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1\input texinfo
2@setfilename gdbint.info
3
4@ifinfo
5@format
6START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
7* Gdb-Internals: (gdbint). The GNU debugger's internals.
8END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
9@end format
10@end ifinfo
11
12@ifinfo
13This file documents the internals of the GNU debugger GDB.
14
15Copyright 1990-1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
16Contributed by Cygnus Solutions. Written by John Gilmore.
17Second Edition by Stan Shebs.
18
19Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
20manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are
21preserved on all copies.
22
23@ignore
24Permission is granted to process this file through Tex and print the
25results, provided the printed document carries copying permission notice
26identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph (this
27paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
28
29@end ignore
30Permission is granted to copy or distribute modified versions of this
31manual under the terms of the GPL (for which purpose this text may be
32regarded as a program in the language TeX).
33@end ifinfo
34
35@setchapternewpage off
36@settitle GDB Internals
37
38@titlepage
39@title{GDB Internals}
40@subtitle{A guide to the internals of the GNU debugger}
41@author John Gilmore
42@author Cygnus Solutions
43@author Second Edition:
44@author Stan Shebs
45@author Cygnus Solutions
46@page
47@tex
48\def\$#1${{#1}} % Kluge: collect RCS revision info without $...$
49\xdef\manvers{\$Revision$} % For use in headers, footers too
50{\parskip=0pt
51\hfill Cygnus Solutions\par
52\hfill \manvers\par
53\hfill \TeX{}info \texinfoversion\par
54}
55@end tex
56
57@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
58Copyright @copyright{} 1990-1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
59
60Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
61this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
62are preserved on all copies.
63
64@end titlepage
65
66@node Top
67@c Perhaps this should be the title of the document (but only for info,
68@c not for TeX). Existing GNU manuals seem inconsistent on this point.
69@top Scope of this Document
70
71This document documents the internals of the GNU debugger, GDB. It
72includes description of GDB's key algorithms and operations, as well
73as the mechanisms that adapt GDB to specific hosts and targets.
74
75@menu
76* Requirements::
77* Overall Structure::
78* Algorithms::
79* User Interface::
80* Symbol Handling::
81* Language Support::
82* Host Definition::
83* Target Architecture Definition::
84* Target Vector Definition::
85* Native Debugging::
86* Support Libraries::
87* Coding::
88* Porting GDB::
89* Hints::
90@end menu
91
92@node Requirements
93
94@chapter Requirements
95
96Before diving into the internals, you should understand the formal
97requirements and other expectations for GDB. Although some of these may
98seem obvious, there have been proposals for GDB that have run counter to
99these requirements.
100
101First of all, GDB is a debugger. It's not designed to be a front panel
102for embedded systems. It's not a text editor. It's not a shell. It's
103not a programming environment.
104
105GDB is an interactive tool. Although a batch mode is available, GDB's
106primary role is to interact with a human programmer.
107
108GDB should be responsive to the user. A programmer hot on the trail of
109a nasty bug, and operating under a looming deadline, is going to be very
110impatient of everything, including the response time to debugger
111commands.
112
113GDB should be relatively permissive, such as for expressions. While the
114compiler should be picky (or have the option to be made picky), since
115source code lives for a long time usually, the programmer doing
116debugging shouldn't be spending time figuring out to mollify the
117debugger.
118
119GDB will be called upon to deal with really large programs. Executable
120sizes of 50 to 100 megabytes occur regularly, and we've heard reports of
121programs approaching 1 gigabyte in size.
122
123GDB should be able to run everywhere. No other debugger is available
124for even half as many configurations as GDB supports.
125
126
127@node Overall Structure
128
129@chapter Overall Structure
130
131GDB consists of three major subsystems: user interface, symbol handling
132(the ``symbol side''), and target system handling (the ``target side'').
133
134Ther user interface consists of several actual interfaces, plus
135supporting code.
136
137The symbol side consists of object file readers, debugging info
138interpreters, symbol table management, source language expression
139parsing, type and value printing.
140
141The target side consists of execution control, stack frame analysis, and
142physical target manipulation.
143
144The target side/symbol side division is not formal, and there are a
145number of exceptions. For instance, core file support involves symbolic
146elements (the basic core file reader is in BFD) and target elements (it
147supplies the contents of memory and the values of registers). Instead,
148this division is useful for understanding how the minor subsystems
149should fit together.
150
151@section The Symbol Side
152
153The symbolic side of GDB can be thought of as ``everything you can do in
154GDB without having a live program running''. For instance, you can look
155at the types of variables, and evaluate many kinds of expressions.
156
157@section The Target Side
158
159The target side of GDB is the ``bits and bytes manipulator''. Although
160it may make reference to symbolic info here and there, most of the
161target side will run with only a stripped executable available -- or
162even no executable at all, in remote debugging cases.
163
164Operations such as disassembly, stack frame crawls, and register
165display, are able to work with no symbolic info at all. In some cases,
166such as disassembly, GDB will use symbolic info to present addresses
167relative to symbols rather than as raw numbers, but it will work either
168way.
169
170@section Configurations
171
172@dfn{Host} refers to attributes of the system where GDB runs.
173@dfn{Target} refers to the system where the program being debugged
174executes. In most cases they are the same machine, in which case a
175third type of @dfn{Native} attributes come into play.
176
177Defines and include files needed to build on the host are host support.
178Examples are tty support, system defined types, host byte order, host
179float format.
180
181Defines and information needed to handle the target format are target
182dependent. Examples are the stack frame format, instruction set,
183breakpoint instruction, registers, and how to set up and tear down the stack
184to call a function.
185
186Information that is only needed when the host and target are the same,
187is native dependent. One example is Unix child process support; if the
188host and target are not the same, doing a fork to start the target
189process is a bad idea. The various macros needed for finding the
190registers in the @code{upage}, running @code{ptrace}, and such are all
191in the native-dependent files.
192
193Another example of native-dependent code is support for features that
194are really part of the target environment, but which require
195@code{#include} files that are only available on the host system. Core
196file handling and @code{setjmp} handling are two common cases.
197
198When you want to make GDB work ``native'' on a particular machine, you
199have to include all three kinds of information.
200
201
202@node Algorithms
203
204@chapter Algorithms
205
206GDB uses a number of debugging-specific algorithms. They are often not
207very complicated, but get lost in the thicket of special cases and
208real-world issues. This chapter describes the basic algorithms and
209mentions some of the specific target definitions that they use.
210
211@section Frames
212
213A frame is a construct that GDB uses to keep track of calling and called
214functions.
215
216@code{FRAME_FP} in the machine description has no meaning to the
217machine-independent part of GDB, except that it is used when setting up
218a new frame from scratch, as follows:
219
220@example
221 create_new_frame (read_register (FP_REGNUM), read_pc ()));
222@end example
223
224Other than that, all the meaning imparted to @code{FP_REGNUM} is
225imparted by the machine-dependent code. So, @code{FP_REGNUM} can have
226any value that is convenient for the code that creates new frames.
227(@code{create_new_frame} calls @code{INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO} if it is
228defined; that is where you should use the @code{FP_REGNUM} value, if
229your frames are nonstandard.)
230
231Given a GDB frame, define @code{FRAME_CHAIN} to determine the address of
232the calling function's frame. This will be used to create a new GDB
233frame struct, and then @code{INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO} and
234@code{INIT_FRAME_PC} will be called for the new frame.
235
236@section Breakpoint Handling
237
238In general, a breakpoint is a user-designated location in the program
239where the user wants to regain control if program execution ever reaches
240that location.
241
242There are two main ways to implement breakpoints; either as ``hardware''
243breakpoints or as ``software'' breakpoints.
244
245Hardware breakpoints are sometimes available as a builtin debugging
246features with some chips. Typically these work by having dedicated
247register into which the breakpoint address may be stored. If the PC
248ever matches a value in a breakpoint registers, the CPU raises an
249exception and reports it to GDB. Another possibility is when an
250emulator is in use; many emulators include circuitry that watches the
251address lines coming out from the processor, and force it to stop if the
252address matches a breakpoint's address. A third possibility is that the
253target already has the ability to do breakpoints somehow; for instance,
254a ROM monitor may do its own software breakpoints. So although these
255are not literally ``hardware breakpoints'', from GDB's point of view
256they work the same; GDB need not do nothing more than set the breakpoint
257and wait for something to happen.
258
259Since they depend on hardware resources, hardware breakpoints may be
260limited in number; when the user asks for more, GDB will start trying to
261set software breakpoints.
262
263Software breakpoints require GDB to do somewhat more work. The basic
264theory is that GDB will replace a program instruction a trap, illegal
265divide, or some other instruction that will cause an exception, and then
266when it's encountered, GDB will take the exception and stop the program.
267When the user says to continue, GDB will restore the original
268instruction, single-step, re-insert the trap, and continue on.
269
270Since it literally overwrites the program being tested, the program area
271must be writeable, so this technique won't work on programs in ROM. It
272can also distort the behavior of programs that examine themselves,
273although the situation would be highly unusual.
274
275Also, the software breakpoint instruction should be the smallest size of
276instruction, so it doesn't overwrite an instruction that might be a jump
277target, and cause disaster when the program jumps into the middle of the
278breakpoint instruction. (Strictly speaking, the breakpoint must be no
279larger than the smallest interval between instructions that may be jump
280targets; perhaps there is an architecture where only even-numbered
281instructions may jumped to.) Note that it's possible for an instruction
282set not to have any instructions usable for a software breakpoint,
283although in practice only the ARC has failed to define such an
284instruction.
285
286The basic definition of the software breakpoint is the macro
287@code{BREAKPOINT}.
288
289Basic breakpoint object handling is in @file{breakpoint.c}. However,
290much of the interesting breakpoint action is in @file{infrun.c}.
291
292@section Single Stepping
293
294@section Signal Handling
295
296@section Thread Handling
297
298@section Inferior Function Calls
299
300@section Longjmp Support
301
302GDB has support for figuring out that the target is doing a
303@code{longjmp} and for stopping at the target of the jump, if we are
304stepping. This is done with a few specialized internal breakpoints,
305which are visible in the @code{maint info breakpoint} command.
306
307To make this work, you need to define a macro called
308@code{GET_LONGJMP_TARGET}, which will examine the @code{jmp_buf}
309structure and extract the longjmp target address. Since @code{jmp_buf}
310is target specific, you will need to define it in the appropriate
311@file{tm-@var{xyz}.h} file. Look in @file{tm-sun4os4.h} and
312@file{sparc-tdep.c} for examples of how to do this.
313
314@node User Interface
315
316@chapter User Interface
317
318GDB has several user interfaces. Although the command-line interface
319is the most common and most familiar, there are others.
320
321@section Command Interpreter
322
323The command interpreter in GDB is fairly simple. It is designed to
324allow for the set of commands to be augmented dynamically, and also
325has a recursive subcommand capability, where the first argument to
326a command may itself direct a lookup on a different command list.
327
328For instance, the @code{set} command just starts a lookup on the
329@code{setlist} command list, while @code{set thread} recurses
330to the @code{set_thread_cmd_list}.
331
332To add commands in general, use @code{add_cmd}. @code{add_com} adds to
333the main command list, and should be used for those commands. The usual
334place to add commands is in the @code{_initialize_@var{xyz}} routines at the
335ends of most source files.
336
337@section Console Printing
338
339@section TUI
340
341@section libgdb
342
343@code{libgdb} was an abortive project of years ago. The theory was to
344provide an API to GDB's functionality.
345
346@node Symbol Handling
347
348@chapter Symbol Handling
349
350Symbols are a key part of GDB's operation. Symbols include variables,
351functions, and types.
352
353@section Symbol Reading
354
355GDB reads symbols from ``symbol files''. The usual symbol file is the
356file containing the program which GDB is debugging. GDB can be directed
357to use a different file for symbols (with the @code{symbol-file}
358command), and it can also read more symbols via the ``add-file'' and
359``load'' commands, or while reading symbols from shared libraries.
360
361Symbol files are initially opened by code in @file{symfile.c} using the
362BFD library. BFD identifies the type of the file by examining its
363header. @code{symfile_init} then uses this identification to locate a
364set of symbol-reading functions.
365
366Symbol reading modules identify themselves to GDB by calling
367@code{add_symtab_fns} during their module initialization. The argument
368to @code{add_symtab_fns} is a @code{struct sym_fns} which contains the
369name (or name prefix) of the symbol format, the length of the prefix,
370and pointers to four functions. These functions are called at various
371times to process symbol-files whose identification matches the specified
372prefix.
373
374The functions supplied by each module are:
375
376@table @code
377@item @var{xyz}_symfile_init(struct sym_fns *sf)
378
379Called from @code{symbol_file_add} when we are about to read a new
380symbol file. This function should clean up any internal state (possibly
381resulting from half-read previous files, for example) and prepare to
382read a new symbol file. Note that the symbol file which we are reading
383might be a new "main" symbol file, or might be a secondary symbol file
384whose symbols are being added to the existing symbol table.
385
386The argument to @code{@var{xyz}_symfile_init} is a newly allocated
387@code{struct sym_fns} whose @code{bfd} field contains the BFD for the
388new symbol file being read. Its @code{private} field has been zeroed,
389and can be modified as desired. Typically, a struct of private
390information will be @code{malloc}'d, and a pointer to it will be placed
391in the @code{private} field.
392
393There is no result from @code{@var{xyz}_symfile_init}, but it can call
394@code{error} if it detects an unavoidable problem.
