When building gnu-nat.c, we get:
CXX gnu-nat.o
gnu-nat.c: In member function 'virtual void gnu_nat_target::create_inferior(const char*, const string&, char**, int)':
gnu-nat.c:2117:13: error: 'struct inf' has no member named 'target_is_pushed'
2117 | if (!inf->target_is_pushed (this))
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
gnu-nat.c:2118:10: error: 'struct inf' has no member named 'push_target'
2118 | inf->push_target (this);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~
This is because of a confusion between the generic `struct inferior`
variable and the gnu-nat-specific `struct inf` variable. Fix by
referring to `inferior`, not `inf`.
Adjust the comment on top of `struct inf` to clarify the purpose of that
type.
Co-Authored-By: Andrea Monaco <andrea.monaco@autistici.org>
Change-Id: I2fe2f7f6ef61a38d79860fd262b08835c963fc77
int suppress; /* Something trivial happened. */
};
-/* The state of an inferior. */
+/* Further Hurd-specific state of an inferior. */
struct inf
{
/* Fields describing the current inferior. */
inf_debug (inf, "creating inferior");
- if (!inf->target_is_pushed (this))
- inf->push_target (this);
+ if (!inferior->target_is_pushed (this))
+ inferior->push_target (this);
pid = fork_inferior (exec_file, allargs, env, gnu_ptrace_me,
NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL);