]> git.ipfire.org Git - thirdparty/binutils-gdb.git/blob - gdb/stack.c
2005-01-12 Andrew Cagney <cagney@gnu.org>
[thirdparty/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / stack.c
1 /* Print and select stack frames for GDB, the GNU debugger.
2
3 Copyright 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994,
4 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 Free
5 Software Foundation, Inc.
6
7 This file is part of GDB.
8
9 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
10 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
11 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
12 (at your option) any later version.
13
14 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
15 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
16 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
17 GNU General Public License for more details.
18
19 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
20 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
21 Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
22 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
23
24 #include <ctype.h>
25 #include "defs.h"
26 #include "gdb_string.h"
27 #include "value.h"
28 #include "symtab.h"
29 #include "gdbtypes.h"
30 #include "expression.h"
31 #include "language.h"
32 #include "frame.h"
33 #include "gdbcmd.h"
34 #include "gdbcore.h"
35 #include "target.h"
36 #include "source.h"
37 #include "breakpoint.h"
38 #include "demangle.h"
39 #include "inferior.h"
40 #include "annotate.h"
41 #include "ui-out.h"
42 #include "block.h"
43 #include "stack.h"
44 #include "gdb_assert.h"
45 #include "dictionary.h"
46 #include "exceptions.h"
47 #include "reggroups.h"
48 #include "regcache.h"
49
50 /* Prototypes for exported functions. */
51
52 void args_info (char *, int);
53
54 void locals_info (char *, int);
55
56 void (*deprecated_selected_frame_level_changed_hook) (int);
57
58 void _initialize_stack (void);
59
60 /* Prototypes for local functions. */
61
62 static void down_command (char *, int);
63
64 static void down_silently_base (char *);
65
66 static void down_silently_command (char *, int);
67
68 static void up_command (char *, int);
69
70 static void up_silently_base (char *);
71
72 static void up_silently_command (char *, int);
73
74 void frame_command (char *, int);
75
76 static void current_frame_command (char *, int);
77
78 static void print_frame_arg_vars (struct frame_info *, struct ui_file *);
79
80 static void catch_info (char *, int);
81
82 static void args_plus_locals_info (char *, int);
83
84 static void print_frame_label_vars (struct frame_info *, int,
85 struct ui_file *);
86
87 static void print_frame_local_vars (struct frame_info *, int,
88 struct ui_file *);
89
90 static int print_block_frame_labels (struct block *, int *,
91 struct ui_file *);
92
93 static int print_block_frame_locals (struct block *,
94 struct frame_info *,
95 int,
96 struct ui_file *);
97
98 static void print_frame (struct frame_info *fi,
99 int print_level,
100 enum print_what print_what,
101 int print_args,
102 struct symtab_and_line sal);
103
104 static void set_current_sal_from_frame (struct frame_info *, int);
105
106 static void backtrace_command (char *, int);
107
108 static void frame_info (char *, int);
109
110 extern int addressprint; /* Print addresses, or stay symbolic only? */
111
112 /* Zero means do things normally; we are interacting directly with the
113 user. One means print the full filename and linenumber when a
114 frame is printed, and do so in a format emacs18/emacs19.22 can
115 parse. Two means print similar annotations, but in many more
116 cases and in a slightly different syntax. */
117
118 int annotation_level = 0;
119 \f
120
121 struct print_stack_frame_args
122 {
123 struct frame_info *fi;
124 int print_level;
125 enum print_what print_what;
126 int print_args;
127 };
128
129 /* Show or print the frame arguments.
130 Pass the args the way catch_errors wants them. */
131 static int
132 print_stack_frame_stub (void *args)
133 {
134 struct print_stack_frame_args *p = args;
135 int center = (p->print_what == SRC_LINE
136 || p->print_what == SRC_AND_LOC);
137
138 print_frame_info (p->fi, p->print_level, p->print_what, p->print_args);
139 set_current_sal_from_frame (p->fi, center);
140 return 0;
141 }
142
143 /* Show or print a stack frame FI briefly. The output is format
144 according to PRINT_LEVEL and PRINT_WHAT printing the frame's
145 relative level, function name, argument list, and file name and
146 line number. If the frame's PC is not at the beginning of the
147 source line, the actual PC is printed at the beginning. */
148
149 void
150 print_stack_frame (struct frame_info *fi, int print_level,
151 enum print_what print_what)
152 {
153 struct print_stack_frame_args args;
154
155 args.fi = fi;
156 args.print_level = print_level;
157 args.print_what = print_what;
158 args.print_args = 1;
159
160 catch_errors (print_stack_frame_stub, (char *) &args, "", RETURN_MASK_ALL);
161 }
162
163 struct print_args_args
164 {
165 struct symbol *func;
166 struct frame_info *fi;
167 struct ui_file *stream;
168 };
169
170 static int print_args_stub (void *);
171
172 /* Print nameless args on STREAM.
173 FI is the frameinfo for this frame, START is the offset
174 of the first nameless arg, and NUM is the number of nameless args to
175 print. FIRST is nonzero if this is the first argument (not just
176 the first nameless arg). */
177
178 static void
179 print_frame_nameless_args (struct frame_info *fi, long start, int num,
180 int first, struct ui_file *stream)
181 {
182 int i;
183 CORE_ADDR argsaddr;
184 long arg_value;
185
186 for (i = 0; i < num; i++)
187 {
188 QUIT;
189 argsaddr = get_frame_args_address (fi);
190 if (!argsaddr)
191 return;
192 arg_value = read_memory_integer (argsaddr + start, sizeof (int));
193 if (!first)
194 fprintf_filtered (stream, ", ");
195 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%ld", arg_value);
196 first = 0;
197 start += sizeof (int);
198 }
199 }
200
201 /* Print the arguments of a stack frame, given the function FUNC
202 running in that frame (as a symbol), the info on the frame,
203 and the number of args according to the stack frame (or -1 if unknown). */
204
205 /* References here and elsewhere to "number of args according to the
206 stack frame" appear in all cases to refer to "number of ints of args
207 according to the stack frame". At least for VAX, i386, isi. */
208
209 static void
210 print_frame_args (struct symbol *func, struct frame_info *fi, int num,
211 struct ui_file *stream)
212 {
213 struct block *b = NULL;
214 int first = 1;
215 struct dict_iterator iter;
216 struct symbol *sym;
217 struct value *val;
218 /* Offset of next stack argument beyond the one we have seen that is
219 at the highest offset.
220 -1 if we haven't come to a stack argument yet. */
221 long highest_offset = -1;
222 int arg_size;
223 /* Number of ints of arguments that we have printed so far. */
224 int args_printed = 0;
225 struct cleanup *old_chain, *list_chain;
226 struct ui_stream *stb;
227
228 stb = ui_out_stream_new (uiout);
229 old_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_stream_delete (stb);
230
231 if (func)
232 {
233 b = SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE (func);
234
235 ALL_BLOCK_SYMBOLS (b, iter, sym)
236 {
237 QUIT;
238
239 /* Keep track of the highest stack argument offset seen, and
240 skip over any kinds of symbols we don't care about. */
241
242 switch (SYMBOL_CLASS (sym))
243 {
244 case LOC_ARG:
245 case LOC_REF_ARG:
246 {
247 long current_offset = SYMBOL_VALUE (sym);
248 arg_size = TYPE_LENGTH (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym));
249
250 /* Compute address of next argument by adding the size of
251 this argument and rounding to an int boundary. */
252 current_offset =
253 ((current_offset + arg_size + sizeof (int) - 1)
254 & ~(sizeof (int) - 1));
255
256 /* If this is the highest offset seen yet, set highest_offset. */
257 if (highest_offset == -1
258 || (current_offset > highest_offset))
259 highest_offset = current_offset;
260
261 /* Add the number of ints we're about to print to args_printed. */
262 args_printed += (arg_size + sizeof (int) - 1) / sizeof (int);
263 }
264
265 /* We care about types of symbols, but don't need to keep track of
266 stack offsets in them. */
267 case LOC_REGPARM:
268 case LOC_REGPARM_ADDR:
269 case LOC_LOCAL_ARG:
270 case LOC_BASEREG_ARG:
271 case LOC_COMPUTED_ARG:
272 break;
273
274 /* Other types of symbols we just skip over. */
275 default:
276 continue;
277 }
278
279 /* We have to look up the symbol because arguments can have
280 two entries (one a parameter, one a local) and the one we
281 want is the local, which lookup_symbol will find for us.
282 This includes gcc1 (not gcc2) on the sparc when passing a
283 small structure and gcc2 when the argument type is float
284 and it is passed as a double and converted to float by
285 the prologue (in the latter case the type of the LOC_ARG
286 symbol is double and the type of the LOC_LOCAL symbol is
287 float). */
288 /* But if the parameter name is null, don't try it.