395
396@item @var{xyz}_new_init()
397
398Called from @code{symbol_file_add} when discarding existing symbols.
399This function need only handle the symbol-reading module's internal
400state; the symbol table data structures visible to the rest of GDB will
401be discarded by @code{symbol_file_add}. It has no arguments and no
402result. It may be called after @code{@var{xyz}_symfile_init}, if a new
403symbol table is being read, or may be called alone if all symbols are
404simply being discarded.
405
406@item @var{xyz}_symfile_read(struct sym_fns *sf, CORE_ADDR addr, int mainline)
407
408Called from @code{symbol_file_add} to actually read the symbols from a
409symbol-file into a set of psymtabs or symtabs.
410
411@code{sf} points to the struct sym_fns originally passed to
412@code{@var{xyz}_sym_init} for possible initialization. @code{addr} is
413the offset between the file's specified start address and its true
414address in memory. @code{mainline} is 1 if this is the main symbol
415table being read, and 0 if a secondary symbol file (e.g. shared library
416or dynamically loaded file) is being read.@refill
417@end table
418
419In addition, if a symbol-reading module creates psymtabs when
420@var{xyz}_symfile_read is called, these psymtabs will contain a pointer
421to a function @code{@var{xyz}_psymtab_to_symtab}, which can be called
422from any point in the GDB symbol-handling code.
423
424@table @code
425@item @var{xyz}_psymtab_to_symtab (struct partial_symtab *pst)
426
427Called from @code{psymtab_to_symtab} (or the PSYMTAB_TO_SYMTAB macro) if
428the psymtab has not already been read in and had its @code{pst->symtab}
429pointer set. The argument is the psymtab to be fleshed-out into a
430symtab. Upon return, pst->readin should have been set to 1, and
431pst->symtab should contain a pointer to the new corresponding symtab, or
432zero if there were no symbols in that part of the symbol file.
433@end table
434
435@section Partial Symbol Tables
436
437GDB has three types of symbol tables.
438
439@itemize @bullet
440
441@item full symbol tables (symtabs). These contain the main information
442about symbols and addresses.
443
444@item partial symbol tables (psymtabs). These contain enough
445information to know when to read the corresponding part of the full
446symbol table.
447
448@item minimal symbol tables (msymtabs). These contain information
449gleaned from non-debugging symbols.
450
451@end itemize
452
453This section describes partial symbol tables.
454
455A psymtab is constructed by doing a very quick pass over an executable
456file's debugging information. Small amounts of information are
457extracted -- enough to identify which parts of the symbol table will
458need to be re-read and fully digested later, when the user needs the
459information. The speed of this pass causes GDB to start up very
460quickly. Later, as the detailed rereading occurs, it occurs in small
461pieces, at various times, and the delay therefrom is mostly invisible to
462the user.
463@c (@xref{Symbol Reading}.)
464
465The symbols that show up in a file's psymtab should be, roughly, those
466visible to the debugger's user when the program is not running code from
467that file. These include external symbols and types, static symbols and
468types, and enum values declared at file scope.
469
470The psymtab also contains the range of instruction addresses that the
471full symbol table would represent.
472
473The idea is that there are only two ways for the user (or much of the
474code in the debugger) to reference a symbol:
475
476@itemize @bullet
477
478@item by its address
479(e.g. execution stops at some address which is inside a function in this
480file). The address will be noticed to be in the range of this psymtab,
481and the full symtab will be read in. @code{find_pc_function},
482@code{find_pc_line}, and other @code{find_pc_@dots{}} functions handle
483this.
484
485@item by its name
486(e.g. the user asks to print a variable, or set a breakpoint on a
487function). Global names and file-scope names will be found in the
488psymtab, which will cause the symtab to be pulled in. Local names will
489have to be qualified by a global name, or a file-scope name, in which
490case we will have already read in the symtab as we evaluated the
491qualifier. Or, a local symbol can be referenced when we are "in" a
492local scope, in which case the first case applies. @code{lookup_symbol}
493does most of the work here.
494
495@end itemize
496
497The only reason that psymtabs exist is to cause a symtab to be read in
498at the right moment. Any symbol that can be elided from a psymtab,
499while still causing that to happen, should not appear in it. Since
500psymtabs don't have the idea of scope, you can't put local symbols in
501them anyway. Psymtabs don't have the idea of the type of a symbol,
502either, so types need not appear, unless they will be referenced by
503name.
504
505It is a bug for GDB to behave one way when only a psymtab has been read,
506and another way if the corresponding symtab has been read in. Such bugs
507are typically caused by a psymtab that does not contain all the visible
508symbols, or which has the wrong instruction address ranges.
509
510The psymtab for a particular section of a symbol-file (objfile) could be
511thrown away after the symtab has been read in. The symtab should always
512be searched before the psymtab, so the psymtab will never be used (in a
513bug-free environment). Currently, psymtabs are allocated on an obstack,
514and all the psymbols themselves are allocated in a pair of large arrays
515on an obstack, so there is little to be gained by trying to free them
516unless you want to do a lot more work.
517
518@section Types
519
520Fundamental Types (e.g., FT_VOID, FT_BOOLEAN).
521
522These are the fundamental types that GDB uses internally. Fundamental
523types from the various debugging formats (stabs, ELF, etc) are mapped
524into one of these. They are basically a union of all fundamental types
525that gdb knows about for all the languages that GDB knows about.
526
527Type Codes (e.g., TYPE_CODE_PTR, TYPE_CODE_ARRAY).
528
529Each time GDB builds an internal type, it marks it with one of these
530types. The type may be a fundamental type, such as TYPE_CODE_INT, or a
531derived type, such as TYPE_CODE_PTR which is a pointer to another type.
532Typically, several FT_* types map to one TYPE_CODE_* type, and are
533distinguished by other members of the type struct, such as whether the
534type is signed or unsigned, and how many bits it uses.
535
536Builtin Types (e.g., builtin_type_void, builtin_type_char).
537
538These are instances of type structs that roughly correspond to
539fundamental types and are created as global types for GDB to use for
540various ugly historical reasons. We eventually want to eliminate these.
541Note for example that builtin_type_int initialized in gdbtypes.c is
542basically the same as a TYPE_CODE_INT type that is initialized in
543c-lang.c for an FT_INTEGER fundamental type. The difference is that the
544builtin_type is not associated with any particular objfile, and only one
545instance exists, while c-lang.c builds as many TYPE_CODE_INT types as
546needed, with each one associated with some particular objfile.
547
548@section Object File Formats
549
550@subsection a.out
551
552The @file{a.out} format is the original file format for Unix. It
553consists of three sections: text, data, and bss, which are for program
554code, initialized data, and uninitialized data, respectively.
555
556The @file{a.out} format is so simple that it doesn't have any reserved
557place for debugging information. (Hey, the original Unix hackers used
558@file{adb}, which is a machine-language debugger.) The only debugging
559format for @file{a.out} is stabs, which is encoded as a set of normal
560symbols with distinctive attributes.
561
562The basic @file{a.out} reader is in @file{dbxread.c}.
563
564@subsection COFF
565
566The COFF format was introduced with System V Release 3 (SVR3) Unix.
567COFF files may have multiple sections, each prefixed by a header. The
568number of sections is limited.
569
570The COFF specification includes support for debugging. Although this
571was a step forward, the debugging information was woefully limited. For
572instance, it was not possible to represent code that came from an
573included file.
574
575The COFF reader is in @file{coffread.c}.
576
577@subsection ECOFF
578
579ECOFF is an extended COFF originally introduced for Mips and Alpha
580workstations.
581
582The basic ECOFF reader is in @file{mipsread.c}.
583
584@subsection XCOFF
585
586The IBM RS/6000 running AIX uses an object file format called XCOFF.
587The COFF sections, symbols, and line numbers are used, but debugging
588symbols are dbx-style stabs whose strings are located in the
589@samp{.debug} section (rather than the string table). For more
590information, see @xref{Top,,,stabs,The Stabs Debugging Format}.
591
592The shared library scheme has a clean interface for figuring out what
593shared libraries are in use, but the catch is that everything which
594refers to addresses (symbol tables and breakpoints at least) needs to be
595relocated for both shared libraries and the main executable. At least
596using the standard mechanism this can only be done once the program has
597been run (or the core file has been read).
598
599@subsection PE
600
601Windows 95 and NT use the PE (Portable Executable) format for their
602executables. PE is basically COFF with additional headers.
603
604While BFD includes special PE support, GDB needs only the basic
605COFF reader.
606
607@subsection ELF
608
609The ELF format came with System V Release 4 (SVR4) Unix. ELF is similar
610to COFF in being organized into a number of sections, but it removes
611many of COFF's limitations.
612
613The basic ELF reader is in @file{elfread.c}.
614
615@subsection SOM
616
617SOM is HP's object file and debug format (not to be confused with IBM's
618SOM, which is a cross-language ABI).
619
620The SOM reader is in @file{hpread.c}.
621
622@subsection Other File Formats
623
624Other file formats that have been supported by GDB include Netware
625Loadable Modules (@file{nlmread.c}.
626
627@section Debugging File Formats
628
629This section describes characteristics of debugging information that
630are independent of the object file format.
631
632@subsection stabs
633
634@code{stabs} started out as special symbols within the @code{a.out}
635format. Since then, it has been encapsulated into other file
636formats, such as COFF and ELF.
637
638While @file{dbxread.c} does some of the basic stab processing,
639including for encapsulated versions, @file{stabsread.c} does
640the real work.
641
642@subsection COFF
643
644The basic COFF definition includes debugging information. The level
645of support is minimal and non-extensible, and is not often used.
646
647@subsection Mips debug (Third Eye)
648
649ECOFF includes a definition of a special debug format.
650
651The file @file{mdebugread.c} implements reading for this format.
652
653@subsection DWARF 1
654
655DWARF 1 is a debugging format that was originally designed to be
656used with ELF in SVR4 systems.
657
658@c CHILL_PRODUCER
659@c GCC_PRODUCER
660@c GPLUS_PRODUCER
661@c LCC_PRODUCER
662@c If defined, these are the producer strings in a DWARF 1 file. All of
663@c these have reasonable defaults already.
664
665The DWARF 1 reader is in @file{dwarfread.c}.
666
667@subsection DWARF 2
668
669DWARF 2 is an improved but incompatible version of DWARF 1.
670
671The DWARF 2 reader is in @file{dwarf2read.c}.
672
673@subsection SOM
674
675Like COFF, the SOM definition includes debugging information.
676
677@section Adding a New Symbol Reader to GDB
678
679If you are using an existing object file format (a.out, COFF, ELF, etc),
680there is probably little to be done.
681
682If you need to add a new object file format, you must first add it to
683BFD. This is beyond the scope of this document.
684
685You must then arrange for the BFD code to provide access to the
686debugging symbols. Generally GDB will have to call swapping routines
687from BFD and a few other BFD internal routines to locate the debugging
688information. As much as possible, GDB should not depend on the BFD
689internal data structures.
690
691For some targets (e.g., COFF), there is a special transfer vector used
692to call swapping routines, since the external data structures on various
693platforms have different sizes and layouts. Specialized routines that
694will only ever be implemented by one object file format may be called
695directly. This interface should be described in a file
696@file{bfd/libxyz.h}, which is included by GDB.
697
698
699@node Language Support
700
701@chapter Language Support
702
703GDB's language support is mainly driven by the symbol reader, although
704it is possible for the user to set the source language manually.
705
706GDB chooses the source language by looking at the extension of the file
707recorded in the debug info; @code{.c} means C, @code{.f} means Fortran,
708etc. It may also use a special-purpose language identifier if the debug
709format supports it, such as DWARF.
710
711@section Adding a Source Language to GDB
712
713To add other languages to GDB's expression parser, follow the following
714steps:
715
716@table @emph
717@item Create the expression parser.
718
719This should reside in a file @file{@var{lang}-exp.y}. Routines for
720building parsed expressions into a @samp{union exp_element} list are in
721@file{parse.c}.
722
723Since we can't depend upon everyone having Bison, and YACC produces
724parsers that define a bunch of global names, the following lines
725@emph{must} be included at the top of the YACC parser, to prevent the
726various parsers from defining the same global names:
727
728@example
729#define yyparse @var{lang}_parse
730#define yylex @var{lang}_lex
731#define yyerror @var{lang}_error
732#define yylval @var{lang}_lval
733#define yychar @var{lang}_char
734#define yydebug @var{lang}_debug
735#define yypact @var{lang}_pact
736#define yyr1 @var{lang}_r1
737#define yyr2 @var{lang}_r2
738#define yydef @var{lang}_def
739#define yychk @var{lang}_chk
740#define yypgo @var{lang}_pgo
741#define yyact @var{lang}_act
742#define yyexca @var{lang}_exca
743#define yyerrflag @var{lang}_errflag
744#define yynerrs @var{lang}_nerrs
745@end example
746
747At the bottom of your parser, define a @code{struct language_defn} and
748initialize it with the right values for your language. Define an
749@code{initialize_@var{lang}} routine and have it call
750@samp{add_language(@var{lang}_language_defn)} to tell the rest of GDB
751that your language exists. You'll need some other supporting variables
752and functions, which will be used via pointers from your
753@code{@var{lang}_language_defn}. See the declaration of @code{struct
754language_defn} in @file{language.h}, and the other @file{*-exp.y} files,
755for more information.
