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view lisp/gud.el @ 1943:80482f2d54bf
* .gdbinit (xprocess): New command.
author | Jim Blandy <jimb@redhat.com> |
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date | Tue, 23 Feb 1993 14:14:19 +0000 |
parents | 6eb6b48f6bf1 |
children | b626f5b9a0df |
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;;; gud.el --- Grand Unified Debugger mode for gdb, sdb, or dbx under Emacs ;; Author: Eric S. Raymond <eric@snark.thyrsus.com> ;; Keywords: unix, tools ;; %W% ;; Copyright (C) 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc. ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs. ;; GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by ;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) ;; any later version. ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the ;; GNU General Public License for more details. ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License ;; along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to ;; the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. ;;; Commentary: ;; The ancestral gdb.el was by W. Schelter <wfs@rascal.ics.utexas.edu> ;; It was later rewritten by rms. Some ideas were due to Masanobu. ;; Grand Unification (sdb/dbx support) by Eric S. Raymond <esr@thyrsus.com> ;; The overloading code was then rewritten by Barry Warsaw <bwarsaw@cen.com>, ;; who also hacked the mode to use comint.el. ;; Note: use of this package with sdb requires that your tags.el support ;; the find-tag-noselect entry point. Stock distributions up to 18.57 do ;; *not* include this feature; if it's not included with this file, email ;; esr@snark.thyrsus.com for it or get 18.58. ;; Further note: due to lossage in the Emacs-18 byte compiler, compiled ;; versions of this code will fail with a complaint about gud-step if ;; you invoke the gdb or sdb initializers. This should be fixed in 19. ;;; Code: (require 'comint) (require 'etags) ;; ====================================================================== ;; the overloading mechanism (defun gud-overload-functions (gud-overload-alist) "Overload functions defined in GUD-OVERLOAD-ALIST. This association list has elements of the form (ORIGINAL-FUNCTION-NAME OVERLOAD-FUNCTION)" (mapcar (function (lambda (p) (fset (car p) (symbol-function (cdr p))))) gud-overload-alist)) (defun gud-debugger-startup (f d) (error "GUD not properly entered.")) (defun gud-marker-filter (proc s) (error "GUD not properly entered.")) (defun gud-visit-file (f) (error "GUD not properly entered.")) (defun gud-set-break (proc f n rest) (error "GUD not properly entered.")) ;; This macro is used below to define some basic debugger interface commands. ;; Of course you may use `gud-def' with any other debugger command, including ;; user defined ones. ;; A macro call like (gud-def FUNC NAME KEY DOC) expands to a form ;; which defines FUNC to send the command NAME to the debugger, gives ;; it the docstring DOC, and binds that function to KEY. NAME should ;; be a string. If a numeric prefix argument is given to FUNC, it ;; gets sent after NAME. (defmacro gud-def (func name key &optional doc) (let* ((cstr (list 'if '(not (= 1 arg)) (list 'format "%s %s" name 'arg) name))) (list 'progn (list 'defun func '(arg) (or doc "") '(interactive "p") (list 'gud-call cstr)) (if key (list 'define-key 'gud-mode-map key (list 'quote func)))))) ;; Where gud-display-frame should put the debugging arrow. This is ;; set by the marker-filter, which scans the debugger's output for ;; indications of the current pc. (defvar gud-last-frame nil) ;; All debugger-specific information is collected here ;; Here's how it works, in case you ever need to add a debugger to the table. ;; ;; Each entry must define the following at startup: ;; ;;<name> ;; comint-prompt-regexp ;; gud-<name>-debugger-startup ;; gud-<name>-marker-filter ;; gud-<name>-visit-file ;; gud-<name>-set-break ;; ;; The job of the startup-command method is to fire up a copy of the debugger, ;; given an object file and source directory. ;; ;; The job of the marker-filter method is to detect file/line markers in ;; strings and set the global gud-last-frame to indicate what display ;; action (if any) should be triggered by the marker. Note that only ;; whetever the method *returns* is displayed in the buffer; thus, you ;; can filter the debugger's output, interpreting some and passing on ;; the rest. ;; ;; The job of the visit-file method is to visit and return the buffer indicated ;; by the car of gud-tag-frame. This may be a file name, a tag name, or ;; something else. ;; ;; The job of the gud-set-break method is to send the commands ;; necessary to set a breakpoint at a given line in a given source ;; file. If its third argument TEMP is non-nil, the breakpoint set ;; should be temporary - it should be deleted when it is reached. If ;; the debugger doesn't support such breakpoints, it should set an ;; ordinary breakpoint. ;; ;; Debugger-specific information begins here: ;; ====================================================================== ;; gdb functions (defun gud-gdb-debugger-startup (f d) (make-comint (concat "gud-" f) "gdb" nil "-fullname" "-cd" d f)) (defun gud-gdb-marker-filter (proc string) (if (string-match "\032\032\\([^:\n]*\\):\\([0-9]*\\):.