{
b = SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE (func);
nsyms = BLOCK_NSYMS (b);
- }
- for (i = 0; i < nsyms; i++)
- {
- QUIT;
- sym = BLOCK_SYM (b, i);
+ for (i = 0; i < nsyms; i++)
+ {
+ QUIT;
+ sym = BLOCK_SYM (b, i);
- /* Keep track of the highest stack argument offset seen, and
- skip over any kinds of symbols we don't care about. */
+ /* Keep track of the highest stack argument offset seen, and
+ skip over any kinds of symbols we don't care about. */
- switch (SYMBOL_CLASS (sym))
- {
- case LOC_ARG:
- case LOC_REF_ARG:
- {
- long current_offset = SYMBOL_VALUE (sym);
- arg_size = TYPE_LENGTH (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym));
-
- /* Compute address of next argument by adding the size of
- this argument and rounding to an int boundary. */
- current_offset =
- ((current_offset + arg_size + sizeof (int) - 1)
- & ~(sizeof (int) - 1));
-
- /* If this is the highest offset seen yet, set highest_offset. */
- if (highest_offset == -1
- || (current_offset > highest_offset))
- highest_offset = current_offset;
-
- /* Add the number of ints we're about to print to args_printed. */
- args_printed += (arg_size + sizeof (int) - 1) / sizeof (int);
- }
+ switch (SYMBOL_CLASS (sym))
+ {
+ case LOC_ARG:
+ case LOC_REF_ARG:
+ {
+ long current_offset = SYMBOL_VALUE (sym);
+ arg_size = TYPE_LENGTH (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym));
+
+ /* Compute address of next argument by adding the size of
+ this argument and rounding to an int boundary. */
+ current_offset =
+ ((current_offset + arg_size + sizeof (int) - 1)
+ & ~(sizeof (int) - 1));
+
+ /* If this is the highest offset seen yet, set highest_offset. */
+ if (highest_offset == -1
+ || (current_offset > highest_offset))
+ highest_offset = current_offset;
+
+ /* Add the number of ints we're about to print to args_printed. */
+ args_printed += (arg_size + sizeof (int) - 1) / sizeof (int);
+ }
- /* We care about types of symbols, but don't need to keep track of
- stack offsets in them. */
- case LOC_REGPARM:
- case LOC_REGPARM_ADDR:
- case LOC_LOCAL_ARG:
- case LOC_BASEREG_ARG:
- break;
+ /* We care about types of symbols, but don't need to keep track of
+ stack offsets in them. */
+ case LOC_REGPARM:
+ case LOC_REGPARM_ADDR:
+ case LOC_LOCAL_ARG:
+ case LOC_BASEREG_ARG:
+ break;
- /* Other types of symbols we just skip over. */
- default:
- continue;
- }
+ /* Other types of symbols we just skip over. */
+ default:
+ continue;
+ }
- /* We have to look up the symbol because arguments can have
- two entries (one a parameter, one a local) and the one we
- want is the local, which lookup_symbol will find for us.
- This includes gcc1 (not gcc2) on the sparc when passing a
- small structure and gcc2 when the argument type is float
- and it is passed as a double and converted to float by
- the prologue (in the latter case the type of the LOC_ARG
- symbol is double and the type of the LOC_LOCAL symbol is
- float). */
- /* But if the parameter name is null, don't try it.
- Null parameter names occur on the RS/6000, for traceback tables.
- FIXME, should we even print them? */
-
- if (*SYMBOL_NAME (sym))
- {
- struct symbol *nsym;
- nsym = lookup_symbol
- (SYMBOL_NAME (sym),
- b, VAR_NAMESPACE, (int *) NULL, (struct symtab **) NULL);
- if (SYMBOL_CLASS (nsym) == LOC_REGISTER)
+ /* We have to look up the symbol because arguments can have
+ two entries (one a parameter, one a local) and the one we
+ want is the local, which lookup_symbol will find for us.
+ This includes gcc1 (not gcc2) on the sparc when passing a
+ small structure and gcc2 when the argument type is float
+ and it is passed as a double and converted to float by
+ the prologue (in the latter case the type of the LOC_ARG
+ symbol is double and the type of the LOC_LOCAL symbol is
+ float). */
+ /* But if the parameter name is null, don't try it.
+ Null parameter names occur on the RS/6000, for traceback tables.
+ FIXME, should we even print them? */
+
+ if (*SYMBOL_NAME (sym))
{
- /* There is a LOC_ARG/LOC_REGISTER pair. This means that
- it was passed on the stack and loaded into a register,
- or passed in a register and stored in a stack slot.
- GDB 3.x used the LOC_ARG; GDB 4.0-4.11 used the LOC_REGISTER.
-
- Reasons for using the LOC_ARG:
- (1) because find_saved_registers may be slow for remote
- debugging,
- (2) because registers are often re-used and stack slots
- rarely (never?) are. Therefore using the stack slot is
- much less likely to print garbage.
-
- Reasons why we might want to use the LOC_REGISTER:
- (1) So that the backtrace prints the same value as
- "print foo". I see no compelling reason why this needs
- to be the case; having the backtrace print the value which
- was passed in, and "print foo" print the value as modified
- within the called function, makes perfect sense to me.
-
- Additional note: It might be nice if "info args" displayed
- both values.
- One more note: There is a case with sparc structure passing
- where we need to use the LOC_REGISTER, but this is dealt with
- by creating a single LOC_REGPARM in symbol reading. */
-
- /* Leave sym (the LOC_ARG) alone. */
- ;
+ struct symbol *nsym;
+ nsym = lookup_symbol
+ (SYMBOL_NAME (sym),
+ b, VAR_NAMESPACE, (int *) NULL, (struct symtab **) NULL);
+ if (SYMBOL_CLASS (nsym) == LOC_REGISTER)
+ {
+ /* There is a LOC_ARG/LOC_REGISTER pair. This means that
+ it was passed on the stack and loaded into a register,
+ or passed in a register and stored in a stack slot.
+ GDB 3.x used the LOC_ARG; GDB 4.0-4.11 used the LOC_REGISTER.
+
+ Reasons for using the LOC_ARG:
+ (1) because find_saved_registers may be slow for remote
+ debugging,
+ (2) because registers are often re-used and stack slots
+ rarely (never?) are. Therefore using the stack slot is
+ much less likely to print garbage.
+
+ Reasons why we might want to use the LOC_REGISTER:
+ (1) So that the backtrace prints the same value as
+ "print foo". I see no compelling reason why this needs
+ to be the case; having the backtrace print the value which
+ was passed in, and "print foo" print the value as modified
+ within the called function, makes perfect sense to me.
+
+ Additional note: It might be nice if "info args" displayed
+ both values.
+ One more note: There is a case with sparc structure passing
+ where we need to use the LOC_REGISTER, but this is dealt with
+ by creating a single LOC_REGPARM in symbol reading. */
+
+ /* Leave sym (the LOC_ARG) alone. */
+ ;
+ }
+ else
+ sym = nsym;
}
- else
- sym = nsym;
- }
#ifdef UI_OUT
- /* Print the current arg. */
- if (!first)
- ui_out_text (uiout, ", ");
- ui_out_wrap_hint (uiout, " ");
-
- annotate_arg_begin ();
-
- list_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, NULL);
- fprintf_symbol_filtered (stb->stream, SYMBOL_SOURCE_NAME (sym),
- SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (sym), DMGL_PARAMS | DMGL_ANSI);
- ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "name", stb);
- annotate_arg_name_end ();
- ui_out_text (uiout, "=");
+ /* Print the current arg. */
+ if (!first)
+ ui_out_text (uiout, ", ");
+ ui_out_wrap_hint (uiout, " ");
+
+ annotate_arg_begin ();
+
+ list_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, NULL);
+ fprintf_symbol_filtered (stb->stream, SYMBOL_SOURCE_NAME (sym),
+ SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (sym), DMGL_PARAMS | DMGL_ANSI);
+ ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "name", stb);
+ annotate_arg_name_end ();
+ ui_out_text (uiout, "=");
#else
- /* Print the current arg. */
- if (!first)
- fprintf_filtered (stream, ", ");
- wrap_here (" ");
+ /* Print the current arg. */
+ if (!first)
+ fprintf_filtered (stream, ", ");
+ wrap_here (" ");
- annotate_arg_begin ();
+ annotate_arg_begin ();
- fprintf_symbol_filtered (stream, SYMBOL_SOURCE_NAME (sym),
- SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (sym), DMGL_PARAMS | DMGL_ANSI);
- annotate_arg_name_end ();
- fputs_filtered ("=", stream);
+ fprintf_symbol_filtered (stream, SYMBOL_SOURCE_NAME (sym),
+ SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (sym), DMGL_PARAMS | DMGL_ANSI);
+ annotate_arg_name_end ();
+ fputs_filtered ("=", stream);
#endif
- /* Avoid value_print because it will deref ref parameters. We just
- want to print their addresses. Print ??? for args whose address
- we do not know. We pass 2 as "recurse" to val_print because our
- standard indentation here is 4 spaces, and val_print indents
- 2 for each recurse. */
- val = read_var_value (sym, fi);
+ /* Avoid value_print because it will deref ref parameters. We just
+ want to print their addresses. Print ??? for args whose address
+ we do not know. We pass 2 as "recurse" to val_print because our
+ standard indentation here is 4 spaces, and val_print indents
+ 2 for each recurse. */
+ val = read_var_value (sym, fi);
- annotate_arg_value (val == NULL ? NULL : VALUE_TYPE (val));
+ annotate_arg_value (val == NULL ? NULL : VALUE_TYPE (val));
- if (val)
- {
+ if (val)
+ {
#ifdef UI_OUT
- val_print (VALUE_TYPE (val), VALUE_CONTENTS (val), 0,
- VALUE_ADDRESS (val),
- stb->stream, 0, 0, 2, Val_no_prettyprint);
- ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "value", stb);
- }
- else
- ui_out_text (uiout, "???");
+ val_print (VALUE_TYPE (val), VALUE_CONTENTS (val), 0,
+ VALUE_ADDRESS (val),
+ stb->stream, 0, 0, 2, Val_no_prettyprint);
+ ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "value", stb);
+ }
+ else
+ ui_out_text (uiout, "???");
- /* Invoke ui_out_tuple_end. */
- do_cleanups (list_chain);
+ /* Invoke ui_out_tuple_end. */
+ do_cleanups (list_chain);
#else
- val_print (VALUE_TYPE (val), VALUE_CONTENTS (val), 0,
- VALUE_ADDRESS (val),
- stream, 0, 0, 2, Val_no_prettyprint);
- }
- else
- fputs_filtered ("???", stream);
+ val_print (VALUE_TYPE (val), VALUE_CONTENTS (val), 0,
+ VALUE_ADDRESS (val),
+ stream, 0, 0, 2, Val_no_prettyprint);
+ }
+ else
+ fputs_filtered ("???", stream);
#endif
- annotate_arg_end ();
+ annotate_arg_end ();
- first = 0;
+ first = 0;
+ }
}
/* Don't print nameless args in situations where we don't know