756
757@item Add any evaluation routines, if necessary
758
759If you need new opcodes (that represent the operations of the language),
760add them to the enumerated type in @file{expression.h}. Add support
761code for these operations in @code{eval.c:evaluate_subexp()}. Add cases
762for new opcodes in two functions from @file{parse.c}:
763@code{prefixify_subexp()} and @code{length_of_subexp()}. These compute
764the number of @code{exp_element}s that a given operation takes up.
765
766@item Update some existing code
767
768Add an enumerated identifier for your language to the enumerated type
769@code{enum language} in @file{defs.h}.
770
771Update the routines in @file{language.c} so your language is included.
772These routines include type predicates and such, which (in some cases)
773are language dependent. If your language does not appear in the switch
774statement, an error is reported.
775
776Also included in @file{language.c} is the code that updates the variable
777@code{current_language}, and the routines that translate the
778@code{language_@var{lang}} enumerated identifier into a printable
779string.
780
781Update the function @code{_initialize_language} to include your
782language. This function picks the default language upon startup, so is
783dependent upon which languages that GDB is built for.
784
785Update @code{allocate_symtab} in @file{symfile.c} and/or symbol-reading
786code so that the language of each symtab (source file) is set properly.
787This is used to determine the language to use at each stack frame level.
788Currently, the language is set based upon the extension of the source
789file. If the language can be better inferred from the symbol
790information, please set the language of the symtab in the symbol-reading
791code.
792
793Add helper code to @code{expprint.c:print_subexp()} to handle any new
794expression opcodes you have added to @file{expression.h}. Also, add the
795printed representations of your operators to @code{op_print_tab}.
796
797@item Add a place of call
798
799Add a call to @code{@var{lang}_parse()} and @code{@var{lang}_error} in
800@code{parse.c:parse_exp_1()}.
801
802@item Use macros to trim code
803
804The user has the option of building GDB for some or all of the
805languages. If the user decides to build GDB for the language
806@var{lang}, then every file dependent on @file{language.h} will have the
807macro @code{_LANG_@var{lang}} defined in it. Use @code{#ifdef}s to
808leave out large routines that the user won't need if he or she is not
809using your language.
810
811Note that you do not need to do this in your YACC parser, since if GDB
812is not build for @var{lang}, then @file{@var{lang}-exp.tab.o} (the
813compiled form of your parser) is not linked into GDB at all.
814
815See the file @file{configure.in} for how GDB is configured for different
816languages.
817
818@item Edit @file{Makefile.in}
819
820Add dependencies in @file{Makefile.in}. Make sure you update the macro
821variables such as @code{HFILES} and @code{OBJS}, otherwise your code may
822not get linked in, or, worse yet, it may not get @code{tar}red into the
823distribution!
824
825@end table
826
827
828@node Host Definition
829
830@chapter Host Definition
831
832With the advent of autoconf, it's rarely necessary to have host
833definition machinery anymore.
834
835@section Adding a New Host
836
837Most of GDB's host configuration support happens via autoconf. It
838should be rare to need new host-specific definitions. GDB still uses
839the host-specific definitions and files listed below, but these mostly
840exist for historical reasons, and should eventually disappear.
841
842Several files control GDB's configuration for host systems:
843
844@table @file
845
846@item gdb/config/@var{arch}/@var{xyz}.mh
847Specifies Makefile fragments needed when hosting on machine @var{xyz}.
848In particular, this lists the required machine-dependent object files,
849by defining @samp{XDEPFILES=@dots{}}. Also specifies the header file
850which describes host @var{xyz}, by defining @code{XM_FILE=
851xm-@var{xyz}.h}. You can also define @code{CC}, @code{SYSV_DEFINE},
852@code{XM_CFLAGS}, @code{XM_ADD_FILES}, @code{XM_CLIBS}, @code{XM_CDEPS},
853etc.; see @file{Makefile.in}.
854
855@item gdb/config/@var{arch}/xm-@var{xyz}.h
856(@file{xm.h} is a link to this file, created by configure). Contains C
857macro definitions describing the host system environment, such as byte
858order, host C compiler and library.
859
860@item gdb/@var{xyz}-xdep.c
861Contains any miscellaneous C code required for this machine as a host.
862On most machines it doesn't exist at all. If it does exist, put
863@file{@var{xyz}-xdep.o} into the @code{XDEPFILES} line in
864@file{gdb/config/@var{arch}/@var{xyz}.mh}.
865
866@end table
867
868@subheading Generic Host Support Files
869
870There are some ``generic'' versions of routines that can be used by
871various systems. These can be customized in various ways by macros
872defined in your @file{xm-@var{xyz}.h} file. If these routines work for
873the @var{xyz} host, you can just include the generic file's name (with
874@samp{.o}, not @samp{.c}) in @code{XDEPFILES}.
875
876Otherwise, if your machine needs custom support routines, you will need
877to write routines that perform the same functions as the generic file.
878Put them into @code{@var{xyz}-xdep.c}, and put @code{@var{xyz}-xdep.o}
879into @code{XDEPFILES}.
880
881@table @file
882
883@item ser-unix.c
884This contains serial line support for Unix systems. This is always
885included, via the makefile variable @code{SER_HARDWIRE}; override this
886variable in the @file{.mh} file to avoid it.
887
888@item ser-go32.c
889This contains serial line support for 32-bit programs running under DOS,
890using the GO32 execution environment.
891
892@item ser-tcp.c
893This contains generic TCP support using sockets.
894
895@end table
896
897@section Host Conditionals
898
899When GDB is configured and compiled, various macros are defined or left
900undefined, to control compilation based on the attributes of the host
901system. These macros and their meanings (or if the meaning is not
902documented here, then one of the source files where they are used is
903indicated) are:
904
905@table @code
906
907@item GDBINIT_FILENAME
908The default name of GDB's initialization file (normally @file{.gdbinit}).
909
910@item MEM_FNS_DECLARED
911Your host config file defines this if it includes declarations of
912@code{memcpy} and @code{memset}. Define this to avoid conflicts between
913the native include files and the declarations in @file{defs.h}.
914
915@item NO_SYS_FILE
916Define this if your system does not have a @code{<sys/file.h>}.
917
918@item SIGWINCH_HANDLER
919If your host defines @code{SIGWINCH}, you can define this to be the name
920of a function to be called if @code{SIGWINCH} is received.
921
922@item SIGWINCH_HANDLER_BODY
923Define this to expand into code that will define the function named by
924the expansion of @code{SIGWINCH_HANDLER}.
925
926@item ALIGN_STACK_ON_STARTUP
927Define this if your system is of a sort that will crash in
928@code{tgetent} if the stack happens not to be longword-aligned when
929@code{main} is called. This is a rare situation, but is known to occur
930on several different types of systems.
931
932@item CRLF_SOURCE_FILES
933Define this if host files use @code{\r\n} rather than @code{\n} as a
934line terminator. This will cause source file listings to omit @code{\r}
935characters when printing and it will allow \r\n line endings of files
936which are "sourced" by gdb. It must be possible to open files in binary
937mode using @code{O_BINARY} or, for fopen, @code{"rb"}.
938
939@item DEFAULT_PROMPT
940The default value of the prompt string (normally @code{"(gdb) "}).
941
942@item DEV_TTY
943The name of the generic TTY device, defaults to @code{"/dev/tty"}.
944
945@item FCLOSE_PROVIDED
946Define this if the system declares @code{fclose} in the headers included
947in @code{defs.h}. This isn't needed unless your compiler is unusually
948anal.
949
950@item FOPEN_RB
951Define this if binary files are opened the same way as text files.
952
953@item GETENV_PROVIDED
954Define this if the system declares @code{getenv} in its headers included
955in @code{defs.h}. This isn't needed unless your compiler is unusually
956anal.
957
958@item HAVE_MMAP
959In some cases, use the system call @code{mmap} for reading symbol
960tables. For some machines this allows for sharing and quick updates.
961
962@item HAVE_SIGSETMASK
963Define this if the host system has job control, but does not define
964@code{sigsetmask()}. Currently, this is only true of the RS/6000.
965
966@item HAVE_TERMIO
967Define this if the host system has @code{termio.h}.
968
969@item HOST_BYTE_ORDER
970The ordering of bytes in the host. This must be defined to be either
971@code{BIG_ENDIAN} or @code{LITTLE_ENDIAN}.
972
973@item INT_MAX
974@item INT_MIN
975@item LONG_MAX
976@item UINT_MAX
977@item ULONG_MAX
978Values for host-side constants.
979
980@item ISATTY
981Substitute for isatty, if not available.
982
983@item LONGEST
984This is the longest integer type available on the host. If not defined,
985it will default to @code{long long} or @code{long}, depending on
986@code{CC_HAS_LONG_LONG}.
987
988@item CC_HAS_LONG_LONG
989Define this if the host C compiler supports ``long long''. This is set
990by the configure script.
991
992@item PRINTF_HAS_LONG_LONG
993Define this if the host can handle printing of long long integers via
994the printf format directive ``ll''. This is set by the configure script.
995
996@item HAVE_LONG_DOUBLE
997Define this if the host C compiler supports ``long double''. This is
998set by the configure script.
999
1000@item PRINTF_HAS_LONG_DOUBLE
1001Define this if the host can handle printing of long double float-point
1002numbers via the printf format directive ``Lg''. This is set by the
1003configure script.
1004
1005@item SCANF_HAS_LONG_DOUBLE
1006Define this if the host can handle the parsing of long double
1007float-point numbers via the scanf format directive directive
1008``Lg''. This is set by the configure script.
1009
1010@item LSEEK_NOT_LINEAR
1011Define this if @code{lseek (n)} does not necessarily move to byte number
1012@code{n} in the file. This is only used when reading source files. It
1013is normally faster to define @code{CRLF_SOURCE_FILES} when possible.
1014
1015@item L_SET
1016This macro is used as the argument to lseek (or, most commonly,
1017bfd_seek). FIXME, should be replaced by SEEK_SET instead, which is the
1018POSIX equivalent.
1019
c906108c
SS
1020@item MALLOC_INCOMPATIBLE
1021Define this if the system's prototype for @code{malloc} differs from the
1022@sc{ANSI} definition.
1023
1024@item MMAP_BASE_ADDRESS
1025When using HAVE_MMAP, the first mapping should go at this address.
1026
1027@item MMAP_INCREMENT
1028when using HAVE_MMAP, this is the increment between mappings.
1029
1030@item NEED_POSIX_SETPGID
1031Define this to use the POSIX version of @code{setpgid} to determine
1032whether job control is available.
1033
1034@item NORETURN
1035If defined, this should be one or more tokens, such as @code{volatile},
1036that can be used in both the declaration and definition of functions to
1037indicate that they never return. The default is already set correctly
1038if compiling with GCC. This will almost never need to be defined.
1039
1040@item ATTR_NORETURN
1041If defined, this should be one or more tokens, such as
1042@code{__attribute__ ((noreturn))}, that can be used in the declarations
1043of functions to indicate that they never return. The default is already
1044set correctly if compiling with GCC. This will almost never need to be
1045defined.
1046
7a292a7a
SS
1047@item USE_GENERIC_DUMMY_FRAMES
1048Define this to 1 if the target is using the generic inferior function
1049call code. See @code{blockframe.c} for more information.
1050
c906108c
SS
1051@item USE_MMALLOC
1052GDB will use the @code{mmalloc} library for memory allocation for symbol
1053reading if this symbol is defined. Be careful defining it since there
1054are systems on which @code{mmalloc} does not work for some reason. One
1055example is the DECstation, where its RPC library can't cope with our
1056redefinition of @code{malloc} to call @code{mmalloc}. When defining
1057@code{USE_MMALLOC}, you will also have to set @code{MMALLOC} in the
1058Makefile, to point to the mmalloc library. This define is set when you
1059configure with --with-mmalloc.
1060
1061@item NO_MMCHECK
1062Define this if you are using @code{mmalloc}, but don't want the overhead
1063of checking the heap with @code{mmcheck}. Note that on some systems,
1064the C runtime makes calls to malloc prior to calling @code{main}, and if
1065@code{free} is ever called with these pointers after calling
1066@code{mmcheck} to enable checking, a memory corruption abort is certain
1067to occur. These systems can still use mmalloc, but must define
1068NO_MMCHECK.
1069
1070@item MMCHECK_FORCE
1071Define this to 1 if the C runtime allocates memory prior to
1072@code{mmcheck} being called, but that memory is never freed so we don't
1073have to worry about it triggering a memory corruption abort. The
1074default is 0, which means that @code{mmcheck} will only install the heap
1075checking functions if there has not yet been any memory allocation
1076calls, and if it fails to install the functions, gdb will issue a
1077warning. This is currently defined if you configure using
1078--with-mmalloc.
1079
1080@item NO_SIGINTERRUPT
1081Define this to indicate that siginterrupt() is not available.
1082
1083@item R_OK
1084Define if this is not in a system .h file.
1085
1086@item SEEK_CUR
1087@item SEEK_SET
1088Define these to appropriate value for the system lseek(), if not already
1089defined.
1090
1091@item STOP_SIGNAL
1092This is the signal for stopping GDB. Defaults to SIGTSTP. (Only
1093redefined for the Convex.)
1094
1095@item USE_O_NOCTTY
1096Define this if the interior's tty should be opened with the O_NOCTTY
1097flag. (FIXME: This should be a native-only flag, but @file{inflow.c} is
1098always linked in.)
1099
1100@item USG
1101Means that System V (prior to SVR4) include files are in use. (FIXME:
1102This symbol is abused in @file{infrun.c}, @file{regex.c},
1103@file{remote-nindy.c}, and @file{utils.c} for other things, at the
1104moment.)
