]> git.ipfire.org Git - thirdparty/binutils-gdb.git/blob - gdb/valprint.c
gdb/
[thirdparty/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / valprint.c
1 /* Print values for GDB, the GNU debugger.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1986, 1988-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
5 This file is part of GDB.
6
7 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
10 (at your option) any later version.
11
12 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15 GNU General Public License for more details.
16
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
19
20 #include "defs.h"
21 #include "gdb_string.h"
22 #include "symtab.h"
23 #include "gdbtypes.h"
24 #include "value.h"
25 #include "gdbcore.h"
26 #include "gdbcmd.h"
27 #include "target.h"
28 #include "language.h"
29 #include "annotate.h"
30 #include "valprint.h"
31 #include "floatformat.h"
32 #include "doublest.h"
33 #include "exceptions.h"
34 #include "dfp.h"
35 #include "python/python.h"
36 #include "ada-lang.h"
37 #include "gdb_obstack.h"
38 #include "charset.h"
39 #include <ctype.h>
40
41 #include <errno.h>
42
43 /* Prototypes for local functions */
44
45 static int partial_memory_read (CORE_ADDR memaddr, gdb_byte *myaddr,
46 int len, int *errnoptr);
47
48 static void show_print (char *, int);
49
50 static void set_print (char *, int);
51
52 static void set_radix (char *, int);
53
54 static void show_radix (char *, int);
55
56 static void set_input_radix (char *, int, struct cmd_list_element *);
57
58 static void set_input_radix_1 (int, unsigned);
59
60 static void set_output_radix (char *, int, struct cmd_list_element *);
61
62 static void set_output_radix_1 (int, unsigned);
63
64 void _initialize_valprint (void);
65
66 #define PRINT_MAX_DEFAULT 200 /* Start print_max off at this value. */
67
68 struct value_print_options user_print_options =
69 {
70 Val_pretty_default, /* pretty */
71 0, /* prettyprint_arrays */
72 0, /* prettyprint_structs */
73 0, /* vtblprint */
74 1, /* unionprint */
75 1, /* addressprint */
76 0, /* objectprint */
77 PRINT_MAX_DEFAULT, /* print_max */
78 10, /* repeat_count_threshold */
79 0, /* output_format */
80 0, /* format */
81 0, /* stop_print_at_null */
82 0, /* inspect_it */
83 0, /* print_array_indexes */
84 0, /* deref_ref */
85 1, /* static_field_print */
86 1, /* pascal_static_field_print */
87 0, /* raw */
88 0, /* summary */
89 1 /* symbol_print */
90 };
91
92 /* Initialize *OPTS to be a copy of the user print options. */
93 void
94 get_user_print_options (struct value_print_options *opts)
95 {
96 *opts = user_print_options;
97 }
98
99 /* Initialize *OPTS to be a copy of the user print options, but with
100 pretty-printing disabled. */
101 void
102 get_raw_print_options (struct value_print_options *opts)
103 {
104 *opts = user_print_options;
105 opts->pretty = Val_no_prettyprint;
106 }
107
108 /* Initialize *OPTS to be a copy of the user print options, but using
109 FORMAT as the formatting option. */
110 void
111 get_formatted_print_options (struct value_print_options *opts,
112 char format)
113 {
114 *opts = user_print_options;
115 opts->format = format;
116 }
117
118 static void
119 show_print_max (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
120 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
121 {
122 fprintf_filtered (file,
123 _("Limit on string chars or array "
124 "elements to print is %s.\n"),
125 value);
126 }
127
128
129 /* Default input and output radixes, and output format letter. */
130
131 unsigned input_radix = 10;
132 static void
133 show_input_radix (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
134 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
135 {
136 fprintf_filtered (file,
137 _("Default input radix for entering numbers is %s.\n"),
138 value);
139 }
140
141 unsigned output_radix = 10;
142 static void
143 show_output_radix (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
144 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
145 {
146 fprintf_filtered (file,
147 _("Default output radix for printing of values is %s.\n"),
148 value);
149 }
150
151 /* By default we print arrays without printing the index of each element in
152 the array. This behavior can be changed by setting PRINT_ARRAY_INDEXES. */
153
154 static void
155 show_print_array_indexes (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
156 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
157 {
158 fprintf_filtered (file, _("Printing of array indexes is %s.\n"), value);
159 }
160
161 /* Print repeat counts if there are more than this many repetitions of an
162 element in an array. Referenced by the low level language dependent
163 print routines. */
164
165 static void
166 show_repeat_count_threshold (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
167 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
168 {
169 fprintf_filtered (file, _("Threshold for repeated print elements is %s.\n"),
170 value);
171 }
172
173 /* If nonzero, stops printing of char arrays at first null. */
174
175 static void
176 show_stop_print_at_null (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
177 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
178 {
179 fprintf_filtered (file,
180 _("Printing of char arrays to stop "
181 "at first null char is %s.\n"),
182 value);
183 }
184
185 /* Controls pretty printing of structures. */
186
187 static void
188 show_prettyprint_structs (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
189 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
190 {
191 fprintf_filtered (file, _("Prettyprinting of structures is %s.\n"), value);
192 }
193
194 /* Controls pretty printing of arrays. */
195
196 static void
197 show_prettyprint_arrays (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
198 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
199 {
200 fprintf_filtered (file, _("Prettyprinting of arrays is %s.\n"), value);
201 }
202
203 /* If nonzero, causes unions inside structures or other unions to be
204 printed. */
205
206 static void
207 show_unionprint (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
208 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
209 {
210 fprintf_filtered (file,
211 _("Printing of unions interior to structures is %s.\n"),
212 value);
213 }
214
215 /* If nonzero, causes machine addresses to be printed in certain contexts. */
216
217 static void
218 show_addressprint (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
219 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
220 {
221 fprintf_filtered (file, _("Printing of addresses is %s.\n"), value);
222 }
223
224 static void
225 show_symbol_print (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
226 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
227 {
228 fprintf_filtered (file,
229 _("Printing of symbols when printing pointers is %s.\n"),
230 value);
231 }
232
233 \f
234
235 /* A helper function for val_print. When printing in "summary" mode,
236 we want to print scalar arguments, but not aggregate arguments.
237 This function distinguishes between the two. */
238
239 static int
240 scalar_type_p (struct type *type)
241 {
242 CHECK_TYPEDEF (type);
243 while (TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_REF)
244 {
245 type = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type);
246 CHECK_TYPEDEF (type);
247 }
248 switch (TYPE_CODE (type))
249 {
250 case TYPE_CODE_ARRAY:
251 case TYPE_CODE_STRUCT:
252 case TYPE_CODE_UNION:
253 case TYPE_CODE_SET:
254 case TYPE_CODE_STRING:
255 return 0;
256 default:
257 return 1;
258 }
259 }
260
261 /* See its definition in value.h. */
262
263 int
264 valprint_check_validity (struct ui_file *stream,
265 struct type *type,
266 int embedded_offset,
267 const struct value *val)
268 {
269 CHECK_TYPEDEF (type);
270
271 if (TYPE_CODE (type) != TYPE_CODE_UNION
272 && TYPE_CODE (type) != TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
273 && TYPE_CODE (type) != TYPE_CODE_ARRAY)
274 {
275 if (!value_bits_valid (val, TARGET_CHAR_BIT * embedded_offset,
276 TARGET_CHAR_BIT * TYPE_LENGTH (type)))
277 {
278 val_print_optimized_out (stream);
279 return 0;
280 }
281
282 if (value_bits_synthetic_pointer (val, TARGET_CHAR_BIT * embedded_offset,
283 TARGET_CHAR_BIT * TYPE_LENGTH (type)))
284 {
285 fputs_filtered (_("<synthetic pointer>"), stream);
286 return 0;
287 }
288
289 if (!value_bytes_available (val, embedded_offset, TYPE_LENGTH (type)))
290 {
291 val_print_unavailable (stream);
292 return 0;
293 }
294 }
295
296 return 1;
297 }
298
299 void
300 val_print_optimized_out (struct ui_file *stream)
301 {
302 fprintf_filtered (stream, _("<optimized out>"));
303 }
304
305 void
306 val_print_unavailable (struct ui_file *stream)
307 {
308 fprintf_filtered (stream, _("<unavailable>"));
309 }
310
311 void
312 val_print_invalid_address (struct ui_file *stream)
313 {
314 fprintf_filtered (stream, _("<invalid address>"));
315 }
316
317 /* A generic val_print that is suitable for use by language
318 implementations of the la_val_print method. This function can
319 handle most type codes, though not all, notably exception
320 TYPE_CODE_UNION and TYPE_CODE_STRUCT, which must be implemented by
321 the caller.
