_internalvar_function (struct internalvar *var,
1787 struct internal_function **result)
1788 {
1789 switch (var->kind)
1790 {
1791 case INTERNALVAR_FUNCTION:
1792 *result = var->u.fn.function;
1793 return 1;
1794
1795 default:
1796 return 0;
1797 }
1798 }
1799
1800 void
1801 set_internalvar_component (struct internalvar *var, int offset, int bitpos,
1802 int bitsize, struct value *newval)
1803 {
1804 gdb_byte *addr;
1805
1806 switch (var->kind)
1807 {
1808 case INTERNALVAR_VALUE:
1809 addr = value_contents_writeable (var->u.value);
1810
1811 if (bitsize)
1812 modify_field (value_type (var->u.value), addr + offset,
1813 value_as_long (newval), bitpos, bitsize);
1814 else
1815 memcpy (addr + offset, value_contents (newval),
1816 TYPE_LENGTH (value_type (newval)));
1817 break;
1818
1819 default:
1820 /* We can never get a component of any other kind. */
1821 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("set_internalvar_component"));
1822 }
1823 }
1824
1825 void
1826 set_internalvar (struct internalvar *var, struct value *val)
1827 {
1828 enum internalvar_kind new_kind;
1829 union internalvar_data new_data = { 0 };
1830
1831 if (var->kind == INTERNALVAR_FUNCTION && var->u.fn.canonical)
1832 error (_("Cannot overwrite convenience function %s"), var->name);
1833
1834 /* Prepare new contents. */
1835 switch (TYPE_CODE (check_typedef (value_type (val))))
1836 {
1837 case TYPE_CODE_VOID:
1838 new_kind = INTERNALVAR_VOID;
1839 break;
1840
1841 case TYPE_CODE_INTERNAL_FUNCTION:
1842 gdb_assert (VALUE_LVAL (val) == lval_internalvar);
1843 new_kind = INTERNALVAR_FUNCTION;
1844 get_internalvar_function (VALUE_INTERNALVAR (val),
1845 &new_data.fn.function);
1846 /* Copies created here are never canonical. */
1847 break;
1848
1849 default:
1850 new_kind = INTERNALVAR_VALUE;
1851 new_data.value = value_copy (val);
1852 new_data.value->modifiable = 1;
1853
1854 /* Force the value to be fetched from the target now, to avoid problems
1855 later when this internalvar is referenced and the target is gone or
1856 has changed. */
1857 if (value_lazy (new_data.value))
1858 value_fetch_lazy (new_data.value);
1859
1860 /* Release the value from the value chain to prevent it from being
1861 deleted by free_all_values. From here on this function should not
1862 call error () until new_data is installed into the var->u to avoid
1863 leaking memory. */
1864 release_value (new_data.value);
1865 break;
1866 }
1867
1868 /* Clean up old contents. */
1869 clear_internalvar (var);
1870
1871 /* Switch over. */
1872 var->kind = new_kind;
1873 var->u = new_data;
1874 /* End code which must not call error(). */
1875 }
1876
1877 void
1878 set_internalvar_integer (struct internalvar *var, LONGEST l)
1879 {
1880 /* Clean up old contents. */
1881 clear_internalvar (var);
1882
1883 var->kind = INTERNALVAR_INTEGER;
1884 var->u.integer.type = NULL;
1885 var->u.integer.val = l;
1886 }
1887
1888 void
1889 set_internalvar_string (struct internalvar *var, const char *string)
1890 {
1891 /* Clean up old contents. */
1892 clear_internalvar (var);
1893
1894 var->kind = INTERNALVAR_STRING;
1895 var->u.string = xstrdup (string);
1896 }
1897
1898 static void
1899 set_internalvar_function (struct internalvar *var, struct internal_function *f)
1900 {
1901 /* Clean up old contents. */
1902 clear_internalvar (var);
1903
1904 var->kind = INTERNALVAR_FUNCTION;
1905 var->u.fn.function = f;
1906 var->u.fn.canonical = 1;
1907 /* Variables installed here are always the canonical version. */
1908 }
1909
1910 void
1911 clear_internalvar (struct internalvar *var)
1912 {
1913 /* Clean up old contents. */
1914 switch (var->kind)
1915 {
1916 case INTERNALVAR_VALUE:
1917 value_free (var->u.value);
1918 break;
1919
1920 case INTERNALVAR_STRING:
1921 xfree (var->u.string);
1922 break;
1923
1924 default:
1925 break;
1926 }
1927
1928 /* Reset to void kind. */
1929 var->kind = INTERNALVAR_VOID;
1930 }
1931
1932 char *
1933 internalvar_name (struct internalvar *var)
1934 {
1935 return var->name;
1936 }
1937
1938 static struct internal_function *
1939 create_internal_function (const char *name,
1940 internal_function_fn handler, void *cookie)
1941 {
1942 struct internal_function *ifn = XNEW (struct internal_function);
1943
1944 ifn->name = xstrdup (name);
1945 ifn->handler = handler;
1946 ifn->cookie = cookie;
1947 return ifn;
1948 }
1949
1950 char *
1951 value_internal_function_name (struct value *val)
1952 {
1953 struct internal_function *ifn;
1954 int result;
1955
1956 gdb_assert (VALUE_LVAL (val) == lval_internalvar);
1957 result = get_internalvar_function (VALUE_INTERNALVAR (val), &ifn);
1958 gdb_assert (result);
1959
1960 return ifn->name;
1961 }
1962
1963 struct value *
1964 call_internal_function (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
1965 const struct language_defn *language,
1966 struct value *func, int argc, struct value **argv)
1967 {
1968 struct internal_function *ifn;
1969 int result;
1970
1971 gdb_assert (VALUE_LVAL (func) == lval_internalvar);
1972 result = get_internalvar_function (VALUE_INTERNALVAR (func), &ifn);
1973 gdb_assert (result);
1974
1975 return (*ifn->handler) (gdbarch, language, ifn->cookie, argc, argv);
1976 }
1977
1978 /* The 'function' command. This does nothing -- it is just a
1979 placeholder to let "help function NAME" work. This is also used as
1980 the implementation of the sub-command that is created when
1981 registering an internal function. */
1982 static void
1983 function_command (char *command, int from_tty)
1984 {
1985 /* Do nothing. */
1986 }
1987
1988 /* Clean up if an internal function's command is destroyed. */
1989 static void
1990 function_destroyer (struct cmd_list_element *self, void *ignore)
1991 {
1992 xfree (self->name);
1993 xfree (self->doc);
1994 }
1995
1996 /* Add a new internal function. NAME is the name of the function; DOC
1997 is a documentation string describing the function. HANDLER is
1998 called when the function is invoked. COOKIE is an arbitrary
1999 pointer which is passed to HANDLER and is intended for "user
2000 data". */
2001 void
2002 add_internal_function (const char *name, const char *doc,
2003 internal_function_fn handler, void *cookie)
2004 {
2005 struct cmd_list_element *cmd;
2006 struct internal_function *ifn;
2007 struct internalvar *var = lookup_internalvar (name);
2008
2009 ifn = create_internal_function (name, handler, cookie);
2010 set_internalvar_function (var, ifn);
2011
2012 cmd = add_cmd (xstrdup (name), no_class, function_command, (char *) doc,
2013 &functionlist);
2014 cmd->destroyer = function_destroyer;
2015 }
2016
2017 /* Update VALUE before discarding OBJFILE. COPIED_TYPES is used to
2018 prevent cycles / duplicates. */
2019
2020 void
2021 preserve_one_value (struct value *value, struct objfile *objfile,
2022 htab_t copied_types)
2023 {
2024 if (TYPE_OBJFILE (value->type) == objfile)
2025 value->type = copy_type_recursive (objfile, value->type, copied_types);
2026
2027 if (TYPE_OBJFILE (value->enclosing_type) == objfile)
2028 value->enclosing_type = copy_type_recursive (objfile,
2029 value->enclosing_type,
2030 copied_types);
2031 }
2032
2033 /* Likewise for internal variable VAR. */
2034
2035 static void
2036 preserve_one_internalvar (struct internalvar *var, struct objfile *objfile,
2037 htab_t copied_types)
2038 {
2039 switch (var->kind)
2040 {
2041 case INTERNALVAR_INTEGER:
2042 if (var->u.integer.type && TYPE_OBJFILE (var->u.integer.type) == objfile)
2043 var->u.integer.type
2044 = copy_type_recursive (objfile, var->u.integer.type, copied_types);
2045 break;
2046
2047 case INTERNALVAR_VALUE:
2048 preserve_one_value (var->u.value, objfile, copied_types);
2049 break;
2050 }
2051 }
2052
2053 /* Update the internal variables and value history when OBJFILE is
2054 discarded; we must copy the types out of the objfile. New global types
2055 will be created for every convenience variable which currently points to
2056 this objfile's types, and the convenience variables will be adjusted to
2057 use the new global types. */
2058
2059 void
2060 preserve_values (struct objfile *objfile)
2061 {
2062 htab_t copied_types;
2063 struct value_history_chunk *cur;
2064 struct internalvar *var;
2065 int i;
2066
2067 /* Create the hash table. We allocate on the objfile's obstack, since
2068 it is soon to be deleted. */
2069 copied_types = create_copied_types_hash (objfile);
2070
2071 for (cur = value_history_chain; cur; cur = cur->next)
2072 for (i = 0; i < VALUE_HISTORY_CHUNK; i++)
2073 if (cur->values[i])
2074 preserve_one_value (cur->values[i], objfile, copied_types);
2075
2076 for (var = internalvars; var; var = var->next)
2077 preserve_one_internalvar (var, objfile, copied_types);
2078
2079 preserve_python_values (objfile, copied_types);
2080
2081 htab_delete (copied_types);
2082 }
2083
2084 static void
2085 show_convenience (char *ignore, int from_tty)
2086 {
2087 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_current_arch ();
2088 struct internalvar *var;
2089 int varseen = 0;
2090 struct value_print_options opts;
2091
2092 get_user_print_options (&opts);
2093 for (var = internalvars; var; var = var->next)
2094 {
2095 if (!varseen)
2096 {
2097 varseen = 1;
2098 }
2099 printf_filtered (("$%s = "), var->name);
2100 value_print (value_of_internalvar (gdbarch, var), gdb_stdout,
2101 &opts);
2102 printf_filtered (("\n"));
2103 }
2104 if (!varseen)
2105 printf_unfiltered (_("No debugger convenience variables now defined.\n"
2106 "Convenience variables have "
2107 "names starting with \"$\";\n"
2108 "use \"set\" as in \"set "
2109 "$foo = 5\" to define them.\n"));
2110 }
2111 \f
2112 /* Extract a value as a C number (either long or double).
2113 Knows how to convert fixed values to double, or
2114 floating values to long.
2115 Does not deallocate the value. */
2116
2117 LONGEST
2118 value_as_long (struct value *val)
2119 {
2120 /* This coerces arrays and functions, which is necessary (e.g.
2121 in disassemble_command). It also dereferences references, which
2122 I suspect is the most logical thing to do. */
2123 val = coerce_array (val);
2124 return unpack_long (value_type (val), value_contents (val));
2125 }
2126
2127 DOUBLEST
2128 value_as_double (struct value *val)
2129 {
2130 DOUBLEST foo;
2131 int inv;
2132
2133 foo = unpack_double (value_type (val), value_contents (val), &inv);
2134 if (inv)
2135 error (_("Invalid floating value found in program."));
2136 return foo;
2137 }
2138
2139 /* Extract a value as a C pointer. Does not deallocate the value.
2140 Note that val's type may not actually be a pointer; value_as_long
2141 handles all the cases. */
2142 CORE_ADDR
2143 value_as_address (struct value *val)
2144 {
2145 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_type_arch (value_type (val));
2146
2147 /* Assume a CORE_ADDR can fit in a LONGEST (for now). Not sure
2148 whether we want this to be true eventually. */
2149 #if 0
2150 /* gdbarch_addr_bits_remove is wrong if we are being called for a
2151 non-address (e.g. argument to "signal", "info break", etc.), or
2152 for pointers to char, in which the low bits *are* significant. */
2153 return gdbarch_addr_bits_remove (gdbarch, value_as_long (val));
2154 #else
2155
2156 /* There are several targets (IA-64, PowerPC, and others) which
2157 don't represent pointers to functions as simply the address of
2158 the function's entry point. For example, on the IA-64, a
2159 function pointer points to a two-word descriptor, generated by
2160 the linker, which contains the function's entry point, and the
2161 value the IA-64 "global pointer" register should have --- to
2162 support position-independent code. The linker generates
2163 descriptors only for those functions whose addresses are taken.