1105
1106@item lint
1107Define this to help placate lint in some situations.
1108
1109@item volatile
1110Define this to override the defaults of @code{__volatile__} or
1111@code{/**/}.
1112
1113@end table
1114
1115
1116@node Target Architecture Definition
1117
1118@chapter Target Architecture Definition
1119
1120GDB's target architecture defines what sort of machine-language programs
1121GDB can work with, and how it works with them.
1122
1123At present, the target architecture definition consists of a number of C
1124macros.
1125
1126@section Registers and Memory
1127
1128GDB's model of the target machine is rather simple. GDB assumes the
1129machine includes a bank of registers and a block of memory. Each
1130register may have a different size.
1131
1132GDB does not have a magical way to match up with the compiler's idea of
1133which registers are which; however, it is critical that they do match up
1134accurately. The only way to make this work is to get accurate
1135information about the order that the compiler uses, and to reflect that
1136in the @code{REGISTER_NAME} and related macros.
1137
1138GDB can handle big-endian, little-endian, and bi-endian architectures.
1139
1140@section Frame Interpretation
1141
1142@section Inferior Call Setup
1143
1144@section Compiler Characteristics
1145
1146@section Target Conditionals
1147
1148This section describes the macros that you can use to define the target
1149machine.
1150
1151@table @code
1152
1153@item ADDITIONAL_OPTIONS
1154@item ADDITIONAL_OPTION_CASES
1155@item ADDITIONAL_OPTION_HANDLER
1156@item ADDITIONAL_OPTION_HELP
1157These are a set of macros that allow the addition of additional command
1158line options to GDB. They are currently used only for the unsupported
1159i960 Nindy target, and should not be used in any other configuration.
1160
1161@item ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (addr)
1162If a raw machine address includes any bits that are not really part of
1163the address, then define this macro to expand into an expression that
1164zeros those bits in @var{addr}. For example, the two low-order bits of
1165a Motorola 88K address may be used by some kernels for their own
1166purposes, since addresses must always be 4-byte aligned, and so are of
1167no use for addressing. Those bits should be filtered out with an
1168expression such as @code{((addr) & ~3)}.
1169
1170@item BEFORE_MAIN_LOOP_HOOK
1171Define this to expand into any code that you want to execute before the
1172main loop starts. Although this is not, strictly speaking, a target
1173conditional, that is how it is currently being used. Note that if a
1174configuration were to define it one way for a host and a different way
1175for the target, GDB will probably not compile, let alone run correctly.
1176This is currently used only for the unsupported i960 Nindy target, and
1177should not be used in any other configuration.
1178
1179@item BELIEVE_PCC_PROMOTION
1180Define if the compiler promotes a short or char parameter to an int, but
1181still reports the parameter as its original type, rather than the
1182promoted type.
1183
1184@item BELIEVE_PCC_PROMOTION_TYPE
1185Define this if GDB should believe the type of a short argument when
1186compiled by pcc, but look within a full int space to get its value.
1187Only defined for Sun-3 at present.
1188
1189@item BITS_BIG_ENDIAN
1190Define this if the numbering of bits in the targets does *not* match the
1191endianness of the target byte order. A value of 1 means that the bits
1192are numbered in a big-endian order, 0 means little-endian.
1193
1194@item BREAKPOINT
1195This is the character array initializer for the bit pattern to put into
1196memory where a breakpoint is set. Although it's common to use a trap
1197instruction for a breakpoint, it's not required; for instance, the bit
1198pattern could be an invalid instruction. The breakpoint must be no
1199longer than the shortest instruction of the architecture.
1200
7a292a7a
SS
1201@var{BREAKPOINT} has been deprecated in favour of
1202@var{BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC}.
1203
c906108c
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1204@item BIG_BREAKPOINT
1205@item LITTLE_BREAKPOINT
1206Similar to BREAKPOINT, but used for bi-endian targets.
1207
7a292a7a
SS
1208@var{BIG_BREAKPOINT} and @var{LITTLE_BREAKPOINT} have been deprecated in
1209favour of @var{BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC}.
1210
c906108c
SS
1211@item REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
1212@item LITTLE_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
1213@item BIG_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT
1214Similar to BREAKPOINT, but used for remote targets.
1215
7a292a7a
SS
1216@var{BIG_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT} and @var{LITTLE_REMOTE_BREAKPOINT} have been
1217deprecated in favour of @var{BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC}.
1218
c906108c
SS
1219@item BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC (pcptr, lenptr)
1220
1221Use the program counter to determine the contents and size of a
1222breakpoint instruction. It returns a pointer to a string of bytes that
1223encode a breakpoint instruction, stores the length of the string to
1224*lenptr, and adjusts pc (if necessary) to point to the actual memory
1225location where the breakpoint should be inserted.
1226
1227Although it is common to use a trap instruction for a breakpoint, it's
1228not required; for instance, the bit pattern could be an invalid
1229instruction. The breakpoint must be no longer than the shortest
1230instruction of the architecture.
1231
7a292a7a
SS
1232Replaces all the other @var{BREAKPOINT} macros.
1233
1234@item CALL_DUMMY_P
1235A C expresson that is non-zero when the target suports inferior function
1236calls.
1237
1238@item CALL_DUMMY_WORDS
1239Pointer to an array of @var{LONGEST} words of data containing
1240host-byte-ordered @var{REGISTER_BYTES} sized values that partially
1241specify the sequence of instructions needed for an inferior function
1242call.
1243
1244Should be deprecated in favour of a macro that uses target-byte-ordered
1245data.
1246
1247@item SIZEOF_CALL_DUMMY_WORDS
1248The size of @var{CALL_DUMMY_WORDS}. When @var{CALL_DUMMY_P} this must
1249return a positive value. See also @var{CALL_DUMMY_LENGTH}.
c906108c
SS
1250
1251@item CALL_DUMMY
7a292a7a
SS
1252A static initializer for @var{CALL_DUMMY_WORDS}. Deprecated.
1253
c906108c
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1254@item CALL_DUMMY_LOCATION
1255inferior.h
7a292a7a 1256
c906108c 1257@item CALL_DUMMY_STACK_ADJUST
7a292a7a
SS
1258Stack adjustment needed when performing an inferior function call.
1259
1260Should be deprecated in favor of something like @var{STACK_ALIGN}.
1261
1262@item CALL_DUMMY_STACK_ADJUST_P
1263Predicate for use of @var{CALL_DUMMY_STACK_ADJUST}.
1264
1265Should be deprecated in favor of something like @var{STACK_ALIGN}.
c906108c
SS
1266
1267@item CANNOT_FETCH_REGISTER (regno)
1268A C expression that should be nonzero if @var{regno} cannot be fetched
1269from an inferior process. This is only relevant if
1270@code{FETCH_INFERIOR_REGISTERS} is not defined.
1271
1272@item CANNOT_STORE_REGISTER (regno)
1273A C expression that should be nonzero if @var{regno} should not be
1274written to the target. This is often the case for program counters,
1275status words, and other special registers. If this is not defined, GDB
1276will assume that all registers may be written.
1277
1278@item DO_DEFERRED_STORES
1279@item CLEAR_DEFERRED_STORES
1280Define this to execute any deferred stores of registers into the inferior,
1281and to cancel any deferred stores.
1282
1283Currently only implemented correctly for native Sparc configurations?
1284
1285@item CPLUS_MARKER
1286Define this to expand into the character that G++ uses to distinguish
1287compiler-generated identifiers from programmer-specified identifiers.
1288By default, this expands into @code{'$'}. Most System V targets should
1289define this to @code{'.'}.
1290
1291@item DBX_PARM_SYMBOL_CLASS
1292Hook for the @code{SYMBOL_CLASS} of a parameter when decoding DBX symbol
1293information. In the i960, parameters can be stored as locals or as
1294args, depending on the type of the debug record.
1295
1296@item DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK
1297Define this to be the amount by which to decrement the PC after the
1298program encounters a breakpoint. This is often the number of bytes in
1299BREAKPOINT, though not always. For most targets this value will be 0.
1300
1301@item DECR_PC_AFTER_HW_BREAK
1302Similarly, for hardware breakpoints.
1303
1304@item DISABLE_UNSETTABLE_BREAK addr
1305If defined, this should evaluate to 1 if @var{addr} is in a shared
1306library in which breakpoints cannot be set and so should be disabled.
1307
1308@item DO_REGISTERS_INFO
1309If defined, use this to print the value of a register or all registers.
1310
1311@item END_OF_TEXT_DEFAULT
1312This is an expression that should designate the end of the text section
1313(? FIXME ?)
1314
1315@item EXTRACT_RETURN_VALUE(type,regbuf,valbuf)
1316Define this to extract a function's return value of type @var{type} from
1317the raw register state @var{regbuf} and copy that, in virtual format,
1318into @var{valbuf}.
1319
1320@item EXTRACT_STRUCT_VALUE_ADDRESS(regbuf)
1321Define this to extract from an array @var{regbuf} containing the (raw)
1322register state, the address in which a function should return its
1323structure value, as a CORE_ADDR (or an expression that can be used as
1324one).
1325
1326@item FLOAT_INFO
1327If defined, then the `info float' command will print information about
1328the processor's floating point unit.
1329
1330@item FP_REGNUM
1331The number of the frame pointer register.
1332
1333@item FRAMELESS_FUNCTION_INVOCATION(fi, frameless)
1334Define this to set the variable @var{frameless} to 1 if the function
1335invocation represented by @var{fi} does not have a stack frame
1336associated with it. Otherwise set it to 0.
1337
1338@item FRAME_ARGS_ADDRESS_CORRECT
1339stack.c
1340
1341@item FRAME_CHAIN(frame)
1342Given @var{frame}, return a pointer to the calling frame.
1343
1344@item FRAME_CHAIN_COMBINE(chain,frame)
1345Define this to take the frame chain pointer and the frame's nominal
1346address and produce the nominal address of the caller's frame.
1347Presently only defined for HP PA.
1348
1349@item FRAME_CHAIN_VALID(chain,thisframe)
1350
1351Define this to be an expression that returns zero if the given frame is
1352an outermost frame, with no caller, and nonzero otherwise. Three common
1353definitions are available. @code{default_frame_chain_valid} (the
1354default) is nonzero if the chain pointer is nonzero and given frame's PC
1355is not inside the startup file (such as @file{crt0.o}).
1356@code{alternate_frame_chain_valid} is nonzero if the chain pointer is
1357nonzero and the given frame's PC is not in @code{main()} or a known
1358entry point function (such as @code{_start()}).
1359
1360@item FRAME_INIT_SAVED_REGS(frame)
1361See @file{frame.h}. Determines the address of all registers in the
1362current stack frame storing each in @code{frame->saved_regs}. Space for
1363@code{frame->saved_regs} shall be allocated by
1364@code{FRAME_INIT_SAVED_REGS} using either
1365@code{frame_saved_regs_zalloc} or @code{frame_obstack_alloc}.
1366
1367@var{FRAME_FIND_SAVED_REGS} and @var{EXTRA_FRAME_INFO} are deprecated.
1368
1369@item FRAME_NUM_ARGS (val, fi)
1370For the frame described by @var{fi}, set @var{val} to the number of arguments
1371that are being passed.
1372
1373@item FRAME_SAVED_PC(frame)
1374Given @var{frame}, return the pc saved there. That is, the return
1375address.
1376
1377@item FUNCTION_EPILOGUE_SIZE
1378For some COFF targets, the @code{x_sym.x_misc.x_fsize} field of the
1379function end symbol is 0. For such targets, you must define
1380@code{FUNCTION_EPILOGUE_SIZE} to expand into the standard size of a
1381function's epilogue.
1382
1383@item GCC_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL
1384@item GCC2_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL
1385If defined, these are the names of the symbols that GDB will look for to
1386detect that GCC compiled the file. The default symbols are
1387@code{gcc_compiled.} and @code{gcc2_compiled.}, respectively. (Currently
1388only defined for the Delta 68.)
1389
1390@item GDB_TARGET_IS_HPPA
1391This determines whether horrible kludge code in dbxread.c and
1392partial-stab.h is used to mangle multiple-symbol-table files from
1393HPPA's. This should all be ripped out, and a scheme like elfread.c
1394used.
1395
1396@item GDB_TARGET_IS_MACH386
1397@item GDB_TARGET_IS_SUN3
1398@item GDB_TARGET_IS_SUN386
1399Kludges that should go away.
1400
1401@item GET_LONGJMP_TARGET
1402For most machines, this is a target-dependent parameter. On the
1403DECstation and the Iris, this is a native-dependent parameter, since
1404<setjmp.h> is needed to define it.
1405
1406This macro determines the target PC address that longjmp() will jump to,
1407assuming that we have just stopped at a longjmp breakpoint. It takes a
1408CORE_ADDR * as argument, and stores the target PC value through this
1409pointer. It examines the current state of the machine as needed.
1410
1411@item GET_SAVED_REGISTER
1412Define this if you need to supply your own definition for the function
7a292a7a 1413@code{get_saved_register}.
c906108c
SS
1414
1415@item HAVE_REGISTER_WINDOWS
1416Define this if the target has register windows.
1417@item REGISTER_IN_WINDOW_P (regnum)
1418Define this to be an expression that is 1 if the given register is in
1419the window.
1420
1421@item IBM6000_TARGET
1422Shows that we are configured for an IBM RS/6000 target. This
1423conditional should be eliminated (FIXME) and replaced by
1424feature-specific macros. It was introduced in haste and we are
1425repenting at leisure.