322
323 Most arguments are as to val_print.
324
325 The additional DECORATIONS argument can be used to customize the
326 output in some small, language-specific ways. */
327
328 void
329 generic_val_print (struct type *type, const gdb_byte *valaddr,
330 int embedded_offset, CORE_ADDR address,
331 struct ui_file *stream, int recurse,
332 const struct value *original_value,
333 const struct value_print_options *options,
334 const struct generic_val_print_decorations *decorations)
335 {
336 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_type_arch (type);
337 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch);
338 unsigned int i = 0; /* Number of characters printed. */
339 unsigned len;
340 struct type *elttype, *unresolved_elttype;
341 struct type *unresolved_type = type;
342 LONGEST val;
343 CORE_ADDR addr;
344
345 CHECK_TYPEDEF (type);
346 switch (TYPE_CODE (type))
347 {
348 case TYPE_CODE_ARRAY:
349 unresolved_elttype = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type);
350 elttype = check_typedef (unresolved_elttype);
351 if (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 0 && TYPE_LENGTH (unresolved_elttype) > 0)
352 {
353 LONGEST low_bound, high_bound;
354
355 if (!get_array_bounds (type, &low_bound, &high_bound))
356 error (_("Could not determine the array high bound"));
357
358 if (options->prettyprint_arrays)
359 {
360 print_spaces_filtered (2 + 2 * recurse, stream);
361 }
362
363 fprintf_filtered (stream, "{");
364 val_print_array_elements (type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
365 address, stream,
366 recurse, original_value, options, 0);
367 fprintf_filtered (stream, "}");
368 break;
369 }
370 /* Array of unspecified length: treat like pointer to first
371 elt. */
372 addr = address + embedded_offset;
373 goto print_unpacked_pointer;
374
375 case TYPE_CODE_MEMBERPTR:
376 val_print_scalar_formatted (type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
377 original_value, options, 0, stream);
378 break;
379
380 case TYPE_CODE_PTR:
381 if (options->format && options->format != 's')
382 {
383 val_print_scalar_formatted (type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
384 original_value, options, 0, stream);
385 break;
386 }
387 unresolved_elttype = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type);
388 elttype = check_typedef (unresolved_elttype);
389 {
390 addr = unpack_pointer (type, valaddr + embedded_offset);
391 print_unpacked_pointer:
392
393 if (TYPE_CODE (elttype) == TYPE_CODE_FUNC)
394 {
395 /* Try to print what function it points to. */
396 print_function_pointer_address (options, gdbarch, addr, stream);
397 return;
398 }
399
400 if (options->symbol_print)
401 print_address_demangle (options, gdbarch, addr, stream, demangle);
402 else if (options->addressprint)
403 fputs_filtered (paddress (gdbarch, addr), stream);
404 }
405 break;
406
407 case TYPE_CODE_REF:
408 elttype = check_typedef (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type));
409 if (options->addressprint)
410 {
411 CORE_ADDR addr
412 = extract_typed_address (valaddr + embedded_offset, type);
413
414 fprintf_filtered (stream, "@");
415 fputs_filtered (paddress (gdbarch, addr), stream);
416 if (options->deref_ref)
417 fputs_filtered (": ", stream);
418 }
419 /* De-reference the reference. */
420 if (options->deref_ref)
421 {
422 if (TYPE_CODE (elttype) != TYPE_CODE_UNDEF)
423 {
424 struct value *deref_val;
425
426 deref_val = coerce_ref_if_computed (original_value);
427 if (deref_val != NULL)
428 {
429 /* More complicated computed references are not supported. */
430 gdb_assert (embedded_offset == 0);
431 }
432 else
433 deref_val = value_at (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type),
434 unpack_pointer (type,
435 (valaddr
436 + embedded_offset)));
437
438 common_val_print (deref_val, stream, recurse, options,
439 current_language);
440 }
441 else
442 fputs_filtered ("???", stream);
443 }
444 break;
445
446 case TYPE_CODE_ENUM:
447 if (options->format)
448 {
449 val_print_scalar_formatted (type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
450 original_value, options, 0, stream);
451 break;
452 }
453 len = TYPE_NFIELDS (type);
454 val = unpack_long (type, valaddr + embedded_offset);
455 for (i = 0; i < len; i++)
456 {
457 QUIT;
458 if (val == TYPE_FIELD_ENUMVAL (type, i))
459 {
460 break;
461 }
462 }
463 if (i < len)
464 {
465 fputs_filtered (TYPE_FIELD_NAME (type, i), stream);
466 }
467 else if (TYPE_FLAG_ENUM (type))
468 {
469 int first = 1;
470
471 /* We have a "flag" enum, so we try to decompose it into
472 pieces as appropriate. A flag enum has disjoint
473 constants by definition. */
474 fputs_filtered ("(", stream);
475 for (i = 0; i < len; ++i)
476 {
477 QUIT;
478
479 if ((val & TYPE_FIELD_ENUMVAL (type, i)) != 0)
480 {
481 if (!first)
482 fputs_filtered (" | ", stream);
483 first = 0;
484
485 val &= ~TYPE_FIELD_ENUMVAL (type, i);
486 fputs_filtered (TYPE_FIELD_NAME (type, i), stream);
487 }
488 }
489
490 if (first || val != 0)
491 {
492 if (!first)
493 fputs_filtered (" | ", stream);
494 fputs_filtered ("unknown: ", stream);
495 print_longest (stream, 'd', 0, val);
496 }
497
498 fputs_filtered (")", stream);
499 }
500 else
501 print_longest (stream, 'd', 0, val);
502 break;
503
504 case TYPE_CODE_FLAGS:
505 if (options->format)
506 val_print_scalar_formatted (type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
507 original_value, options, 0, stream);
508 else
509 val_print_type_code_flags (type, valaddr + embedded_offset,
510 stream);
511 break;
512
513 case TYPE_CODE_FUNC:
514 case TYPE_CODE_METHOD:
515 if (options->format)
516 {
517 val_print_scalar_formatted (type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
518 original_value, options, 0, stream);
519 break;
520 }
521 /* FIXME, we should consider, at least for ANSI C language,
522 eliminating the distinction made between FUNCs and POINTERs
523 to FUNCs. */
524 fprintf_filtered (stream, "{");
525 type_print (type, "", stream, -1);
526 fprintf_filtered (stream, "} ");
527 /* Try to print what function it points to, and its address. */
528 print_address_demangle (options, gdbarch, address, stream, demangle);
529 break;
530
531 case TYPE_CODE_BOOL:
532 if (options->format || options->output_format)
533 {
534 struct value_print_options opts = *options;
535 opts.format = (options->format ? options->format
536 : options->output_format);
537 val_print_scalar_formatted (type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
538 original_value, &opts, 0, stream);
539 }
540 else
541 {
542 val = unpack_long (type, valaddr + embedded_offset);
543 if (val == 0)
544 fputs_filtered (decorations->false_name, stream);
545 else if (val == 1)
546 fputs_filtered (decorations->true_name, stream);
547 else
548 print_longest (stream, 'd', 0, val);
549 }
550 break;
551
552 case TYPE_CODE_RANGE:
553 /* FIXME: create_range_type does not set the unsigned bit in a
554 range type (I think it probably should copy it from the
555 target type), so we won't print values which are too large to
556 fit in a signed integer correctly. */
557 /* FIXME: Doesn't handle ranges of enums correctly. (Can't just
558 print with the target type, though, because the size of our
559 type and the target type might differ). */
560
561 /* FALLTHROUGH */
562
563 case TYPE_CODE_INT:
564 if (options->format || options->output_format)
565 {
566 struct value_print_options opts = *options;
567
568 opts.format = (options->format ? options->format
569 : options->output_format);
570 val_print_scalar_formatted (type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
571 original_value, &opts, 0, stream);
572 }
573 else
574 val_print_type_code_int (type, valaddr + embedded_offset, stream);
575 break;
576
577 case TYPE_CODE_CHAR:
578 if (options->format || options->output_format)
579 {
580 struct value_print_options opts = *options;
581
582 opts.format = (options->format ? options->format
583 : options->output_format);
584 val_print_scalar_formatted (type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
585 original_value, &opts, 0, stream);
586 }
587 else
588 {
589 val = unpack_long (type, valaddr + embedded_offset);
590 if (TYPE_UNSIGNED (type))
591 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%u", (unsigned int) val);
592 else
593 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%d", (int) val);
594 fputs_filtered (" ", stream);
595 LA_PRINT_CHAR (val, unresolved_type, stream);
596 }
597 break;
598
599 case TYPE_CODE_FLT:
600 if (options->format)
601 {
602 val_print_scalar_formatted (type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
603 original_value, options, 0, stream);
604 }
605 else
606 {
607 print_floating (valaddr + embedded_offset, type, stream);
608 }
609 break;
610
611 case TYPE_CODE_DECFLOAT:
612 if (options->format)
613 val_print_scalar_formatted (type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
614 original_value, options, 0, stream);
615 else
616 print_decimal_floating (valaddr + embedded_offset,
617 type, stream);
618 break;
619
620 case TYPE_CODE_VOID:
621 fputs_filtered (decorations->void_name, stream);
622 break;
623
624 case TYPE_CODE_ERROR:
625 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%s", TYPE_ERROR_NAME (type));
626 break;
627
628 case TYPE_CODE_UNDEF:
629 /* This happens (without TYPE_FLAG_STUB set) on systems which
630 don't use dbx xrefs (NO_DBX_XREFS in gcc) if a file has a
631 "struct foo *bar" and no complete type for struct foo in that
632 file. */
633 fprintf_filtered (stream, _("<incomplete type>"));
634 break;
635
636 case TYPE_CODE_COMPLEX:
637 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%s", decorations->complex_prefix);
638 if (options->format)
639 val_print_scalar_formatted (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type),
640 valaddr, embedded_offset,
641 original_value, options, 0, stream);
642 else
643 print_floating (valaddr + embedded_offset,
644 TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type),
645 stream);
646 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%s", decorations->complex_infix);
647 if (options->format)
648 val_print_scalar_formatted (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type),
649 valaddr,
650 embedded_offset
651 + TYPE_LENGTH (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type)),
652 original_value,
653 options, 0, stream);
654 else
655 print_floating (valaddr + embedded_offset
656 + TYPE_LENGTH (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type)),
657 TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type),
658 stream);
659 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%s", decorations->complex_suffix);
660 break;
661
662 case TYPE_CODE_UNION:
663 case TYPE_CODE_STRUCT:
664 case TYPE_CODE_METHODPTR:
665 default:
666 error (_("Unhandled type code %d in symbol table."),
667 TYPE_CODE (type));
668 }
669 gdb_flush (stream);
670 }
671
672 /* Print using the given LANGUAGE the data of type TYPE located at
673 VALADDR + EMBEDDED_OFFSET (within GDB), which came from the
674 inferior at address ADDRESS + EMBEDDED_OFFSET, onto stdio stream
675 STREAM according to OPTIONS. VAL is the whole object that came
676 from ADDRESS. VALADDR must point to the head of VAL's contents
677 buffer.
678
679 The language printers will pass down an adjusted EMBEDDED_OFFSET to
680 further helper subroutines as subfields of TYPE are printed. In
681 such cases, VALADDR is passed down unadjusted, as well as VAL, so
682 that VAL can be queried for metadata about the contents data being
683 printed, using EMBEDDED_OFFSET as an offset into VAL's contents
684 buffer. For example: "has this field been optimized out", or "I'm
685 printing an object while inspecting a traceframe; has this
686 particular piece of data been collected?".
687
688 RECURSE indicates the amount of indentation to supply before
689 continuation lines; this amount is roughly twice the value of
690 RECURSE. */
691
692 void
693 val_print (struct type *type, const gdb_byte *valaddr, int embedded_offset,
694 CORE_ADDR address, struct ui_file *stream, int recurse,
695 const struct value *val,
696 const struct value_print_options *options,
697 const struct language_defn *language)
698 {
699 volatile struct gdb_exception except;
700 int ret = 0;
701 struct value_print_options local_opts = *options;
702 struct type *real_type = check_typedef (type);
703
704 if (local_opts.pretty == Val_pretty_default)
705 local_opts.pretty = (local_opts.prettyprint_structs
706 ? Val_prettyprint : Val_no_prettyprint);
707
708 QUIT;
709
710 /* Ensure that the type is complete and not just a stub. If the type is
711 only a stub and we can't find and substitute its complete type, then
712 print appropriate string and return. */
713
714 if (TYPE_STUB (real_type))
715 {
716 fprintf_filtered (stream, _("<incomplete type>"));
717 gdb_flush (stream);
718 return;
719 }
720
721 if (!valprint_check_validity (stream, real_type, embedded_offset, val))
722 return;
723
724 if (!options->raw)
725 {
726 ret = apply_val_pretty_printer (type, valaddr, embedded_offset,
727 address, stream, recurse,
728 val, options, language);
729 if (ret)
730 return;
731 }
732
733 /* Handle summary mode. If the value is a scalar, print it;
734 otherwise, print an ellipsis. */
735 if (options->summary && !scalar_type_p (type))
736 {
737 fprintf_filtered (stream, "...");
738 return;
739 }
740
741 TRY_CATCH (except, RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
742 {
743 language->la_val_print (type, valaddr, embedded_offset, address,
744 stream, recurse, val,
745 &local_opts);
746 }
747 if (except.reason < 0)
748 fprintf_filtered (stream, _("<error reading variable>"));
749 }
750
751 /* Check whether the value VAL is printable. Return 1 if it is;
752 return 0 and print an appropriate error message to STREAM according to
753 OPTIONS if it is not. */
754
755 static int
756 value_check_printable (struct value *val, struct ui_file *stream,
757 const struct value_print_options *options)
758 {
759 if (val == 0)
760 {
761 fprintf_filtered (stream, _("<address of value unknown>"));
762 return 0;
763 }
764
765 if (value_entirely_optimized_out (val))
766 {
767 if (options->summary && !scalar_type_p (value_type (val)))
768 fprintf_filtered (stream, "...");
769 else
770 val_print_optimized_out (stream);
771 return 0;
772 }
773
774 if (TYPE_CODE (value_type (val)) == TYPE_CODE_INTERNAL_FUNCTION)
775 {
776 fprintf_filtered (stream, _("<internal function %s>"),
777 value_internal_function_name (val));
778 return 0;
779 }
780
781 return 1;
782 }
783
784 /* Print using the given LANGUAGE the value VAL onto stream STREAM according
785 to OPTIONS.