2164
2165 On such targets, it's difficult for GDB to convert an arbitrary
2166 function address into a function pointer; it has to either find
2167 an existing descriptor for that function, or call malloc and
2168 build its own. On some targets, it is impossible for GDB to
2169 build a descriptor at all: the descriptor must contain a jump
2170 instruction; data memory cannot be executed; and code memory
2171 cannot be modified.
2172
2173 Upon entry to this function, if VAL is a value of type `function'
2174 (that is, TYPE_CODE (VALUE_TYPE (val)) == TYPE_CODE_FUNC), then
2175 value_address (val) is the address of the function. This is what
2176 you'll get if you evaluate an expression like `main'. The call
2177 to COERCE_ARRAY below actually does all the usual unary
2178 conversions, which includes converting values of type `function'
2179 to `pointer to function'. This is the challenging conversion
2180 discussed above. Then, `unpack_long' will convert that pointer
2181 back into an address.
2182
2183 So, suppose the user types `disassemble foo' on an architecture
2184 with a strange function pointer representation, on which GDB
2185 cannot build its own descriptors, and suppose further that `foo'
2186 has no linker-built descriptor. The address->pointer conversion
2187 will signal an error and prevent the command from running, even
2188 though the next step would have been to convert the pointer
2189 directly back into the same address.
2190
2191 The following shortcut avoids this whole mess. If VAL is a
2192 function, just return its address directly. */
2193 if (TYPE_CODE (value_type (val)) == TYPE_CODE_FUNC
2194 || TYPE_CODE (value_type (val)) == TYPE_CODE_METHOD)
2195 return value_address (val);
2196
2197 val = coerce_array (val);
2198
2199 /* Some architectures (e.g. Harvard), map instruction and data
2200 addresses onto a single large unified address space. For
2201 instance: An architecture may consider a large integer in the
2202 range 0x10000000 .. 0x1000ffff to already represent a data
2203 addresses (hence not need a pointer to address conversion) while
2204 a small integer would still need to be converted integer to
2205 pointer to address. Just assume such architectures handle all
2206 integer conversions in a single function. */
2207
2208 /* JimB writes:
2209
2210 I think INTEGER_TO_ADDRESS is a good idea as proposed --- but we
2211 must admonish GDB hackers to make sure its behavior matches the
2212 compiler's, whenever possible.
2213
2214 In general, I think GDB should evaluate expressions the same way
2215 the compiler does. When the user copies an expression out of
2216 their source code and hands it to a `print' command, they should
2217 get the same value the compiler would have computed. Any
2218 deviation from this rule can cause major confusion and annoyance,
2219 and needs to be justified carefully. In other words, GDB doesn't
2220 really have the freedom to do these conversions in clever and
2221 useful ways.
2222
2223 AndrewC pointed out that users aren't complaining about how GDB
2224 casts integers to pointers; they are complaining that they can't
2225 take an address from a disassembly listing and give it to `x/i'.
2226 This is certainly important.
2227
2228 Adding an architecture method like integer_to_address() certainly
2229 makes it possible for GDB to "get it right" in all circumstances
2230 --- the target has complete control over how things get done, so
2231 people can Do The Right Thing for their target without breaking
2232 anyone else. The standard doesn't specify how integers get
2233 converted to pointers; usually, the ABI doesn't either, but
2234 ABI-specific code is a more reasonable place to handle it. */
2235
2236 if (TYPE_CODE (value_type (val)) != TYPE_CODE_PTR
2237 && TYPE_CODE (value_type (val)) != TYPE_CODE_REF
2238 && gdbarch_integer_to_address_p (gdbarch))
2239 return gdbarch_integer_to_address (gdbarch, value_type (val),
2240 value_contents (val));
2241
2242 return unpack_long (value_type (val), value_contents (val));
2243 #endif
2244 }
2245 \f
2246 /* Unpack raw data (copied from debugee, target byte order) at VALADDR
2247 as a long, or as a double, assuming the raw data is described
2248 by type TYPE. Knows how to convert different sizes of values
2249 and can convert between fixed and floating point. We don't assume
2250 any alignment for the raw data. Return value is in host byte order.
2251
2252 If you want functions and arrays to be coerced to pointers, and
2253 references to be dereferenced, call value_as_long() instead.
2254
2255 C++: It is assumed that the front-end has taken care of
2256 all matters concerning pointers to members. A pointer
2257 to member which reaches here is considered to be equivalent
2258 to an INT (or some size). After all, it is only an offset. */
2259
2260 LONGEST
2261 unpack_long (struct type *type, const gdb_byte *valaddr)
2262 {
2263 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (get_type_arch (type));
2264 enum type_code code = TYPE_CODE (type);
2265 int len = TYPE_LENGTH (type);
2266 int nosign = TYPE_UNSIGNED (type);
2267
2268 switch (code)
2269 {
2270 case TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF:
2271 return unpack_long (check_typedef (type), valaddr);
2272 case TYPE_CODE_ENUM:
2273 case TYPE_CODE_FLAGS:
2274 case TYPE_CODE_BOOL:
2275 case TYPE_CODE_INT:
2276 case TYPE_CODE_CHAR:
2277 case TYPE_CODE_RANGE:
2278 case TYPE_CODE_MEMBERPTR:
2279 if (nosign)
2280 return extract_unsigned_integer (valaddr, len, byte_order);
2281 else
2282 return extract_signed_integer (valaddr, len, byte_order);
2283
2284 case TYPE_CODE_FLT:
2285 return extract_typed_floating (valaddr, type);
2286
2287 case TYPE_CODE_DECFLOAT:
2288 /* libdecnumber has a function to convert from decimal to integer, but
2289 it doesn't work when the decimal number has a fractional part. */
2290 return decimal_to_doublest (valaddr, len, byte_order);
2291
2292 case TYPE_CODE_PTR:
2293 case TYPE_CODE_REF:
2294 /* Assume a CORE_ADDR can fit in a LONGEST (for now). Not sure
2295 whether we want this to be true eventually. */
2296 return extract_typed_address (valaddr, type);
2297
2298 default:
2299 error (_("Value can't be converted to integer."));
2300 }
2301 return 0; /* Placate lint. */
2302 }
2303
2304 /* Return a double value from the specified type and address.