289 Null parameter names occur on the RS/6000, for traceback tables.
290 FIXME, should we even print them? */
291
292 if (*DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (sym))
293 {
294 struct symbol *nsym;
295 nsym = lookup_symbol
296 (DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (sym),
297 b, VAR_DOMAIN, (int *) NULL, (struct symtab **) NULL);
298 if (SYMBOL_CLASS (nsym) == LOC_REGISTER)
299 {
300 /* There is a LOC_ARG/LOC_REGISTER pair. This means that
301 it was passed on the stack and loaded into a register,
302 or passed in a register and stored in a stack slot.
303 GDB 3.x used the LOC_ARG; GDB 4.0-4.11 used the LOC_REGISTER.
304
305 Reasons for using the LOC_ARG:
306 (1) because find_saved_registers may be slow for remote
307 debugging,
308 (2) because registers are often re-used and stack slots
309 rarely (never?) are. Therefore using the stack slot is
310 much less likely to print garbage.
311
312 Reasons why we might want to use the LOC_REGISTER:
313 (1) So that the backtrace prints the same value as
314 "print foo". I see no compelling reason why this needs
315 to be the case; having the backtrace print the value which
316 was passed in, and "print foo" print the value as modified
317 within the called function, makes perfect sense to me.
318
319 Additional note: It might be nice if "info args" displayed
320 both values.
321 One more note: There is a case with sparc structure passing
322 where we need to use the LOC_REGISTER, but this is dealt with
323 by creating a single LOC_REGPARM in symbol reading. */
324
325 /* Leave sym (the LOC_ARG) alone. */
326 ;
327 }
328 else
329 sym = nsym;
330 }
331
332 /* Print the current arg. */
333 if (!first)
334 ui_out_text (uiout, ", ");
335 ui_out_wrap_hint (uiout, " ");
336
337 annotate_arg_begin ();
338
339 list_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, NULL);
340 fprintf_symbol_filtered (stb->stream, SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (sym),
341 SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (sym), DMGL_PARAMS | DMGL_ANSI);
342 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "name", stb);
343 annotate_arg_name_end ();
344 ui_out_text (uiout, "=");
345
346 /* Avoid value_print because it will deref ref parameters. We just
347 want to print their addresses. Print ??? for args whose address
348 we do not know. We pass 2 as "recurse" to val_print because our
349 standard indentation here is 4 spaces, and val_print indents
350 2 for each recurse. */
351 val = read_var_value (sym, fi);
352
353 annotate_arg_value (val == NULL ? NULL : value_type (val));
354
355 if (val)
356 {
357 val_print (value_type (val), VALUE_CONTENTS (val), 0,
358 VALUE_ADDRESS (val),
359 stb->stream, 0, 0, 2, Val_no_prettyprint);
360 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "value", stb);
361 }
362 else
363 ui_out_text (uiout, "???");
364
365 /* Invoke ui_out_tuple_end. */
366 do_cleanups (list_chain);
367
368 annotate_arg_end ();
369
370 first = 0;
371 }
372 }
373
374 /* Don't print nameless args in situations where we don't know
375 enough about the stack to find them. */
376 if (num != -1)
377 {
378 long start;
379
380 if (highest_offset == -1)
381 start = FRAME_ARGS_SKIP;
382 else
383 start = highest_offset;
384
385 print_frame_nameless_args (fi, start, num - args_printed,
386 first, stream);
387 }
388 do_cleanups (old_chain);
389 }
390
391 /* Pass the args the way catch_errors wants them. */
392
393 static int
394 print_args_stub (void *args)
395 {
396 int numargs;
397 struct print_args_args *p = (struct print_args_args *) args;
398
399 if (FRAME_NUM_ARGS_P ())
400 {
401 numargs = FRAME_NUM_ARGS (p->fi);
402 gdb_assert (numargs >= 0);
403 }
404 else
405 numargs = -1;
406 print_frame_args (p->func, p->fi, numargs, p->stream);
407 return 0;
408 }
409
410 /* Set the current source and line to the location of the given
411 frame, if possible. When CENTER is true, adjust so the
412 relevant line is in the center of the next 'list'. */
413
414 static void
415 set_current_sal_from_frame (struct frame_info *fi, int center)
416 {
417 struct symtab_and_line sal;
418
419 find_frame_sal (fi, &sal);
420 if (sal.symtab)
421 {
422 if (center)
423 sal.line = max (sal.line - get_lines_to_list () / 2, 1);
424 set_current_source_symtab_and_line (&sal);
425 }
426 }
427
428 /* Print information about a frame for frame "fi" at level "level".
429 Used in "where" output, also used to emit breakpoint or step
430 messages.
431 LEVEL is the level of the frame, or -1 if it is the
432 innermost frame but we don't want to print the level.
433 The meaning of the SOURCE argument is:
434 SRC_LINE: Print only source line
435 LOCATION: Print only location
436 LOC_AND_SRC: Print location and source line. */
437
438 void
439 print_frame_info (struct frame_info *fi, int print_level,
440 enum print_what print_what, int print_args)
441 {
442 struct symtab_and_line sal;
443 int source_print;
444 int location_print;
445
446 if (get_frame_type (fi) == DUMMY_FRAME
447 || get_frame_type (fi) == SIGTRAMP_FRAME)
448 {
449 struct cleanup *uiout_cleanup
450 = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "frame");
451
452 annotate_frame_begin (print_level ? frame_relative_level (fi) : 0,
453 get_frame_pc (fi));
454
455 /* Do this regardless of SOURCE because we don't have any source
456 to list for this frame. */
457 if (print_level)
458 {
459 ui_out_text (uiout, "#");
460 ui_out_field_fmt_int (uiout, 2, ui_left, "level",
461 frame_relative_level (fi));
462 }
463 if (ui_out_is_mi_like_p (uiout))
464 {
465 annotate_frame_address ();
466 ui_out_field_core_addr (uiout, "addr", get_frame_pc (fi));
467 annotate_frame_address_end ();
468 }
469
470 if (get_frame_type (fi) == DUMMY_FRAME)
471 {
472 annotate_function_call ();
473 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "func", "<function called from gdb>");
474 }
475 else if (get_frame_type (fi) == SIGTRAMP_FRAME)
476 {
477 annotate_signal_handler_caller ();
478 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "func", "<signal handler called>");
479 }
480 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
481 annotate_frame_end ();
482
483 do_cleanups (uiout_cleanup);
484 return;
485 }
486
487 /* If fi is not the innermost frame, that normally means that fi->pc
488 points to *after* the call instruction, and we want to get the
489 line containing the call, never the next line. But if the next
490 frame is a SIGTRAMP_FRAME or a DUMMY_FRAME, then the next frame
491 was not entered as the result of a call, and we want to get the
492 line containing fi->pc. */
493 find_frame_sal (fi, &sal);
494
495 location_print = (print_what == LOCATION
496 || print_what == LOC_AND_ADDRESS
497 || print_what == SRC_AND_LOC);
498
499 if (location_print || !sal.symtab)
500 print_frame (fi, print_level, print_what, print_args, sal);
501
502 source_print = (print_what == SRC_LINE || print_what == SRC_AND_LOC);
503
504 if (source_print && sal.symtab)
505 {
506 int done = 0;
507 int mid_statement = ((print_what == SRC_LINE)
508 && (get_frame_pc (fi) != sal.pc));
509
510 if (annotation_level)
511 done = identify_source_line (sal.symtab, sal.line, mid_statement,
512 get_frame_pc (fi));
513 if (!done)
514 {
515 if (deprecated_print_frame_info_listing_hook)
516 deprecated_print_frame_info_listing_hook (sal.symtab, sal.line, sal.line + 1, 0);
517 else
518 {
519 /* We used to do this earlier, but that is clearly
520 wrong. This function is used by many different
521 parts of gdb, including normal_stop in infrun.c,
522 which uses this to print out the current PC
523 when we stepi/nexti into the middle of a source
524 line. Only the command line really wants this
525 behavior. Other UIs probably would like the
526 ability to decide for themselves if it is desired. */
527 if (addressprint && mid_statement)
528 {
529 ui_out_field_core_addr (uiout, "addr", get_frame_pc (fi));
530 ui_out_text (uiout, "\t");
531 }
532
533 print_source_lines (sal.symtab, sal.line, sal.line + 1, 0);
534 }
535 }
536 }
537
538 if (print_what != LOCATION)
539 set_default_breakpoint (1, get_frame_pc (fi), sal.symtab, sal.line);
540
541 annotate_frame_end ();
542
543 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
544 }
545
546 static void
547 print_frame (struct frame_info *fi,
548 int print_level,
549 enum print_what print_what,
550 int print_args,
551 struct symtab_and_line sal)
552 {
553 struct symbol *func;
554 char *funname = 0;
555 enum language funlang = language_unknown;
556 struct ui_stream *stb;
557 struct cleanup *old_chain;
558 struct cleanup *list_chain;
559
560 stb = ui_out_stream_new (uiout);
561 old_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_stream_delete (stb);
562
563 func = find_pc_function (get_frame_address_in_block (fi));
564 if (func)
565 {
566 /* In certain pathological cases, the symtabs give the wrong
567 function (when we are in the first function in a file which
568 is compiled without debugging symbols, the previous function
569 is compiled with debugging symbols, and the "foo.o" symbol
570 that is supposed to tell us where the file with debugging symbols
571 ends has been truncated by ar because it is longer than 15
572 characters). This also occurs if the user uses asm() to create
573 a function but not stabs for it (in a file compiled -g).