786
787 This is a preferable interface to val_print, above, because it uses
788 GDB's value mechanism. */
789
790 void
791 common_val_print (struct value *val, struct ui_file *stream, int recurse,
792 const struct value_print_options *options,
793 const struct language_defn *language)
794 {
795 if (!value_check_printable (val, stream, options))
796 return;
797
798 if (language->la_language == language_ada)
799 /* The value might have a dynamic type, which would cause trouble
800 below when trying to extract the value contents (since the value
801 size is determined from the type size which is unknown). So
802 get a fixed representation of our value. */
803 val = ada_to_fixed_value (val);
804
805 val_print (value_type (val), value_contents_for_printing (val),
806 value_embedded_offset (val), value_address (val),
807 stream, recurse,
808 val, options, language);
809 }
810
811 /* Print on stream STREAM the value VAL according to OPTIONS. The value
812 is printed using the current_language syntax. */
813
814 void
815 value_print (struct value *val, struct ui_file *stream,
816 const struct value_print_options *options)
817 {
818 if (!value_check_printable (val, stream, options))
819 return;
820
821 if (!options->raw)
822 {
823 int r = apply_val_pretty_printer (value_type (val),
824 value_contents_for_printing (val),
825 value_embedded_offset (val),
826 value_address (val),
827 stream, 0,
828 val, options, current_language);
829
830 if (r)
831 return;
832 }
833
834 LA_VALUE_PRINT (val, stream, options);
835 }
836
837 /* Called by various <lang>_val_print routines to print
838 TYPE_CODE_INT's. TYPE is the type. VALADDR is the address of the
839 value. STREAM is where to print the value. */
840
841 void
842 val_print_type_code_int (struct type *type, const gdb_byte *valaddr,
843 struct ui_file *stream)
844 {
845 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (get_type_arch (type));
846
847 if (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > sizeof (LONGEST))
848 {
849 LONGEST val;
850
851 if (TYPE_UNSIGNED (type)
852 && extract_long_unsigned_integer (valaddr, TYPE_LENGTH (type),
853 byte_order, &val))
854 {
855 print_longest (stream, 'u', 0, val);
856 }
857 else
858 {
859 /* Signed, or we couldn't turn an unsigned value into a
860 LONGEST. For signed values, one could assume two's
861 complement (a reasonable assumption, I think) and do
862 better than this. */
863 print_hex_chars (stream, (unsigned char *) valaddr,
864 TYPE_LENGTH (type), byte_order);
865 }
866 }
867 else
868 {
869 print_longest (stream, TYPE_UNSIGNED (type) ? 'u' : 'd', 0,
870 unpack_long (type, valaddr));
871 }
872 }
873
874 void
875 val_print_type_code_flags (struct type *type, const gdb_byte *valaddr,
876 struct ui_file *stream)
877 {
878 ULONGEST val = unpack_long (type, valaddr);
879 int bitpos, nfields = TYPE_NFIELDS (type);
880
881 fputs_filtered ("[ ", stream);
882 for (bitpos = 0; bitpos < nfields; bitpos++)
883 {
884 if (TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (type, bitpos) != -1
885 && (val & ((ULONGEST)1 << bitpos)))
886 {
887 if (TYPE_FIELD_NAME (type, bitpos))
888 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%s ", TYPE_FIELD_NAME (type, bitpos));
889 else
890 fprintf_filtered (stream, "#%d ", bitpos);
891 }
892 }
893 fputs_filtered ("]", stream);
894 }
895
896 /* Print a scalar of data of type TYPE, pointed to in GDB by VALADDR,
897 according to OPTIONS and SIZE on STREAM. Format i is not supported
898 at this level.
899
900 This is how the elements of an array or structure are printed
901 with a format. */
902
903 void
904 val_print_scalar_formatted (struct type *type,
905 const gdb_byte *valaddr, int embedded_offset,
906 const struct value *val,
907 const struct value_print_options *options,
908 int size,
909 struct ui_file *stream)
910 {
911 gdb_assert (val != NULL);
912 gdb_assert (valaddr == value_contents_for_printing_const (val));
913
914 /* If we get here with a string format, try again without it. Go
915 all the way back to the language printers, which may call us
916 again. */
917 if (options->format == 's')
918 {
919 struct value_print_options opts = *options;
920 opts.format = 0;
921 opts.deref_ref = 0;
922 val_print (type, valaddr, embedded_offset, 0, stream, 0, val, &opts,
923 current_language);
924 return;
925 }
926
927 /* A scalar object that does not have all bits available can't be
928 printed, because all bits contribute to its representation. */
929 if (!value_bits_valid (val, TARGET_CHAR_BIT * embedded_offset,
930 TARGET_CHAR_BIT * TYPE_LENGTH (type)))
931 val_print_optimized_out (stream);
932 else if (!value_bytes_available (val, embedded_offset, TYPE_LENGTH (type)))
933 val_print_unavailable (stream);
934 else
935 print_scalar_formatted (valaddr + embedded_offset, type,
936 options, size, stream);
937 }
938
939 /* Print a number according to FORMAT which is one of d,u,x,o,b,h,w,g.
940 The raison d'etre of this function is to consolidate printing of
941 LONG_LONG's into this one function. The format chars b,h,w,g are
942 from print_scalar_formatted(). Numbers are printed using C
943 format.
944
945 USE_C_FORMAT means to use C format in all cases. Without it,
946 'o' and 'x' format do not include the standard C radix prefix
947 (leading 0 or 0x).
948
949 Hilfinger/2004-09-09: USE_C_FORMAT was originally called USE_LOCAL
950 and was intended to request formating according to the current
951 language and would be used for most integers that GDB prints. The
952 exceptional cases were things like protocols where the format of
953 the integer is a protocol thing, not a user-visible thing). The
954 parameter remains to preserve the information of what things might
955 be printed with language-specific format, should we ever resurrect
956 that capability. */
957
958 void
959 print_longest (struct ui_file *stream, int format, int use_c_format,
960 LONGEST val_long)
961 {
962 const char *val;
963
964 switch (format)
965 {
966 case 'd':
967 val = int_string (val_long, 10, 1, 0, 1); break;
968 case 'u':
969 val = int_string (val_long, 10, 0, 0, 1); break;
970 case 'x':
971 val = int_string (val_long, 16, 0, 0, use_c_format); break;
972 case 'b':
973 val = int_string (val_long, 16, 0, 2, 1); break;
974 case 'h':
975 val = int_string (val_long, 16, 0, 4, 1); break;
976 case 'w':
977 val = int_string (val_long, 16, 0, 8, 1); break;
978 case 'g':
979 val = int_string (val_long, 16, 0, 16, 1); break;
980 break;
981 case 'o':
982 val = int_string (val_long, 8, 0, 0, use_c_format); break;
983 default:
984 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
985 _("failed internal consistency check"));
986 }
987 fputs_filtered (val, stream);
988 }
989
990 /* This used to be a macro, but I don't think it is called often enough
991 to merit such treatment. */
992 /* Convert a LONGEST to an int. This is used in contexts (e.g. number of
993 arguments to a function, number in a value history, register number, etc.)
994 where the value must not be larger than can fit in an int. */
995
996 int
997 longest_to_int (LONGEST arg)
998 {
999 /* Let the compiler do the work. */
1000 int rtnval = (int) arg;
1001
1002 /* Check for overflows or underflows. */
1003 if (sizeof (LONGEST) > sizeof (int))
1004 {
1005 if (rtnval != arg)
1006 {
1007 error (_("Value out of range."));
1008 }
1009 }
1010 return (rtnval);
1011 }
1012
1013 /* Print a floating point value of type TYPE (not always a
1014 TYPE_CODE_FLT), pointed to in GDB by VALADDR, on STREAM. */
1015
1016 void
1017 print_floating (const gdb_byte *valaddr, struct type *type,
1018 struct ui_file *stream)
1019 {
1020 DOUBLEST doub;
1021 int inv;
1022 const struct floatformat *fmt = NULL;
1023 unsigned len = TYPE_LENGTH (type);
1024 enum float_kind kind;
1025
1026 /* If it is a floating-point, check for obvious problems. */
1027 if (TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_FLT)
1028 fmt = floatformat_from_type (type);
1029 if (fmt != NULL)
1030 {
1031 kind = floatformat_classify (fmt, valaddr);
1032 if (kind == float_nan)
1033 {
1034 if (floatformat_is_negative (fmt, valaddr))
1035 fprintf_filtered (stream, "-");
1036 fprintf_filtered (stream, "nan(");
1037 fputs_filtered ("0x", stream);
1038 fputs_filtered (floatformat_mantissa (fmt, valaddr), stream);
1039 fprintf_filtered (stream, ")");
1040 return;
1041 }
1042 else if (kind == float_infinite)
1043 {
1044 if (floatformat_is_negative (fmt, valaddr))
1045 fputs_filtered ("-", stream);
1046 fputs_filtered ("inf", stream);
1047 return;
1048 }
1049 }
1050
1051 /* NOTE: cagney/2002-01-15: The TYPE passed into print_floating()
1052 isn't necessarily a TYPE_CODE_FLT. Consequently, unpack_double
1053 needs to be used as that takes care of any necessary type
1054 conversions. Such conversions are of course direct to DOUBLEST
1055 and disregard any possible target floating point limitations.
