]> git.ipfire.org Git - thirdparty/binutils-gdb.git/blob - gdb/value.c
2005-02-11 Andrew Cagney <cagney@gnu.org>
[thirdparty/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / value.c
1 /* Low level packing and unpacking of values for GDB, the GNU Debugger.
2
3 Copyright 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994,
4 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 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 "defs.h"
25 #include "gdb_string.h"
26 #include "symtab.h"
27 #include "gdbtypes.h"
28 #include "value.h"
29 #include "gdbcore.h"
30 #include "command.h"
31 #include "gdbcmd.h"
32 #include "target.h"
33 #include "language.h"
34 #include "scm-lang.h"
35 #include "demangle.h"
36 #include "doublest.h"
37 #include "gdb_assert.h"
38 #include "regcache.h"
39 #include "block.h"
40
41 /* Prototypes for exported functions. */
42
43 void _initialize_values (void);
44
45 struct value
46 {
47 /* Type of value; either not an lval, or one of the various
48 different possible kinds of lval. */
49 enum lval_type lval;
50
51 /* Is it modifiable? Only relevant if lval != not_lval. */
52 int modifiable;
53
54 /* Location of value (if lval). */
55 union
56 {
57 /* If lval == lval_memory, this is the address in the inferior.
58 If lval == lval_register, this is the byte offset into the
59 registers structure. */
60 CORE_ADDR address;
61
62 /* Pointer to internal variable. */
63 struct internalvar *internalvar;
64 } location;
65
66 /* Describes offset of a value within lval of a structure in bytes.
67 If lval == lval_memory, this is an offset to the address. If
68 lval == lval_register, this is a further offset from
69 location.address within the registers structure. Note also the
70 member embedded_offset below. */
71 int offset;
72
73 /* Only used for bitfields; number of bits contained in them. */
74 int bitsize;
75
76 /* Only used for bitfields; position of start of field. For
77 BITS_BIG_ENDIAN=0 targets, it is the position of the LSB. For
78 BITS_BIG_ENDIAN=1 targets, it is the position of the MSB. */
79 int bitpos;
80
81 /* Frame register value is relative to. This will be described in
82 the lval enum above as "lval_register". */
83 struct frame_id frame_id;
84
85 /* Type of the value. */
86 struct type *type;
87
88 /* If a value represents a C++ object, then the `type' field gives
89 the object's compile-time type. If the object actually belongs
90 to some class derived from `type', perhaps with other base
91 classes and additional members, then `type' is just a subobject
92 of the real thing, and the full object is probably larger than
93 `type' would suggest.
94
95 If `type' is a dynamic class (i.e. one with a vtable), then GDB
96 can actually determine the object's run-time type by looking at
97 the run-time type information in the vtable. When this
98 information is available, we may elect to read in the entire
99 object, for several reasons:
100
101 - When printing the value, the user would probably rather see the
102 full object, not just the limited portion apparent from the
103 compile-time type.
104
105 - If `type' has virtual base classes, then even printing `type'
106 alone may require reaching outside the `type' portion of the
107 object to wherever the virtual base class has been stored.
108
109 When we store the entire object, `enclosing_type' is the run-time
110 type -- the complete object -- and `embedded_offset' is the
111 offset of `type' within that larger type, in bytes. The
112 value_contents() macro takes `embedded_offset' into account, so
113 most GDB code continues to see the `type' portion of the value,
114 just as the inferior would.
115
116 If `type' is a pointer to an object, then `enclosing_type' is a
117 pointer to the object's run-time type, and `pointed_to_offset' is
118 the offset in bytes from the full object to the pointed-to object
119 -- that is, the value `embedded_offset' would have if we followed
120 the pointer and fetched the complete object. (I don't really see
121 the point. Why not just determine the run-time type when you
122 indirect, and avoid the special case? The contents don't matter
123 until you indirect anyway.)
124
125 If we're not doing anything fancy, `enclosing_type' is equal to
126 `type', and `embedded_offset' is zero, so everything works
127 normally. */
128 struct type *enclosing_type;
129 int embedded_offset;
130 int pointed_to_offset;
131
132 /* Values are stored in a chain, so that they can be deleted easily
133 over calls to the inferior. Values assigned to internal
134 variables or put into the value history are taken off this
135 list. */
136 struct value *next;
137
138 /* Register number if the value is from a register. */
139 short regnum;
140
141 /* If zero, contents of this value are in the contents field. If
142 nonzero, contents are in inferior memory at address in the
143 location.address field plus the offset field (and the lval field
144 should be lval_memory).
145
146 WARNING: This field is used by the code which handles watchpoints
147 (see breakpoint.c) to decide whether a particular value can be
148 watched by hardware watchpoints. If the lazy flag is set for
149 some member of a value chain, it is assumed that this member of
150 the chain doesn't need to be watched as part of watching the
151 value itself. This is how GDB avoids watching the entire struct
152 or array when the user wants to watch a single struct member or
153 array element. If you ever change the way lazy flag is set and
154 reset, be sure to consider this use as well! */
155 char lazy;
156
157 /* If nonzero, this is the value of a variable which does not
158 actually exist in the program. */
159 char optimized_out;
160
161 /* Actual contents of the value. For use of this value; setting it
162 uses the stuff above. Not valid if lazy is nonzero. Target
163 byte-order. We force it to be aligned properly for any possible
164 value. Note that a value therefore extends beyond what is
165 declared here. */
166 union
167 {
168 bfd_byte contents[1];
169 DOUBLEST force_doublest_align;
170 LONGEST force_longest_align;
171 CORE_ADDR force_core_addr_align;
172 void *force_pointer_align;
173 } aligner;
174 /* Do not add any new members here -- contents above will trash
175 them. */
176 };
177
178 /* Prototypes for local functions. */
179
180 static void show_values (char *, int);
181
182 static void show_convenience (char *, int);
183
184
185 /* The value-history records all the values printed
186 by print commands during this session. Each chunk
187 records 60 consecutive values. The first chunk on
188 the chain records the most recent values.