2305 INVP points to an int which is set to 0 for valid value,
2306 1 for invalid value (bad float format). In either case,
2307 the returned double is OK to use. Argument is in target
2308 format, result is in host format. */
2309
2310 DOUBLEST
2311 unpack_double (struct type *type, const gdb_byte *valaddr, int *invp)
2312 {
2313 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (get_type_arch (type));
2314 enum type_code code;
2315 int len;
2316 int nosign;
2317
2318 *invp = 0; /* Assume valid. */
2319 CHECK_TYPEDEF (type);
2320 code = TYPE_CODE (type);
2321 len = TYPE_LENGTH (type);
2322 nosign = TYPE_UNSIGNED (type);
2323 if (code == TYPE_CODE_FLT)
2324 {
2325 /* NOTE: cagney/2002-02-19: There was a test here to see if the
2326 floating-point value was valid (using the macro
2327 INVALID_FLOAT). That test/macro have been removed.
2328
2329 It turns out that only the VAX defined this macro and then
2330 only in a non-portable way. Fixing the portability problem
2331 wouldn't help since the VAX floating-point code is also badly
2332 bit-rotten. The target needs to add definitions for the
2333 methods gdbarch_float_format and gdbarch_double_format - these
2334 exactly describe the target floating-point format. The
2335 problem here is that the corresponding floatformat_vax_f and
2336 floatformat_vax_d values these methods should be set to are
2337 also not defined either. Oops!
2338
2339 Hopefully someone will add both the missing floatformat
2340 definitions and the new cases for floatformat_is_valid (). */
2341
2342 if (!floatformat_is_valid (floatformat_from_type (type), valaddr))
2343 {
2344 *invp = 1;
2345 return 0.0;
2346 }
2347
2348 return extract_typed_floating (valaddr, type);
2349 }
2350 else if (code == TYPE_CODE_DECFLOAT)
2351 return decimal_to_doublest (valaddr, len, byte_order);
2352 else if (nosign)
2353 {
2354 /* Unsigned -- be sure we compensate for signed LONGEST. */
2355 return (ULONGEST) unpack_long (type, valaddr);
2356 }
2357 else
2358 {
2359 /* Signed -- we are OK with unpack_long. */
2360 return unpack_long (type, valaddr);
2361 }
2362 }
2363
2364 /* Unpack raw data (copied from debugee, target byte order) at VALADDR
2365 as a CORE_ADDR, assuming the raw data is described by type TYPE.
2366 We don't assume any alignment for the raw data. Return value is in
2367 host byte order.
2368
2369 If you want functions and arrays to be coerced to pointers, and
2370 references to be dereferenced, call value_as_address() instead.
2371
2372 C++: It is assumed that the front-end has taken care of
2373 all matters concerning pointers to members. A pointer
2374 to member which reaches here is considered to be equivalent
2375 to an INT (or some size). After all, it is only an offset. */
2376
2377 CORE_ADDR
2378 unpack_pointer (struct type *type, const gdb_byte *valaddr)
2379 {
2380 /* Assume a CORE_ADDR can fit in a LONGEST (for now). Not sure
2381 whether we want this to be true eventually. */
2382 return unpack_long (type, valaddr);
2383 }
2384
2385 \f
2386 /* Get the value of the FIELDNO'th field (which must be static) of
2387 TYPE. Return NULL if the field doesn't exist or has been
2388 optimized out. */
2389
2390 struct value *
2391 value_static_field (struct type *type, int fieldno)
2392 {
2393 struct value *retval;
2394
2395 switch (TYPE_FIELD_LOC_KIND (type, fieldno))
2396 {
2397 case FIELD_LOC_KIND_PHYSADDR:
2398 retval = value_at_lazy (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, fieldno),
2399 TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_PHYSADDR (type, fieldno));
2400 break;
2401 case FIELD_LOC_KIND_PHYSNAME:
2402 {
2403 const char *phys_name = TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_PHYSNAME (type, fieldno);
2404 /* TYPE_FIELD_NAME (type, fieldno); */
2405 struct symbol *sym = lookup_symbol (phys_name, 0, VAR_DOMAIN, 0);
2406
2407 if (sym == NULL)
2408 {
2409 /* With some compilers, e.g. HP aCC, static data members are
2410 reported as non-debuggable symbols. */
2411 struct minimal_symbol *msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (phys_name,
2412 NULL, NULL);
2413
2414 if (!msym)
2415 return NULL;
2416 else
2417 {
2418 retval = value_at_lazy (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, fieldno),
2419 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym));
2420 }
2421 }
2422 else
2423 retval = value_of_variable (sym, NULL);
2424 break;
2425 }
2426 default:
2427 gdb_assert_not_reached ("unexpected field location kind");
2428 }
2429
2430 return retval;
2431 }
2432
2433 /* Change the enclosing type of a value object VAL to NEW_ENCL_TYPE.
2434 You have to be careful here, since the size of the data area for the value
2435 is set by the length of the enclosing type. So if NEW_ENCL_TYPE is bigger
2436 than the old enclosing type, you have to allocate more space for the
2437 data. */
2438
2439 void
2440 set_value_enclosing_type (struct value *val, struct type *new_encl_type)
2441 {
2442 if (TYPE_LENGTH (new_encl_type) > TYPE_LENGTH (value_enclosing_type (val)))
2443 val->contents =
2444 (gdb_byte *) xrealloc (val->contents, TYPE_LENGTH (new_encl_type));
2445
2446 val->enclosing_type = new_encl_type;
2447 }
2448
2449 /* Given a value ARG1 (offset by OFFSET bytes)
2450 of a struct or union type ARG_TYPE,
2451 extract and return the value of one of its (non-static) fields.
2452 FIELDNO says which field. */
2453
2454 struct value *
2455 value_primitive_field (struct value *arg1, int offset,
2456 int fieldno, struct type *arg_type)
2457 {
2458 struct value *v;
2459 struct type *type;
2460
2461 CHECK_TYPEDEF (arg_type);
2462 type = TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (arg_type, fieldno);
2463
2464 /* Call check_typedef on our type to make sure that, if TYPE
2465 is a TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF, its length is set to the length
2466 of the target type instead of zero. However, we do not
2467 replace the typedef type by the target type, because we want
2468 to keep the typedef in order to be able to print the type
2469 description correctly. */
2470 check_typedef (type);
2471
2472 /* Handle packed fields */
2473
2474 if (TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE (arg_type, fieldno))
2475 {
2476 /* Create a new value for the bitfield, with bitpos and bitsize
2477 set. If possible, arrange offset and bitpos so that we can
2478 do a single aligned read of the size of the containing type.
2479 Otherwise, adjust offset to the byte containing the first
2480 bit. Assume that the address, offset, and embedded offset
2481 are sufficiently aligned. */
2482 int bitpos = TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (arg_type, fieldno);
2483 int container_bitsize = TYPE_LENGTH (type) * 8;
2484
2485 v = allocate_value_lazy (type);
2486 v->bitsize = TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE (arg_type, fieldno);
2487 if ((bitpos % container_bitsize) + v->bitsize <= container_bitsize
2488 && TYPE_LENGTH (type) <= (int) sizeof (LONGEST))
2489 v->bitpos = bitpos % container_bitsize;
2490 else
2491 v->bitpos = bitpos % 8;
2492 v->offset = (value_embedded_offset (arg1)
2493 + offset
2494 + (bitpos - v->bitpos) / 8);
2495 v->parent = arg1;
2496 value_incref (v->parent);
2497 if (!value_lazy (arg1))
2498 value_fetch_lazy (v);
2499 }
2500 else if (fieldno < TYPE_N_BASECLASSES (arg_type))
2501 {
2502 /* This field is actually a base subobject, so preserve the
2503 entire object's contents for later references to virtual
2504 bases, etc. */
2505
2506 /* Lazy register values with offsets are not supported. */
2507 if (VALUE_LVAL (arg1) == lval_register && value_lazy (arg1))
2508 value_fetch_lazy (arg1);
2509
2510 if (value_lazy (arg1))
2511 v = allocate_value_lazy (value_enclosing_type (arg1));
2512 else
2513 {
2514 v = allocate_value (value_enclosing_type (arg1));
2515 value_contents_copy_raw (v, 0, arg1, 0,
2516 TYPE_LENGTH (value_enclosing_type (arg1)));
2517 }
2518 v->type = type;
2519 v->offset = value_offset (arg1);
2520 v->embedded_offset = (offset + value_embedded_offset (arg1)
2521 + TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (arg_type, fieldno) / 8);
2522 }
2523 else
2524 {
2525 /* Plain old data member */
2526 offset += TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (arg_type, fieldno) / 8;
2527
2528 /* Lazy register values with offsets are not supported. */
2529 if (VALUE_LVAL (arg1) == lval_register && value_lazy (arg1))
2530 value_fetch_lazy (arg1);
2531
2532 if (value_lazy (arg1))
2533 v = allocate_value_lazy (type);
2534 else
2535 {
2536 v = allocate_value (type);
2537 value_contents_copy_raw (v, value_embedded_offset (v),
2538 arg1, value_embedded_offset (arg1) + offset,
2539 TYPE_LENGTH (type));
2540 }
2541 v->offset = (value_offset (arg1) + offset
2542 + value_embedded_offset (arg1));
2543 }
2544 set_value_component_location (v, arg1);
2545 VALUE_REGNUM (v) = VALUE_REGNUM (arg1);
2546 VALUE_FRAME_ID (v) = VALUE_FRAME_ID (arg1);
2547 return v;
2548 }
2549
2550 /* Given a value ARG1 of a struct or union type,
2551 extract and return the value of one of its (non-static) fields.
2552 FIELDNO says which field. */
2553
2554 struct value *
2555 value_field (struct value *arg1, int fieldno)
2556 {
2557 return value_primitive_field (arg1, 0, fieldno, value_type (arg1));
2558 }
2559
2560 /* Return a non-virtual function as a value.
2561 F is the list of member functions which contains the desired method.
2562 J is an index into F which provides the desired method.
2563
2564 We only use the symbol for its address, so be happy with either a
2565 full symbol or a minimal symbol. */
2566
2567 struct value *
2568 value_fn_field (struct value **arg1p, struct fn_field *f,
2569 int j, struct type *type,
2570 int offset)
2571 {
2572 struct value *v;
2573 struct type *ftype = TYPE_FN_FIELD_TYPE (f, j);
2574 const char *physname = TYPE_FN_FIELD_PHYSNAME (f, j);
2575 struct symbol *sym;
2576 struct minimal_symbol *msym;
2577
2578 sym = lookup_symbol (physname, 0, VAR_DOMAIN, 0);
2579 if (sym != NULL)
2580 {
2581 msym = NULL;
2582 }
2583 else
2584 {
2585 gdb_assert (sym == NULL);
2586 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (physname, NULL, NULL);
2587 if (msym == NULL)
2588 return NULL;
2589 }
2590
2591 v = allocate_value (ftype);
2592 if (sym)
2593 {
2594 set_value_address (v, BLOCK_START (SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE (sym)));
2595 }
2596 else
2597 {
2598 /* The minimal symbol might point to a function descriptor;
2599 resolve it to the actual code address instead. */
2600 struct objfile *objfile = msymbol_objfile (msym);
2601 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_objfile_arch (objfile);
2602
2603 set_value_address (v,
2604 gdbarch_convert_from_func_ptr_addr
2605 (gdbarch, SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym), &current_target));
2606 }
2607
2608 if (arg1p)
2609 {
2610 if (type != value_type (*arg1p))
2611 *arg1p = value_ind (value_cast (lookup_pointer_type (type),
2612 value_addr (*arg1p)));
2613
2614 /* Move the `this' pointer according to the offset.
2615 VALUE_OFFSET (*arg1p) += offset; */
2616 }
2617
2618 return v;
2619 }
2620
2621 \f
2622
2623 /* Helper function for both unpack_value_bits_as_long and
2624 unpack_bits_as_long. See those functions for more details on the
2625 interface; the only difference is that this function accepts either
2626 a NULL or a non-NULL ORIGINAL_VALUE. */
2627
2628 static int
2629 unpack_value_bits_as_long_1 (struct type *field_type, const gdb_byte *valaddr,
2630 int embedded_offset, int bitpos, int bitsize,
2631 const struct value *original_value,
2632 LONGEST *result)
2633 {
2634 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (get_type_arch (field_type));
2635 ULONGEST val;
2636 ULONGEST valmask;
2637 int lsbcount;
2638 int bytes_read;
2639 int read_offset;
2640
2641 /* Read the minimum number of bytes required; there may not be
2642 enough bytes to read an entire ULONGEST. */
2643 CHECK_TYPEDEF (field_type);
2644 if (bitsize)
2645 bytes_read = ((bitpos % 8) + bitsize + 7) / 8;
2646 else
2647 bytes_read = TYPE_LENGTH (field_type);
2648
2649 read_offset = bitpos / 8;
2650
2651 if (original_value != NULL
2652 && !value_bytes_available (original_value, embedded_offset + read_offset,
2653 bytes_read))
2654 return 0;
2655
2656 val = extract_unsigned_integer (valaddr + embedded_offset + read_offset,
2657 bytes_read, byte_order);
2658
2659 /* Extract bits. See comment above. */
2660
2661 if (gdbarch_bits_big_endian (get_type_arch (field_type)))
2662 lsbcount = (bytes_read * 8 - bitpos % 8 - bitsize);
2663 else
2664 lsbcount = (bitpos % 8);
2665 val >>= lsbcount;
2666
2667 /* If the field does not entirely fill a LONGEST, then zero the sign bits.
2668 If the field is signed, and is negative, then sign extend. */
2669
2670 if ((bitsize > 0) && (bitsize < 8 * (int) sizeof (val)))
2671 {
2672 valmask = (((ULONGEST) 1) << bitsize) - 1;
2673 val &= valmask;
2674 if (!TYPE_UNSIGNED (field_type))
2675 {
2676 if (val & (valmask ^ (valmask >> 1)))
2677 {
2678 val |= ~valmask;
2679 }
2680 }
2681 }
2682
2683 *result = val;
2684 return 1;
2685 }
2686
2687 /* Unpack a bitfield of the specified FIELD_TYPE, from the object at
2688 VALADDR + EMBEDDED_OFFSET, and store the result in *RESULT.
2689 VALADDR points to the contents of ORIGINAL_VALUE, which must not be
2690 NULL. The bitfield starts at BITPOS bits and contains BITSIZE
2691 bits.
2692
2693 Returns false if the value contents are unavailable, otherwise
2694 returns true, indicating a valid value has been stored in *RESULT.
2695
2696 Extracting bits depends on endianness of the machine. Compute the
2697 number of least significant bits to discard. For big endian machines,
2698 we compute the total number of bits in the anonymous object, subtract
2699 off the bit count from the MSB of the object to the MSB of the
2700 bitfield, then the size of the bitfield, which leaves the LSB discard
2701 count. For little endian machines, the discard count is simply the
2702 number of bits from the LSB of the anonymous object to the LSB of the
2703 bitfield.
2704
2705 If the field is signed, we also do sign extension. */
2706
2707 int
2708 unpack_value_bits_as_long (struct type *field_type, const gdb_byte *valaddr,
2709 int embedded_offset, int bitpos, int bitsize,
2710 const struct value *original_value,
2711 LONGEST *result)
2712 {
2713 gdb_assert (original_value != NULL);
2714
2715 return unpack_value_bits_as_long_1 (field_type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
2716 bitpos, bitsize, original_value, result);
2717
2718 }
2719
2720 /* Unpack a field FIELDNO of the specified TYPE, from the object at
2721 VALADDR + EMBEDDED_OFFSET. VALADDR points to the contents of
2722 ORIGINAL_VALUE. See unpack_value_bits_as_long for more
2723 details. */
2724
2725 static int
2726 unpack_value_field_as_long_1 (struct type *type, const gdb_byte *valaddr,
2727 int embedded_offset, int fieldno,
2728 const struct value *val, LONGEST *result)
2729 {
2730 int bitpos = TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (type, fieldno);
2731 int bitsize = TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE (type, fieldno);
2732 struct type *field_type = TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, fieldno);
2733
2734 return unpack_value_bits_as_long_1 (field_type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
2735 bitpos, bitsize, val,
2736 result);
2737 }
2738
2739 /* Unpack a field FIELDNO of the specified TYPE, from the object at
2740 VALADDR + EMBEDDED_OFFSET. VALADDR points to the contents of
2741 ORIGINAL_VALUE, which must not be NULL. See
2742 unpack_value_bits_as_long for more details. */
2743
2744 int
2745 unpack_value_field_as_long (struct type *type, const gdb_byte *valaddr,
2746 int embedded_offset, int fieldno,
2747 const struct value *val, LONGEST *result)
2748 {
2749 gdb_assert (val != NULL);
2750
2751 return unpack_value_field_as_long_1 (type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
2752 fieldno, val, result);
2753 }
2754
2755 /* Unpack a field FIELDNO of the specified TYPE, from the anonymous
2756 object at VALADDR. See unpack_value_bits_as_long for more details.
2757 This function differs from unpack_value_field_as_long in that it
2758 operates without a struct value object. */
2759
2760 LONGEST
2761 unpack_field_as_long (struct type *type, const gdb_byte *valaddr, int fieldno)
2762 {
2763 LONGEST result;
2764
2765 unpack_value_field_as_long_1 (type, valaddr, 0, fieldno, NULL, &result);
2766 return result;
2767 }
2768
2769 /* Return a new value with type TYPE, which is FIELDNO field of the
2770 object at VALADDR + EMBEDDEDOFFSET. VALADDR points to the contents
2771 of VAL. If the VAL's contents required to extract the bitfield
2772 from are unavailable, the new value is correspondingly marked as
2773 unavailable. */
2774
2775 struct value *
2776 value_field_bitfield (struct type *type, int fieldno,
2777 const gdb_byte *valaddr,
2778 int embedded_offset, const struct value *val)
2779 {
2780 LONGEST l;
2781
2782 if (!unpack_value_field_as_long (type, valaddr, embedded_offset, fieldno,
2783 val, &l))
2784 {
2785 struct type *field_type = TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, fieldno);
2786 struct value *retval = allocate_value (field_type);
2787 mark_value_bytes_unavailable (retval, 0, TYPE_LENGTH (field_type));
2788 return retval;
2789 }
2790 else
2791 {
2792 return value_from_longest (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, fieldno), l);
2793 }
2794 }
2795
2796 /* Modify the value of a bitfield. ADDR points to a block of memory in
2797 target byte order; the bitfield starts in the byte pointed to. FIELDVAL
2798 is the desired value of the field, in host byte order. BITPOS and BITSIZE
2799 indicate which bits (in target bit order) comprise the bitfield.