1056 For instance, a u64 would be converted and displayed exactly on a
1057 host with 80 bit DOUBLEST but with loss of information on a host
1058 with 64 bit DOUBLEST. */
1059
1060 doub = unpack_double (type, valaddr, &inv);
1061 if (inv)
1062 {
1063 fprintf_filtered (stream, "<invalid float value>");
1064 return;
1065 }
1066
1067 /* FIXME: kettenis/2001-01-20: The following code makes too much
1068 assumptions about the host and target floating point format. */
1069
1070 /* NOTE: cagney/2002-02-03: Since the TYPE of what was passed in may
1071 not necessarily be a TYPE_CODE_FLT, the below ignores that and
1072 instead uses the type's length to determine the precision of the
1073 floating-point value being printed. */
1074
1075 if (len < sizeof (double))
1076 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%.9g", (double) doub);
1077 else if (len == sizeof (double))
1078 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%.17g", (double) doub);
1079 else
1080 #ifdef PRINTF_HAS_LONG_DOUBLE
1081 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%.35Lg", doub);
1082 #else
1083 /* This at least wins with values that are representable as
1084 doubles. */
1085 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%.17g", (double) doub);
1086 #endif
1087 }
1088
1089 void
1090 print_decimal_floating (const gdb_byte *valaddr, struct type *type,
1091 struct ui_file *stream)
1092 {
1093 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (get_type_arch (type));
1094 char decstr[MAX_DECIMAL_STRING];
1095 unsigned len = TYPE_LENGTH (type);
1096
1097 decimal_to_string (valaddr, len, byte_order, decstr);
1098 fputs_filtered (decstr, stream);
1099 return;
1100 }
1101
1102 void
1103 print_binary_chars (struct ui_file *stream, const gdb_byte *valaddr,
1104 unsigned len, enum bfd_endian byte_order)
1105 {
1106
1107 #define BITS_IN_BYTES 8
1108
1109 const gdb_byte *p;
1110 unsigned int i;
1111 int b;
1112
1113 /* Declared "int" so it will be signed.
1114 This ensures that right shift will shift in zeros. */
1115
1116 const int mask = 0x080;
1117
1118 /* FIXME: We should be not printing leading zeroes in most cases. */
1119
1120 if (byte_order == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG)
1121 {
1122 for (p = valaddr;
1123 p < valaddr + len;
1124 p++)
1125 {
1126 /* Every byte has 8 binary characters; peel off
1127 and print from the MSB end. */
1128
1129 for (i = 0; i < (BITS_IN_BYTES * sizeof (*p)); i++)
1130 {
1131 if (*p & (mask >> i))
1132 b = 1;
1133 else
1134 b = 0;
1135
1136 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%1d", b);
1137 }
1138 }
1139 }
1140 else
1141 {
1142 for (p = valaddr + len - 1;
1143 p >= valaddr;
1144 p--)
1145 {
1146 for (i = 0; i < (BITS_IN_BYTES * sizeof (*p)); i++)
1147 {
1148 if (*p & (mask >> i))
1149 b = 1;
1150 else
1151 b = 0;
1152
1153 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%1d", b);
1154 }
1155 }
1156 }
1157 }
1158
1159 /* VALADDR points to an integer of LEN bytes.
1160 Print it in octal on stream or format it in buf. */
1161
1162 void
1163 print_octal_chars (struct ui_file *stream, const gdb_byte *valaddr,
1164 unsigned len, enum bfd_endian byte_order)
1165 {
1166 const gdb_byte *p;
1167 unsigned char octa1, octa2, octa3, carry;
1168 int cycle;
1169
1170 /* FIXME: We should be not printing leading zeroes in most cases. */
1171
1172
1173 /* Octal is 3 bits, which doesn't fit. Yuk. So we have to track
1174 * the extra bits, which cycle every three bytes:
1175 *
1176 * Byte side: 0 1 2 3
1177 * | | | |
1178 * bit number 123 456 78 | 9 012 345 6 | 78 901 234 | 567 890 12 |
1179 *
1180 * Octal side: 0 1 carry 3 4 carry ...
1181 *
1182 * Cycle number: 0 1 2
1183 *
1184 * But of course we are printing from the high side, so we have to
1185 * figure out where in the cycle we are so that we end up with no
1186 * left over bits at the end.
1187 */
1188 #define BITS_IN_OCTAL 3
1189 #define HIGH_ZERO 0340
1190 #define LOW_ZERO 0016
1191 #define CARRY_ZERO 0003
1192 #define HIGH_ONE 0200
1193 #define MID_ONE 0160
1194 #define LOW_ONE 0016
1195 #define CARRY_ONE 0001
1196 #define HIGH_TWO 0300
1197 #define MID_TWO 0070
1198 #define LOW_TWO 0007
1199
1200 /* For 32 we start in cycle 2, with two bits and one bit carry;
1201 for 64 in cycle in cycle 1, with one bit and a two bit carry. */
1202
1203 cycle = (len * BITS_IN_BYTES) % BITS_IN_OCTAL;
1204 carry = 0;
1205
1206 fputs_filtered ("0", stream);
1207 if (byte_order == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG)
1208 {
1209 for (p = valaddr;
1210 p < valaddr + len;
1211 p++)
1212 {
1213 switch (cycle)
1214 {
1215 case 0:
1216 /* No carry in, carry out two bits. */
1217
1218 octa1 = (HIGH_ZERO & *p) >> 5;
1219 octa2 = (LOW_ZERO & *p) >> 2;
1220 carry = (CARRY_ZERO & *p);
1221 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa1);
1222 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa2);
1223 break;
1224
1225 case 1:
1226 /* Carry in two bits, carry out one bit. */
1227
1228 octa1 = (carry << 1) | ((HIGH_ONE & *p) >> 7);
1229 octa2 = (MID_ONE & *p) >> 4;
1230 octa3 = (LOW_ONE & *p) >> 1;
1231 carry = (CARRY_ONE & *p);
1232 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa1);
1233 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa2);
1234 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa3);
1235 break;
1236
1237 case 2:
1238 /* Carry in one bit, no carry out. */
1239
1240 octa1 = (carry << 2) | ((HIGH_TWO & *p) >> 6);
1241 octa2 = (MID_TWO & *p) >> 3;
1242 octa3 = (LOW_TWO & *p);
1243 carry = 0;
1244 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa1);
1245 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa2);
1246 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa3);
1247 break;
1248
1249 default:
1250 error (_("Internal error in octal conversion;"));
1251 }
1252
1253 cycle++;
1254 cycle = cycle % BITS_IN_OCTAL;
1255 }
1256 }
1257 else
1258 {
1259 for (p = valaddr + len - 1;
1260 p >= valaddr;
1261 p--)
1262 {
1263 switch (cycle)
1264 {
1265 case 0:
1266 /* Carry out, no carry in */
1267
1268 octa1 = (HIGH_ZERO & *p) >> 5;
1269 octa2 = (LOW_ZERO & *p) >> 2;
1270 carry = (CARRY_ZERO & *p);
1271 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa1);
1272 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa2);
1273 break;
1274
1275 case 1:
1276 /* Carry in, carry out */
1277
1278 octa1 = (carry << 1) | ((HIGH_ONE & *p) >> 7);
1279 octa2 = (MID_ONE & *p) >> 4;
1280 octa3 = (LOW_ONE & *p) >> 1;
1281 carry = (CARRY_ONE & *p);
1282 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa1);
1283 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa2);
1284 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa3);
1285 break;
1286
1287 case 2:
1288 /* Carry in, no carry out */
1289
1290 octa1 = (carry << 2) | ((HIGH_TWO & *p) >> 6);
1291 octa2 = (MID_TWO & *p) >> 3;
1292 octa3 = (LOW_TWO & *p);
1293 carry = 0;
1294 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa1);
1295 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa2);
1296 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%o", octa3);
1297 break;
1298
1299 default:
1300 error (_("Internal error in octal conversion;"));
1301 }
1302
1303 cycle++;
1304 cycle = cycle % BITS_IN_OCTAL;
1305 }
1306 }
1307
1308 }
1309
1310 /* VALADDR points to an integer of LEN bytes.
1311 Print it in decimal on stream or format it in buf. */
1312
1313 void
1314 print_decimal_chars (struct ui_file *stream, const gdb_byte *valaddr,
1315 unsigned len, enum bfd_endian byte_order)
1316 {
1317 #define TEN 10
1318 #define CARRY_OUT( x ) ((x) / TEN) /* extend char to int */
1319 #define CARRY_LEFT( x ) ((x) % TEN)
1320 #define SHIFT( x ) ((x) << 4)
1321 #define LOW_NIBBLE( x ) ( (x) & 0x00F)
1322 #define HIGH_NIBBLE( x ) (((x) & 0x0F0) >> 4)
1323
1324 const gdb_byte *p;
1325 unsigned char *digits;
1326 int carry;
1327 int decimal_len;
1328 int i, j, decimal_digits;
1329 int dummy;
1330 int flip;
1331
1332 /* Base-ten number is less than twice as many digits
1333 as the base 16 number, which is 2 digits per byte. */
1334
1335 decimal_len = len * 2 * 2;
1336 digits = xmalloc (decimal_len);
1337
1338 for (i = 0; i < decimal_len; i++)
1339 {
1340 digits[i] = 0;
1341 }
1342
1343 /* Ok, we have an unknown number of bytes of data to be printed in
1344 * decimal.
1345 *
1346 * Given a hex number (in nibbles) as XYZ, we start by taking X and
1347 * decemalizing it as "x1 x2" in two decimal nibbles. Then we multiply
1348 * the nibbles by 16, add Y and re-decimalize. Repeat with Z.
1349 *
1350 * The trick is that "digits" holds a base-10 number, but sometimes
1351 * the individual digits are > 10.
1352 *
1353 * Outer loop is per nibble (hex digit) of input, from MSD end to
1354 * LSD end.
1355 */
1356 decimal_digits = 0; /* Number of decimal digits so far */
1357 p = (byte_order == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG) ? valaddr : valaddr + len - 1;
1358 flip = 0;
1359 while ((byte_order == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG) ? (p < valaddr + len) : (p >= valaddr))
1360 {
1361 /*
1362 * Multiply current base-ten number by 16 in place.
1363 * Each digit was between 0 and 9, now is between
1364 * 0 and 144.
1365 */
1366 for (j = 0; j < decimal_digits; j++)
1367 {
1368 digits[j] = SHIFT (digits[j]);
1369 }
1370
1371 /* Take the next nibble off the input and add it to what
1372 * we've got in the LSB position. Bottom 'digit' is now
1373 * between 0 and 159.
1374 *
1375 * "flip" is used to run this loop twice for each byte.
1376 */
1377 if (flip == 0)
1378 {
1379 /* Take top nibble. */
1380
1381 digits[0] += HIGH_NIBBLE (*p);
1382 flip = 1;
1383 }
1384 else
1385 {
1386 /* Take low nibble and bump our pointer "p". */
1387
1388 digits[0] += LOW_NIBBLE (*p);
1389 if (byte_order == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG)
1390 p++;
1391 else
1392 p--;
1393 flip = 0;
1394 }
1395
1396 /* Re-decimalize. We have to do this often enough
1397 * that we don't overflow, but once per nibble is
1398 * overkill. Easier this way, though. Note that the
1399 * carry is often larger than 10 (e.g. max initial
1400 * carry out of lowest nibble is 15, could bubble all
1401 * the way up greater than 10). So we have to do
1402 * the carrying beyond the last current digit.
1403 */
1404 carry = 0;
1405 for (j = 0; j < decimal_len - 1; j++)
1406 {
1407 digits[j] += carry;
1408
1409 /* "/" won't handle an unsigned char with
1410 * a value that if signed would be negative.
1411 * So extend to longword int via "dummy".
1412 */
1413 dummy = digits[j];
1414 carry = CARRY_OUT (dummy);
1415 digits[j] = CARRY_LEFT (dummy);
1416
1417 if (j >= decimal_digits && carry == 0)
1418 {
1419 /*
1420 * All higher digits are 0 and we
1421 * no longer have a carry.
1422 *
1423 * Note: "j" is 0-based, "decimal_digits" is
1424 * 1-based.
1425 */
1426 decimal_digits = j + 1;
1427 break;
1428 }
1429 }
1430 }
1431
1432 /* Ok, now "digits" is the decimal representation, with
1433 the "decimal_digits" actual digits. Print! */
1434
1435 for (i = decimal_digits - 1; i >= 0; i--)
1436 {
1437 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%1d", digits[i]);
1438 }
1439 xfree (digits);
1440 }
1441
1442 /* VALADDR points to an integer of LEN bytes. Print it in hex on stream. */
1443
1444 void
1445 print_hex_chars (struct ui_file *stream, const gdb_byte *valaddr,
1446 unsigned len, enum bfd_endian byte_order)
1447 {
1448 const gdb_byte *p;
1449
1450 /* FIXME: We should be not printing leading zeroes in most cases. */
1451
1452 fputs_filtered ("0x", stream);
1453 if (byte_order == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG)
1454 {
1455 for (p = valaddr;
1456 p < valaddr + len;
1457 p++)
1458 {
1459 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%02x", *p);
1460 }
1461 }
1462 else
1463 {
1464 for (p = valaddr + len - 1;
1465 p >= valaddr;
1466 p--)
1467 {
1468 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%02x", *p);
1469 }
1470 }
1471 }
1472
1473 /* VALADDR points to a char integer of LEN bytes.
1474 Print it out in appropriate language form on stream.
1475 Omit any leading zero chars. */
1476
1477 void
1478 print_char_chars (struct ui_file *stream, struct type *type,
1479 const gdb_byte *valaddr,
1480 unsigned len, enum bfd_endian byte_order)
1481 {
1482 const gdb_byte *p;
1483
1484 if (byte_order == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG)
1485 {
1486 p = valaddr;
1487 while (p < valaddr + len - 1 && *p == 0)
1488 ++p;
1489
1490 while (p < valaddr + len)
1491 {
1492 LA_EMIT_CHAR (*p, type, stream, '\'');
1493 ++p;
1494 }
1495 }
1496 else
1497 {
1498 p = valaddr + len - 1;
1499 while (p > valaddr && *p == 0)
1500 --p;
1501
1502 while (p >= valaddr)
1503 {
1504 LA_EMIT_CHAR (*p, type, stream, '\'');
1505 --p;
1506 }
1507 }
1508 }
1509
1510 /* Print function pointer with inferior address ADDRESS onto stdio
1511 stream STREAM. */
1512
1513 void
1514 print_function_pointer_address (const struct value_print_options *options,
1515 struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
1516 CORE_ADDR address,
1517 struct ui_file *stream)
1518 {
1519 CORE_ADDR func_addr
1520 = gdbarch_convert_from_func_ptr_addr (gdbarch, address,
1521 &current_target);
1522
1523 /* If the function pointer is represented by a description, print
1524 the address of the description. */
1525 if (options->addressprint && func_addr != address)
1526 {
1527 fputs_filtered ("@", stream);
1528 fputs_filtered (paddress (gdbarch, address), stream);
1529 fputs_filtered (": ", stream);
1530 }
1531 print_address_demangle (options, gdbarch, func_addr, stream, demangle);
1532 }
1533
1534
1535 /* Print on STREAM using the given OPTIONS the index for the element
1536 at INDEX of an array whose index type is INDEX_TYPE. */
1537
1538 void
1539 maybe_print_array_index (struct type *index_type, LONGEST index,
1540 struct ui_file *stream,
1541 const struct value_print_options *options)
1542 {
1543 struct value *index_value;
1544
1545 if (!options->print_array_indexes)
1546 return;
1547
1548 index_value = value_from_longest (index_type, index);
1549
1550 LA_PRINT_ARRAY_INDEX (index_value, stream, options);
1551 }
1552
1553 /* Called by various <lang>_val_print routines to print elements of an
1554 array in the form "<elem1>, <elem2>, <elem3>, ...".
1555
1556 (FIXME?) Assumes array element separator is a comma, which is correct
1557 for all languages currently handled.
1558 (FIXME?) Some languages have a notation for repeated array elements,
1559 perhaps we should try to use that notation when appropriate. */
1560
1561 void
1562 val_print_array_elements (struct type *type,
1563 const gdb_byte *valaddr, int embedded_offset,
1564 CORE_ADDR address, struct ui_file *stream,
1565 int recurse,
1566 const struct value *val,
1567 const struct value_print_options *options,
1568 unsigned int i)
1569 {
1570 unsigned int things_printed = 0;
1571 unsigned len;
1572 struct type *elttype, *index_type;
1573 unsigned eltlen;
1574 /* Position of the array element we are examining to see
1575 whether it is repeated. */
1576 unsigned int rep1;
1577 /* Number of repetitions we have detected so far. */
1578 unsigned int reps;
1579 LONGEST low_bound, high_bound;
1580
1581 elttype = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type);
1582 eltlen = TYPE_LENGTH (check_typedef (elttype));
1583 index_type = TYPE_INDEX_TYPE (type);
1584
1585 if (get_array_bounds (type, &low_bound, &high_bound))
1586 {
1587 /* The array length should normally be HIGH_BOUND - LOW_BOUND + 1.
1588 But we have to be a little extra careful, because some languages
1589 such as Ada allow LOW_BOUND to be greater than HIGH_BOUND for
1590 empty arrays. In that situation, the array length is just zero,
1591 not negative! */
1592 if (low_bound > high_bound)
1593 len = 0;
1594 else
1595 len = high_bound - low_bound + 1;
1596 }
1597 else
1598 {
1599 warning (_("unable to get bounds of array, assuming null array"));
1600 low_bound = 0;
1601 len = 0;
1602 }
1603
1604 annotate_array_section_begin (i, elttype);
1605
1606 for (; i < len && things_printed < options->print_max; i++)
1607 {
1608 if (i != 0)
1609 {
1610 if (options->prettyprint_arrays)
1611 {
1612 fprintf_filtered (stream, ",\n");
1613 print_spaces_filtered (2 + 2 * recurse, stream);
1614 }
1615 else
1616 {
1617 fprintf_filtered (stream, ", ");
1618 }
1619 }
1620 wrap_here (n_spaces (2 + 2 * recurse));
1621 maybe_print_array_index (index_type, i + low_bound,
1622 stream, options);
1623
1624 rep1 = i + 1;
1625 reps = 1;
1626 /* Only check for reps if repeat_count_threshold is not set to
1627 UINT_MAX (unlimited). */
1628 if (options->repeat_count_threshold < UINT_MAX)
1629 {
1630 while (rep1 < len
1631 && value_available_contents_eq (val,
1632 embedded_offset + i * eltlen,
1633 val,
1634 (embedded_offset
1635 + rep1 * eltlen),
1636 eltlen))
1637 {
1638 ++reps;
1639 ++rep1;
1640 }
1641 }
1642
1643 if (reps > options->repeat_count_threshold)
1644 {
1645 val_print (elttype, valaddr, embedded_offset + i * eltlen,
1646 address, stream, recurse + 1, val, options,
1647 current_language);
1648 annotate_elt_rep (reps);
1649 fprintf_filtered (stream, " <repeats %u times>", reps);
1650 annotate_elt_rep_end ();
1651
1652 i = rep1 - 1;
1653 things_printed += options->repeat_count_threshold;
1654 }
1655 else
1656 {
1657 val_print (elttype, valaddr, embedded_offset + i * eltlen,
1658 address,
1659 stream, recurse + 1, val, options, current_language);
1660 annotate_elt ();
1661 things_printed++;
1662 }
1663 }
1664 annotate_array_section_end ();
1665 if (i < len)
1666 {
1667 fprintf_filtered (stream, "...");
1668 }
1669 }
1670
1671 /* Read LEN bytes of target memory at address MEMADDR, placing the
1672 results in GDB's memory at MYADDR. Returns a count of the bytes
1673 actually read, and optionally an errno value in the location
1674 pointed to by ERRNOPTR if ERRNOPTR is non-null. */
1675
1676 /* FIXME: cagney/1999-10-14: Only used by val_print_string. Can this
1677 function be eliminated. */
1678
1679 static int
1680 partial_memory_read (CORE_ADDR memaddr, gdb_byte *myaddr,
1681 int len, int *errnoptr)
1682 {
1683 int nread; /* Number of bytes actually read. */
1684 int errcode; /* Error from last read. */
1685
1686 /* First try a complete read. */
1687 errcode = target_read_memory (memaddr, myaddr, len);
1688 if (errcode == 0)
1689 {
1690 /* Got it all. */
1691 nread = len;
1692 }
1693 else
1694 {
1695 /* Loop, reading one byte at a time until we get as much as we can. */
1696 for (errcode = 0, nread = 0; len > 0 && errcode == 0; nread++, len--)
1697 {
1698 errcode = target_read_memory (memaddr++, myaddr++, 1);
1699 }
1700 /* If an error, the last read was unsuccessful, so adjust count. */
1701 if (errcode != 0)
1702 {
1703 nread--;
1704 }
1705 }
1706 if (errnoptr != NULL)
1707 {
1708 *errnoptr = errcode;
1709 }
1710 return (nread);
1711 }
1712
1713 /* Read a string from the inferior, at ADDR, with LEN characters of WIDTH bytes
1714 each. Fetch at most FETCHLIMIT characters. BUFFER will be set to a newly
1715 allocated buffer containing the string, which the caller is responsible to
1716 free, and BYTES_READ will be set to the number of bytes read. Returns 0 on
1717 success, or errno on failure.
1718
1719 If LEN > 0, reads exactly LEN characters (including eventual NULs in
1720 the middle or end of the string). If LEN is -1, stops at the first
1721 null character (not necessarily the first null byte) up to a maximum
1722 of FETCHLIMIT characters. Set FETCHLIMIT to UINT_MAX to read as many
1723 characters as possible from the string.
1724
1725 Unless an exception is thrown, BUFFER will always be allocated, even on
1726 failure. In this case, some characters might have been read before the
1727 failure happened. Check BYTES_READ to recognize this situation.