189 The total number of values is in value_history_count. */
190
191 #define VALUE_HISTORY_CHUNK 60
192
193 struct value_history_chunk
194 {
195 struct value_history_chunk *next;
196 struct value *values[VALUE_HISTORY_CHUNK];
197 };
198
199 /* Chain of chunks now in use. */
200
201 static struct value_history_chunk *value_history_chain;
202
203 static int value_history_count; /* Abs number of last entry stored */
204 \f
205 /* List of all value objects currently allocated
206 (except for those released by calls to release_value)
207 This is so they can be freed after each command. */
208
209 static struct value *all_values;
210
211 /* Allocate a value that has the correct length for type TYPE. */
212
213 struct value *
214 allocate_value (struct type *type)
215 {
216 struct value *val;
217 struct type *atype = check_typedef (type);
218
219 val = (struct value *) xzalloc (sizeof (struct value) + TYPE_LENGTH (atype));
220 val->next = all_values;
221 all_values = val;
222 val->type = type;
223 val->enclosing_type = type;
224 VALUE_LVAL (val) = not_lval;
225 VALUE_ADDRESS (val) = 0;
226 VALUE_FRAME_ID (val) = null_frame_id;
227 val->offset = 0;
228 val->bitpos = 0;
229 val->bitsize = 0;
230 VALUE_REGNUM (val) = -1;
231 val->lazy = 0;
232 val->optimized_out = 0;
233 val->embedded_offset = 0;
234 val->pointed_to_offset = 0;
235 val->modifiable = 1;
236 return val;
237 }
238
239 /* Allocate a value that has the correct length
240 for COUNT repetitions type TYPE. */
241
242 struct value *
243 allocate_repeat_value (struct type *type, int count)
244 {
245 int low_bound = current_language->string_lower_bound; /* ??? */
246 /* FIXME-type-allocation: need a way to free this type when we are
247 done with it. */
248 struct type *range_type
249 = create_range_type ((struct type *) NULL, builtin_type_int,
250 low_bound, count + low_bound - 1);
251 /* FIXME-type-allocation: need a way to free this type when we are
252 done with it. */
253 return allocate_value (create_array_type ((struct type *) NULL,
254 type, range_type));
255 }
256
257 /* Accessor methods. */
258
259 struct value *
260 value_next (struct value *value)
261 {
262 return value->next;
263 }
264
265 struct type *
266 value_type (struct value *value)
267 {
268 return value->type;
269 }
270 void
271 deprecated_set_value_type (struct value *value, struct type *type)
272 {
273 value->type = type;
274 }
275
276 int
277 value_offset (struct value *value)
278 {
279 return value->offset;
280 }
281 void
282 set_value_offset (struct value *value, int offset)
283 {
284 value->offset = offset;
285 }
286
287 int
288 value_bitpos (struct value *value)
289 {
290 return value->bitpos;
291 }
292 void
293 set_value_bitpos (struct value *value, int bit)
294 {
295 value->bitpos = bit;
296 }
297
298 int
299 value_bitsize (struct value *value)
300 {
301 return value->bitsize;
302 }
303 void
304 set_value_bitsize (struct value *value, int bit)
305 {
306 value->bitsize = bit;
307 }
308
309 bfd_byte *
310 value_contents_raw (struct value *value)
311 {
312 return value->aligner.contents + value->embedded_offset;
313 }
314
315 bfd_byte *
316 value_contents_all_raw (struct value *value)
317 {
318 return value->aligner.contents;
319 }
320
321 struct type *
322 value_enclosing_type (struct value *value)
323 {
324 return value->enclosing_type;
325 }
326
327 const bfd_byte *
328 value_contents_all (struct value *value)
329 {
330 if (value->lazy)
331 value_fetch_lazy (value);
332 return value->aligner.contents;
333 }
334
335 int
336 value_lazy (struct value *value)
337 {
338 return value->lazy;
339 }
340
341 void
342 set_value_lazy (struct value *value, int val)
343 {
344 value->lazy = val;
345 }
346
347 const bfd_byte *
348 value_contents (struct value *value)
349 {
350 return value_contents_writeable (value);
351 }
352
353 bfd_byte *
354 value_contents_writeable (struct value *value)
355 {
356 if (value->lazy)
357 value_fetch_lazy (value);
358 return value->aligner.contents;
359 }
360
361 int
362 value_optimized_out (struct value *value)
363 {
364 return value->optimized_out;
365 }
366
367 void
368 set_value_optimized_out (struct value *value, int val)
369 {
370 value->optimized_out = val;
371 }
372
373 int
374 value_embedded_offset (struct value *value)
375 {
376 return value->embedded_offset;
377 }
378
379 void
380 set_value_embedded_offset (struct value *value, int val)
381 {
382 value->embedded_offset = val;
383 }
384
385 int
386 value_pointed_to_offset (struct value *value)
387 {
388 return value->pointed_to_offset;
389 }
390
391 void
392 set_value_pointed_to_offset (struct value *value, int val)
393 {
394 value->pointed_to_offset = val;
395 }
396
397 enum lval_type *
398 deprecated_value_lval_hack (struct value *value)
399 {
400 return &value->lval;
401 }
402
403 CORE_ADDR *
404 deprecated_value_address_hack (struct value *value)
405 {
406 return &value->location.address;
407 }
408
409 struct internalvar **
410 deprecated_value_internalvar_hack (struct value *value)
411 {
412 return &value->location.internalvar;
413 }
414
415 struct frame_id *
416 deprecated_value_frame_id_hack (struct value *value)
417 {
418 return &value->frame_id;
419 }
420
421 short *
422 deprecated_value_regnum_hack (struct value *value)
423 {
424 return &value->regnum;
425 }
426
427 int
428 deprecated_value_modifiable (struct value *value)
429 {
430 return value->modifiable;
431 }
432 void
433 deprecated_set_value_modifiable (struct value *value, int modifiable)
434 {
435 value->modifiable = modifiable;
436 }
437 \f
438 /* Return a mark in the value chain. All values allocated after the
439 mark is obtained (except for those released) are subject to being freed
440 if a subsequent value_free_to_mark is passed the mark. */
441 struct value *
442 value_mark (void)
443 {
444 return all_values;
445 }
446
447 /* Free all values allocated since MARK was obtained by value_mark
448 (except for those released). */
449 void
450 value_free_to_mark (struct value *mark)
451 {
452 struct value *val;
453 struct value *next;
454
455 for (val = all_values; val && val != mark; val = next)
456 {
457 next = val->next;
458 value_free (val);
459 }
460 all_values = val;
461 }
462
463 /* Free all the values that have been allocated (except for those released).
464 Called after each command, successful or not. */
465
466 void
467 free_all_values (void)
468 {
469 struct value *val;
470 struct value *next;
471
472 for (val = all_values; val; val = next)
473 {
474 next = val->next;
475 value_free (val);
476 }
477
478 all_values = 0;
479 }
480
481 /* Remove VAL from the chain all_values
482 so it will not be freed automatically. */
483
484 void
485 release_value (struct value *val)
486 {
487 struct value *v;
488
489 if (all_values == val)
490 {
491 all_values = val->next;
492 return;
493 }
494
495 for (v = all_values; v; v = v->next)
496 {
497 if (v->next == val)
498 {
499 v->next = val->next;
500 break;
501 }
502 }
503 }
504
505 /* Release all values up to mark */
506 struct value *
507 value_release_to_mark (struct value *mark)
508 {
509 struct value *val;
510 struct value *next;
511
512 for (val = next = all_values; next; next = next->next)
513 if (next->next == mark)
514 {
515 all_values = next->next;
516 next->next = NULL;
517 return val;
518 }
519 all_values = 0;
520 return val;
521 }
522
523 /* Return a copy of the value ARG.