574
575 So look in the minimal symbol tables as well, and if it comes
576 up with a larger address for the function use that instead.
577 I don't think this can ever cause any problems; there shouldn't
578 be any minimal symbols in the middle of a function; if this is
579 ever changed many parts of GDB will need to be changed (and we'll
580 create a find_pc_minimal_function or some such). */
581
582 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (get_frame_address_in_block (fi));
583 if (msymbol != NULL
584 && (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol)
585 > BLOCK_START (SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE (func))))
586 {
587 /* We also don't know anything about the function besides
588 its address and name. */
589 func = 0;
590 funname = DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (msymbol);
591 funlang = SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (msymbol);
592 }
593 else
594 {
595 /* I'd like to use SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME() here, to display the
596 demangled name that we already have stored in the symbol
597 table, but we stored a version with DMGL_PARAMS turned
598 on, and here we don't want to display parameters. So call
599 the demangler again, with DMGL_ANSI only. (Yes, I know
600 that printf_symbol_filtered() will again try to demangle
601 the name on the fly, but the issue is that if
602 cplus_demangle() fails here, it'll fail there too. So we
603 want to catch the failure ("demangled==NULL" case below)
604 here, while we still have our hands on the function
605 symbol.) */
606 char *demangled;
607 funname = DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (func);
608 funlang = SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (func);
609 if (funlang == language_cplus)
610 {
611 demangled = cplus_demangle (funname, DMGL_ANSI);
612 if (demangled == NULL)
613 /* If the demangler fails, try the demangled name from
614 the symbol table. This'll have parameters, but
615 that's preferable to diplaying a mangled name. */
616 funname = SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (func);
617 }
618 }
619 }
620 else
621 {
622 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (get_frame_address_in_block (fi));
623 if (msymbol != NULL)
624 {
625 funname = DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (msymbol);
626 funlang = SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (msymbol);
627 }
628 }
629
630 annotate_frame_begin (print_level ? frame_relative_level (fi) : 0,
631 get_frame_pc (fi));
632
633 list_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "frame");
634
635 if (print_level)
636 {
637 ui_out_text (uiout, "#");
638 ui_out_field_fmt_int (uiout, 2, ui_left, "level",
639 frame_relative_level (fi));
640 }
641 if (addressprint)
642 if (get_frame_pc (fi) != sal.pc
643 || !sal.symtab
644 || print_what == LOC_AND_ADDRESS)
645 {
646 annotate_frame_address ();
647 ui_out_field_core_addr (uiout, "addr", get_frame_pc (fi));
648 annotate_frame_address_end ();
649 ui_out_text (uiout, " in ");
650 }
651 annotate_frame_function_name ();
652 fprintf_symbol_filtered (stb->stream, funname ? funname : "??", funlang,
653 DMGL_ANSI);
654 ui_out_field_stream (uiout, "func", stb);
655 ui_out_wrap_hint (uiout, " ");
656 annotate_frame_args ();
657
658 ui_out_text (uiout, " (");
659 if (print_args)
660 {
661 struct print_args_args args;
662 struct cleanup *args_list_chain;
663 args.fi = fi;
664 args.func = func;
665 args.stream = gdb_stdout;
666 args_list_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_list_begin_end (uiout, "args");
667 catch_errors (print_args_stub, &args, "", RETURN_MASK_ALL);
668 /* FIXME: args must be a list. If one argument is a string it will
669 have " that will not be properly escaped. */
670 /* Invoke ui_out_tuple_end. */
671 do_cleanups (args_list_chain);
672 QUIT;
673 }
674 ui_out_text (uiout, ")");
675 if (sal.symtab && sal.symtab->filename)
676 {
677 annotate_frame_source_begin ();
678 ui_out_wrap_hint (uiout, " ");
679 ui_out_text (uiout, " at ");
680 annotate_frame_source_file ();
681 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "file", sal.symtab->filename);
682 annotate_frame_source_file_end ();
683 ui_out_text (uiout, ":");
684 annotate_frame_source_line ();
685 ui_out_field_int (uiout, "line", sal.line);
686 annotate_frame_source_end ();
687 }
688
689 #ifdef PC_SOLIB
690 if (!funname || (!sal.symtab || !sal.symtab->filename))
691 {
692 char *lib = PC_SOLIB (get_frame_pc (fi));
693 if (lib)
694 {
695 annotate_frame_where ();
696 ui_out_wrap_hint (uiout, " ");
697 ui_out_text (uiout, " from ");
698 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "from", lib);
699 }
700 }
701 #endif /* PC_SOLIB */
702
703 /* do_cleanups will call ui_out_tuple_end() for us. */
704 do_cleanups (list_chain);
705 ui_out_text (uiout, "\n");
706 do_cleanups (old_chain);
707 }
708 \f
709 /* Show the frame info. If this is the tui, it will be shown in
710 the source display otherwise, nothing is done */
711 void
712 show_stack_frame (struct frame_info *fi)
713 {
714 }
715 \f
716
717 /* Read a frame specification in whatever the appropriate format is.
718 Call error() if the specification is in any way invalid (i.e. this
719 function never returns NULL). When SEPECTED_P is non-NULL set it's
720 target to indicate that the default selected frame was used. */
721
722 static struct frame_info *
723 parse_frame_specification_1 (const char *frame_exp, const char *message,
724 int *selected_frame_p)
725 {
726 int numargs;
727 struct value *args[4];
728 CORE_ADDR addrs[ARRAY_SIZE (args)];
729
730 if (frame_exp == NULL)
731 numargs = 0;
732 else
733 {
734 char *addr_string;
735 struct cleanup *tmp_cleanup;
736
737 numargs = 0;
738 while (1)
739 {
740 char *addr_string;
741 struct cleanup *cleanup;
742 const char *p;
743
744 /* Skip leading white space, bail of EOL. */
745 while (isspace (*frame_exp))
746 frame_exp++;
747 if (!*frame_exp)
748 break;
749
750 /* Parse the argument, extract it, save it. */
751 for (p = frame_exp;
752 *p && !isspace (*p);
753 p++);
754 addr_string = savestring (frame_exp, p - frame_exp);
755 frame_exp = p;
756 cleanup = make_cleanup (xfree, addr_string);
757
758 /* NOTE: Parse and evaluate expression, but do not use
759 functions such as parse_and_eval_long or
760 parse_and_eval_address to also extract the value.
761 Instead value_as_long and value_as_address are used.
762 This avoids problems with expressions that contain
763 side-effects. */
764 if (numargs >= ARRAY_SIZE (args))
765 error ("Too many args in frame specification");
766 args[numargs++] = parse_and_eval (addr_string);
767
768 do_cleanups (cleanup);
769 }
770 }
771
772 /* If no args, default to the selected frame. */
773 if (numargs == 0)
774 {
775 if (selected_frame_p != NULL)
776 (*selected_frame_p) = 1;
777 return get_selected_frame (message);
778 }
779
780 /* None of the remaining use the selected frame. */
781 if (selected_frame_p != NULL)
782 (*selected_frame_p) = 0;
783
784 /* Assume the single arg[0] is an integer, and try using that to
785 select a frame relative to current. */
786 if (numargs == 1)
787 {
788 struct frame_info *fid;
789 int level = value_as_long (args[0]);
790 fid = find_relative_frame (get_current_frame (), &level);
791 if (level == 0)
792 /* find_relative_frame was successful */
793 return fid;
794 }
795
796 /* Convert each value into a corresponding address. */
797 {
798 int i;
799 for (i = 0; i < numargs; i++)
800 addrs[i] = value_as_address (args[0]);
801 }
802
803 /* Assume that the single arg[0] is an address, use that to identify
804 a frame with a matching ID. Should this also accept stack/pc or
805 stack/pc/special. */
806 if (numargs == 1)
807 {
808 struct frame_id id = frame_id_build_wild (addrs[0]);
809 struct frame_info *fid;
810
811 /* If SETUP_ARBITRARY_FRAME is defined, then frame
812 specifications take at least 2 addresses. It is important to
813 detect this case here so that "frame 100" does not give a
814 confusing error message like "frame specification requires
815 two addresses". This of course does not solve the "frame
816 100" problem for machines on which a frame specification can
817 be made with one address. To solve that, we need a new
818 syntax for a specifying a frame by address. I think the
819 cleanest syntax is $frame(0x45) ($frame(0x23,0x45) for two
820 args, etc.), but people might think that is too much typing,
821 so I guess *0x23,0x45 would be a possible alternative (commas
822 really should be used instead of spaces to delimit; using
823 spaces normally works in an expression). */
824 #ifdef SETUP_ARBITRARY_FRAME
825 error ("No frame %s", paddr_d (addrs[0]));
826 #endif
827 /* If (s)he specifies the frame with an address, he deserves
828 what (s)he gets. Still, give the highest one that matches.
829 (NOTE: cagney/2004-10-29: Why highest, or outer-most, I don't
830 know). */
831 for (fid = get_current_frame ();
832 fid != NULL;
833 fid = get_prev_frame (fid))
834 {
835 if (frame_id_eq (id, get_frame_id (fid)))
836 {
837 while (frame_id_eq (id, frame_unwind_id (fid)))
838 fid = get_prev_frame (fid);
839 return fid;
840 }
841 }
842 }
843
844 /* We couldn't identify the frame as an existing frame, but
845 perhaps we can create one with a single argument. */
846 if (numargs == 1)
847 return create_new_frame (addrs[0], 0);
848 else if (numargs == 2)
849 return create_new_frame (addrs[0], addrs[1]);
850 else
851 error ("Too many args in frame specification");
852 }
853
854 struct frame_info *
855 parse_frame_specification (char *frame_exp)
856 {
857 return parse_frame_specification_1 (frame_exp, NULL, NULL);
858 }
859
860 /* Print verbosely the selected frame or the frame at address ADDR.
861 This means absolutely all information in the frame is printed. */
862
863 static void
864 frame_info (char *addr_exp, int from_tty)
865 {
866 struct frame_info *fi;
867 struct symtab_and_line sal;
868 struct symbol *func;
869 struct symtab *s;
870 struct frame_info *calling_frame_info;
871 int i, count, numregs;
872 char *funname = 0;
873 enum language funlang = language_unknown;
874 const char *pc_regname;
875 int selected_frame_p;
876
877 fi = parse_frame_specification_1 (addr_exp, "No stack.", &selected_frame_p);
878
879 /* Name of the value returned by get_frame_pc(). Per comments, "pc"
880 is not a good name. */
881 if (PC_REGNUM >= 0)
882 /* OK, this is weird. The PC_REGNUM hardware register's value can
883 easily not match that of the internal value returned by
884 get_frame_pc(). */
885 pc_regname = REGISTER_NAME (PC_REGNUM);
886 else
887 /* But then, this is weird to. Even without PC_REGNUM, an
888 architectures will often have a hardware register called "pc",
889 and that register's value, again, can easily not match
890 get_frame_pc(). */
891 pc_regname = "pc";
892
893 find_frame_sal (fi, &sal);
894 func = get_frame_function (fi);
895 /* FIXME: cagney/2002-11-28: Why bother? Won't sal.symtab contain
896 the same value. */
897 s = find_pc_symtab (get_frame_pc (fi));
898 if (func)
899 {
900 /* I'd like to use SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME() here, to display
901 * the demangled name that we already have stored in
902 * the symbol table, but we stored a version with
903 * DMGL_PARAMS turned on, and here we don't want
904 * to display parameters. So call the demangler again,
905 * with DMGL_ANSI only. RT
906 * (Yes, I know that printf_symbol_filtered() will
907 * again try to demangle the name on the fly, but
908 * the issue is that if cplus_demangle() fails here,
909 * it'll fail there too. So we want to catch the failure
910 * ("demangled==NULL" case below) here, while we still
911 * have our hands on the function symbol.)
912 */
913 char *demangled;
914 funname = DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (func);
915 funlang = SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (func);
916 if (funlang == language_cplus)
917 {
918 demangled = cplus_demangle (funname, DMGL_ANSI);
919 /* If the demangler fails, try the demangled name
920 * from the symbol table. This'll have parameters,
921 * but that's preferable to diplaying a mangled name.
922 */
923 if (demangled == NULL)
924 funname = SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (func);
925 }
926 }
927 else
928 {
929 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (get_frame_pc (fi));
930 if (msymbol != NULL)
931 {
932 funname = DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (msymbol);
933 funlang = SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (msymbol);
934 }
935 }
936 calling_frame_info = get_prev_frame (fi);
937
938 if (selected_frame_p && frame_relative_level (fi) >= 0)
939 {
940 printf_filtered ("Stack level %d, frame at ",
941 frame_relative_level (fi));
942 print_address_numeric (get_frame_base (fi), 1, gdb_stdout);
943 printf_filtered (":\n");
944 }
945 else
946 {
947 printf_filtered ("Stack frame at ");
948 print_address_numeric (get_frame_base (fi), 1, gdb_stdout);
949 printf_filtered (":\n");
950 }
951 printf_filtered (" %s = ", pc_regname);
952 print_address_numeric (get_frame_pc (fi), 1, gdb_stdout);
953
954 wrap_here (" ");
955 if (funname)
956 {
957 printf_filtered (" in ");
958 fprintf_symbol_filtered (gdb_stdout, funname, funlang,
959 DMGL_ANSI | DMGL_PARAMS);
960 }
961 wrap_here (" ");
962 if (sal.symtab)
963 printf_filtered (" (%s:%d)", sal.symtab->filename, sal.line);
964 puts_filtered ("; ");
965 wrap_here (" ");
966 printf_filtered ("saved %s ", pc_regname);
967 print_address_numeric (frame_pc_unwind (fi), 1, gdb_stdout);
968 printf_filtered ("\n");
969
970 if (calling_frame_info)
971 {
972 printf_filtered (" called by frame at ");
973 print_address_numeric (get_frame_base (calling_frame_info),
974 1, gdb_stdout);
975 }
976 if (get_next_frame (fi) && calling_frame_info)
977 puts_filtered (",");
978 wrap_here (" ");
979 if (get_next_frame (fi))
980 {
981 printf_filtered (" caller of frame at ");
982 print_address_numeric (get_frame_base (get_next_frame (fi)), 1,
983 gdb_stdout);
984 }
985 if (get_next_frame (fi) || calling_frame_info)
986 puts_filtered ("\n");
987 if (s)
988 printf_filtered (" source language %s.\n",
989 language_str (s->language));
990
991 {
992 /* Address of the argument list for this frame, or 0. */
993 CORE_ADDR arg_list = get_frame_args_address (fi);
994 /* Number of args for this frame, or -1 if unknown. */
995 int numargs;
996
997 if (arg_list == 0)
998 printf_filtered (" Arglist at unknown address.\n");
999 else
1000 {
1001 printf_filtered (" Arglist at ");
1002 print_address_numeric (arg_list, 1, gdb_stdout);
1003 printf_filtered (",");
1004
1005 if (!FRAME_NUM_ARGS_P ())
1006 {
1007 numargs = -1;
1008 puts_filtered (" args: ");
1009 }
1010 else
1011 {
1012 numargs = FRAME_NUM_ARGS (fi);
1013 gdb_assert (numargs >= 0);
1014 if (numargs == 0)
1015 puts_filtered (" no args.");
1016 else if (numargs == 1)
1017 puts_filtered (" 1 arg: ");
1018 else
1019 printf_filtered (" %d args: ", numargs);
1020 }
1021 print_frame_args (func, fi, numargs, gdb_stdout);
1022 puts_filtered ("\n");
1023 }
1024 }
1025 {
1026 /* Address of the local variables for this frame, or 0. */
1027 CORE_ADDR arg_list = get_frame_locals_address (fi);
1028
1029 if (arg_list == 0)
1030 printf_filtered (" Locals at unknown address,");
1031 else
1032 {
1033 printf_filtered (" Locals at ");
1034 print_address_numeric (arg_list, 1, gdb_stdout);
1035 printf_filtered (",");
1036 }
1037 }
1038
1039 /* Print as much information as possible on the location of all the
1040 registers. */
1041 {
1042 enum lval_type lval;
1043 int optimized;
1044 CORE_ADDR addr;
1045 int realnum;
1046 int count;
1047 int i;
1048 int need_nl = 1;
1049
1050 /* The sp is special; what's displayed isn't the save address, but
1051 the value of the previous frame's sp. This is a legacy thing,
1052 at one stage the frame cached the previous frame's SP instead
1053 of its address, hence it was easiest to just display the cached
1054 value. */
1055 if (SP_REGNUM >= 0)
1056 {
1057 /* Find out the location of the saved stack pointer with out
1058 actually evaluating it. */
1059 frame_register_unwind (fi, SP_REGNUM, &optimized, &lval, &addr,
1060 &realnum, NULL);
1061 if (!optimized && lval == not_lval)
1062 {
1063 char value[MAX_REGISTER_SIZE];
1064 CORE_ADDR sp;
1065 frame_register_unwind (fi, SP_REGNUM, &optimized, &lval, &addr,
1066 &realnum, value);
1067 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-05-22: This is assuming that the
1068 stack pointer was packed as an unsigned integer. That
1069 may or may not be valid. */
1070 sp = extract_unsigned_integer (value, register_size (current_gdbarch, SP_REGNUM));
1071 printf_filtered (" Previous frame's sp is ");
1072 print_address_numeric (sp, 1, gdb_stdout);
1073 printf_filtered ("\n");
1074 need_nl = 0;
1075 }
1076 else if (!optimized && lval == lval_memory)
1077 {
1078 printf_filtered (" Previous frame's sp at ");
1079 print_address_numeric (addr, 1, gdb_stdout);
1080 printf_filtered ("\n");
1081 need_nl = 0;
1082 }
1083 else if (!optimized && lval == lval_register)
1084 {
1085 printf_filtered (" Previous frame's sp in %s\n",
1086 REGISTER_NAME (realnum));
1087 need_nl = 0;
1088 }
1089 /* else keep quiet. */
1090 }
1091
1092 count = 0;
1093 numregs = NUM_REGS + NUM_PSEUDO_REGS;
1094 for (i = 0; i < numregs; i++)
1095 if (i != SP_REGNUM
1096 && gdbarch_register_reggroup_p (current_gdbarch, i, all_reggroup))
1097 {
1098 /* Find out the location of the saved register without
1099 fetching the corresponding value. */
1100 frame_register_unwind (fi, i, &optimized, &lval, &addr, &realnum,
1101 NULL);
1102 /* For moment, only display registers that were saved on the
1103 stack. */
1104 if (!optimized && lval == lval_memory)
1105 {
1106 if (count == 0)
1107 puts_filtered (" Saved registers:\n ");
1108 else
1109 puts_filtered (",");
1110 wrap_here (" ");
1111 printf_filtered (" %s at ", REGISTER_NAME (i));
1112 print_address_numeric (addr, 1, gdb_stdout);
1113 count++;
1114 }
1115 }
1116 if (count || need_nl)
1117 puts_filtered ("\n");
1118 }
1119 }
1120
1121 /* Print briefly all stack frames or just the innermost COUNT frames. */
1122
1123 static void backtrace_command_1 (char *count_exp, int show_locals,
1124 int from_tty);
1125 static void
1126 backtrace_command_1 (char *count_exp, int show_locals, int from_tty)
1127 {
1128 struct frame_info *fi;
1129 int count;
1130 int i;
1131 struct frame_info *trailing;
1132 int trailing_level;
1133
1134 if (!target_has_stack)
1135 error ("No stack.");
1136
1137 /* The following code must do two things. First, it must
1138 set the variable TRAILING to the frame from which we should start
1139 printing. Second, it must set the variable count to the number
1140 of frames which we should print, or -1 if all of them. */
1141 trailing = get_current_frame ();
1142
1143 /* The target can be in a state where there is no valid frames
1144 (e.g., just connected). */
1145 if (trailing == NULL)
1146 error ("No stack.");
1147
1148 trailing_level = 0;
1149 if (count_exp)
1150 {
1151 count = parse_and_eval_long (count_exp);
1152 if (count < 0)
1153 {
1154 struct frame_info *current;
1155
1156 count = -count;
1157
1158 current = trailing;
1159 while (current && count--)
1160 {
1161 QUIT;
1162 current = get_prev_frame (current);
1163 }
1164
1165 /* Will stop when CURRENT reaches the top of the stack. TRAILING
1166 will be COUNT below it. */
1167 while (current)
1168 {
1169 QUIT;
1170 trailing = get_prev_frame (trailing);
1171 current = get_prev_frame (current);
1172 trailing_level++;
1173 }
1174
1175 count = -1;
1176 }
1177 }
1178 else
1179 count = -1;
1180
1181 if (info_verbose)
1182 {
1183 struct partial_symtab *ps;
1184
1185 /* Read in symbols for all of the frames. Need to do this in
1186 a separate pass so that "Reading in symbols for xxx" messages
1187 don't screw up the appearance of the backtrace. Also
1188 if people have strong opinions against reading symbols for
1189 backtrace this may have to be an option. */
1190 i = count;
1191 for (fi = trailing;
1192 fi != NULL && i--;
1193 fi = get_prev_frame (fi))
1194 {
1195 QUIT;
1196 ps = find_pc_psymtab (get_frame_address_in_block (fi));
1197 if (ps)
1198 PSYMTAB_TO_SYMTAB (ps); /* Force syms to come in */
1199 }
1200 }
1201
1202 for (i = 0, fi = trailing;
1203 fi && count--;
1204 i++, fi = get_prev_frame (fi))
1205 {
1206 QUIT;
1207
1208 /* Don't use print_stack_frame; if an error() occurs it probably
1209 means further attempts to backtrace would fail (on the other
1210 hand, perhaps the code does or could be fixed to make sure
1211 the frame->prev field gets set to NULL in that case). */
1212 print_frame_info (fi, 1, LOCATION, 1);
1213 if (show_locals)
1214 print_frame_local_vars (fi, 1, gdb_stdout);
1215 }
1216
1217 /* If we've stopped before the end, mention that. */
1218 if (fi && from_tty)
1219 printf_filtered ("(More stack frames follow...)\n");
1220 }
1221
1222 struct backtrace_command_args
1223 {
1224 char *count_exp;
1225 int show_locals;
1226 int from_tty;
1227 };
1228
1229 /* Stub to call backtrace_command_1 by way of an error catcher. */
1230 static int
1231 backtrace_command_stub (void *data)
1232 {
1233 struct backtrace_command_args *args = (struct backtrace_command_args *)data;
1234 backtrace_command_1 (args->count_exp, args->show_locals, args->from_tty);
1235 return 0;
1236 }
1237
1238 static void
1239 backtrace_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
1240 {
1241 struct cleanup *old_chain = (struct cleanup *) NULL;
1242 char **argv = (char **) NULL;
1243 int argIndicatingFullTrace = (-1), totArgLen = 0, argc = 0;
1244 char *argPtr = arg;
1245 struct backtrace_command_args btargs;
1246
1247 if (arg != (char *) NULL)
1248 {
1249 int i;
1250
1251 argv = buildargv (arg);
1252 old_chain = make_cleanup_freeargv (argv);
1253 argc = 0;
1254 for (i = 0; (argv[i] != (char *) NULL); i++)
1255 {
1256 unsigned int j;
1257
1258 for (j = 0; (j < strlen (argv[i])); j++)
1259 argv[i][j] = tolower (argv[i][j]);
1260
1261 if (argIndicatingFullTrace < 0 && subset_compare (argv[i], "full"))
1262 argIndicatingFullTrace = argc;
1263 else
1264 {
1265 argc++;
1266 totArgLen += strlen (argv[i]);
1267 }
1268 }
1269 totArgLen += argc;
1270 if (argIndicatingFullTrace >= 0)
1271 {
1272 if (totArgLen > 0)
1273 {
1274 argPtr = (char *) xmalloc (totArgLen + 1);
1275 if (!argPtr)
1276 nomem (0);
1277 else
1278 {
1279 memset (argPtr, 0, totArgLen + 1);
1280 for (i = 0; (i < (argc + 1)); i++)
1281 {
1282 if (i != argIndicatingFullTrace)
1283 {
1284 strcat (argPtr, argv[i]);
1285 strcat (argPtr, " ");
1286 }
1287 }
1288 }
1289 }
1290 else
1291 argPtr = (char *) NULL;
1292 }
1293 }
1294
1295 btargs.count_exp = argPtr;
1296 btargs.show_locals = (argIndicatingFullTrace >= 0);
1297 btargs.from_tty = from_tty;
1298 catch_errors (backtrace_command_stub, (char *)&btargs, "", RETURN_MASK_ERROR);
1299
1300 if (argIndicatingFullTrace >= 0 && totArgLen > 0)
1301 xfree (argPtr);
1302
1303 if (old_chain)
1304 do_cleanups (old_chain);
1305 }
1306
1307 static void backtrace_full_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
1308 static void
1309 backtrace_full_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
1310 {
1311 struct backtrace_command_args btargs;
1312 btargs.count_exp = arg;
1313 btargs.show_locals = 1;
1314 btargs.from_tty = from_tty;
1315 catch_errors (backtrace_command_stub, (char *)&btargs, "", RETURN_MASK_ERROR);
1316 }
1317 \f
1318
1319 /* Print the local variables of a block B active in FRAME.
1320 Return 1 if any variables were printed; 0 otherwise. */
1321
1322 static int
1323 print_block_frame_locals (struct block *b, struct frame_info *fi,
1324 int num_tabs, struct ui_file *stream)
1325 {
1326 struct dict_iterator iter;
1327 int j;
1328 struct symbol *sym;
1329 int values_printed = 0;
1330
1331 ALL_BLOCK_SYMBOLS (b, iter, sym)
1332 {
1333 switch (SYMBOL_CLASS (sym))
1334 {
1335 case LOC_LOCAL:
1336 case LOC_REGISTER:
1337 case LOC_STATIC:
1338 case LOC_BASEREG:
1339 case LOC_COMPUTED:
1340 values_printed = 1;
1341 for (j = 0; j < num_tabs; j++)
1342 fputs_filtered ("\t", stream);
1343 fputs_filtered (SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (sym), stream);
1344 fputs_filtered (" = ", stream);
1345 print_variable_value (sym, fi, stream);
1346 fprintf_filtered (stream, "\n");
1347 break;
1348
1349 default:
1350 /* Ignore symbols which are not locals. */
1351 break;
1352 }
1353 }
1354 return values_printed;
1355 }
1356
1357 /* Same, but print labels. */
1358
1359 static int
1360 print_block_frame_labels (struct block *b, int *have_default,
1361 struct ui_file *stream)
1362 {
1363 struct dict_iterator iter;
1364 struct symbol *sym;
1365 int values_printed = 0;
1366
1367 ALL_BLOCK_SYMBOLS (b, iter, sym)
1368 {
1369 if (strcmp (DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (sym), "default") == 0)
1370 {
1371 if (*have_default)
1372 continue;
1373 *have_default = 1;
1374 }
1375 if (SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) == LOC_LABEL)
1376 {
1377 struct symtab_and_line sal;
1378 sal = find_pc_line (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (sym), 0);
1379 values_printed = 1;
1380 fputs_filtered (SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (sym), stream);
1381 if (addressprint)
1382 {
1383 fprintf_filtered (stream, " ");
1384 print_address_numeric (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (sym), 1, stream);
1385 }
1386 fprintf_filtered (stream, " in file %s, line %d\n",
1387 sal.symtab->filename, sal.line);
1388 }
1389 }
1390 return values_printed;
1391 }
1392
1393 /* Print on STREAM all the local variables in frame FRAME,
1394 including all the blocks active in that frame
1395 at its current pc.
1396
1397 Returns 1 if the job was done,
1398 or 0 if nothing was printed because we have no info
1399 on the function running in FRAME. */
1400
1401 static void
1402 print_frame_local_vars (struct frame_info *fi, int num_tabs,
1403 struct ui_file *stream)
1404 {
1405 struct block *block = get_frame_block (fi, 0);
1406 int values_printed = 0;
1407
1408 if (block == 0)
1409 {
1410 fprintf_filtered (stream, "No symbol table info available.\n");
1411 return;
1412 }
1413
1414 while (block != 0)
1415 {
1416 if (print_block_frame_locals (block, fi, num_tabs, stream))
1417 values_printed = 1;
1418 /* After handling the function's top-level block, stop.
1419 Don't continue to its superblock, the block of
1420 per-file symbols. */
1421 if (BLOCK_FUNCTION (block))
1422 break;
1423 block = BLOCK_SUPERBLOCK (block);
1424 }
1425
1426 if (!values_printed)
1427 {
1428 fprintf_filtered (stream, "No locals.\n");
1429 }
1430 }
1431
1432 /* Same, but print labels. */
1433
1434 static void
1435 print_frame_label_vars (struct frame_info *fi, int this_level_only,
1436 struct ui_file *stream)
1437 {
1438 struct blockvector *bl;
1439 struct block *block = get_frame_block (fi, 0);
1440 int values_printed = 0;
1441 int index, have_default = 0;
1442 char *blocks_printed;
1443 CORE_ADDR pc = get_frame_pc (fi);
1444
1445 if (block == 0)
1446 {
1447 fprintf_filtered (stream, "No symbol table info available.\n");
1448 return;
1449 }
1450
1451 bl = blockvector_for_pc (BLOCK_END (block) - 4, &index);
1452 blocks_printed = (char *) alloca (BLOCKVECTOR_NBLOCKS (bl) * sizeof (char));
1453 memset (blocks_printed, 0, BLOCKVECTOR_NBLOCKS (bl) * sizeof (char));
1454
1455 while (block != 0)
1456 {
1457 CORE_ADDR end = BLOCK_END (block) - 4;
1458 int last_index;
1459
1460 if (bl != blockvector_for_pc (end, &index))
1461 error ("blockvector blotch");
1462 if (BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK (bl, index) != block)
1463 error ("blockvector botch");
1464 last_index = BLOCKVECTOR_NBLOCKS (bl);
1465 index += 1;
1466
1467 /* Don't print out blocks that have gone by. */
1468 while (index < last_index
1469 && BLOCK_END (BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK (bl, index)) < pc)
1470 index++;
1471
1472 while (index < last_index
1473 && BLOCK_END (BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK (bl, index)) < end)
1474 {
1475 if (blocks_printed[index] == 0)
1476 {
1477 if (print_block_frame_labels (BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK (bl, index), &have_default, stream))
1478 values_printed = 1;
1479 blocks_printed[index] = 1;
1480 }
1481 index++;
1482 }
1483 if (have_default)
1484 return;
1485 if (values_printed && this_level_only)
1486 return;
1487
1488 /* After handling the function's top-level block, stop.
1489 Don't continue to its superblock, the block of
1490 per-file symbols. */
1491 if (BLOCK_FUNCTION (block))
1492 break;
1493 block = BLOCK_SUPERBLOCK (block);
1494 }
1495
1496 if (!values_printed && !this_level_only)
1497 {
1498 fprintf_filtered (stream, "No catches.\n");
1499 }
1500 }
1501
1502 void
1503 locals_info (char *args, int from_tty)
1504 {
1505 print_frame_local_vars (get_selected_frame ("No frame selected."),
1506 0, gdb_stdout);
1507 }
1508
1509 static void
1510 catch_info (char *ignore, int from_tty)
1511 {
1512 struct symtab_and_line *sal;
1513
1514 /* Check for target support for exception handling */
1515 sal = target_enable_exception_callback (EX_EVENT_CATCH, 1);
1516 if (sal)
1517 {
1518 /* Currently not handling this */
1519 /* Ideally, here we should interact with the C++ runtime
1520 system to find the list of active handlers, etc. */
1521 fprintf_filtered (gdb_stdout, "Info catch not supported with this target/compiler combination.\n");
1522 }
1523 else
1524 {
1525 /* Assume g++ compiled code -- old v 4.16 behaviour */
1526 print_frame_label_vars (get_selected_frame ("No frame selected."),
1527 0, gdb_stdout);
1528 }
1529 }
1530
1531 static void
1532 print_frame_arg_vars (struct frame_info *fi,
1533 struct ui_file *stream)
1534 {
1535 struct symbol *func = get_frame_function (fi);
1536 struct block *b;
1537 struct dict_iterator iter;
1538 struct symbol *sym, *sym2;
1539 int values_printed = 0;
1540
1541 if (func == 0)
1542 {
1543 fprintf_filtered (stream, "No symbol table info available.\n");
1544 return;
1545 }
1546
1547 b = SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE (func);
1548 ALL_BLOCK_SYMBOLS (b, iter, sym)
1549 {
1550 switch (SYMBOL_CLASS (sym))
1551 {
1552 case LOC_ARG:
1553 case LOC_LOCAL_ARG:
1554 case LOC_REF_ARG:
1555 case LOC_REGPARM:
1556 case LOC_REGPARM_ADDR:
1557 case LOC_BASEREG_ARG:
1558 case LOC_COMPUTED_ARG:
1559 values_printed = 1;
1560 fputs_filtered (SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (sym), stream);
1561 fputs_filtered (" = ", stream);
1562
1563 /* We have to look up the symbol because arguments can have
1564 two entries (one a parameter, one a local) and the one we
1565 want is the local, which lookup_symbol will find for us.
1566 This includes gcc1 (not gcc2) on the sparc when passing a
1567 small structure and gcc2 when the argument type is float
1568 and it is passed as a double and converted to float by
1569 the prologue (in the latter case the type of the LOC_ARG
1570 symbol is double and the type of the LOC_LOCAL symbol is
1571 float). There are also LOC_ARG/LOC_REGISTER pairs which
1572 are not combined in symbol-reading. */
1573
1574 sym2 = lookup_symbol (DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (sym),
1575 b, VAR_DOMAIN, (int *) NULL, (struct symtab **) NULL);
1576 print_variable_value (sym2, fi, stream);
1577 fprintf_filtered (stream, "\n");
1578 break;
1579
1580 default:
1581 /* Don't worry about things which aren't arguments. */
1582 break;
1583 }
1584 }
1585 if (!values_printed)
1586 {
1587 fprintf_filtered (stream, "No arguments.\n");
1588 }
1589 }
1590
1591 void
1592 args_info (char *ignore, int from_tty)
1593 {
1594 print_frame_arg_vars (get_selected_frame ("No frame selected."),
1595 gdb_stdout);
1596 }
1597
1598
1599 static void
1600 args_plus_locals_info (char *ignore, int from_tty)
1601 {
1602 args_info (ignore, from_tty);
1603 locals_info (ignore, from_tty);
1604 }
1605 \f
1606
1607 /* Select frame FI. Also print the stack frame and show the source if
1608 this is the tui version. */
1609 static void
1610 select_and_print_frame (struct frame_info *fi)
1611 {
1612 select_frame (fi);
1613 if (fi)
1614 print_stack_frame (fi, 1, SRC_AND_LOC);
1615 }
1616 \f
1617 /* Return the symbol-block in which the selected frame is executing.