2800 Requires 0 < BITSIZE <= lbits, 0 <= BITPOS % 8 + BITSIZE <= lbits, and
2801 0 <= BITPOS, where lbits is the size of a LONGEST in bits. */
2802
2803 void
2804 modify_field (struct type *type, gdb_byte *addr,
2805 LONGEST fieldval, int bitpos, int bitsize)
2806 {
2807 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (get_type_arch (type));
2808 ULONGEST oword;
2809 ULONGEST mask = (ULONGEST) -1 >> (8 * sizeof (ULONGEST) - bitsize);
2810 int bytesize;
2811
2812 /* Normalize BITPOS. */
2813 addr += bitpos / 8;
2814 bitpos %= 8;
2815
2816 /* If a negative fieldval fits in the field in question, chop
2817 off the sign extension bits. */
2818 if ((~fieldval & ~(mask >> 1)) == 0)
2819 fieldval &= mask;
2820
2821 /* Warn if value is too big to fit in the field in question. */
2822 if (0 != (fieldval & ~mask))
2823 {
2824 /* FIXME: would like to include fieldval in the message, but
2825 we don't have a sprintf_longest. */
2826 warning (_("Value does not fit in %d bits."), bitsize);
2827
2828 /* Truncate it, otherwise adjoining fields may be corrupted. */
2829 fieldval &= mask;
2830 }
2831
2832 /* Ensure no bytes outside of the modified ones get accessed as it may cause
2833 false valgrind reports. */
2834
2835 bytesize = (bitpos + bitsize + 7) / 8;
2836 oword = extract_unsigned_integer (addr, bytesize, byte_order);
2837
2838 /* Shifting for bit field depends on endianness of the target machine. */
2839 if (gdbarch_bits_big_endian (get_type_arch (type)))
2840 bitpos = bytesize * 8 - bitpos - bitsize;
2841
2842 oword &= ~(mask << bitpos);
2843 oword |= fieldval << bitpos;
2844
2845 store_unsigned_integer (addr, bytesize, byte_order, oword);
2846 }
2847 \f
2848 /* Pack NUM into BUF using a target format of TYPE. */
2849
2850 void
2851 pack_long (gdb_byte *buf, struct type *type, LONGEST num)
2852 {
2853 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (get_type_arch (type));
2854 int len;
2855
2856 type = check_typedef (type);
2857 len = TYPE_LENGTH (type);
2858
2859 switch (TYPE_CODE (type))
2860 {
2861 case TYPE_CODE_INT:
2862 case TYPE_CODE_CHAR:
2863 case TYPE_CODE_ENUM:
2864 case TYPE_CODE_FLAGS:
2865 case TYPE_CODE_BOOL:
2866 case TYPE_CODE_RANGE:
2867 case TYPE_CODE_MEMBERPTR:
2868 store_signed_integer (buf, len, byte_order, num);
2869 break;
2870
2871 case TYPE_CODE_REF:
2872 case TYPE_CODE_PTR:
2873 store_typed_address (buf, type, (CORE_ADDR) num);
2874 break;
2875
2876 default:
2877 error (_("Unexpected type (%d) encountered for integer constant."),
2878 TYPE_CODE (type));
2879 }
2880 }
2881
2882
2883 /* Pack NUM into BUF using a target format of TYPE. */
2884
2885 void
2886 pack_unsigned_long (gdb_byte *buf, struct type *type, ULONGEST num)
2887 {
2888 int len;
2889 enum bfd_endian byte_order;
2890
2891 type = check_typedef (type);
2892 len = TYPE_LENGTH (type);
2893 byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (get_type_arch (type));
2894
2895 switch (TYPE_CODE (type))
2896 {
2897 case TYPE_CODE_INT:
2898 case TYPE_CODE_CHAR:
2899 case TYPE_CODE_ENUM:
2900 case TYPE_CODE_FLAGS:
2901 case TYPE_CODE_BOOL:
2902 case TYPE_CODE_RANGE:
2903 case TYPE_CODE_MEMBERPTR:
2904 store_unsigned_integer (buf, len, byte_order, num);
2905 break;
2906
2907 case TYPE_CODE_REF:
2908 case TYPE_CODE_PTR:
2909 store_typed_address (buf, type, (CORE_ADDR) num);
2910 break;
2911
2912 default:
2913 error (_("Unexpected type (%d) encountered "
2914 "for unsigned integer constant."),
2915 TYPE_CODE (type));
2916 }
2917 }
2918
2919
2920 /* Convert C numbers into newly allocated values. */
2921
2922 struct value *
2923 value_from_longest (struct type *type, LONGEST num)
2924 {
2925 struct value *val = allocate_value (type);
2926
2927 pack_long (value_contents_raw (val), type, num);
2928 return val;
2929 }
2930
2931
2932 /* Convert C unsigned numbers into newly allocated values. */
2933
2934 struct value *
2935 value_from_ulongest (struct type *type, ULONGEST num)
2936 {
2937 struct value *val = allocate_value (type);
2938
2939 pack_unsigned_long (value_contents_raw (val), type, num);
2940
2941 return val;
2942 }
2943
2944
2945 /* Create a value representing a pointer of type TYPE to the address
2946 ADDR. */
2947 struct value *
2948 value_from_pointer (struct type *type, CORE_ADDR addr)
2949 {
2950 struct value *val = allocate_value (type);
2951
2952 store_typed_address (value_contents_raw (val), check_typedef (type), addr);
2953 return val;
2954 }
2955
2956
2957 /* Create a value of type TYPE whose contents come from VALADDR, if it
2958 is non-null, and whose memory address (in the inferior) is
2959 ADDRESS. */
2960
2961 struct value *
2962 value_from_contents_and_address (struct type *type,
2963 const gdb_byte *valaddr,
2964 CORE_ADDR address)
2965 {
2966 struct value *v;
2967
2968 if (valaddr == NULL)
2969 v = allocate_value_lazy (type);
2970 else
2971 {
2972 v = allocate_value (type);
2973 memcpy (value_contents_raw (v), valaddr, TYPE_LENGTH (type));
2974 }
2975 set_value_address (v, address);
2976 VALUE_LVAL (v) = lval_memory;
2977 return v;
2978 }
2979
2980 /* Create a value of type TYPE holding the contents CONTENTS.