1426
1427@item IEEE_FLOAT
1428Define this if the target system uses IEEE-format floating point numbers.
1429
1430@item INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO (fromleaf, frame)
1431If additional information about the frame is required this should be
1432stored in @code{frame->extra_info}. Space for @code{frame->extra_info}
1433is allocated using @code{frame_obstack_alloc}.
1434
1435@item INIT_FRAME_PC (fromleaf, prev)
1436This is a C statement that sets the pc of the frame pointed to by
1437@var{prev}. [By default...]
1438
1439@item INNER_THAN (lhs,rhs)
1440Returns non-zero if stack address @var{lhs} is inner than (nearer to the
1441stack top) stack address @var{rhs}. Define this as @code{lhs < rhs} if
1442the target's stack grows downward in memory, or @code{lhs > rsh} if the
1443stack grows upward.
1444
1445@item IN_SIGTRAMP (pc, name)
1446Define this to return true if the given @var{pc} and/or @var{name}
1447indicates that the current function is a sigtramp.
1448
1449@item SIGTRAMP_START (pc)
1450@item SIGTRAMP_END (pc)
1451Define these to be the start and end address of the sigtramp for the
1452given @var{pc}. On machines where the address is just a compile time
1453constant, the macro expansion will typically just ignore the supplied
1454@var{pc}.
1455
1456@item IN_SOLIB_CALL_TRAMPOLINE pc name
1457Define this to evaluate to nonzero if the program is stopped in the
1458trampoline that connects to a shared library.
1459
1460@item IN_SOLIB_RETURN_TRAMPOLINE pc name
1461Define this to evaluate to nonzero if the program is stopped in the
1462trampoline that returns from a shared library.
1463
1464@item IS_TRAPPED_INTERNALVAR (name)
1465This is an ugly hook to allow the specification of special actions that
1466should occur as a side-effect of setting the value of a variable
1467internal to GDB. Currently only used by the h8500. Note that this
1468could be either a host or target conditional.
1469
1470@item NEED_TEXT_START_END
1471Define this if GDB should determine the start and end addresses of the
1472text section. (Seems dubious.)
1473
1474@item NO_HIF_SUPPORT
1475(Specific to the a29k.)
1476
1477@item SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP_P
1478Define this as 1 if the target does not have a hardware single-step
1479mechanism. The macro @code{SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP} must also be defined.
1480
1481@item SOFTWARE_SINGLE_STEP(signal,insert_breapoints_p)
1482A function that inserts or removes (dependant on
1483@var{insert_breapoints_p}) breakpoints at each possible destinations of
1484the next instruction. See @code{sparc-tdep.c} and @code{rs6000-tdep.c}
1485for examples.
1486
1487@item PCC_SOL_BROKEN
1488(Used only in the Convex target.)
1489
1490@item PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY
1491inferior.h
1492
1493@item PC_LOAD_SEGMENT
1494If defined, print information about the load segment for the program
1495counter. (Defined only for the RS/6000.)
1496
1497@item PC_REGNUM
1498If the program counter is kept in a register, then define this macro to
1499be the number of that register. This need be defined only if
1500@code{TARGET_WRITE_PC} is not defined.
1501
1502@item NPC_REGNUM
1503The number of the ``next program counter'' register, if defined.
1504
1505@item NNPC_REGNUM
1506The number of the ``next next program counter'' register, if defined.
1507Currently, this is only defined for the Motorola 88K.
1508
1509@item PRINT_REGISTER_HOOK (regno)
1510If defined, this must be a function that prints the contents of the
1511given register to standard output.
1512
1513@item PRINT_TYPELESS_INTEGER
1514This is an obscure substitute for @code{print_longest} that seems to
1515have been defined for the Convex target.
1516
1517@item PROCESS_LINENUMBER_HOOK
1518A hook defined for XCOFF reading.
1519
1520@item PROLOGUE_FIRSTLINE_OVERLAP
1521(Only used in unsupported Convex configuration.)
1522
1523@item PS_REGNUM
1524If defined, this is the number of the processor status register. (This
1525definition is only used in generic code when parsing "$ps".)
1526
1527@item POP_FRAME
1528Used in @samp{call_function_by_hand} to remove an artificial stack
1529frame.
1530
1531@item PUSH_ARGUMENTS (nargs, args, sp, struct_return, struct_addr)
1532Define this to push arguments onto the stack for inferior function call.
1533
1534@item PUSH_DUMMY_FRAME
1535Used in @samp{call_function_by_hand} to create an artificial stack frame.
1536
1537@item REGISTER_BYTES
1538The total amount of space needed to store GDB's copy of the machine's
1539register state.
1540
1541@item REGISTER_NAME(i)
1542Return the name of register @var{i} as a string. May return @var{NULL}
1543or @var{NUL} to indicate that register @var{i} is not valid.
1544
7a292a7a
SS
1545@item REGISTER_NAMES
1546Deprecated in favor of @var{REGISTER_NAME}.
1547
c906108c
SS
1548@item REG_STRUCT_HAS_ADDR (gcc_p, type)
1549Define this to return 1 if the given type will be passed by pointer
1550rather than directly.
1551
1552@item SDB_REG_TO_REGNUM
1553Define this to convert sdb register numbers into GDB regnums. If not
1554defined, no conversion will be done.
1555
1556@item SHIFT_INST_REGS
1557(Only used for m88k targets.)
1558
1559@item SKIP_PROLOGUE (pc)
1560A C statement that advances the @var{pc} across any function entry
1561prologue instructions so as to reach ``real'' code.
1562
1563@item SKIP_PROLOGUE_FRAMELESS_P
1564A C statement that should behave similarly, but that can stop as soon as
1565the function is known to have a frame. If not defined,
1566@code{SKIP_PROLOGUE} will be used instead.
1567
1568@item SKIP_TRAMPOLINE_CODE (pc)
1569If the target machine has trampoline code that sits between callers and
1570the functions being called, then define this macro to return a new PC
1571that is at the start of the real function.
1572
1573@item SP_REGNUM
1574Define this to be the number of the register that serves as the stack
1575pointer.
1576
1577@item STAB_REG_TO_REGNUM
1578Define this to convert stab register numbers (as gotten from `r'
1579declarations) into GDB regnums. If not defined, no conversion will be
1580done.
1581
1582@item STACK_ALIGN (addr)
1583Define this to adjust the address to the alignment required for the
1584processor's stack.
1585
1586@item STEP_SKIPS_DELAY (addr)
1587Define this to return true if the address is of an instruction with a
1588delay slot. If a breakpoint has been placed in the instruction's delay
1589slot, GDB will single-step over that instruction before resuming
1590normally. Currently only defined for the Mips.
1591
1592@item STORE_RETURN_VALUE (type, valbuf)
1593A C expression that stores a function return value of type @var{type},
1594where @var{valbuf} is the address of the value to be stored.
1595
1596@item SUN_FIXED_LBRAC_BUG
1597(Used only for Sun-3 and Sun-4 targets.)
1598
1599@item SYMBOL_RELOADING_DEFAULT
1600The default value of the `symbol-reloading' variable. (Never defined in
1601current sources.)
1602
1603@item TARGET_BYTE_ORDER_DEFAULT
1604The ordering of bytes in the target. This must be either
1605@code{BIG_ENDIAN} or @code{LITTLE_ENDIAN}. This macro replaces
1606@var{TARGET_BYTE_ORDER} which is deprecated.
1607
1608@item TARGET_BYTE_ORDER_SELECTABLE_P
1609Non-zero if the target has both @code{BIG_ENDIAN} and
1610@code{LITTLE_ENDIAN} variants. This macro replaces
1611@var{TARGET_BYTE_ORDER_SELECTABLE} which is deprecated.
1612
1613@item TARGET_CHAR_BIT
1614Number of bits in a char; defaults to 8.
1615
1616@item TARGET_COMPLEX_BIT
1617Number of bits in a complex number; defaults to @code{2 * TARGET_FLOAT_BIT}.
1618
1619@item TARGET_DOUBLE_BIT
1620Number of bits in a double float; defaults to @code{8 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT}.
1621
1622@item TARGET_DOUBLE_COMPLEX_BIT
1623Number of bits in a double complex; defaults to @code{2 * TARGET_DOUBLE_BIT}.
1624
1625@item TARGET_FLOAT_BIT
1626Number of bits in a float; defaults to @code{4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT}.
1627
1628@item TARGET_INT_BIT
1629Number of bits in an integer; defaults to @code{4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT}.
1630
1631@item TARGET_LONG_BIT
1632Number of bits in a long integer; defaults to @code{4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT}.
1633
1634@item TARGET_LONG_DOUBLE_BIT
1635Number of bits in a long double float;
1636defaults to @code{2 * TARGET_DOUBLE_BIT}.
1637
1638@item TARGET_LONG_LONG_BIT
1639Number of bits in a long long integer; defaults to @code{2 * TARGET_LONG_BIT}.
1640
1641@item TARGET_PTR_BIT
1642Number of bits in a pointer; defaults to @code{TARGET_INT_BIT}.
1643
1644@item TARGET_SHORT_BIT
1645Number of bits in a short integer; defaults to @code{2 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT}.
1646
1647@item TARGET_READ_PC
1648@item TARGET_WRITE_PC (val, pid)
1649@item TARGET_READ_SP
1650@item TARGET_WRITE_SP
1651@item TARGET_READ_FP
1652@item TARGET_WRITE_FP
1653These change the behavior of @code{read_pc}, @code{write_pc},
1654@code{read_sp}, @code{write_sp}, @code{read_fp} and @code{write_fp}.
1655For most targets, these may be left undefined. GDB will call the read
1656and write register functions with the relevant @code{_REGNUM} argument.
1657
1658These macros are useful when a target keeps one of these registers in a
1659hard to get at place; for example, part in a segment register and part
1660in an ordinary register.
1661
1662@item TARGET_VIRTUAL_FRAME_POINTER(pc,regp,offsetp)
1663Returns a @code{(register, offset)} pair representing the virtual
1664frame pointer in use at the code address @code{"pc"}. If virtual
1665frame pointers are not used, a default definition simply returns
1666@code{FP_REGNUM}, with an offset of zero.
1667
1668@item USE_STRUCT_CONVENTION (gcc_p, type)
1669If defined, this must be an expression that is nonzero if a value of the
1670given @var{type} being returned from a function must have space
1671allocated for it on the stack. @var{gcc_p} is true if the function
1672being considered is known to have been compiled by GCC; this is helpful
1673for systems where GCC is known to use different calling convention than
1674other compilers.
1675
1676@item VARIABLES_INSIDE_BLOCK (desc, gcc_p)
1677For dbx-style debugging information, if the compiler puts variable
1678declarations inside LBRAC/RBRAC blocks, this should be defined to be
1679nonzero. @var{desc} is the value of @code{n_desc} from the
1680@code{N_RBRAC} symbol, and @var{gcc_p} is true if GDB has noticed the
1681presence of either the @code{GCC_COMPILED_SYMBOL} or the
1682@code{GCC2_COMPILED_SYMBOL}. By default, this is 0.
1683
1684@item OS9K_VARIABLES_INSIDE_BLOCK (desc, gcc_p)
1685Similarly, for OS/9000. Defaults to 1.
1686
1687@end table
1688
1689Motorola M68K target conditionals.
1690
1691@table @code
1692
1693@item BPT_VECTOR
1694Define this to be the 4-bit location of the breakpoint trap vector. If
1695not defined, it will default to @code{0xf}.
1696
1697@item REMOTE_BPT_VECTOR
1698Defaults to @code{1}.
1699
1700@end table
1701
1702@section Adding a New Target
1703
1704The following files define a target to GDB:
1705
1706@table @file
1707
1708@item gdb/config/@var{arch}/@var{ttt}.mt
1709Contains a Makefile fragment specific to this target. Specifies what
1710object files are needed for target @var{ttt}, by defining
1711@samp{TDEPFILES=@dots{}}. Also specifies the header file which
1712describes @var{ttt}, by defining @samp{TM_FILE= tm-@var{ttt}.h}. You
1713can also define @samp{TM_CFLAGS}, @samp{TM_CLIBS}, @samp{TM_CDEPS}, but
1714these are now deprecated and may go away in future versions of GDB.
1715
1716@item gdb/config/@var{arch}/tm-@var{ttt}.h
1717(@file{tm.h} is a link to this file, created by configure). Contains
1718macro definitions about the target machine's registers, stack frame
1719format and instructions.
1720
1721@item gdb/@var{ttt}-tdep.c
1722Contains any miscellaneous code required for this target machine. On
1723some machines it doesn't exist at all. Sometimes the macros in
1724@file{tm-@var{ttt}.h} become very complicated, so they are implemented
1725as functions here instead, and the macro is simply defined to call the
1726function. This is vastly preferable, since it is easier to understand
1727and debug.
1728
1729@item gdb/config/@var{arch}/tm-@var{arch}.h
1730This often exists to describe the basic layout of the target machine's
1731processor chip (registers, stack, etc). If used, it is included by
1732@file{tm-@var{ttt}.h}. It can be shared among many targets that use the
1733same processor.
1734
1735@item gdb/@var{arch}-tdep.c
1736Similarly, there are often common subroutines that are shared by all
1737target machines that use this particular architecture.