524 It contains the same contents, for same memory address,
525 but it's a different block of storage. */
526
527 struct value *
528 value_copy (struct value *arg)
529 {
530 struct type *encl_type = value_enclosing_type (arg);
531 struct value *val = allocate_value (encl_type);
532 val->type = arg->type;
533 VALUE_LVAL (val) = VALUE_LVAL (arg);
534 VALUE_ADDRESS (val) = VALUE_ADDRESS (arg);
535 val->offset = arg->offset;
536 val->bitpos = arg->bitpos;
537 val->bitsize = arg->bitsize;
538 VALUE_FRAME_ID (val) = VALUE_FRAME_ID (arg);
539 VALUE_REGNUM (val) = VALUE_REGNUM (arg);
540 val->lazy = arg->lazy;
541 val->optimized_out = arg->optimized_out;
542 val->embedded_offset = value_embedded_offset (arg);
543 val->pointed_to_offset = arg->pointed_to_offset;
544 val->modifiable = arg->modifiable;
545 if (!value_lazy (val))
546 {
547 memcpy (value_contents_all_raw (val), value_contents_all_raw (arg),
548 TYPE_LENGTH (value_enclosing_type (arg)));
549
550 }
551 return val;
552 }
553 \f
554 /* Access to the value history. */
555
556 /* Record a new value in the value history.
557 Returns the absolute history index of the entry.
558 Result of -1 indicates the value was not saved; otherwise it is the
559 value history index of this new item. */
560
561 int
562 record_latest_value (struct value *val)
563 {
564 int i;
565
566 /* We don't want this value to have anything to do with the inferior anymore.
567 In particular, "set $1 = 50" should not affect the variable from which
568 the value was taken, and fast watchpoints should be able to assume that
569 a value on the value history never changes. */
570 if (value_lazy (val))
571 value_fetch_lazy (val);
572 /* We preserve VALUE_LVAL so that the user can find out where it was fetched
573 from. This is a bit dubious, because then *&$1 does not just return $1
574 but the current contents of that location. c'est la vie... */
575 val->modifiable = 0;
576 release_value (val);
577
578 /* Here we treat value_history_count as origin-zero
579 and applying to the value being stored now. */
580
581 i = value_history_count % VALUE_HISTORY_CHUNK;
582 if (i == 0)
583 {
584 struct value_history_chunk *new
585 = (struct value_history_chunk *)
586 xmalloc (sizeof (struct value_history_chunk));
587 memset (new->values, 0, sizeof new->values);
588 new->next = value_history_chain;
589 value_history_chain = new;
590 }
591
592 value_history_chain->values[i] = val;
593
594 /* Now we regard value_history_count as origin-one
595 and applying to the value just stored. */
596
597 return ++value_history_count;
598 }
599
600 /* Return a copy of the value in the history with sequence number NUM. */
601
602 struct value *
603 access_value_history (int num)
604 {
605 struct value_history_chunk *chunk;
606 int i;
607 int absnum = num;
608
609 if (absnum <= 0)
610 absnum += value_history_count;
611
612 if (absnum <= 0)
613 {
614 if (num == 0)
615 error (_("The history is empty."));
616 else if (num == 1)
617 error (_("There is only one value in the history."));
618 else
619 error (_("History does not go back to $$%d."), -num);
620 }
621 if (absnum > value_history_count)
622 error (_("History has not yet reached $%d."), absnum);
623
624 absnum--;
625
626 /* Now absnum is always absolute and origin zero. */
627
628 chunk = value_history_chain;
629 for (i = (value_history_count - 1) / VALUE_HISTORY_CHUNK - absnum / VALUE_HISTORY_CHUNK;
630 i > 0; i--)
631 chunk = chunk->next;
632
633 return value_copy (chunk->values[absnum % VALUE_HISTORY_CHUNK]);
634 }
635
636 /* Clear the value history entirely.
637 Must be done when new symbol tables are loaded,
638 because the type pointers become invalid. */
639
640 void
641 clear_value_history (void)
642 {
643 struct value_history_chunk *next;
644 int i;
645 struct value *val;
646
647 while (value_history_chain)
648 {
649 for (i = 0; i < VALUE_HISTORY_CHUNK; i++)
650 if ((val = value_history_chain->values[i]) != NULL)
651 xfree (val);
652 next = value_history_chain->next;
653 xfree (value_history_chain);
654 value_history_chain = next;
655 }
656 value_history_count = 0;
657 }
658
659 static void
660 show_values (char *num_exp, int from_tty)
661 {
662 int i;
663 struct value *val;
664 static int num = 1;
665
666 if (num_exp)
667 {
668 /* "info history +" should print from the stored position.
669 "info history <exp>" should print around value number <exp>. */
670 if (num_exp[0] != '+' || num_exp[1] != '\0')
671 num = parse_and_eval_long (num_exp) - 5;
672 }
673 else
674 {
675 /* "info history" means print the last 10 values. */
676 num = value_history_count - 9;
677 }
678
679 if (num <= 0)
680 num = 1;
681
682 for (i = num; i < num + 10 && i <= value_history_count; i++)
683 {
684 val = access_value_history (i);
685 printf_filtered (("$%d = "), i);
686 value_print (val, gdb_stdout, 0, Val_pretty_default);
687 printf_filtered (("\n"));
688 }
689
690 /* The next "info history +" should start after what we just printed. */
691 num += 10;
692
693 /* Hitting just return after this command should do the same thing as
694 "info history +". If num_exp is null, this is unnecessary, since
695 "info history +" is not useful after "info history". */
696 if (from_tty && num_exp)
697 {
698 num_exp[0] = '+';
699 num_exp[1] = '\0';
700 }
701 }
702 \f
703 /* Internal variables. These are variables within the debugger
704 that hold values assigned by debugger commands.
705 The user refers to them with a '$' prefix
706 that does not appear in the variable names stored internally. */
707
708 static struct internalvar *internalvars;
709
710 /* Look up an internal variable with name NAME. NAME should not
711 normally include a dollar sign.
712
713 If the specified internal variable does not exist,
714 one is created, with a void value. */
715
716 struct internalvar *
717 lookup_internalvar (char *name)
718 {
719 struct internalvar *var;
720
721 for (var = internalvars; var; var = var->next)
722 if (strcmp (var->name, name) == 0)
723 return var;
724
725 var = (struct internalvar *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct internalvar));
726 var->name = concat (name, NULL);
727 var->value = allocate_value (builtin_type_void);
728 release_value (var->value);
729 var->next = internalvars;
730 internalvars = var;
731 return var;
732 }
733
734 struct value *
735 value_of_internalvar (struct internalvar *var)
736 {
737 struct value *val;
738
739 val = value_copy (var->value);
740 if (value_lazy (val))
741 value_fetch_lazy (val);
742 VALUE_LVAL (val) = lval_internalvar;
743 VALUE_INTERNALVAR (val) = var;
744 return val;
745 }
746
747 void
748 set_internalvar_component (struct internalvar *var, int offset, int bitpos,
749 int bitsize, struct value *newval)
750 {
751 bfd_byte *addr = value_contents_writeable (var->value) + offset;
752
753 if (bitsize)
754 modify_field (addr, value_as_long (newval),
755 bitpos, bitsize);
756 else
757 memcpy (addr, value_contents (newval), TYPE_LENGTH (value_type (newval)));
758 }
759
760 void
761 set_internalvar (struct internalvar *var, struct value *val)
762 {
763 struct value *newval;
764
765 newval = value_copy (val);
766 newval->modifiable = 1;
767
768 /* Force the value to be fetched from the target now, to avoid problems
769 later when this internalvar is referenced and the target is gone or
770 has changed. */
771 if (value_lazy (newval))
772 value_fetch_lazy (newval);
773
774 /* Begin code which must not call error(). If var->value points to
775 something free'd, an error() obviously leaves a dangling pointer.
776 But we also get a danling pointer if var->value points to
777 something in the value chain (i.e., before release_value is
778 called), because after the error free_all_values will get called before
779 long. */
780 xfree (var->value);
781 var->value = newval;
782 release_value (newval);
783 /* End code which must not call error(). */
784 }
785
786 char *
787 internalvar_name (struct internalvar *var)
788 {
789 return var->name;
790 }
791
792 /* Free all internalvars. Done when new symtabs are loaded,
793 because that makes the values invalid. */
794
795 void
796 clear_internalvars (void)
797 {
798 struct internalvar *var;
799
800 while (internalvars)
801 {
802 var = internalvars;
803 internalvars = var->next;
804 xfree (var->name);
805 xfree (var->value);
806 xfree (var);
807 }
808 }
809
810 static void
811 show_convenience (char *ignore, int from_tty)
812 {
813 struct internalvar *var;
814 int varseen = 0;
815
816 for (var = internalvars; var; var = var->next)
817 {
818 if (!varseen)
819 {
820 varseen = 1;
821 }
822 printf_filtered (("$%s = "), var->name);
823 value_print (var->value, gdb_stdout, 0, Val_pretty_default);
824 printf_filtered (("\n"));
825 }
826 if (!varseen)
827 printf_unfiltered (_("\
828 No debugger convenience variables now defined.\n\
829 Convenience variables have names starting with \"$\";\n\
830 use \"set\" as in \"set $foo = 5\" to define them.\n"));
831 }
832 \f
833 /* Extract a value as a C number (either long or double).
834 Knows how to convert fixed values to double, or
835 floating values to long.
836 Does not deallocate the value. */
837
838 LONGEST
839 value_as_long (struct value *val)
840 {
841 /* This coerces arrays and functions, which is necessary (e.g.
842 in disassemble_command). It also dereferences references, which
843 I suspect is the most logical thing to do. */
844 val = coerce_array (val);
845 return unpack_long (value_type (val), value_contents (val));
846 }
847
848 DOUBLEST
849 value_as_double (struct value *val)
850 {
851 DOUBLEST foo;
852 int inv;
853
854 foo = unpack_double (value_type (val), value_contents (val), &inv);
855 if (inv)
856 error (_("Invalid floating value found in program."));
857 return foo;
858 }
859 /* Extract a value as a C pointer. Does not deallocate the value.
860 Note that val's type may not actually be a pointer; value_as_long
861 handles all the cases. */
862 CORE_ADDR
863 value_as_address (struct value *val)
864 {
865 /* Assume a CORE_ADDR can fit in a LONGEST (for now). Not sure
866 whether we want this to be true eventually. */
867 #if 0
868 /* ADDR_BITS_REMOVE is wrong if we are being called for a
869 non-address (e.g. argument to "signal", "info break", etc.), or
870 for pointers to char, in which the low bits *are* significant. */
871 return ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (value_as_long (val));
872 #else
873
874 /* There are several targets (IA-64, PowerPC, and others) which
875 don't represent pointers to functions as simply the address of
876 the function's entry point. For example, on the IA-64, a
877 function pointer points to a two-word descriptor, generated by
878 the linker, which contains the function's entry point, and the
879 value the IA-64 "global pointer" register should have --- to
880 support position-independent code. The linker generates
881 descriptors only for those functions whose addresses are taken.
882
883 On such targets, it's difficult for GDB to convert an arbitrary
884 function address into a function pointer; it has to either find
885 an existing descriptor for that function, or call malloc and
886 build its own. On some targets, it is impossible for GDB to
887 build a descriptor at all: the descriptor must contain a jump
888 instruction; data memory cannot be executed; and code memory
889 cannot be modified.
890
891 Upon entry to this function, if VAL is a value of type `function'
892 (that is, TYPE_CODE (VALUE_TYPE (val)) == TYPE_CODE_FUNC), then
893 VALUE_ADDRESS (val) is the address of the function. This is what
894 you'll get if you evaluate an expression like `main'. The call
895 to COERCE_ARRAY below actually does all the usual unary
896 conversions, which includes converting values of type `function'
897 to `pointer to function'. This is the challenging conversion
898 discussed above. Then, `unpack_long' will convert that pointer
899 back into an address.
900
901 So, suppose the user types `disassemble foo' on an architecture
902 with a strange function pointer representation, on which GDB
903 cannot build its own descriptors, and suppose further that `foo'
904 has no linker-built descriptor. The address->pointer conversion
905 will signal an error and prevent the command from running, even
906 though the next step would have been to convert the pointer
907 directly back into the same address.
908
909 The following shortcut avoids this whole mess. If VAL is a
910 function, just return its address directly. */
911 if (TYPE_CODE (value_type (val)) == TYPE_CODE_FUNC
912 || TYPE_CODE (value_type (val)) == TYPE_CODE_METHOD)
913 return VALUE_ADDRESS (val);
914
915 val = coerce_array (val);
916
917 /* Some architectures (e.g. Harvard), map instruction and data
918 addresses onto a single large unified address space. For
919 instance: An architecture may consider a large integer in the
920 range 0x10000000 .. 0x1000ffff to already represent a data
921 addresses (hence not need a pointer to address conversion) while
922 a small integer would still need to be converted integer to
923 pointer to address. Just assume such architectures handle all
924 integer conversions in a single function. */
925
926 /* JimB writes:
927
928 I think INTEGER_TO_ADDRESS is a good idea as proposed --- but we
929 must admonish GDB hackers to make sure its behavior matches the
930 compiler's, whenever possible.
931
932 In general, I think GDB should evaluate expressions the same way
933 the compiler does. When the user copies an expression out of
934 their source code and hands it to a `print' command, they should
935 get the same value the compiler would have computed. Any
936 deviation from this rule can cause major confusion and annoyance,
937 and needs to be justified carefully. In other words, GDB doesn't
938 really have the freedom to do these conversions in clever and
939 useful ways.
940
941 AndrewC pointed out that users aren't complaining about how GDB
942 casts integers to pointers; they are complaining that they can't
943 take an address from a disassembly listing and give it to `x/i'.
944 This is certainly important.
945
946 Adding an architecture method like integer_to_address() certainly
947 makes it possible for GDB to "get it right" in all circumstances
948 --- the target has complete control over how things get done, so
949 people can Do The Right Thing for their target without breaking
950 anyone else. The standard doesn't specify how integers get
951 converted to pointers; usually, the ABI doesn't either, but
952 ABI-specific code is a more reasonable place to handle it. */
953
954 if (TYPE_CODE (value_type (val)) != TYPE_CODE_PTR
955 && TYPE_CODE (value_type (val)) != TYPE_CODE_REF
956 && gdbarch_integer_to_address_p (current_gdbarch))
957 return gdbarch_integer_to_address (current_gdbarch, value_type (val),
958 value_contents (val));
959
960 return unpack_long (value_type (val), value_contents (val));
961 #endif
962 }
963 \f
964 /* Unpack raw data (copied from debugee, target byte order) at VALADDR
965 as a long, or as a double, assuming the raw data is described
966 by type TYPE. Knows how to convert different sizes of values
967 and can convert between fixed and floating point. We don't assume
968 any alignment for the raw data. Return value is in host byte order.
969
970 If you want functions and arrays to be coerced to pointers, and
971 references to be dereferenced, call value_as_long() instead.
972
973 C++: It is assumed that the front-end has taken care of
974 all matters concerning pointers to members. A pointer
975 to member which reaches here is considered to be equivalent
976 to an INT (or some size). After all, it is only an offset. */
977
978 LONGEST
979 unpack_long (struct type *type, const char *valaddr)
980 {
981 enum type_code code = TYPE_CODE (type);
982 int len = TYPE_LENGTH (type);
983 int nosign = TYPE_UNSIGNED (type);
984
985 if (current_language->la_language == language_scm
986 && is_scmvalue_type (type))
987 return scm_unpack (type, valaddr, TYPE_CODE_INT);
988
989 switch (code)
990 {
991 case TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF:
992 return unpack_long (check_typedef (type), valaddr);
993 case TYPE_CODE_ENUM:
994 case TYPE_CODE_BOOL:
995 case TYPE_CODE_INT:
996 case TYPE_CODE_CHAR:
997 case TYPE_CODE_RANGE:
998 if (nosign)
999 return extract_unsigned_integer (valaddr, len);
1000 else
1001 return extract_signed_integer (valaddr, len);
1002
1003 case TYPE_CODE_FLT:
1004 return extract_typed_floating (valaddr, type);
1005
1006 case TYPE_CODE_PTR:
1007 case TYPE_CODE_REF:
1008 /* Assume a CORE_ADDR can fit in a LONGEST (for now). Not sure
1009 whether we want this to be true eventually. */
1010 return extract_typed_address (valaddr, type);
1011
1012 case TYPE_CODE_MEMBER:
1013 error (_("not implemented: member types in unpack_long"));
1014
1015 default:
1016 error (_("Value can't be converted to integer."));
1017 }
1018 return 0; /* Placate lint. */
1019 }
1020
1021 /* Return a double value from the specified type and address.
1022 INVP points to an int which is set to 0 for valid value,
1023 1 for invalid value (bad float format). In either case,
1024 the returned double is OK to use. Argument is in target
1025 format, result is in host format. */
1026
1027 DOUBLEST
1028 unpack_double (struct type *type, const char *valaddr, int *invp)
1029 {
1030 enum type_code code;
1031 int len;
1032 int nosign;
1033
1034 *invp = 0; /* Assume valid. */
1035 CHECK_TYPEDEF (type);
1036 code = TYPE_CODE (type);
1037 len = TYPE_LENGTH (type);
1038 nosign = TYPE_UNSIGNED (type);
1039 if (code == TYPE_CODE_FLT)
1040 {
1041 /* NOTE: cagney/2002-02-19: There was a test here to see if the
1042 floating-point value was valid (using the macro
1043 INVALID_FLOAT). That test/macro have been removed.
1044
1045 It turns out that only the VAX defined this macro and then
1046 only in a non-portable way. Fixing the portability problem
1047 wouldn't help since the VAX floating-point code is also badly
1048 bit-rotten. The target needs to add definitions for the
1049 methods TARGET_FLOAT_FORMAT and TARGET_DOUBLE_FORMAT - these
1050 exactly describe the target floating-point format. The
1051 problem here is that the corresponding floatformat_vax_f and
1052 floatformat_vax_d values these methods should be set to are
1053 also not defined either. Oops!
1054
1055 Hopefully someone will add both the missing floatformat
1056 definitions and the new cases for floatformat_is_valid (). */
1057
1058 if (!floatformat_is_valid (floatformat_from_type (type), valaddr))
1059 {
1060 *invp = 1;
1061 return 0.0;
1062 }
1063
1064 return extract_typed_floating (valaddr, type);
1065 }
1066 else if (nosign)
1067 {
1068 /* Unsigned -- be sure we compensate for signed LONGEST. */
1069 return (ULONGEST) unpack_long (type, valaddr);
1070 }
1071 else
1072 {
1073 /* Signed -- we are OK with unpack_long. */
1074 return unpack_long (type, valaddr);
1075 }
1076 }
1077
1078 /* Unpack raw data (copied from debugee, target byte order) at VALADDR
1079 as a CORE_ADDR, assuming the raw data is described by type TYPE.
1080 We don't assume any alignment for the raw data. Return value is in
1081 host byte order.
1082
1083 If you want functions and arrays to be coerced to pointers, and
1084 references to be dereferenced, call value_as_address() instead.
1085
1086 C++: It is assumed that the front-end has taken care of
1087 all matters concerning pointers to members. A pointer
1088 to member which reaches here is considered to be equivalent
1089 to an INT (or some size). After all, it is only an offset. */
1090
1091 CORE_ADDR
1092 unpack_pointer (struct type *type, const char *valaddr)
1093 {
1094 /* Assume a CORE_ADDR can fit in a LONGEST (for now). Not sure
1095 whether we want this to be true eventually. */
1096 return unpack_long (type, valaddr);
1097 }
1098
1099 \f
1100 /* Get the value of the FIELDN'th field (which must be static) of
1101 TYPE. Return NULL if the field doesn't exist or has been
1102 optimized out. */
1103
1104 struct value *
1105 value_static_field (struct type *type, int fieldno)
1106 {
1107 struct value *retval;
1108
1109 if (TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_HAS_ADDR (type, fieldno))
1110 {
1111 retval = value_at (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, fieldno),
1112 TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_PHYSADDR (type, fieldno));
1113 }
1114 else
1115 {
1116 char *phys_name = TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_PHYSNAME (type, fieldno);
1117 struct symbol *sym = lookup_symbol (phys_name, 0, VAR_DOMAIN, 0, NULL);
1118 if (sym == NULL)
1119 {
1120 /* With some compilers, e.g. HP aCC, static data members are reported
1121 as non-debuggable symbols */
1122 struct minimal_symbol *msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (phys_name, NULL, NULL);
1123 if (!msym)
1124 return NULL;
1125 else
1126 {
1127 retval = value_at (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, fieldno),
1128 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym));
1129 }
1130 }
1131 else
1132 {
1133 /* SYM should never have a SYMBOL_CLASS which will require
1134 read_var_value to use the FRAME parameter. */
1135 if (symbol_read_needs_frame (sym))
1136 warning (_("static field's value depends on the current "
1137 "frame - bad debug info?"));
1138 retval = read_var_value (sym, NULL);
1139 }
1140 if (retval && VALUE_LVAL (retval) == lval_memory)
1141 SET_FIELD_PHYSADDR (TYPE_FIELD (type, fieldno),
1142 VALUE_ADDRESS (retval));
1143 }
1144 return retval;
1145 }
1146
1147 /* Change the enclosing type of a value object VAL to NEW_ENCL_TYPE.
1148 You have to be careful here, since the size of the data area for the value
1149 is set by the length of the enclosing type. So if NEW_ENCL_TYPE is bigger
1150 than the old enclosing type, you have to allocate more space for the data.
1151 The return value is a pointer to the new version of this value structure. */
1152
1153 struct value *
1154 value_change_enclosing_type (struct value *val, struct type *new_encl_type)
1155 {
1156 if (TYPE_LENGTH (new_encl_type) <= TYPE_LENGTH (value_enclosing_type (val)))
1157 {
1158 val->enclosing_type = new_encl_type;
1159 return val;
1160 }
1161 else
1162 {
1163 struct value *new_val;
1164 struct value *prev;
1165
1166 new_val = (struct value *) xrealloc (val, sizeof (struct value) + TYPE_LENGTH (new_encl_type));
1167
1168 new_val->enclosing_type = new_encl_type;
1169
1170 /* We have to make sure this ends up in the same place in the value
1171 chain as the original copy, so it's clean-up behavior is the same.
1172 If the value has been released, this is a waste of time, but there
1173 is no way to tell that in advance, so... */
1174
1175 if (val != all_values)
1176 {
1177 for (prev = all_values; prev != NULL; prev = prev->next)
1178 {
1179 if (prev->next == val)
1180 {
1181 prev->next = new_val;
1182 break;
1183 }
1184 }
1185 }
1186
1187 return new_val;
1188 }
1189 }
1190
1191 /* Given a value ARG1 (offset by OFFSET bytes)
1192 of a struct or union type ARG_TYPE,
1193 extract and return the value of one of its (non-static) fields.
1194 FIELDNO says which field. */
1195
1196 struct value *
1197 value_primitive_field (struct value *arg1, int offset,
1198 int fieldno, struct type *arg_type)
1199 {
1200 struct value *v;
1201 struct type *type;
1202
1203 CHECK_TYPEDEF (arg_type);
1204 type = TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (arg_type, fieldno);
1205
1206 /* Handle packed fields */
1207
1208 if (TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE (arg_type, fieldno))
1209 {
1210 v = value_from_longest (type,
1211 unpack_field_as_long (arg_type,
1212 value_contents (arg1)
1213 + offset,
1214 fieldno));
1215 v->bitpos = TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (arg_type, fieldno) % 8;
1216 v->bitsize = TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE (arg_type, fieldno);
1217 v->offset = value_offset (arg1) + offset
1218 + TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (arg_type, fieldno) / 8;
1219 }
1220 else if (fieldno < TYPE_N_BASECLASSES (arg_type))
1221 {
1222 /* This field is actually a base subobject, so preserve the
1223 entire object's contents for later references to virtual
1224 bases, etc. */
1225 v = allocate_value (value_enclosing_type (arg1));
1226 v->type = type;
1227 if (value_lazy (arg1))
1228 set_value_lazy (v, 1);
1229 else
1230 memcpy (value_contents_all_raw (v), value_contents_all_raw (arg1),
1231 TYPE_LENGTH (value_enclosing_type (arg1)));
1232 v->offset = value_offset (arg1);
1233 v->embedded_offset = (offset + value_embedded_offset (arg1)
1234 + TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (arg_type, fieldno) / 8);
1235 }
1236 else
1237 {
1238 /* Plain old data member */
1239 offset += TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (arg_type, fieldno) / 8;
1240 v = allocate_value (type);
1241 if (value_lazy (arg1))
1242 set_value_lazy (v, 1);
1243 else
1244 memcpy (value_contents_raw (v),
1245 value_contents_raw (arg1) + offset,
1246 TYPE_LENGTH (type));
1247 v->offset = (value_offset (arg1) + offset
1248 + value_embedded_offset (arg1));
1249 }
1250 VALUE_LVAL (v) = VALUE_LVAL (arg1);
1251 if (VALUE_LVAL (arg1) == lval_internalvar)
1252 VALUE_LVAL (v) = lval_internalvar_component;
1253 VALUE_ADDRESS (v) = VALUE_ADDRESS (arg1);
1254 VALUE_REGNUM (v) = VALUE_REGNUM (arg1);
1255 VALUE_FRAME_ID (v) = VALUE_FRAME_ID (arg1);
1256 /* VALUE_OFFSET (v) = VALUE_OFFSET (arg1) + offset
1257 + TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (arg_type, fieldno) / 8; */
1258 return v;
1259 }
1260
1261 /* Given a value ARG1 of a struct or union type,
1262 extract and return the value of one of its (non-static) fields.
1263 FIELDNO says which field. */
1264
1265 struct value *
1266 value_field (struct value *arg1, int fieldno)
1267 {
1268 return value_primitive_field (arg1, 0, fieldno, value_type (arg1));
1269 }
1270
1271 /* Return a non-virtual function as a value.
1272 F is the list of member functions which contains the desired method.
1273 J is an index into F which provides the desired method.
1274
1275 We only use the symbol for its address, so be happy with either a
1276 full symbol or a minimal symbol.
1277 */
1278
1279 struct value *
1280 value_fn_field (struct value **arg1p, struct fn_field *f, int j, struct type *type,
1281 int offset)
1282 {
1283 struct value *v;
1284 struct type *ftype = TYPE_FN_FIELD_TYPE (f, j);
1285 char *physname = TYPE_FN_FIELD_PHYSNAME (f, j);
1286 struct symbol *sym;
1287 struct minimal_symbol *msym;
1288
1289 sym = lookup_symbol (physname, 0, VAR_DOMAIN, 0, NULL);
1290 if (sym != NULL)
1291 {
1292 msym = NULL;
1293 }
1294 else
1295 {
1296 gdb_assert (sym == NULL);
1297 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (physname, NULL, NULL);
1298 if (msym == NULL)
1299 return NULL;
1300 }
1301
1302 v = allocate_value (ftype);
1303 if (sym)
1304 {
1305 VALUE_ADDRESS (v) = BLOCK_START (SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE (sym));
1306 }
1307 else
1308 {
1309 VALUE_ADDRESS (v) = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym);
1310 }
1311
1312 if (arg1p)
1313 {
1314 if (type != value_type (*arg1p))
1315 *arg1p = value_ind (value_cast (lookup_pointer_type (type),
1316 value_addr (*arg1p)));
1317
1318 /* Move the `this' pointer according to the offset.
1319 VALUE_OFFSET (*arg1p) += offset;
1320 */
1321 }
1322
1323 return v;
1324 }
1325
1326 \f
1327 /* Unpack a field FIELDNO of the specified TYPE, from the anonymous object at
1328 VALADDR.
1329
1330 Extracting bits depends on endianness of the machine. Compute the
1331 number of least significant bits to discard. For big endian machines,
1332 we compute the total number of bits in the anonymous object, subtract
1333 off the bit count from the MSB of the object to the MSB of the
1334 bitfield, then the size of the bitfield, which leaves the LSB discard
1335 count. For little endian machines, the discard count is simply the
1336 number of bits from the LSB of the anonymous object to the LSB of the
1337 bitfield.
1338
1339 If the field is signed, we also do sign extension. */
1340
1341 LONGEST
1342 unpack_field_as_long (struct type *type, const char *valaddr, int fieldno)
1343 {
1344 ULONGEST val;
1345 ULONGEST valmask;
1346 int bitpos = TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (type, fieldno);
1347 int bitsize = TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE (type, fieldno);
1348 int lsbcount;
1349 struct type *field_type;
1350
1351 val = extract_unsigned_integer (valaddr + bitpos / 8, sizeof (val));
1352 field_type = TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, fieldno);
1353 CHECK_TYPEDEF (field_type);
1354
1355 /* Extract bits. See comment above. */
1356
1357 if (BITS_BIG_ENDIAN)
1358 lsbcount = (sizeof val * 8 - bitpos % 8 - bitsize);
1359 else
1360 lsbcount = (bitpos % 8);
1361 val >>= lsbcount;
1362
1363 /* If the field does not entirely fill a LONGEST, then zero the sign bits.
1364 If the field is signed, and is negative, then sign extend. */
1365
1366 if ((bitsize > 0) && (bitsize < 8 * (int) sizeof (val)))
1367 {
1368 valmask = (((ULONGEST) 1) << bitsize) - 1;
1369 val &= valmask;
1370 if (!TYPE_UNSIGNED (field_type))
1371 {
1372 if (val & (valmask ^ (valmask >> 1)))
1373 {
1374 val |= ~valmask;
1375 }
1376 }
1377 }
1378 return (val);
1379 }
1380
1381 /* Modify the value of a bitfield. ADDR points to a block of memory in
1382 target byte order; the bitfield starts in the byte pointed to. FIELDVAL
1383 is the desired value of the field, in host byte order. BITPOS and BITSIZE
1384 indicate which bits (in target bit order) comprise the bitfield.
1385 Requires 0 < BITSIZE <= lbits, 0 <= BITPOS+BITSIZE <= lbits, and
1386 0 <= BITPOS, where lbits is the size of a LONGEST in bits. */
1387
1388 void
1389 modify_field (char *addr, LONGEST fieldval, int bitpos, int bitsize)
1390 {
1391 ULONGEST oword;
1392 ULONGEST mask = (ULONGEST) -1 >> (8 * sizeof (ULONGEST) - bitsize);
1393
1394 /* If a negative fieldval fits in the field in question, chop
1395 off the sign extension bits. */
1396 if ((~fieldval & ~(mask >> 1)) == 0)
1397 fieldval &= mask;
1398
1399 /* Warn if value is too big to fit in the field in question. */
1400 if (0 != (fieldval & ~mask))
1401 {
1402 /* FIXME: would like to include fieldval in the message, but
1403 we don't have a sprintf_longest. */
1404 warning (_("Value does not fit in %d bits."), bitsize);
1405
1406 /* Truncate it, otherwise adjoining fields may be corrupted. */
1407 fieldval &= mask;
1408 }
1409
1410 oword = extract_unsigned_integer (addr, sizeof oword);
1411
1412 /* Shifting for bit field depends on endianness of the target machine. */
1413 if (BITS_BIG_ENDIAN)
1414 bitpos = sizeof (oword) * 8 - bitpos - bitsize;
1415
1416 oword &= ~(mask << bitpos);
1417 oword |= fieldval << bitpos;
1418
1419 store_unsigned_integer (addr, sizeof oword, oword);
1420 }
1421 \f
1422 /* Convert C numbers into newly allocated values */
1423
1424 struct value *
1425 value_from_longest (struct type *type, LONGEST num)
1426 {
1427 struct value *val = allocate_value (type);
1428 enum type_code code;
1429 int len;
1430 retry:
1431 code = TYPE_CODE (type);
1432 len = TYPE_LENGTH (type);
1433
1434 switch (code)
1435 {
1436 case TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF:
1437 type = check_typedef (type);
1438 goto retry;
1439 case TYPE_CODE_INT:
1440 case TYPE_CODE_CHAR:
1441 case TYPE_CODE_ENUM:
1442 case TYPE_CODE_BOOL:
1443 case TYPE_CODE_RANGE:
1444 store_signed_integer (value_contents_raw (val), len, num);
1445 break;
1446
1447 case TYPE_CODE_REF:
1448 case TYPE_CODE_PTR:
1449 store_typed_address (value_contents_raw (val), type, (CORE_ADDR) num);
1450 break;
1451
1452 default:
1453 error (_("Unexpected type (%d) encountered for integer constant."), code);
1454 }
1455 return val;
1456 }
1457
1458
1459 /* Create a value representing a pointer of type TYPE to the address
1460 ADDR. */
1461 struct value *
1462 value_from_pointer (struct type *type, CORE_ADDR addr)
1463 {
1464 struct value *val = allocate_value (type);
1465 store_typed_address (value_contents_raw (val), type, addr);
1466 return val;
1467 }
1468
1469
1470 /* Create a value for a string constant to be stored locally
1471 (not in the inferior's memory space, but in GDB memory).