2981 The new value is `not_lval'. */
2982
2983 struct value *
2984 value_from_contents (struct type *type, const gdb_byte *contents)
2985 {
2986 struct value *result;
2987
2988 result = allocate_value (type);
2989 memcpy (value_contents_raw (result), contents, TYPE_LENGTH (type));
2990 return result;
2991 }
2992
2993 struct value *
2994 value_from_double (struct type *type, DOUBLEST num)
2995 {
2996 struct value *val = allocate_value (type);
2997 struct type *base_type = check_typedef (type);
2998 enum type_code code = TYPE_CODE (base_type);
2999
3000 if (code == TYPE_CODE_FLT)
3001 {
3002 store_typed_floating (value_contents_raw (val), base_type, num);
3003 }
3004 else
3005 error (_("Unexpected type encountered for floating constant."));
3006
3007 return val;
3008 }
3009
3010 struct value *
3011 value_from_decfloat (struct type *type, const gdb_byte *dec)
3012 {
3013 struct value *val = allocate_value (type);
3014
3015 memcpy (value_contents_raw (val), dec, TYPE_LENGTH (type));
3016 return val;
3017 }
3018
3019 /* Extract a value from the history file. Input will be of the form
3020 $digits or $$digits. See block comment above 'write_dollar_variable'
3021 for details. */
3022
3023 struct value *
3024 value_from_history_ref (char *h, char **endp)
3025 {
3026 int index, len;
3027
3028 if (h[0] == '$')
3029 len = 1;
3030 else
3031 return NULL;
3032
3033 if (h[1] == '$')
3034 len = 2;
3035
3036 /* Find length of numeral string. */
3037 for (; isdigit (h[len]); len++)
3038 ;
3039
3040 /* Make sure numeral string is not part of an identifier. */
3041 if (h[len] == '_' || isalpha (h[len]))
3042 return NULL;
3043
3044 /* Now collect the index value. */
3045 if (h[1] == '$')
3046 {
3047 if (len == 2)
3048 {
3049 /* For some bizarre reason, "$$" is equivalent to "$$1",
3050 rather than to "$$0" as it ought to be! */
3051 index = -1;
3052 *endp += len;
3053 }
3054 else
3055 index = -strtol (&h[2], endp, 10);
3056 }
3057 else
3058 {
3059 if (len == 1)
3060 {
3061 /* "$" is equivalent to "$0". */
3062 index = 0;
3063 *endp += len;
3064 }
3065 else
3066 index = strtol (&h[1], endp, 10);
3067 }
3068
3069 return access_value_history (index);
3070 }
3071
3072 struct value *
3073 coerce_ref (struct value *arg)
3074 {
3075 struct type *value_type_arg_tmp = check_typedef (value_type (arg));
3076
3077 if (TYPE_CODE (value_type_arg_tmp) == TYPE_CODE_REF)
3078 arg = value_at_lazy (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (value_type_arg_tmp),
3079 unpack_pointer (value_type (arg),
3080 value_contents (arg)));
3081 return arg;
3082 }
3083
3084 struct value *
3085 coerce_array (struct value *arg)
3086 {
3087 struct type *type;
3088
3089 arg = coerce_ref (arg);
3090 type = check_typedef (value_type (arg));
3091
3092 switch (TYPE_CODE (type))
3093 {
3094 case TYPE_CODE_ARRAY:
3095 if (!TYPE_VECTOR (type) && current_language->c_style_arrays)
3096 arg = value_coerce_array (arg);
3097 break;
3098 case TYPE_CODE_FUNC:
3099 arg = value_coerce_function (arg);
3100 break;
3101 }
3102 return arg;
3103 }
3104 \f
3105
3106 /* Return true if the function returning the specified type is using
3107 the convention of returning structures in memory (passing in the
3108 address as a hidden first parameter). */
3109
3110 int
3111 using_struct_return (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
3112 struct type *func_type, struct type *value_type)
3113 {
3114 enum type_code code = TYPE_CODE (value_type);
3115
3116 if (code == TYPE_CODE_ERROR)
3117 error (_("Function return type unknown."));
3118
3119 if (code == TYPE_CODE_VOID)
3120 /* A void return value is never in memory. See also corresponding
3121 code in "print_return_value". */
3122 return 0;
3123
3124 /* Probe the architecture for the return-value convention. */
3125 return (gdbarch_return_value (gdbarch, func_type, value_type,
3126 NULL, NULL, NULL)
3127 != RETURN_VALUE_REGISTER_CONVENTION);
3128 }
3129
3130 /* Set the initialized field in a value struct. */
3131
3132 void
3133 set_value_initialized (struct value *val, int status)
3134 {
3135 val->initialized = status;
3136 }
3137
3138 /* Return the initialized field in a value struct. */
3139
3140 int
3141 value_initialized (struct value *val)
3142 {
3143 return val->initialized;
3144 }
3145
3146 void
3147 _initialize_values (void)
3148 {
3149 add_cmd ("convenience", no_class, show_convenience, _("\
3150 Debugger convenience (\"$foo\") variables.\n\
3151 These variables are created when you assign them values;\n\
3152 thus, \"print $foo=1\" gives \"$foo\" the value 1. Values may be any type.\n\
3153 \n\
3154 A few convenience variables are given values automatically:\n\
3155 \"$_\"holds the last address examined with \"x\" or \"info lines\",\n\
3156 \"$__\" holds the contents of the last address examined with \"x\"."),
3157 &showlist);
3158
3159 add_cmd ("values", no_set_class, show_values, _("\
3160 Elements of value history around item number IDX (or last ten)."),
3161 &showlist);
3162
3163 add_com ("init-if-undefined", class_vars, init_if_undefined_command, _("\
3164 Initialize a convenience variable if necessary.\n\
3165 init-if-undefined VARIABLE = EXPRESSION\n\
3166 Set an internal VARIABLE to the result of the EXPRESSION if it does not\n\
3167 exist or does not contain a value. The EXPRESSION is not evaluated if the\n\
3168 VARIABLE is already initialized."));
3169
3170 add_prefix_cmd ("function", no_class, function_command, _("\
3171 Placeholder command for showing help on convenience functions."),
3172 &functionlist, "function ", 0, &cmdlist);
3173 }