1738
1739@end table
1740
1741If you are adding a new operating system for an existing CPU chip, add a
1742@file{config/tm-@var{os}.h} file that describes the operating system
1743facilities that are unusual (extra symbol table info; the breakpoint
1744instruction needed; etc). Then write a @file{@var{arch}/tm-@var{os}.h}
1745that just @code{#include}s @file{tm-@var{arch}.h} and
1746@file{config/tm-@var{os}.h}.
1747
1748
1749@node Target Vector Definition
1750
1751@chapter Target Vector Definition
1752
1753The target vector defines the interface between GDB's abstract handling
1754of target systems, and the nitty-gritty code that actually exercises
1755control over a process or a serial port. GDB includes some 30-40
1756different target vectors; however, each configuration of GDB includes
1757only a few of them.
1758
1759@section File Targets
1760
1761Both executables and core files have target vectors.
1762
1763@section Standard Protocol and Remote Stubs
1764
1765GDB's file @file{remote.c} talks a serial protocol to code that runs in
1766the target system. GDB provides several sample ``stubs'' that can be
1767integrated into target programs or operating systems for this purpose;
1768they are named @file{*-stub.c}.
1769
1770The GDB user's manual describes how to put such a stub into your target
1771code. What follows is a discussion of integrating the SPARC stub into a
1772complicated operating system (rather than a simple program), by Stu
1773Grossman, the author of this stub.
1774
1775The trap handling code in the stub assumes the following upon entry to
1776trap_low:
1777
1778@enumerate
1779
1780@item %l1 and %l2 contain pc and npc respectively at the time of the trap
1781
1782@item traps are disabled
1783
1784@item you are in the correct trap window
1785
1786@end enumerate
1787
1788As long as your trap handler can guarantee those conditions, then there
1789is no reason why you shouldn't be able to `share' traps with the stub.
1790The stub has no requirement that it be jumped to directly from the
1791hardware trap vector. That is why it calls @code{exceptionHandler()},
1792which is provided by the external environment. For instance, this could
1793setup the hardware traps to actually execute code which calls the stub
1794first, and then transfers to its own trap handler.
1795
1796For the most point, there probably won't be much of an issue with
1797`sharing' traps, as the traps we use are usually not used by the kernel,
1798and often indicate unrecoverable error conditions. Anyway, this is all
1799controlled by a table, and is trivial to modify. The most important
1800trap for us is for @code{ta 1}. Without that, we can't single step or
1801do breakpoints. Everything else is unnecessary for the proper operation
1802of the debugger/stub.
1803
1804From reading the stub, it's probably not obvious how breakpoints work.
1805They are simply done by deposit/examine operations from GDB.
1806
1807@section ROM Monitor Interface
1808
1809@section Custom Protocols
1810
1811@section Transport Layer
1812
1813@section Builtin Simulator
1814
1815
1816@node Native Debugging
1817
1818@chapter Native Debugging
1819
1820Several files control GDB's configuration for native support:
1821
1822@table @file
1823
1824@item gdb/config/@var{arch}/@var{xyz}.mh
1825Specifies Makefile fragments needed when hosting @emph{or native} on
1826machine @var{xyz}. In particular, this lists the required
1827native-dependent object files, by defining @samp{NATDEPFILES=@dots{}}.
1828Also specifies the header file which describes native support on
1829@var{xyz}, by defining @samp{NAT_FILE= nm-@var{xyz}.h}. You can also
1830define @samp{NAT_CFLAGS}, @samp{NAT_ADD_FILES}, @samp{NAT_CLIBS},
1831@samp{NAT_CDEPS}, etc.; see @file{Makefile.in}.
1832
1833@item gdb/config/@var{arch}/nm-@var{xyz}.h
1834(@file{nm.h} is a link to this file, created by configure). Contains C
1835macro definitions describing the native system environment, such as
1836child process control and core file support.
1837
1838@item gdb/@var{xyz}-nat.c
1839Contains any miscellaneous C code required for this native support of
1840this machine. On some machines it doesn't exist at all.
1841
1842@end table
1843
1844There are some ``generic'' versions of routines that can be used by
1845various systems. These can be customized in various ways by macros
1846defined in your @file{nm-@var{xyz}.h} file. If these routines work for
1847the @var{xyz} host, you can just include the generic file's name (with
1848@samp{.o}, not @samp{.c}) in @code{NATDEPFILES}.
1849
1850Otherwise, if your machine needs custom support routines, you will need
1851to write routines that perform the same functions as the generic file.
1852Put them into @code{@var{xyz}-nat.c}, and put @code{@var{xyz}-nat.o}
1853into @code{NATDEPFILES}.
1854
1855@table @file
1856
1857@item inftarg.c
1858This contains the @emph{target_ops vector} that supports Unix child
1859processes on systems which use ptrace and wait to control the child.
1860
1861@item procfs.c
1862This contains the @emph{target_ops vector} that supports Unix child
1863processes on systems which use /proc to control the child.
1864
1865@item fork-child.c
1866This does the low-level grunge that uses Unix system calls to do a "fork
1867and exec" to start up a child process.
1868
1869@item infptrace.c
1870This is the low level interface to inferior processes for systems using
1871the Unix @code{ptrace} call in a vanilla way.
1872
1873@end table
1874
1875@section Native core file Support
1876
1877@table @file
1878
1879@item core-aout.c::fetch_core_registers()
1880Support for reading registers out of a core file. This routine calls
1881@code{register_addr()}, see below. Now that BFD is used to read core
1882files, virtually all machines should use @code{core-aout.c}, and should
1883just provide @code{fetch_core_registers} in @code{@var{xyz}-nat.c} (or
1884@code{REGISTER_U_ADDR} in @code{nm-@var{xyz}.h}).
1885
1886@item core-aout.c::register_addr()
1887If your @code{nm-@var{xyz}.h} file defines the macro
1888@code{REGISTER_U_ADDR(addr, blockend, regno)}, it should be defined to
1889set @code{addr} to the offset within the @samp{user} struct of GDB
1890register number @code{regno}. @code{blockend} is the offset within the
1891``upage'' of @code{u.u_ar0}. If @code{REGISTER_U_ADDR} is defined,
1892@file{core-aout.c} will define the @code{register_addr()} function and
1893use the macro in it. If you do not define @code{REGISTER_U_ADDR}, but
1894you are using the standard @code{fetch_core_registers()}, you will need
1895to define your own version of @code{register_addr()}, put it into your
1896@code{@var{xyz}-nat.c} file, and be sure @code{@var{xyz}-nat.o} is in
1897the @code{NATDEPFILES} list. If you have your own
1898@code{fetch_core_registers()}, you may not need a separate
1899@code{register_addr()}. Many custom @code{fetch_core_registers()}
1900implementations simply locate the registers themselves.@refill
1901
1902@end table
1903
1904When making GDB run native on a new operating system, to make it
1905possible to debug core files, you will need to either write specific
1906code for parsing your OS's core files, or customize
1907@file{bfd/trad-core.c}. First, use whatever @code{#include} files your
1908machine uses to define the struct of registers that is accessible
1909(possibly in the u-area) in a core file (rather than
1910@file{machine/reg.h}), and an include file that defines whatever header
1911exists on a core file (e.g. the u-area or a @samp{struct core}). Then
1912modify @code{trad_unix_core_file_p()} to use these values to set up the
1913section information for the data segment, stack segment, any other
1914segments in the core file (perhaps shared library contents or control
1915information), ``registers'' segment, and if there are two discontiguous
1916sets of registers (e.g. integer and float), the ``reg2'' segment. This
1917section information basically delimits areas in the core file in a
1918standard way, which the section-reading routines in BFD know how to seek
1919around in.
1920
1921Then back in GDB, you need a matching routine called
1922@code{fetch_core_registers()}. If you can use the generic one, it's in
1923@file{core-aout.c}; if not, it's in your @file{@var{xyz}-nat.c} file.
1924It will be passed a char pointer to the entire ``registers'' segment,
1925its length, and a zero; or a char pointer to the entire ``regs2''
1926segment, its length, and a 2. The routine should suck out the supplied
1927register values and install them into GDB's ``registers'' array.
1928
1929If your system uses @file{/proc} to control processes, and uses ELF
1930format core files, then you may be able to use the same routines for
1931reading the registers out of processes and out of core files.
1932
1933@section ptrace
1934
1935@section /proc
1936
1937@section win32
1938
1939@section shared libraries
1940
1941@section Native Conditionals
1942
1943When GDB is configured and compiled, various macros are defined or left
1944undefined, to control compilation when the host and target systems are
1945the same. These macros should be defined (or left undefined) in
1946@file{nm-@var{system}.h}.
1947
1948@table @code
1949
1950@item ATTACH_DETACH
1951If defined, then GDB will include support for the @code{attach} and
1952@code{detach} commands.
1953
1954@item CHILD_PREPARE_TO_STORE
1955If the machine stores all registers at once in the child process, then
1956define this to ensure that all values are correct. This usually entails
1957a read from the child.
1958
1959[Note that this is incorrectly defined in @file{xm-@var{system}.h} files
1960currently.]
1961
1962@item FETCH_INFERIOR_REGISTERS
1963Define this if the native-dependent code will provide its own routines
1964@code{fetch_inferior_registers} and @code{store_inferior_registers} in
1965@file{@var{HOST}-nat.c}. If this symbol is @emph{not} defined, and
1966@file{infptrace.c} is included in this configuration, the default
1967routines in @file{infptrace.c} are used for these functions.
1968
1969@item FILES_INFO_HOOK
1970(Only defined for Convex.)
1971
1972@item FP0_REGNUM
1973This macro is normally defined to be the number of the first floating
1974point register, if the machine has such registers. As such, it would
1975appear only in target-specific code. However, /proc support uses this
1976to decide whether floats are in use on this target.
1977
1978@item GET_LONGJMP_TARGET
1979For most machines, this is a target-dependent parameter. On the
1980DECstation and the Iris, this is a native-dependent parameter, since
1981<setjmp.h> is needed to define it.
1982
1983This macro determines the target PC address that longjmp() will jump to,
1984assuming that we have just stopped at a longjmp breakpoint. It takes a
1985CORE_ADDR * as argument, and stores the target PC value through this
1986pointer. It examines the current state of the machine as needed.
1987
1988@item KERNEL_U_ADDR
1989Define this to the address of the @code{u} structure (the ``user
1990struct'', also known as the ``u-page'') in kernel virtual memory. GDB
1991needs to know this so that it can subtract this address from absolute
1992addresses in the upage, that are obtained via ptrace or from core files.
1993On systems that don't need this value, set it to zero.
1994
1995@item KERNEL_U_ADDR_BSD
1996Define this to cause GDB to determine the address of @code{u} at
1997runtime, by using Berkeley-style @code{nlist} on the kernel's image in
1998the root directory.
1999
2000@item KERNEL_U_ADDR_HPUX
2001Define this to cause GDB to determine the address of @code{u} at
2002runtime, by using HP-style @code{nlist} on the kernel's image in the
2003root directory.
2004
2005@item ONE_PROCESS_WRITETEXT
2006Define this to be able to, when a breakpoint insertion fails, warn the
2007user that another process may be running with the same executable.
2008
2009@item PROC_NAME_FMT
2010Defines the format for the name of a @file{/proc} device. Should be
2011defined in @file{nm.h} @emph{only} in order to override the default
2012definition in @file{procfs.c}.
2013
2014@item PTRACE_FP_BUG
2015mach386-xdep.c
2016
2017@item PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE
2018The type of the third argument to the @code{ptrace} system call, if it
2019exists and is different from @code{int}.
2020
2021@item REGISTER_U_ADDR
2022Defines the offset of the registers in the ``u area''.
2023
2024@item SHELL_COMMAND_CONCAT
2025If defined, is a string to prefix on the shell command used to start the
2026inferior.
2027
2028@item SHELL_FILE
2029If defined, this is the name of the shell to use to run the inferior.
2030Defaults to @code{"/bin/sh"}.
2031
2032@item SOLIB_ADD (filename, from_tty, targ)
2033Define this to expand into an expression that will cause the symbols in
2034@var{filename} to be added to GDB's symbol table.
2035
2036@item SOLIB_CREATE_INFERIOR_HOOK
2037Define this to expand into any shared-library-relocation code that you
2038want to be run just after the child process has been forked.
2039
2040@item START_INFERIOR_TRAPS_EXPECTED
2041When starting an inferior, GDB normally expects to trap twice; once when
2042the shell execs, and once when the program itself execs. If the actual
2043number of traps is something other than 2, then define this macro to
2044expand into the number expected.
2045
2046@item SVR4_SHARED_LIBS
2047Define this to indicate that SVR4-style shared libraries are in use.
2048
2049@item USE_PROC_FS
2050This determines whether small routines in @file{*-tdep.c}, which
2051translate register values between GDB's internal representation and the
2052/proc representation, are compiled.
2053
2054@item U_REGS_OFFSET
2055This is the offset of the registers in the upage. It need only be
2056defined if the generic ptrace register access routines in
2057@file{infptrace.c} are being used (that is, @file{infptrace.c} is
2058configured in, and @code{FETCH_INFERIOR_REGISTERS} is not defined). If
2059the default value from @file{infptrace.c} is good enough, leave it
2060undefined.
2061
2062The default value means that u.u_ar0 @emph{points to} the location of
2063the registers. I'm guessing that @code{#define U_REGS_OFFSET 0} means
2064that u.u_ar0 @emph{is} the location of the registers.
2065
2066@item CLEAR_SOLIB
2067objfiles.c
2068
2069@item DEBUG_PTRACE
2070Define this to debug ptrace calls.
2071
2072@end table
2073
2074
2075@node Support Libraries
2076
2077@chapter Support Libraries
2078
2079@section BFD
2080
2081BFD provides support for GDB in several ways:
2082
2083@table @emph
2084
2085@item identifying executable and core files
2086BFD will identify a variety of file types, including a.out, coff, and
2087several variants thereof, as well as several kinds of core files.
2088
2089@item access to sections of files
2090BFD parses the file headers to determine the names, virtual addresses,
2091sizes, and file locations of all the various named sections in files
2092(such as the text section or the data section). GDB simply calls BFD to
2093read or write section X at byte offset Y for length Z.
2094
2095@item specialized core file support
2096BFD provides routines to determine the failing command name stored in a
2097core file, the signal with which the program failed, and whether a core
2098file matches (i.e. could be a core dump of) a particular executable
2099file.
2100
2101@item locating the symbol information
2102GDB uses an internal interface of BFD to determine where to find the
2103symbol information in an executable file or symbol-file. GDB itself
2104handles the reading of symbols, since BFD does not ``understand'' debug
2105symbols, but GDB uses BFD's cached information to find the symbols,
2106string table, etc.
2107
2108@end table
2109
2110@section opcodes
2111
2112The opcodes library provides GDB's disassembler. (It's a separate
2113library because it's also used in binutils, for @file{objdump}).
2114
2115@section readline
2116
2117@section mmalloc
2118
2119@section libiberty
2120
2121@section gnu-regex
2122
2123Regex conditionals.
2124
2125@table @code
2126
2127@item C_ALLOCA
2128
2129@item NFAILURES
2130
2131@item RE_NREGS
2132
2133@item SIGN_EXTEND_CHAR
2134
2135@item SWITCH_ENUM_BUG
2136
2137@item SYNTAX_TABLE
2138
2139@item Sword
2140
2141@item sparc
2142
2143@end table
2144
2145@section include
2146
2147@node Coding
2148
2149@chapter Coding
2150
2151This chapter covers topics that are lower-level than the major
2152algorithms of GDB.
2153
2154@section Cleanups
2155
2156Cleanups are a structured way to deal with things that need to be done
2157later. When your code does something (like @code{malloc} some memory,
2158or open a file) that needs to be undone later (e.g. free the memory or
2159close the file), it can make a cleanup. The cleanup will be done at
2160some future point: when the command is finished, when an error occurs,
2161or when your code decides it's time to do cleanups.
2162
2163You can also discard cleanups, that is, throw them away without doing
2164what they say. This is only done if you ask that it be done.
2165
2166Syntax:
2167
2168@table @code
2169
2170@item struct cleanup *@var{old_chain};
2171Declare a variable which will hold a cleanup chain handle.
2172
2173@item @var{old_chain} = make_cleanup (@var{function}, @var{arg});
2174Make a cleanup which will cause @var{function} to be called with
2175@var{arg} (a @code{char *}) later. The result, @var{old_chain}, is a
2176handle that can be passed to @code{do_cleanups} or
2177@code{discard_cleanups} later. Unless you are going to call
2178@code{do_cleanups} or @code{discard_cleanups} yourself, you can ignore
2179the result from @code{make_cleanup}.
2180
2181@item do_cleanups (@var{old_chain});
2182Perform all cleanups done since @code{make_cleanup} returned
2183@var{old_chain}. E.g.:
2184@example
2185make_cleanup (a, 0);
2186old = make_cleanup (b, 0);
2187do_cleanups (old);
2188@end example
2189@noindent
2190will call @code{b()} but will not call @code{a()}. The cleanup that
2191calls @code{a()} will remain in the cleanup chain, and will be done
2192later unless otherwise discarded.@refill
2193
2194@item discard_cleanups (@var{old_chain});
2195Same as @code{do_cleanups} except that it just removes the cleanups from
2196the chain and does not call the specified functions.
2197
2198@end table
2199
2200Some functions, e.g. @code{fputs_filtered()} or @code{error()}, specify
2201that they ``should not be called when cleanups are not in place''. This
2202means that any actions you need to reverse in the case of an error or
2203interruption must be on the cleanup chain before you call these
2204functions, since they might never return to your code (they
2205@samp{longjmp} instead).
2206
2207@section Wrapping Output Lines
2208
2209Output that goes through @code{printf_filtered} or @code{fputs_filtered}
2210or @code{fputs_demangled} needs only to have calls to @code{wrap_here}
2211added in places that would be good breaking points. The utility
2212routines will take care of actually wrapping if the line width is
2213exceeded.
2214
2215The argument to @code{wrap_here} is an indentation string which is
2216printed @emph{only} if the line breaks there. This argument is saved
2217away and used later. It must remain valid until the next call to
2218@code{wrap_here} or until a newline has been printed through the
2219@code{*_filtered} functions. Don't pass in a local variable and then
2220return!
2221
2222It is usually best to call @code{wrap_here()} after printing a comma or
2223space. If you call it before printing a space, make sure that your
2224indentation properly accounts for the leading space that will print if
2225the line wraps there.
2226
2227Any function or set of functions that produce filtered output must
2228finish by printing a newline, to flush the wrap buffer, before switching
2229to unfiltered (``@code{printf}'') output. Symbol reading routines that
2230print warnings are a good example.
2231
2232@section GDB Coding Standards
2233
2234GDB follows the GNU coding standards, as described in
2235@file{etc/standards.texi}. This file is also available for anonymous
2236FTP from GNU archive sites. GDB takes a strict interpretation of the
2237standard; in general, when the GNU standard recommends a practice but
2238does not require it, GDB requires it.
2239
2240GDB follows an additional set of coding standards specific to GDB,
2241as described in the following sections.
2242
2243You can configure with @samp{--enable-build-warnings} to get GCC to
2244check on a number of these rules. GDB sources ought not to engender any
2245complaints, unless they are caused by bogus host systems. (The exact
2246set of enabled warnings is currently @samp{-Wall -Wpointer-arith
2247-Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes -Wmissing-declarations}.
2248
2249@subsection Formatting
2250
2251The standard GNU recommendations for formatting must be followed
2252strictly.
2253
2254Note that while in a definition, the function's name must be in column
2255zero; in a function declaration, the name must be on the same line as
2256the return type.
2257
2258In addition, there must be a space between a function or macro name and
2259the opening parenthesis of its argument list (except for macro
2260definitions, as required by C). There must not be a space after an open
2261paren/bracket or before a close paren/bracket.
2262
2263While additional whitespace is generally helpful for reading, do not use
2264more than one blank line to separate blocks, and avoid adding whitespace
2265after the end of a program line (as of 1/99, some 600 lines had whitespace
2266after the semicolon). Excess whitespace causes difficulties for diff and
2267patch.
2268
2269@subsection Comments
2270
2271The standard GNU requirements on comments must be followed strictly.
2272
2273Block comments must appear in the following form, with no `/*'- or
2274'*/'-only lines, and no leading `*':
2275
2276@example @code
2277/* Wait for control to return from inferior to debugger. If inferior
2278 gets a signal, we may decide to start it up again instead of
2279 returning. That is why there is a loop in this function. When
2280 this function actually returns it means the inferior should be left
2281 stopped and GDB should read more commands. */
2282@end example
2283
2284(Note that this format is encouraged by Emacs; tabbing for a multi-line
2285comment works correctly, and M-Q fills the block consistently.)
2286
2287Put a blank line between the block comments preceding function or
2288variable definitions, and the definition itself.
2289
2290In general, put function-body comments on lines by themselves, rather
2291than trying to fit them into the 20 characters left at the end of a
2292line, since either the comment or the code will inevitably get longer
2293than will fit, and then somebody will have to move it anyhow.
2294
2295@subsection C Usage
2296
2297Code must not depend on the sizes of C data types, the format of the
2298host's floating point numbers, the alignment of anything, or the order
2299of evaluation of expressions.
2300
2301Use functions freely. There are only a handful of compute-bound areas
2302in GDB that might be affected by the overhead of a function call, mainly
2303in symbol reading. Most of GDB's performance is limited by the target
2304interface (whether serial line or system call).
2305
2306However, use functions with moderation. A thousand one-line functions
2307are just as hard to understand as a single thousand-line function.
2308
2309@subsection Function Prototypes
2310
2311Prototypes must be used to @emph{declare} functions but never to
2312@emph{define} them. Prototypes for GDB functions must include both the
2313argument type and name, with the name matching that used in the actual
2314function definition.
2315
2316For the sake of compatibility with pre-ANSI compilers, define prototypes
2317with the @code{PARAMS} macro:
2318
2319@example @code
2320extern int memory_remove_breakpoint PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR addr,
2321 char *contents_cache));
2322@end example
2323
2324Note the double parentheses around the parameter types. This allows an
2325arbitrary number of parameters to be described, without freaking out the
2326C preprocessor. When the function has no parameters, it should be
2327described like:
2328
2329@example @code
2330extern void noprocess PARAMS ((void));
2331@end example
2332
2333The @code{PARAMS} macro expands to its argument in ANSI C, or to a
2334simple @code{()} in traditional C.
2335
2336All external functions should have a @code{PARAMS} declaration in a
2337header file that callers include, except for @code{_initialize_*}
2338functions, which must be external so that @file{init.c} construction
2339works, but shouldn't be visible to random source files.
2340
2341All static functions must be declared in a block near the top of the
2342source file.
2343
2344@subsection Clean Design
2345
2346In addition to getting the syntax right, there's the little question of
2347semantics. Some things are done in certain ways in GDB because long
2348experience has shown that the more obvious ways caused various kinds of
2349trouble.
2350
2351You can't assume the byte order of anything that comes from a target
2352(including @var{value}s, object files, and instructions). Such things
2353must be byte-swapped using @code{SWAP_TARGET_AND_HOST} in GDB, or one of
2354the swap routines defined in @file{bfd.h}, such as @code{bfd_get_32}.
2355
2356You can't assume that you know what interface is being used to talk to
2357the target system. All references to the target must go through the
2358current @code{target_ops} vector.
2359
2360You can't assume that the host and target machines are the same machine
2361(except in the ``native'' support modules). In particular, you can't
2362assume that the target machine's header files will be available on the
2363host machine. Target code must bring along its own header files --
2364written from scratch or explicitly donated by their owner, to avoid
2365copyright problems.
2366
2367Insertion of new @code{#ifdef}'s will be frowned upon. It's much better
2368to write the code portably than to conditionalize it for various
2369systems.
2370
2371New @code{#ifdef}'s which test for specific compilers or manufacturers
2372or operating systems are unacceptable. All @code{#ifdef}'s should test
2373for features. The information about which configurations contain which
2374features should be segregated into the configuration files. Experience
2375has proven far too often that a feature unique to one particular system
2376often creeps into other systems; and that a conditional based on some
2377predefined macro for your current system will become worthless over
2378time, as new versions of your system come out that behave differently
2379with regard to this feature.
2380
2381Adding code that handles specific architectures, operating systems,
2382target interfaces, or hosts, is not acceptable in generic code. If a
2383hook is needed at that point, invent a generic hook and define it for
2384your configuration, with something like:
2385
2386@example
2387#ifdef WRANGLE_SIGNALS
2388 WRANGLE_SIGNALS (signo);
2389#endif
2390@end example
2391
2392In your host, target, or native configuration file, as appropriate,
2393define @code{WRANGLE_SIGNALS} to do the machine-dependent thing. Take a
2394bit of care in defining the hook, so that it can be used by other ports
2395in the future, if they need a hook in the same place.
2396
2397If the hook is not defined, the code should do whatever "most" machines
2398want. Using @code{#ifdef}, as above, is the preferred way to do this,
2399but sometimes that gets convoluted, in which case use
2400
2401@example
2402#ifndef SPECIAL_FOO_HANDLING
2403#define SPECIAL_FOO_HANDLING(pc, sp) (0)
2404#endif
2405@end example
2406
2407where the macro is used or in an appropriate header file.
2408
2409Whether to include a @dfn{small} hook, a hook around the exact pieces of
2410code which are system-dependent, or whether to replace a whole function
2411with a hook depends on the case. A good example of this dilemma can be
2412found in @code{get_saved_register}. All machines that GDB 2.8 ran on
2413just needed the @code{FRAME_FIND_SAVED_REGS} hook to find the saved
2414registers. Then the SPARC and Pyramid came along, and
2415@code{HAVE_REGISTER_WINDOWS} and @code{REGISTER_IN_WINDOW_P} were
2416introduced. Then the 29k and 88k required the @code{GET_SAVED_REGISTER}
2417hook. The first three are examples of small hooks; the latter replaces
2418a whole function. In this specific case, it is useful to have both
2419kinds; it would be a bad idea to replace all the uses of the small hooks
2420with @code{GET_SAVED_REGISTER}, since that would result in much
2421duplicated code. Other times, duplicating a few lines of code here or
2422there is much cleaner than introducing a large number of small hooks.
2423
2424Another way to generalize GDB along a particular interface is with an
2425attribute struct. For example, GDB has been generalized to handle
2426multiple kinds of remote interfaces -- not by #ifdef's everywhere, but
2427by defining the "target_ops" structure and having a current target (as
2428well as a stack of targets below it, for memory references). Whenever
2429something needs to be done that depends on which remote interface we are
2430using, a flag in the current target_ops structure is tested (e.g.