1728
1729 Note: There was a FIXME asking to make this code use target_read_string,
1730 but this function is more general (can read past null characters, up to
1731 given LEN). Besides, it is used much more often than target_read_string
1732 so it is more tested. Perhaps callers of target_read_string should use
1733 this function instead? */
1734
1735 int
1736 read_string (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int width, unsigned int fetchlimit,
1737 enum bfd_endian byte_order, gdb_byte **buffer, int *bytes_read)
1738 {
1739 int found_nul; /* Non-zero if we found the nul char. */
1740 int errcode; /* Errno returned from bad reads. */
1741 unsigned int nfetch; /* Chars to fetch / chars fetched. */
1742 unsigned int chunksize; /* Size of each fetch, in chars. */
1743 gdb_byte *bufptr; /* Pointer to next available byte in
1744 buffer. */
1745 gdb_byte *limit; /* First location past end of fetch buffer. */
1746 struct cleanup *old_chain = NULL; /* Top of the old cleanup chain. */
1747
1748 /* Decide how large of chunks to try to read in one operation. This
1749 is also pretty simple. If LEN >= zero, then we want fetchlimit chars,
1750 so we might as well read them all in one operation. If LEN is -1, we
1751 are looking for a NUL terminator to end the fetching, so we might as
1752 well read in blocks that are large enough to be efficient, but not so
1753 large as to be slow if fetchlimit happens to be large. So we choose the
1754 minimum of 8 and fetchlimit. We used to use 200 instead of 8 but
1755 200 is way too big for remote debugging over a serial line. */
1756
1757 chunksize = (len == -1 ? min (8, fetchlimit) : fetchlimit);
1758
1759 /* Loop until we either have all the characters, or we encounter
1760 some error, such as bumping into the end of the address space. */
1761
1762 found_nul = 0;
1763 *buffer = NULL;
1764
1765 old_chain = make_cleanup (free_current_contents, buffer);
1766
1767 if (len > 0)
1768 {
1769 *buffer = (gdb_byte *) xmalloc (len * width);
1770 bufptr = *buffer;
1771
1772 nfetch = partial_memory_read (addr, bufptr, len * width, &errcode)
1773 / width;
1774 addr += nfetch * width;
1775 bufptr += nfetch * width;
1776 }
1777 else if (len == -1)
1778 {
1779 unsigned long bufsize = 0;
1780
1781 do
1782 {
1783 QUIT;
1784 nfetch = min (chunksize, fetchlimit - bufsize);
1785
1786 if (*buffer == NULL)
1787 *buffer = (gdb_byte *) xmalloc (nfetch * width);
1788 else
1789 *buffer = (gdb_byte *) xrealloc (*buffer,
1790 (nfetch + bufsize) * width);
1791
1792 bufptr = *buffer + bufsize * width;
1793 bufsize += nfetch;
1794
1795 /* Read as much as we can. */
1796 nfetch = partial_memory_read (addr, bufptr, nfetch * width, &errcode)
1797 / width;
1798
1799 /* Scan this chunk for the null character that terminates the string
1800 to print. If found, we don't need to fetch any more. Note
1801 that bufptr is explicitly left pointing at the next character
1802 after the null character, or at the next character after the end
1803 of the buffer. */
1804
1805 limit = bufptr + nfetch * width;
1806 while (bufptr < limit)
1807 {
1808 unsigned long c;
1809
1810 c = extract_unsigned_integer (bufptr, width, byte_order);
1811 addr += width;
1812 bufptr += width;
1813 if (c == 0)
1814 {
1815 /* We don't care about any error which happened after
1816 the NUL terminator. */
1817 errcode = 0;
1818 found_nul = 1;
1819 break;
1820 }
1821 }
1822 }
1823 while (errcode == 0 /* no error */
1824 && bufptr - *buffer < fetchlimit * width /* no overrun */
1825 && !found_nul); /* haven't found NUL yet */
1826 }
1827 else
1828 { /* Length of string is really 0! */
1829 /* We always allocate *buffer. */
1830 *buffer = bufptr = xmalloc (1);
1831 errcode = 0;
1832 }
1833
1834 /* bufptr and addr now point immediately beyond the last byte which we
1835 consider part of the string (including a '\0' which ends the string). */
1836 *bytes_read = bufptr - *buffer;
1837
1838 QUIT;
1839
1840 discard_cleanups (old_chain);
1841
1842 return errcode;
1843 }
1844
1845 /* Return true if print_wchar can display W without resorting to a
1846 numeric escape, false otherwise. */
1847
1848 static int
1849 wchar_printable (gdb_wchar_t w)
1850 {
1851 return (gdb_iswprint (w)
1852 || w == LCST ('\a') || w == LCST ('\b')
1853 || w == LCST ('\f') || w == LCST ('\n')
1854 || w == LCST ('\r') || w == LCST ('\t')
1855 || w == LCST ('\v'));
1856 }
1857
1858 /* A helper function that converts the contents of STRING to wide
1859 characters and then appends them to OUTPUT. */
1860
1861 static void
1862 append_string_as_wide (const char *string,
1863 struct obstack *output)
1864 {
1865 for (; *string; ++string)
1866 {
1867 gdb_wchar_t w = gdb_btowc (*string);
1868 obstack_grow (output, &w, sizeof (gdb_wchar_t));
1869 }
1870 }
1871
1872 /* Print a wide character W to OUTPUT. ORIG is a pointer to the
1873 original (target) bytes representing the character, ORIG_LEN is the
1874 number of valid bytes. WIDTH is the number of bytes in a base
1875 characters of the type. OUTPUT is an obstack to which wide
1876 characters are emitted. QUOTER is a (narrow) character indicating
1877 the style of quotes surrounding the character to be printed.
1878 NEED_ESCAPE is an in/out flag which is used to track numeric
1879 escapes across calls. */
1880
1881 static void
1882 print_wchar (gdb_wint_t w, const gdb_byte *orig,
1883 int orig_len, int width,
1884 enum bfd_endian byte_order,
1885 struct obstack *output,
1886 int quoter, int *need_escapep)
1887 {
1888 int need_escape = *need_escapep;
1889
1890 *need_escapep = 0;
1891 if (gdb_iswprint (w) && (!need_escape || (!gdb_iswdigit (w)
1892 && w != LCST ('8')
1893 && w != LCST ('9'))))
1894 {
1895 gdb_wchar_t wchar = w;
1896
1897 if (w == gdb_btowc (quoter) || w == LCST ('\\'))
1898 obstack_grow_wstr (output, LCST ("\\"));
1899 obstack_grow (output, &wchar, sizeof (gdb_wchar_t));
1900 }
1901 else
1902 {
1903 switch (w)
1904 {
1905 case LCST ('\a'):
1906 obstack_grow_wstr (output, LCST ("\\a"));
1907 break;
1908 case LCST ('\b'):
1909 obstack_grow_wstr (output, LCST ("\\b"));
1910 break;
1911 case LCST ('\f'):
1912 obstack_grow_wstr (output, LCST ("\\f"));
1913 break;
1914 case LCST ('\n'):
1915 obstack_grow_wstr (output, LCST ("\\n"));
1916 break;
1917 case LCST ('\r'):
1918 obstack_grow_wstr (output, LCST ("\\r"));
1919 break;
1920 case LCST ('\t'):
1921 obstack_grow_wstr (output, LCST ("\\t"));
1922 break;
1923 case LCST ('\v'):
1924 obstack_grow_wstr (output, LCST ("\\v"));
1925 break;
1926 default:
1927 {
1928 int i;
1929
1930 for (i = 0; i + width <= orig_len; i += width)
1931 {
1932 char octal[30];
1933 ULONGEST value;
1934
1935 value = extract_unsigned_integer (&orig[i], width,
1936 byte_order);
1937 /* If the value fits in 3 octal digits, print it that
1938 way. Otherwise, print it as a hex escape. */
1939 if (value <= 0777)
1940 sprintf (octal, "\\%.3o", (int) (value & 0777));
1941 else
1942 sprintf (octal, "\\x%lx", (long) value);
1943 append_string_as_wide (octal, output);
1944 }
1945 /* If we somehow have extra bytes, print them now. */
1946 while (i < orig_len)
1947 {
1948 char octal[5];
1949
1950 sprintf (octal, "\\%.3o", orig[i] & 0xff);
1951 append_string_as_wide (octal, output);
1952 ++i;
1953 }
1954
1955 *need_escapep = 1;
1956 }
1957 break;
1958 }
1959 }
1960 }
1961
1962 /* Print the character C on STREAM as part of the contents of a
1963 literal string whose delimiter is QUOTER. ENCODING names the
1964 encoding of C. */
1965
1966 void
1967 generic_emit_char (int c, struct type *type, struct ui_file *stream,
1968 int quoter, const char *encoding)
1969 {
1970 enum bfd_endian byte_order
1971 = gdbarch_byte_order (get_type_arch (type));
1972 struct obstack wchar_buf, output;
1973 struct cleanup *cleanups;
1974 gdb_byte *buf;
1975 struct wchar_iterator *iter;
1976 int need_escape = 0;
1977
1978 buf = alloca (TYPE_LENGTH (type));
1979 pack_long (buf, type, c);
1980
1981 iter = make_wchar_iterator (buf, TYPE_LENGTH (type),
1982 encoding, TYPE_LENGTH (type));
1983 cleanups = make_cleanup_wchar_iterator (iter);
1984
1985 /* This holds the printable form of the wchar_t data. */
1986 obstack_init (&wchar_buf);
1987 make_cleanup_obstack_free (&wchar_buf);
1988
1989 while (1)
1990 {
1991 int num_chars;
1992 gdb_wchar_t *chars;
1993 const gdb_byte *buf;
1994 size_t buflen;
1995 int print_escape = 1;
1996 enum wchar_iterate_result result;
1997
1998 num_chars = wchar_iterate (iter, &result, &chars, &buf, &buflen);
1999 if (num_chars < 0)
2000 break;
2001 if (num_chars > 0)
2002 {
2003 /* If all characters are printable, print them. Otherwise,
2004 we're going to have to print an escape sequence. We
2005 check all characters because we want to print the target
2006 bytes in the escape sequence, and we don't know character
2007 boundaries there. */
2008 int i;
2009
2010 print_escape = 0;
2011 for (i = 0; i < num_chars; ++i)
2012 if (!wchar_printable (chars[i]))
2013 {
2014 print_escape = 1;
2015 break;
2016 }
2017
2018 if (!print_escape)
2019 {
2020 for (i = 0; i < num_chars; ++i)
2021 print_wchar (chars[i], buf, buflen,
2022 TYPE_LENGTH (type), byte_order,
2023 &wchar_buf, quoter, &need_escape);
2024 }
2025 }
2026
2027 /* This handles the NUM_CHARS == 0 case as well. */
2028 if (print_escape)
2029 print_wchar (gdb_WEOF, buf, buflen, TYPE_LENGTH (type),
2030 byte_order, &wchar_buf, quoter, &need_escape);
2031 }
2032
2033 /* The output in the host encoding. */
2034 obstack_init (&output);
2035 make_cleanup_obstack_free (&output);
2036
2037 convert_between_encodings (INTERMEDIATE_ENCODING, host_charset (),
2038 obstack_base (&wchar_buf),
2039 obstack_object_size (&wchar_buf),
2040 1, &output, translit_char);
2041 obstack_1grow (&output, '\0');
2042
2043 fputs_filtered (obstack_base (&output), stream);
2044
2045 do_cleanups (cleanups);
2046 }
2047
2048 /* Print the character string STRING, printing at most LENGTH
2049 characters. LENGTH is -1 if the string is nul terminated. TYPE is
2050 the type of each character. OPTIONS holds the printing options;
2051 printing stops early if the number hits print_max; repeat counts
2052 are printed as appropriate. Print ellipses at the end if we had to
2053 stop before printing LENGTH characters, or if FORCE_ELLIPSES.
2054 QUOTE_CHAR is the character to print at each end of the string. If
2055 C_STYLE_TERMINATOR is true, and the last character is 0, then it is
2056 omitted. */
2057
2058 void
2059 generic_printstr (struct ui_file *stream, struct type *type,
2060 const gdb_byte *string, unsigned int length,
2061 const char *encoding, int force_ellipses,
2062 int quote_char, int c_style_terminator,
2063 const struct value_print_options *options)
2064 {
2065 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (get_type_arch (type));
2066 unsigned int i;
2067 unsigned int things_printed = 0;
2068 int in_quotes = 0;
2069 int need_comma = 0;
2070 int width = TYPE_LENGTH (type);
2071 struct obstack wchar_buf, output;
2072 struct cleanup *cleanup;
2073 struct wchar_iterator *iter;
2074 int finished = 0;
2075 int need_escape = 0;
2076 gdb_wchar_t wide_quote_char = gdb_btowc (quote_char);
2077
2078 if (length == -1)
2079 {
2080 unsigned long current_char = 1;
2081
2082 for (i = 0; current_char; ++i)
2083 {
2084 QUIT;
2085 current_char = extract_unsigned_integer (string + i * width,
2086 width, byte_order);
2087 }
2088 length = i;
2089 }
2090
2091 /* If the string was not truncated due to `set print elements', and
2092 the last byte of it is a null, we don't print that, in
2093 traditional C style. */
2094 if (c_style_terminator
2095 && !force_ellipses
2096 && length > 0
2097 && (extract_unsigned_integer (string + (length - 1) * width,
2098 width, byte_order) == 0))
2099 length--;
2100
2101 if (length == 0)
2102 {
2103 fputs_filtered ("\"\"", stream);
2104 return;
2105 }
2106
2107 /* Arrange to iterate over the characters, in wchar_t form. */
2108 iter = make_wchar_iterator (string, length * width, encoding, width);
2109 cleanup = make_cleanup_wchar_iterator (iter);
2110
2111 /* WCHAR_BUF is the obstack we use to represent the string in
2112 wchar_t form. */
2113 obstack_init (&wchar_buf);
2114 make_cleanup_obstack_free (&wchar_buf);
2115
2116 while (!finished && things_printed < options->print_max)
2117 {
2118 int num_chars;
2119 enum wchar_iterate_result result;
2120 gdb_wchar_t *chars;
2121 const gdb_byte *buf;
2122 size_t buflen;
2123
2124 QUIT;
2125
2126 if (need_comma)
2127 {
2128 obstack_grow_wstr (&wchar_buf, LCST (", "));
2129 need_comma = 0;
2130 }
2131
2132 num_chars = wchar_iterate (iter, &result, &chars, &buf, &buflen);
2133 /* We only look at repetitions when we were able to convert a
2134 single character in isolation. This makes the code simpler
2135 and probably does the sensible thing in the majority of
2136 cases. */
2137 while (num_chars == 1 && things_printed < options->print_max)
2138 {
2139 /* Count the number of repetitions. */
2140 unsigned int reps = 0;
2141 gdb_wchar_t current_char = chars[0];
2142 const gdb_byte *orig_buf = buf;
2143 int orig_len = buflen;
2144
2145 if (need_comma)
2146 {
2147 obstack_grow_wstr (&wchar_buf, LCST (", "));
2148 need_comma = 0;
2149 }
2150
2151 while (num_chars == 1 && current_char == chars[0])
2152 {
2153 num_chars = wchar_iterate (iter, &result, &chars,
2154 &buf, &buflen);
2155 ++reps;
2156 }
2157
2158 /* Emit CURRENT_CHAR according to the repetition count and
2159 options. */
2160 if (reps > options->repeat_count_threshold)
2161 {
2162 if (in_quotes)
2163 {
2164 if (options->inspect_it)
2165 obstack_grow_wstr (&wchar_buf, LCST ("\\"));
2166 obstack_grow (&wchar_buf, &wide_quote_char,
2167 sizeof (gdb_wchar_t));
2168 obstack_grow_wstr (&wchar_buf, LCST (", "));
2169 in_quotes = 0;
2170 }
2171 obstack_grow_wstr (&wchar_buf, LCST ("'"));
2172 need_escape = 0;
2173 print_wchar (current_char, orig_buf, orig_len, width,
2174 byte_order, &wchar_buf, '\'', &need_escape);
2175 obstack_grow_wstr (&wchar_buf, LCST ("'"));
2176 {
2177 /* Painful gyrations. */
2178 int j;
2179 char *s = xstrprintf (_(" <repeats %u times>"), reps);
2180
2181 for (j = 0; s[j]; ++j)
2182 {
2183 gdb_wchar_t w = gdb_btowc (s[j]);
2184 obstack_grow (&wchar_buf, &w, sizeof (gdb_wchar_t));
2185 }
2186 xfree (s);
2187 }
2188 things_printed += options->repeat_count_threshold;
2189 need_comma = 1;
2190 }
2191 else
2192 {
2193 /* Saw the character one or more times, but fewer than
2194 the repetition threshold. */
2195 if (!in_quotes)
2196 {
2197 if (options->inspect_it)
2198 obstack_grow_wstr (&wchar_buf, LCST ("\\"));
2199 obstack_grow (&wchar_buf, &wide_quote_char,
2200 sizeof (gdb_wchar_t));
2201 in_quotes = 1;
2202 need_escape = 0;
2203 }
2204
2205 while (reps-- > 0)
2206 {
2207 print_wchar (current_char, orig_buf,
2208 orig_len, width,
2209 byte_order, &wchar_buf,
2210 quote_char, &need_escape);
2211 ++things_printed;
2212 }
2213 }
2214 }
2215
2216 /* NUM_CHARS and the other outputs from wchar_iterate are valid
2217 here regardless of which branch was taken above. */
2218 if (num_chars < 0)
2219 {
2220 /* Hit EOF. */
2221 finished = 1;
2222 break;
2223 }
2224
2225 switch (result)
2226 {
2227 case wchar_iterate_invalid:
2228 if (!in_quotes)
2229 {
2230 if (options->inspect_it)
2231 obstack_grow_wstr (&wchar_buf, LCST ("\\"));
2232 obstack_grow (&wchar_buf, &wide_quote_char,
2233 sizeof (gdb_wchar_t));
2234 in_quotes = 1;
2235 }
2236 need_escape = 0;
2237 print_wchar (gdb_WEOF, buf, buflen, width, byte_order,
2238 &wchar_buf, quote_char, &need_escape);
2239 break;
2240
2241 case wchar_iterate_incomplete:
2242 if (in_quotes)
2243 {
2244 if (options->inspect_it)
2245 obstack_grow_wstr (&wchar_buf, LCST ("\\"));
2246 obstack_grow (&wchar_buf, &wide_quote_char,
2247 sizeof (gdb_wchar_t));
2248 obstack_grow_wstr (&wchar_buf, LCST (","));
2249 in_quotes = 0;
2250 }
2251 obstack_grow_wstr (&wchar_buf,
2252 LCST (" <incomplete sequence "));
2253 print_wchar (gdb_WEOF, buf, buflen, width,
2254 byte_order, &wchar_buf,
2255 0, &need_escape);
2256 obstack_grow_wstr (&wchar_buf, LCST (">"));
2257 finished = 1;
2258 break;
2259 }
2260 }
2261
2262 /* Terminate the quotes if necessary. */
2263 if (in_quotes)
2264 {
2265 if (options->inspect_it)
2266 obstack_grow_wstr (&wchar_buf, LCST ("\\"));
2267 obstack_grow (&wchar_buf, &wide_quote_char,
2268 sizeof (gdb_wchar_t));
2269 }
2270
2271 if (force_ellipses || !finished)
2272 obstack_grow_wstr (&wchar_buf, LCST ("..."));
2273
2274 /* OUTPUT is where we collect `char's for printing. */
2275 obstack_init (&output);
2276 make_cleanup_obstack_free (&output);
2277
2278 convert_between_encodings (INTERMEDIATE_ENCODING, host_charset (),
2279 obstack_base (&wchar_buf),
2280 obstack_object_size (&wchar_buf),
2281 1, &output, translit_char);
2282 obstack_1grow (&output, '\0');
2283
2284 fputs_filtered (obstack_base (&output), stream);
2285
2286 do_cleanups (cleanup);
2287 }
2288
2289 /* Print a string from the inferior, starting at ADDR and printing up to LEN
2290 characters, of WIDTH bytes a piece, to STREAM. If LEN is -1, printing
2291 stops at the first null byte, otherwise printing proceeds (including null
2292 bytes) until either print_max or LEN characters have been printed,
2293 whichever is smaller. ENCODING is the name of the string's
2294 encoding. It can be NULL, in which case the target encoding is
2295 assumed. */
2296
2297 int
2298 val_print_string (struct type *elttype, const char *encoding,
2299 CORE_ADDR addr, int len,
2300 struct ui_file *stream,
2301 const struct value_print_options *options)
2302 {
2303 int force_ellipsis = 0; /* Force ellipsis to be printed if nonzero. */
2304 int errcode; /* Errno returned from bad reads. */
2305 int found_nul; /* Non-zero if we found the nul char. */
2306 unsigned int fetchlimit; /* Maximum number of chars to print. */
2307 int bytes_read;
2308 gdb_byte *buffer = NULL; /* Dynamically growable fetch buffer. */
2309 struct cleanup *old_chain = NULL; /* Top of the old cleanup chain. */
2310 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_type_arch (elttype);
2311 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch);
2312 int width = TYPE_LENGTH (elttype);
2313
2314 /* First we need to figure out the limit on the number of characters we are
2315 going to attempt to fetch and print. This is actually pretty simple. If
2316 LEN >= zero, then the limit is the minimum of LEN and print_max. If
2317 LEN is -1, then the limit is print_max. This is true regardless of
2318 whether print_max is zero, UINT_MAX (unlimited), or something in between,
2319 because finding the null byte (or available memory) is what actually
2320 limits the fetch. */
2321
2322 fetchlimit = (len == -1 ? options->print_max : min (len,
2323 options->print_max));
2324
2325 errcode = read_string (addr, len, width, fetchlimit, byte_order,
2326 &buffer, &bytes_read);
2327 old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, buffer);
2328
2329 addr += bytes_read;
2330
2331 /* We now have either successfully filled the buffer to fetchlimit,
2332 or terminated early due to an error or finding a null char when
2333 LEN is -1. */
2334
2335 /* Determine found_nul by looking at the last character read. */
2336 found_nul = extract_unsigned_integer (buffer + bytes_read - width, width,
2337 byte_order) == 0;
2338 if (len == -1 && !found_nul)
2339 {
2340 gdb_byte *peekbuf;
2341
2342 /* We didn't find a NUL terminator we were looking for. Attempt
2343 to peek at the next character. If not successful, or it is not
2344 a null byte, then force ellipsis to be printed. */
2345
2346 peekbuf = (gdb_byte *) alloca (width);
2347
2348 if (target_read_memory (addr, peekbuf, width) == 0
2349 && extract_unsigned_integer (peekbuf, width, byte_order) != 0)
2350 force_ellipsis = 1;
2351 }
2352 else if ((len >= 0 && errcode != 0) || (len > bytes_read / width))
2353 {
2354 /* Getting an error when we have a requested length, or fetching less
2355 than the number of characters actually requested, always make us
2356 print ellipsis. */
2357 force_ellipsis = 1;
2358 }
2359
2360 /* If we get an error before fetching anything, don't print a string.