1618 Can return zero under various legitimate circumstances.
1619
1620 If ADDR_IN_BLOCK is non-zero, set *ADDR_IN_BLOCK to the relevant
1621 code address within the block returned. We use this to decide
1622 which macros are in scope. */
1623
1624 struct block *
1625 get_selected_block (CORE_ADDR *addr_in_block)
1626 {
1627 if (!target_has_stack)
1628 return 0;
1629
1630 /* NOTE: cagney/2002-11-28: Why go to all this effort to not create
1631 a selected/current frame? Perhaps this function is called,
1632 indirectly, by WFI in "infrun.c" where avoiding the creation of
1633 an inner most frame is very important (it slows down single
1634 step). I suspect, though that this was true in the deep dark
1635 past but is no longer the case. A mindless look at all the
1636 callers tends to support this theory. I think we should be able
1637 to assume that there is always a selcted frame. */
1638 /* gdb_assert (deprecated_selected_frame != NULL); So, do you feel
1639 lucky? */
1640 if (!deprecated_selected_frame)
1641 {
1642 CORE_ADDR pc = read_pc ();
1643 if (addr_in_block != NULL)
1644 *addr_in_block = pc;
1645 return block_for_pc (pc);
1646 }
1647 return get_frame_block (deprecated_selected_frame, addr_in_block);
1648 }
1649
1650 /* Find a frame a certain number of levels away from FRAME.
1651 LEVEL_OFFSET_PTR points to an int containing the number of levels.
1652 Positive means go to earlier frames (up); negative, the reverse.
1653 The int that contains the number of levels is counted toward
1654 zero as the frames for those levels are found.
1655 If the top or bottom frame is reached, that frame is returned,
1656 but the final value of *LEVEL_OFFSET_PTR is nonzero and indicates
1657 how much farther the original request asked to go. */
1658
1659 struct frame_info *
1660 find_relative_frame (struct frame_info *frame,
1661 int *level_offset_ptr)
1662 {
1663 struct frame_info *prev;
1664 struct frame_info *frame1;
1665
1666 /* Going up is simple: just do get_prev_frame enough times
1667 or until initial frame is reached. */
1668 while (*level_offset_ptr > 0)
1669 {
1670 prev = get_prev_frame (frame);
1671 if (prev == 0)
1672 break;
1673 (*level_offset_ptr)--;
1674 frame = prev;
1675 }
1676 /* Going down is just as simple. */
1677 if (*level_offset_ptr < 0)
1678 {
1679 while (*level_offset_ptr < 0)
1680 {
1681 frame1 = get_next_frame (frame);
1682 if (!frame1)
1683 break;
1684 frame = frame1;
1685 (*level_offset_ptr)++;
1686 }
1687 }
1688 return frame;
1689 }
1690
1691 /* The "select_frame" command. With no arg, NOP.
1692 With arg LEVEL_EXP, select the frame at level LEVEL if it is a
1693 valid level. Otherwise, treat level_exp as an address expression
1694 and select it. See parse_frame_specification for more info on proper
1695 frame expressions. */
1696
1697 void
1698 select_frame_command (char *level_exp, int from_tty)
1699 {
1700 select_frame (parse_frame_specification_1 (level_exp, "No stack.", NULL));
1701 }
1702
1703 /* The "frame" command. With no arg, print selected frame briefly.
1704 With arg, behaves like select_frame and then prints the selected
1705 frame. */
1706
1707 void
1708 frame_command (char *level_exp, int from_tty)
1709 {
1710 select_frame_command (level_exp, from_tty);
1711 print_stack_frame (get_selected_frame (NULL), 1, SRC_AND_LOC);
1712 }
1713
1714 /* The XDB Compatibility command to print the current frame. */
1715
1716 static void
1717 current_frame_command (char *level_exp, int from_tty)
1718 {
1719 print_stack_frame (get_selected_frame ("No stack."), 1, SRC_AND_LOC);
1720 }
1721
1722 /* Select the frame up one or COUNT stack levels
1723 from the previously selected frame, and print it briefly. */
1724
1725 static void
1726 up_silently_base (char *count_exp)
1727 {
1728 struct frame_info *fi;
1729 int count = 1, count1;
1730 if (count_exp)
1731 count = parse_and_eval_long (count_exp);
1732 count1 = count;
1733
1734 fi = find_relative_frame (get_selected_frame ("No stack."), &count1);
1735 if (count1 != 0 && count_exp == 0)
1736 error ("Initial frame selected; you cannot go up.");
1737 select_frame (fi);
1738 }
1739
1740 static void
1741 up_silently_command (char *count_exp, int from_tty)
1742 {
1743 up_silently_base (count_exp);
1744 }
1745
1746 static void
1747 up_command (char *count_exp, int from_tty)
1748 {
1749 up_silently_base (count_exp);
1750 print_stack_frame (get_selected_frame (NULL), 1, SRC_AND_LOC);
1751 }
1752
1753 /* Select the frame down one or COUNT stack levels
1754 from the previously selected frame, and print it briefly. */
1755
1756 static void
1757 down_silently_base (char *count_exp)
1758 {
1759 struct frame_info *frame;
1760 int count = -1, count1;
1761 if (count_exp)
1762 count = -parse_and_eval_long (count_exp);
1763 count1 = count;
1764
1765 frame = find_relative_frame (get_selected_frame ("No stack."), &count1);
1766 if (count1 != 0 && count_exp == 0)
1767 {
1768
1769 /* We only do this if count_exp is not specified. That way "down"
1770 means to really go down (and let me know if that is
1771 impossible), but "down 9999" can be used to mean go all the way
1772 down without getting an error. */
1773
1774 error ("Bottom (i.e., innermost) frame selected; you cannot go down.");
1775 }
1776
1777 select_frame (frame);
1778 }
1779
1780 static void
1781 down_silently_command (char *count_exp, int from_tty)
1782 {
1783 down_silently_base (count_exp);
1784 }
1785
1786 static void
1787 down_command (char *count_exp, int from_tty)
1788 {
1789 down_silently_base (count_exp);
1790 print_stack_frame (get_selected_frame (NULL), 1, SRC_AND_LOC);
1791 }
1792 \f
1793 void
1794 return_command (char *retval_exp, int from_tty)
1795 {
1796 struct symbol *thisfun;
1797 struct value *return_value = NULL;
1798 const char *query_prefix = "";
1799
1800 thisfun = get_frame_function (get_selected_frame ("No selected frame."));
1801
1802 /* Compute the return value. If the computation triggers an error,
1803 let it bail. If the return type can't be handled, set
1804 RETURN_VALUE to NULL, and QUERY_PREFIX to an informational
1805 message. */
1806 if (retval_exp)
1807 {
1808 struct type *return_type = NULL;
1809
1810 /* Compute the return value. Should the computation fail, this
1811 call throws an error. */
1812 return_value = parse_and_eval (retval_exp);
1813
1814 /* Cast return value to the return type of the function. Should
1815 the cast fail, this call throws an error. */
1816 if (thisfun != NULL)
1817 return_type = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (SYMBOL_TYPE (thisfun));
1818 if (return_type == NULL)
1819 return_type = builtin_type_int;
1820 CHECK_TYPEDEF (return_type);
1821 return_value = value_cast (return_type, return_value);
1822
1823 /* Make sure the value is fully evaluated. It may live in the
1824 stack frame we're about to pop. */
1825 if (VALUE_LAZY (return_value))
1826 value_fetch_lazy (return_value);
1827
1828 if (TYPE_CODE (return_type) == TYPE_CODE_VOID)
1829 /* If the return-type is "void", don't try to find the
1830 return-value's location. However, do still evaluate the
1831 return expression so that, even when the expression result
1832 is discarded, side effects such as "return i++" still
1833 occure. */
1834 return_value = NULL;
1835 /* FIXME: cagney/2004-01-17: If the architecture implements both
1836 return_value and extract_returned_value_address, should allow
1837 "return" to work - don't set return_value to NULL. */
1838 else if (!gdbarch_return_value_p (current_gdbarch)
1839 && (TYPE_CODE (return_type) == TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
1840 || TYPE_CODE (return_type) == TYPE_CODE_UNION))
1841 {
1842 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-10-20: Compatibility hack for legacy
1843 code. Old architectures don't expect STORE_RETURN_VALUE
1844 to be called with with a small struct that needs to be
1845 stored in registers. Don't start doing it now. */
1846 query_prefix = "\
1847 A structure or union return type is not supported by this architecture.\n\
1848 If you continue, the return value that you specified will be ignored.\n";
1849 return_value = NULL;
1850 }
1851 else if (using_struct_return (return_type, 0))
1852 {
1853 query_prefix = "\
1854 The location at which to store the function's return value is unknown.\n\
1855 If you continue, the return value that you specified will be ignored.\n";
1856 return_value = NULL;
1857 }
1858 }
1859
1860 /* Does an interactive user really want to do this? Include
1861 information, such as how well GDB can handle the return value, in
1862 the query message. */
1863 if (from_tty)
1864 {
1865 int confirmed;
1866 if (thisfun == NULL)