2431`target_has_stack'), or a function is called through a pointer in the
2432current target_ops structure. In this way, when a new remote interface
2433is added, only one module needs to be touched -- the one that actually
2434implements the new remote interface. Other examples of
2435attribute-structs are BFD access to multiple kinds of object file
2436formats, or GDB's access to multiple source languages.
2437
2438Please avoid duplicating code. For example, in GDB 3.x all the code
2439interfacing between @code{ptrace} and the rest of GDB was duplicated in
2440@file{*-dep.c}, and so changing something was very painful. In GDB 4.x,
2441these have all been consolidated into @file{infptrace.c}.
2442@file{infptrace.c} can deal with variations between systems the same way
2443any system-independent file would (hooks, #if defined, etc.), and
2444machines which are radically different don't need to use infptrace.c at
2445all.
2446
2447
2448@node Porting GDB
2449
2450@chapter Porting GDB
2451
2452Most of the work in making GDB compile on a new machine is in specifying
2453the configuration of the machine. This is done in a dizzying variety of
2454header files and configuration scripts, which we hope to make more
2455sensible soon. Let's say your new host is called an @var{xyz} (e.g.
2456@samp{sun4}), and its full three-part configuration name is
2457@code{@var{arch}-@var{xvend}-@var{xos}} (e.g. @samp{sparc-sun-sunos4}).
2458In particular:
2459
2460In the top level directory, edit @file{config.sub} and add @var{arch},
2461@var{xvend}, and @var{xos} to the lists of supported architectures,
2462vendors, and operating systems near the bottom of the file. Also, add
2463@var{xyz} as an alias that maps to
2464@code{@var{arch}-@var{xvend}-@var{xos}}. You can test your changes by
2465running
2466
2467@example
2468./config.sub @var{xyz}
2469@end example
2470@noindent
2471and
2472@example
2473./config.sub @code{@var{arch}-@var{xvend}-@var{xos}}
2474@end example
2475@noindent
2476which should both respond with @code{@var{arch}-@var{xvend}-@var{xos}}
2477and no error messages.
2478
2479You need to port BFD, if that hasn't been done already. Porting BFD is
2480beyond the scope of this manual.
2481
2482To configure GDB itself, edit @file{gdb/configure.host} to recognize
2483your system and set @code{gdb_host} to @var{xyz}, and (unless your
2484desired target is already available) also edit @file{gdb/configure.tgt},
2485setting @code{gdb_target} to something appropriate (for instance,
2486@var{xyz}).
2487
2488Finally, you'll need to specify and define GDB's host-, native-, and
2489target-dependent @file{.h} and @file{.c} files used for your
2490configuration.
2491
2492@section Configuring GDB for Release
2493
2494From the top level directory (containing @file{gdb}, @file{bfd},
2495@file{libiberty}, and so on):
2496@example
2497make -f Makefile.in gdb.tar.gz
2498@end example
2499
2500This will properly configure, clean, rebuild any files that are
2501distributed pre-built (e.g. @file{c-exp.tab.c} or @file{refcard.ps}),
2502and will then make a tarfile. (If the top level directory has already
2503been configured, you can just do @code{make gdb.tar.gz} instead.)
2504
2505This procedure requires:
2506@itemize @bullet
2507@item symbolic links
2508@item @code{makeinfo} (texinfo2 level)
2509@item @TeX{}
2510@item @code{dvips}
2511@item @code{yacc} or @code{bison}
2512@end itemize
2513@noindent
2514@dots{} and the usual slew of utilities (@code{sed}, @code{tar}, etc.).
2515
2516@subheading TEMPORARY RELEASE PROCEDURE FOR DOCUMENTATION
2517
2518@file{gdb.texinfo} is currently marked up using the texinfo-2 macros,
2519which are not yet a default for anything (but we have to start using
2520them sometime).
2521
2522For making paper, the only thing this implies is the right generation of
2523@file{texinfo.tex} needs to be included in the distribution.
2524
2525For making info files, however, rather than duplicating the texinfo2
2526distribution, generate @file{gdb-all.texinfo} locally, and include the
2527files @file{gdb.info*} in the distribution. Note the plural;
2528@code{makeinfo} will split the document into one overall file and five
2529or so included files.
2530
2531@node Hints
2532
2533@chapter Hints
2534
2535Check the @file{README} file, it often has useful information that does not
2536appear anywhere else in the directory.
2537
2538@menu
2539* Getting Started:: Getting started working on GDB
2540* Debugging GDB:: Debugging GDB with itself
2541@end menu
2542
2543@node Getting Started,,, Hints
2544
2545@section Getting Started
2546
2547GDB is a large and complicated program, and if you first starting to
2548work on it, it can be hard to know where to start. Fortunately, if you
2549know how to go about it, there are ways to figure out what is going on.
2550
2551This manual, the GDB Internals manual, has information which applies
2552generally to many parts of GDB.
2553
2554Information about particular functions or data structures are located in
2555comments with those functions or data structures. If you run across a
2556function or a global variable which does not have a comment correctly
2557explaining what is does, this can be thought of as a bug in GDB; feel
2558free to submit a bug report, with a suggested comment if you can figure
2559out what the comment should say. If you find a comment which is
2560actually wrong, be especially sure to report that.
2561
2562Comments explaining the function of macros defined in host, target, or
2563native dependent files can be in several places. Sometimes they are
2564repeated every place the macro is defined. Sometimes they are where the
2565macro is used. Sometimes there is a header file which supplies a
2566default definition of the macro, and the comment is there. This manual
2567also documents all the available macros.
2568@c (@pxref{Host Conditionals}, @pxref{Target
2569@c Conditionals}, @pxref{Native Conditionals}, and @pxref{Obsolete
2570@c Conditionals})
2571
2572Start with the header files. Once you some idea of how GDB's internal
2573symbol tables are stored (see @file{symtab.h}, @file{gdbtypes.h}), you
2574will find it much easier to understand the code which uses and creates
2575those symbol tables.
2576
2577You may wish to process the information you are getting somehow, to
2578enhance your understanding of it. Summarize it, translate it to another
2579language, add some (perhaps trivial or non-useful) feature to GDB, use
2580the code to predict what a test case would do and write the test case
2581and verify your prediction, etc. If you are reading code and your eyes
2582are starting to glaze over, this is a sign you need to use a more active
2583approach.
2584
2585Once you have a part of GDB to start with, you can find more
2586specifically the part you are looking for by stepping through each
2587function with the @code{next} command. Do not use @code{step} or you
2588will quickly get distracted; when the function you are stepping through
2589calls another function try only to get a big-picture understanding
2590(perhaps using the comment at the beginning of the function being
2591called) of what it does. This way you can identify which of the
2592functions being called by the function you are stepping through is the
2593one which you are interested in. You may need to examine the data
2594structures generated at each stage, with reference to the comments in
2595the header files explaining what the data structures are supposed to
2596look like.
2597
2598Of course, this same technique can be used if you are just reading the
2599code, rather than actually stepping through it. The same general
2600principle applies---when the code you are looking at calls something
2601else, just try to understand generally what the code being called does,
2602rather than worrying about all its details.
2603
2604A good place to start when tracking down some particular area is with a
2605command which invokes that feature. Suppose you want to know how
2606single-stepping works. As a GDB user, you know that the @code{step}
2607command invokes single-stepping. The command is invoked via command
2608tables (see @file{command.h}); by convention the function which actually
2609performs the command is formed by taking the name of the command and
2610adding @samp{_command}, or in the case of an @code{info} subcommand,
2611@samp{_info}. For example, the @code{step} command invokes the
2612@code{step_command} function and the @code{info display} command invokes
2613@code{display_info}. When this convention is not followed, you might
2614have to use @code{grep} or @kbd{M-x tags-search} in emacs, or run GDB on
2615itself and set a breakpoint in @code{execute_command}.
2616
2617If all of the above fail, it may be appropriate to ask for information
2618on @code{bug-gdb}. But @emph{never} post a generic question like ``I was
2619wondering if anyone could give me some tips about understanding
2620GDB''---if we had some magic secret we would put it in this manual.
2621Suggestions for improving the manual are always welcome, of course.
2622
2623@node Debugging GDB,,,Hints
2624
2625@section Debugging GDB with itself
2626
2627If GDB is limping on your machine, this is the preferred way to get it
2628fully functional. Be warned that in some ancient Unix systems, like
2629Ultrix 4.2, a program can't be running in one process while it is being
2630debugged in another. Rather than typing the command @code{@w{./gdb
2631./gdb}}, which works on Suns and such, you can copy @file{gdb} to
2632@file{gdb2} and then type @code{@w{./gdb ./gdb2}}.
2633
2634When you run GDB in the GDB source directory, it will read a
2635@file{.gdbinit} file that sets up some simple things to make debugging
2636gdb easier. The @code{info} command, when executed without a subcommand
2637in a GDB being debugged by gdb, will pop you back up to the top level
2638gdb. See @file{.gdbinit} for details.
2639
2640If you use emacs, you will probably want to do a @code{make TAGS} after
2641you configure your distribution; this will put the machine dependent
2642routines for your local machine where they will be accessed first by
2643@kbd{M-.}
2644
2645Also, make sure that you've either compiled GDB with your local cc, or
2646have run @code{fixincludes} if you are compiling with gcc.
2647
2648@section Submitting Patches
2649
2650Thanks for thinking of offering your changes back to the community of
2651GDB users. In general we like to get well designed enhancements.
2652Thanks also for checking in advance about the best way to transfer the
2653changes.
2654
2655The GDB maintainers will only install ``cleanly designed'' patches. You
2656may not always agree on what is clean design.
2657@c @pxref{Coding Style}, @pxref{Clean Design}.
2658
2659If the maintainers don't have time to put the patch in when it arrives,
2660or if there is any question about a patch, it goes into a large queue
2661with everyone else's patches and bug reports.
2662
2663The legal issue is that to incorporate substantial changes requires a
2664copyright assignment from you and/or your employer, granting ownership
2665of the changes to the Free Software Foundation. You can get the
2666standard document for doing this by sending mail to
2667@code{gnu@@prep.ai.mit.edu} and asking for it. I recommend that people
2668write in "All programs owned by the Free Software Foundation" as "NAME
2669OF PROGRAM", so that changes in many programs (not just GDB, but GAS,
2670Emacs, GCC, etc) can be contributed with only one piece of legalese
2671pushed through the bureacracy and filed with the FSF. I can't start
2672merging changes until this paperwork is received by the FSF (their
2673rules, which I follow since I maintain it for them).
2674
2675Technically, the easiest way to receive changes is to receive each
2676feature as a small context diff or unidiff, suitable for "patch".
2677Each message sent to me should include the changes to C code and
2678header files for a single feature, plus ChangeLog entries for each
2679directory where files were modified, and diffs for any changes needed
2680to the manuals (gdb/doc/gdb.texi or gdb/doc/gdbint.texi). If there
2681are a lot of changes for a single feature, they can be split down
2682into multiple messages.
2683
2684In this way, if I read and like the feature, I can add it to the
2685sources with a single patch command, do some testing, and check it in.
2686If you leave out the ChangeLog, I have to write one. If you leave
2687out the doc, I have to puzzle out what needs documenting. Etc.
2688
2689The reason to send each change in a separate message is that I will
2690not install some of the changes. They'll be returned to you with
2691questions or comments. If I'm doing my job, my message back to you
2692will say what you have to fix in order to make the change acceptable.
2693The reason to have separate messages for separate features is so
2694that other changes (which I @emph{am} willing to accept) can be installed
2695while one or more changes are being reworked. If multiple features
2696are sent in a single message, I tend to not put in the effort to sort
2697out the acceptable changes from the unacceptable, so none of the
2698features get installed until all are acceptable.
2699
2700If this sounds painful or authoritarian, well, it is. But I get a lot
2701of bug reports and a lot of patches, and most of them don't get
2702installed because I don't have the time to finish the job that the bug
2703reporter or the contributor could have done. Patches that arrive
2704complete, working, and well designed, tend to get installed on the day
2705they arrive. The others go into a queue and get installed if and when
2706I scan back over the queue -- which can literally take months
2707sometimes. It's in both our interests to make patch installation easy
2708-- you get your changes installed, and I make some forward progress on
2709GDB in a normal 12-hour day (instead of them having to wait until I
2710have a 14-hour or 16-hour day to spend cleaning up patches before I
2711can install them).
2712
2713Please send patches directly to the GDB maintainers at
2714@code{gdb-patches@@cygnus.com}.
2715
2716@section Obsolete Conditionals
2717
2718Fragments of old code in GDB sometimes reference or set the following
2719configuration macros. They should not be used by new code, and old uses
2720should be removed as those parts of the debugger are otherwise touched.
2721
2722@table @code
2723
2724@item STACK_END_ADDR
2725This macro used to define where the end of the stack appeared, for use
2726in interpreting core file formats that don't record this address in the
2727core file itself. This information is now configured in BFD, and GDB
2728gets the info portably from there. The values in GDB's configuration
2729files should be moved into BFD configuration files (if needed there),
2730and deleted from all of GDB's config files.
2731
2732Any @file{@var{foo}-xdep.c} file that references STACK_END_ADDR
2733is so old that it has never been converted to use BFD. Now that's old!
2734
2735@item PYRAMID_CONTROL_FRAME_DEBUGGING
2736pyr-xdep.c
2737@item PYRAMID_CORE
2738pyr-xdep.c
2739@item PYRAMID_PTRACE
2740pyr-xdep.c
2741
2742@item REG_STACK_SEGMENT
2743exec.c
2744
2745@end table
2746
2747
2748@contents
2749@bye