1472 This is analogous to value_from_longest, which also does not
1473 use inferior memory. String shall NOT contain embedded nulls. */
1474
1475 struct value *
1476 value_from_string (char *ptr)
1477 {
1478 struct value *val;
1479 int len = strlen (ptr);
1480 int lowbound = current_language->string_lower_bound;
1481 struct type *string_char_type;
1482 struct type *rangetype;
1483 struct type *stringtype;
1484
1485 rangetype = create_range_type ((struct type *) NULL,
1486 builtin_type_int,
1487 lowbound, len + lowbound - 1);
1488 string_char_type = language_string_char_type (current_language,
1489 current_gdbarch);
1490 stringtype = create_array_type ((struct type *) NULL,
1491 string_char_type,
1492 rangetype);
1493 val = allocate_value (stringtype);
1494 memcpy (value_contents_raw (val), ptr, len);
1495 return val;
1496 }
1497
1498 struct value *
1499 value_from_double (struct type *type, DOUBLEST num)
1500 {
1501 struct value *val = allocate_value (type);
1502 struct type *base_type = check_typedef (type);
1503 enum type_code code = TYPE_CODE (base_type);
1504 int len = TYPE_LENGTH (base_type);
1505
1506 if (code == TYPE_CODE_FLT)
1507 {
1508 store_typed_floating (value_contents_raw (val), base_type, num);
1509 }
1510 else
1511 error (_("Unexpected type encountered for floating constant."));
1512
1513 return val;
1514 }
1515
1516 struct value *
1517 coerce_ref (struct value *arg)
1518 {
1519 struct type *value_type_arg_tmp = check_typedef (value_type (arg));
1520 if (TYPE_CODE (value_type_arg_tmp) == TYPE_CODE_REF)
1521 arg = value_at_lazy (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (value_type_arg_tmp),
1522 unpack_pointer (value_type (arg),
1523 value_contents (arg)));
1524 return arg;
1525 }
1526
1527 struct value *
1528 coerce_array (struct value *arg)
1529 {
1530 arg = coerce_ref (arg);
1531 if (current_language->c_style_arrays
1532 && TYPE_CODE (value_type (arg)) == TYPE_CODE_ARRAY)
1533 arg = value_coerce_array (arg);
1534 if (TYPE_CODE (value_type (arg)) == TYPE_CODE_FUNC)
1535 arg = value_coerce_function (arg);
1536 return arg;
1537 }
1538
1539 struct value *
1540 coerce_number (struct value *arg)
1541 {
1542 arg = coerce_array (arg);
1543 arg = coerce_enum (arg);
1544 return arg;
1545 }
1546
1547 struct value *
1548 coerce_enum (struct value *arg)
1549 {
1550 if (TYPE_CODE (check_typedef (value_type (arg))) == TYPE_CODE_ENUM)
1551 arg = value_cast (builtin_type_unsigned_int, arg);
1552 return arg;
1553 }
1554 \f
1555
1556 /* Should we use DEPRECATED_EXTRACT_STRUCT_VALUE_ADDRESS instead of
1557 EXTRACT_RETURN_VALUE? GCC_P is true if compiled with gcc and TYPE
1558 is the type (which is known to be struct, union or array).
1559
1560 On most machines, the struct convention is used unless we are
1561 using gcc and the type is of a special size. */
1562 /* As of about 31 Mar 93, GCC was changed to be compatible with the
1563 native compiler. GCC 2.3.3 was the last release that did it the
1564 old way. Since gcc2_compiled was not changed, we have no
1565 way to correctly win in all cases, so we just do the right thing
1566 for gcc1 and for gcc2 after this change. Thus it loses for gcc
1567 2.0-2.3.3. This is somewhat unfortunate, but changing gcc2_compiled
1568 would cause more chaos than dealing with some struct returns being
1569 handled wrong. */
1570 /* NOTE: cagney/2004-06-13: Deleted check for "gcc_p". GCC 1.x is
1571 dead. */
1572
1573 int
1574 generic_use_struct_convention (int gcc_p, struct type *value_type)
1575 {
1576 return !(TYPE_LENGTH (value_type) == 1
1577 || TYPE_LENGTH (value_type) == 2
1578 || TYPE_LENGTH (value_type) == 4
1579 || TYPE_LENGTH (value_type) == 8);
1580 }
1581
1582 /* Return true if the function returning the specified type is using
1583 the convention of returning structures in memory (passing in the
1584 address as a hidden first parameter). GCC_P is nonzero if compiled
1585 with GCC. */
1586
1587 int
1588 using_struct_return (struct type *value_type, int gcc_p)
1589 {
1590 enum type_code code = TYPE_CODE (value_type);
1591
1592 if (code == TYPE_CODE_ERROR)
1593 error (_("Function return type unknown."));
1594
1595 if (code == TYPE_CODE_VOID)
1596 /* A void return value is never in memory. See also corresponding
1597 code in "print_return_value". */
1598 return 0;
1599
1600 /* Probe the architecture for the return-value convention. */
1601 return (gdbarch_return_value (current_gdbarch, value_type,
1602 NULL, NULL, NULL)
1603 != RETURN_VALUE_REGISTER_CONVENTION);
1604 }
1605
1606 void
1607 _initialize_values (void)
1608 {
1609 add_cmd ("convenience", no_class, show_convenience,
1610 "Debugger convenience (\"$foo\") variables.\n\
1611 These variables are created when you assign them values;\n\
1612 thus, \"print $foo=1\" gives \"$foo\" the value 1. Values may be any type.\n\n\
1613 A few convenience variables are given values automatically:\n\
1614 \"$_\"holds the last address examined with \"x\" or \"info lines\",\n\
1615 \"$__\" holds the contents of the last address examined with \"x\".",
1616 &showlist);
1617
1618 add_cmd ("values", no_class, show_values,
1619 "Elements of value history around item number IDX (or last ten).",
1620 &showlist);
1621 }