1867 confirmed = query ("%sMake selected stack frame return now? ",
1868 query_prefix);
1869 else
1870 confirmed = query ("%sMake %s return now? ", query_prefix,
1871 SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (thisfun));
1872 if (!confirmed)
1873 error ("Not confirmed");
1874 }
1875
1876 /* NOTE: cagney/2003-01-18: Is this silly? Rather than pop each
1877 frame in turn, should this code just go straight to the relevant
1878 frame and pop that? */
1879
1880 /* First discard all frames inner-to the selected frame (making the
1881 selected frame current). */
1882 {
1883 struct frame_id selected_id = get_frame_id (get_selected_frame (NULL));
1884 while (!frame_id_eq (selected_id, get_frame_id (get_current_frame ())))
1885 {
1886 if (frame_id_inner (selected_id, get_frame_id (get_current_frame ())))
1887 /* Caught in the safety net, oops! We've gone way past the
1888 selected frame. */
1889 error ("Problem while popping stack frames (corrupt stack?)");
1890 frame_pop (get_current_frame ());
1891 }
1892 }
1893
1894 /* Second discard the selected frame (which is now also the current
1895 frame). */
1896 frame_pop (get_current_frame ());
1897
1898 /* Store RETURN_VAUE in the just-returned register set. */
1899 if (return_value != NULL)
1900 {
1901 struct type *return_type = value_type (return_value);
1902 gdb_assert (gdbarch_return_value (current_gdbarch, return_type,
1903 NULL, NULL, NULL)
1904 == RETURN_VALUE_REGISTER_CONVENTION);
1905 gdbarch_return_value (current_gdbarch, return_type,
1906 current_regcache, NULL /*read*/,
1907 VALUE_CONTENTS (return_value) /*write*/);
1908 }
1909
1910 /* If we are at the end of a call dummy now, pop the dummy frame
1911 too. */
1912 if (get_frame_type (get_current_frame ()) == DUMMY_FRAME)
1913 frame_pop (get_current_frame ());
1914
1915 /* If interactive, print the frame that is now current. */
1916 if (from_tty)
1917 frame_command ("0", 1);
1918 else
1919 select_frame_command ("0", 0);
1920 }
1921
1922 /* Sets the scope to input function name, provided that the
1923 function is within the current stack frame */
1924
1925 struct function_bounds
1926 {
1927 CORE_ADDR low, high;
1928 };
1929
1930 static void func_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
1931 static void
1932 func_command (char *arg, int from_tty)
1933 {
1934 struct frame_info *fp;
1935 int found = 0;
1936 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
1937 int i;
1938 int level = 1;
1939 struct function_bounds *func_bounds = (struct function_bounds *) NULL;
1940
1941 if (arg != (char *) NULL)
1942 return;
1943
1944 fp = parse_frame_specification ("0");
1945 sals = decode_line_spec (arg, 1);
1946 func_bounds = (struct function_bounds *) xmalloc (
1947 sizeof (struct function_bounds) * sals.nelts);
1948 for (i = 0; (i < sals.nelts && !found); i++)
1949 {
1950 if (sals.sals[i].pc == (CORE_ADDR) 0 ||
1951 find_pc_partial_function (sals.sals[i].pc,
1952 (char **) NULL,
1953 &func_bounds[i].low,
1954 &func_bounds[i].high) == 0)
1955 {
1956 func_bounds[i].low =
1957 func_bounds[i].high = (CORE_ADDR) NULL;
1958 }
1959 }
1960
1961 do
1962 {
1963 for (i = 0; (i < sals.nelts && !found); i++)
1964 found = (get_frame_pc (fp) >= func_bounds[i].low &&
1965 get_frame_pc (fp) < func_bounds[i].high);
1966 if (!found)
1967 {
1968 level = 1;
1969 fp = find_relative_frame (fp, &level);
1970 }
1971 }
1972 while (!found && level == 0);
1973
1974 if (func_bounds)
1975 xfree (func_bounds);
1976
1977 if (!found)
1978 printf_filtered ("'%s' not within current stack frame.\n", arg);
1979 else if (fp != deprecated_selected_frame)
1980 select_and_print_frame (fp);
1981 }
1982
1983 /* Gets the language of the current frame. */
1984
1985 enum language
1986 get_frame_language (void)
1987 {
1988 struct symtab *s;
1989 enum language flang; /* The language of the current frame */
1990
1991 if (deprecated_selected_frame)
1992 {
1993 /* We determine the current frame language by looking up its
1994 associated symtab. To retrieve this symtab, we use the frame PC.
1995 However we cannot use the frame pc as is, because it usually points
1996 to the instruction following the "call", which is sometimes the first
1997 instruction of another function. So we rely on
1998 get_frame_address_in_block(), it provides us with a PC which is
1999 guaranteed to be inside the frame's code block. */
2000 s = find_pc_symtab (get_frame_address_in_block (deprecated_selected_frame));
2001 if (s)
2002 flang = s->language;
2003 else
2004 flang = language_unknown;
2005 }
2006 else
2007 flang = language_unknown;
2008
2009 return flang;
2010 }
2011 \f
2012 void
2013 _initialize_stack (void)
2014 {
2015 #if 0
2016 backtrace_limit = 30;
2017 #endif
2018
2019 add_com ("return", class_stack, return_command,
2020 "Make selected stack frame return to its caller.\n\
2021 Control remains in the debugger, but when you continue\n\
2022 execution will resume in the frame above the one now selected.\n\
2023 If an argument is given, it is an expression for the value to return.");
2024
2025 add_com ("up", class_stack, up_command,
2026 "Select and print stack frame that called this one.\n\
2027 An argument says how many frames up to go.");
2028 add_com ("up-silently", class_support, up_silently_command,
2029 "Same as the `up' command, but does not print anything.\n\
2030 This is useful in command scripts.");
2031
2032 add_com ("down", class_stack, down_command,
2033 "Select and print stack frame called by this one.\n\
2034 An argument says how many frames down to go.");
2035 add_com_alias ("do", "down", class_stack, 1);
2036 add_com_alias ("dow", "down", class_stack, 1);
2037 add_com ("down-silently", class_support, down_silently_command,
2038 "Same as the `down' command, but does not print anything.\n\
2039 This is useful in command scripts.");
2040
2041 add_com ("frame", class_stack, frame_command,
2042 "Select and print a stack frame.\n\
2043 With no argument, print the selected stack frame. (See also \"info frame\").\n\
2044 An argument specifies the frame to select.\n\
2045 It can be a stack frame number or the address of the frame.\n\
2046 With argument, nothing is printed if input is coming from\n\
2047 a command file or a user-defined command.");
2048
2049 add_com_alias ("f", "frame", class_stack, 1);
2050
2051 if (xdb_commands)
2052 {
2053 add_com ("L", class_stack, current_frame_command,
2054 "Print the current stack frame.\n");
2055 add_com_alias ("V", "frame", class_stack, 1);
2056 }
2057 add_com ("select-frame", class_stack, select_frame_command,
2058 "Select a stack frame without printing anything.\n\
2059 An argument specifies the frame to select.\n\
2060 It can be a stack frame number or the address of the frame.\n");
2061
2062 add_com ("backtrace", class_stack, backtrace_command,
2063 "Print backtrace of all stack frames, or innermost COUNT frames.\n\
2064 With a negative argument, print outermost -COUNT frames.\n\
2065 Use of the 'full' qualifier also prints the values of the local variables.\n");
2066 add_com_alias ("bt", "backtrace", class_stack, 0);
2067 if (xdb_commands)
2068 {
2069 add_com_alias ("t", "backtrace", class_stack, 0);
2070 add_com ("T", class_stack, backtrace_full_command,
2071 "Print backtrace of all stack frames, or innermost COUNT frames \n\
2072 and the values of the local variables.\n\
2073 With a negative argument, print outermost -COUNT frames.\n\
2074 Usage: T <count>\n");
2075 }
2076
2077 add_com_alias ("where", "backtrace", class_alias, 0);
2078 add_info ("stack", backtrace_command,
2079 "Backtrace of the stack, or innermost COUNT frames.");
2080 add_info_alias ("s", "stack", 1);
2081 add_info ("frame", frame_info,
2082 "All about selected stack frame, or frame at ADDR.");
2083 add_info_alias ("f", "frame", 1);
2084 add_info ("locals", locals_info,
2085 "Local variables of current stack frame.");
2086 add_info ("args", args_info,
2087 "Argument variables of current stack frame.");
2088 if (xdb_commands)
2089 add_com ("l", class_info, args_plus_locals_info,
2090 "Argument and local variables of current stack frame.");
2091
2092 if (dbx_commands)
2093 add_com ("func", class_stack, func_command,
2094 "Select the stack frame that contains <func>.\nUsage: func <name>\n");
2095
2096 add_info ("catch", catch_info,
2097 "Exceptions that can be caught in the current stack frame.");
2098
2099 #if 0
2100 add_cmd ("backtrace-limit", class_stack, set_backtrace_limit_command,
2101 "Specify maximum number of frames for \"backtrace\" to print by default.",
2102 &setlist);
2103 add_info ("backtrace-limit", backtrace_limit_info,
2104 "The maximum number of frames for \"backtrace\" to print by default.");
2105 #endif
2106 }