2361 But if we fetch something and then get an error, print the string
2362 and then the error message. */
2363 if (errcode == 0 || bytes_read > 0)
2364 {
2365 LA_PRINT_STRING (stream, elttype, buffer, bytes_read / width,
2366 encoding, force_ellipsis, options);
2367 }
2368
2369 if (errcode != 0)
2370 {
2371 if (errcode == EIO)
2372 {
2373 fprintf_filtered (stream, "<Address ");
2374 fputs_filtered (paddress (gdbarch, addr), stream);
2375 fprintf_filtered (stream, " out of bounds>");
2376 }
2377 else
2378 {
2379 fprintf_filtered (stream, "<Error reading address ");
2380 fputs_filtered (paddress (gdbarch, addr), stream);
2381 fprintf_filtered (stream, ": %s>", safe_strerror (errcode));
2382 }
2383 }
2384
2385 gdb_flush (stream);
2386 do_cleanups (old_chain);
2387
2388 return (bytes_read / width);
2389 }
2390 \f
2391
2392 /* The 'set input-radix' command writes to this auxiliary variable.
2393 If the requested radix is valid, INPUT_RADIX is updated; otherwise,
2394 it is left unchanged. */
2395
2396 static unsigned input_radix_1 = 10;
2397
2398 /* Validate an input or output radix setting, and make sure the user
2399 knows what they really did here. Radix setting is confusing, e.g.
2400 setting the input radix to "10" never changes it! */
2401
2402 static void
2403 set_input_radix (char *args, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c)
2404 {
2405 set_input_radix_1 (from_tty, input_radix_1);
2406 }
2407
2408 static void
2409 set_input_radix_1 (int from_tty, unsigned radix)
2410 {
2411 /* We don't currently disallow any input radix except 0 or 1, which don't
2412 make any mathematical sense. In theory, we can deal with any input
2413 radix greater than 1, even if we don't have unique digits for every
2414 value from 0 to radix-1, but in practice we lose on large radix values.
2415 We should either fix the lossage or restrict the radix range more.
2416 (FIXME). */
2417
2418 if (radix < 2)
2419 {
2420 input_radix_1 = input_radix;
2421 error (_("Nonsense input radix ``decimal %u''; input radix unchanged."),
2422 radix);
2423 }
2424 input_radix_1 = input_radix = radix;
2425 if (from_tty)
2426 {
2427 printf_filtered (_("Input radix now set to "
2428 "decimal %u, hex %x, octal %o.\n"),
2429 radix, radix, radix);
2430 }
2431 }
2432
2433 /* The 'set output-radix' command writes to this auxiliary variable.
2434 If the requested radix is valid, OUTPUT_RADIX is updated,
2435 otherwise, it is left unchanged. */
2436
2437 static unsigned output_radix_1 = 10;
2438
2439 static void
2440 set_output_radix (char *args, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *c)
2441 {
2442 set_output_radix_1 (from_tty, output_radix_1);
2443 }
2444
2445 static void
2446 set_output_radix_1 (int from_tty, unsigned radix)
2447 {
2448 /* Validate the radix and disallow ones that we aren't prepared to
2449 handle correctly, leaving the radix unchanged. */
2450 switch (radix)
2451 {
2452 case 16:
2453 user_print_options.output_format = 'x'; /* hex */
2454 break;
2455 case 10:
2456 user_print_options.output_format = 0; /* decimal */
2457 break;
2458 case 8:
2459 user_print_options.output_format = 'o'; /* octal */
2460 break;
2461 default:
2462 output_radix_1 = output_radix;
2463 error (_("Unsupported output radix ``decimal %u''; "
2464 "output radix unchanged."),
2465 radix);
2466 }
2467 output_radix_1 = output_radix = radix;
2468 if (from_tty)
2469 {
2470 printf_filtered (_("Output radix now set to "
2471 "decimal %u, hex %x, octal %o.\n"),
2472 radix, radix, radix);
2473 }
2474 }
2475
2476 /* Set both the input and output radix at once. Try to set the output radix
2477 first, since it has the most restrictive range. An radix that is valid as
2478 an output radix is also valid as an input radix.
2479
2480 It may be useful to have an unusual input radix. If the user wishes to
2481 set an input radix that is not valid as an output radix, he needs to use
2482 the 'set input-radix' command. */
2483
2484 static void
2485 set_radix (char *arg, int from_tty)
2486 {
2487 unsigned radix;
2488
2489 radix = (arg == NULL) ? 10 : parse_and_eval_long (arg);
2490 set_output_radix_1 (0, radix);
2491 set_input_radix_1 (0, radix);
2492 if (from_tty)
2493 {
2494 printf_filtered (_("Input and output radices now set to "
2495 "decimal %u, hex %x, octal %o.\n"),
2496 radix, radix, radix);
2497 }
2498 }
2499
2500 /* Show both the input and output radices. */
2501
2502 static void
2503 show_radix (char *arg, int from_tty)
2504 {
2505 if (from_tty)
2506 {
2507 if (input_radix == output_radix)
2508 {
2509 printf_filtered (_("Input and output radices set to "
2510 "decimal %u, hex %x, octal %o.\n"),
2511 input_radix, input_radix, input_radix);
2512 }
2513 else
2514 {
2515 printf_filtered (_("Input radix set to decimal "
2516 "%u, hex %x, octal %o.\n"),
2517 input_radix, input_radix, input_radix);
2518 printf_filtered (_("Output radix set to decimal "
2519 "%u, hex %x, octal %o.\n"),
2520 output_radix, output_radix, output_radix);
2521 }
2522 }
2523 }
2524 \f
2525
2526 static void
2527 set_print (char *arg, int from_tty)
2528 {
2529 printf_unfiltered (
2530 "\"set print\" must be followed by the name of a print subcommand.\n");
2531 help_list (setprintlist, "set print ", -1, gdb_stdout);
2532 }
2533
2534 static void
2535 show_print (char *args, int from_tty)
2536 {
2537 cmd_show_list (showprintlist, from_tty, "");
2538 }
2539 \f
2540 void
2541 _initialize_valprint (void)
2542 {
2543 add_prefix_cmd ("print", no_class, set_print,
2544 _("Generic command for setting how things print."),
2545 &setprintlist, "set print ", 0, &setlist);
2546 add_alias_cmd ("p", "print", no_class, 1, &setlist);
2547 /* Prefer set print to set prompt. */
2548 add_alias_cmd ("pr", "print", no_class, 1, &setlist);
2549
2550 add_prefix_cmd ("print", no_class, show_print,
2551 _("Generic command for showing print settings."),
2552 &showprintlist, "show print ", 0, &showlist);
2553 add_alias_cmd ("p", "print", no_class, 1, &showlist);
2554 add_alias_cmd ("pr", "print", no_class, 1, &showlist);
2555
2556 add_setshow_uinteger_cmd ("elements", no_class,
2557 &user_print_options.print_max, _("\
2558 Set limit on string chars or array elements to print."), _("\
2559 Show limit on string chars or array elements to print."), _("\
2560 \"set print elements 0\" causes there to be no limit."),
2561 NULL,
2562 show_print_max,
2563 &setprintlist, &showprintlist);
2564
2565 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("null-stop", no_class,
2566 &user_print_options.stop_print_at_null, _("\
2567 Set printing of char arrays to stop at first null char."), _("\
2568 Show printing of char arrays to stop at first null char."), NULL,
2569 NULL,
2570 show_stop_print_at_null,
2571 &setprintlist, &showprintlist);
2572
2573 add_setshow_uinteger_cmd ("repeats", no_class,
2574 &user_print_options.repeat_count_threshold, _("\
2575 Set threshold for repeated print elements."), _("\
2576 Show threshold for repeated print elements."), _("\
2577 \"set print repeats 0\" causes all elements to be individually printed."),
2578 NULL,
2579 show_repeat_count_threshold,
2580 &setprintlist, &showprintlist);
2581
2582 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("pretty", class_support,
2583 &user_print_options.prettyprint_structs, _("\
2584 Set prettyprinting of structures."), _("\
2585 Show prettyprinting of structures."), NULL,
2586 NULL,
2587 show_prettyprint_structs,
2588 &setprintlist, &showprintlist);
2589
2590 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("union", class_support,
2591 &user_print_options.unionprint, _("\
2592 Set printing of unions interior to structures."), _("\
2593 Show printing of unions interior to structures."), NULL,
2594 NULL,
2595 show_unionprint,
2596 &setprintlist, &showprintlist);
2597
2598 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("array", class_support,
2599 &user_print_options.prettyprint_arrays, _("\
2600 Set prettyprinting of arrays."), _("\
2601 Show prettyprinting of arrays."), NULL,
2602 NULL,
2603 show_prettyprint_arrays,
2604 &setprintlist, &showprintlist);
2605
2606 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("address", class_support,
2607 &user_print_options.addressprint, _("\
2608 Set printing of addresses."), _("\
2609 Show printing of addresses."), NULL,
2610 NULL,
2611 show_addressprint,
2612 &setprintlist, &showprintlist);
2613
2614 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("symbol", class_support,
2615 &user_print_options.symbol_print, _("\
2616 Set printing of symbol names when printing pointers."), _("\
2617 Show printing of symbol names when printing pointers."),
2618 NULL, NULL,
2619 show_symbol_print,
2620 &setprintlist, &showprintlist);
2621
2622 add_setshow_zuinteger_cmd ("input-radix", class_support, &input_radix_1,
2623 _("\
2624 Set default input radix for entering numbers."), _("\
2625 Show default input radix for entering numbers."), NULL,
2626 set_input_radix,
2627 show_input_radix,
2628 &setlist, &showlist);
2629
2630 add_setshow_zuinteger_cmd ("output-radix", class_support, &output_radix_1,
2631 _("\
2632 Set default output radix for printing of values."), _("\
2633 Show default output radix for printing of values."), NULL,
2634 set_output_radix,
2635 show_output_radix,
2636 &setlist, &showlist);
2637
2638 /* The "set radix" and "show radix" commands are special in that
2639 they are like normal set and show commands but allow two normally
2640 independent variables to be either set or shown with a single
2641 command. So the usual deprecated_add_set_cmd() and [deleted]
2642 add_show_from_set() commands aren't really appropriate. */
2643 /* FIXME: i18n: With the new add_setshow_integer command, that is no
2644 longer true - show can display anything. */
2645 add_cmd ("radix", class_support, set_radix, _("\
2646 Set default input and output number radices.\n\
2647 Use 'set input-radix' or 'set output-radix' to independently set each.\n\
2648 Without an argument, sets both radices back to the default value of 10."),
2649 &setlist);
2650 add_cmd ("radix", class_support, show_radix, _("\
2651 Show the default input and output number radices.\n\
2652 Use 'show input-radix' or 'show output-radix' to independently show each."),
2653 &showlist);
2654
2655 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("array-indexes", class_support,
2656 &user_print_options.print_array_indexes, _("\
2657 Set printing of array indexes."), _("\
2658 Show printing of array indexes"), NULL, NULL, show_print_array_indexes,
2659 &setprintlist, &showprintlist);
2660 }