*\n" string) (progn (setq gud-last-frame (cons (substring string (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1)) (string-to-int (substring string (match-beginning 2) (match-end 2))))) ;; this computation means the ^Z^Z-initiated marker in the ;; input string is never emitted. (concat (substring string 0 (match-beginning 0)) (substring string (match-end 0)) )) string)) (defun gud-gdb-visit-file (f) (find-file-noselect f)) (defun gud-gdb-set-break (proc f n temp) (gud-call "%s %s:%d" (if temp "tbreak" "break") f n)) ;;;###autoload (defun gdb (path) "Run gdb on program FILE in buffer *gud-FILE*. The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory and source-file directory for your debugger." (interactive "fRun gdb on file: ") (gud-overload-functions '((gud-debugger-startup . gud-gdb-debugger-startup) (gud-marker-filter . gud-gdb-marker-filter) (gud-visit-file . gud-gdb-visit-file) (gud-set-break . gud-gdb-set-break))) (gud-def gud-step "step" "\C-c\C-s" "Step one source line with display") (gud-def gud-stepi "stepi" "\C-c\C-i" "Step one instruction with display") (gud-def gud-next "next" "\C-c\C-n" "Step one line (skip functions)") (gud-def gud-cont "cont" "\C-c\C-r" "Continue with display") (gud-def gud-finish "finish" "\C-c\C-f" "Finish executing current function") (gud-def gud-up "up" "\C-c<" "Up N stack frames (numeric arg)") (gud-def gud-down "down" "\C-c>" "Down N stack frames (numeric arg)") (gud-common-init path) (setq comint-prompt-regexp "^(.*gdb[+]?) *") (run-hooks 'gdb-mode-hook) ) ;; ====================================================================== ;; sdb functions (defun gud-sdb-debugger-startup (f d) (make-comint (concat "gud-" f) "sdb" nil f "-" d)) (defun gud-sdb-marker-filter (proc string) (if (string-match "\\(^0x\\w* in \\|^\\|\n\\)\\([^:\n]*\\):\\([0-9]*\\):.*\n" string) (setq gud-last-frame (cons (substring string (match-beginning 2) (match-end 2)) (string-to-int (substring string (match-beginning 3) (match-end 3)))))) string) (defun gud-sdb-visit-file (f) (find-tag-noselect f)) ;;; We'll just ignore the TEMP argument for now; I don't know how to ;;; set temporary breakpoints in sdb. (See the description of the ;;; gud-set-break method for details.) (defun gud-sdb-set-break (proc f n temp) (gud-queue-send (format "e %s" f) (format "%d b" n))) ;;;###autoload (defun sdb (path) "Run sdb on program FILE in buffer *gud-FILE*. The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory and source-file directory for your debugger." (interactive "fRun sdb on file: ") (if (not (and (boundp 'tags-file-name) (file-exists-p tags-file-name))) (error "The sdb support requires a valid tags table to work.")) (gud-overload-functions '((gud-debugger-startup . gud-sdb-debugger-startup) (gud-marker-filter . gud-sdb-marker-filter) (gud-visit-file . gud-sdb-visit-file) (gud-set-break . gud-sdb-set-break))) (gud-def gud-step "s" "\C-c\C-s" "Step one source line with display") (gud-def gud-stepi "i" "\C-c\C-i" "Step one instruction with display") (gud-def gud-next "S" "\C-c\C-n" "Step one source line (skip functions)") (gud-def gud-cont "c" "\C-c\C-r" "Continue with display (`resume')") (gud-common-init path) (setq comint-prompt-regexp "\\(^\\|\n\\)\\*") (run-hooks 'sdb-mode-hook) ) ;; ====================================================================== ;; dbx functions (defun gud-dbx-debugger-startup (f d) (make-comint (concat "gud-" f) "dbx" nil f)) (defun gud-dbx-marker-filter (proc string) (if (string-match "stopped in .* at line \\([0-9]*\\) in file \"\\([^\"]*\\)\"" string) (setq gud-last-frame (cons (substring string (match-beginning 2) (match-end 2)) (string-to-int (substring string (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1)))))) string) (defun gud-dbx-visit-file (f) (find-file-noselect f)) ;;; We'll just ignore the TEMP argument for now; I don't know how to ;;; set temporary breakpoints in dbx. (See the description of the ;;; gud-set-break method for details.) (defun gud-dbx-set-break (proc f n temp) (gud-call "stop at \"%s\":%d" f n)) ;;;###autoload (defun dbx (path) "Run dbx on program FILE in buffer *gud-FILE*. The directory containing FILE becomes the initial working directory and source-file directory for your debugger." (interactive "fRun dbx on file: ") (gud-overload-functions '((gud-debugger-startup . gud-dbx-debugger-startup) (gud-marker-filter . gud-dbx-marker-filter) (gud-visit-file . gud-dbx-visit-file) (gud-set-break . gud-dbx-set-break))) (gud-def gud-step "step" "\C-c\C-s" "Step one source line with display") (gud-def gud-stepi "stepi" "\C-c\C-i" "Step one instruction with display") (gud-def gud-next "next" "\C-c\C-n" "Step one line (skip functions)") (gud-def gud-cont "cont" "\C-c\C-r" "Continue with display (`resume')") (gud-def gud-up "up" "\C-c<" "Up N stack frames (numeric arg)") (gud-def gud-down "down" "\C-c>" "Down N stack frames (numeric arg)") (gud-common-init path) (setq comint-prompt-regexp "^[^)]*dbx) *") (run-hooks 'dbx-mode-hook) ) ;; ;; End of debugger-specific information ;; (defvar gud-mode-map nil "Keymap for gud-mode.") (defvar gud-commands nil "List of strings or functions used by send-gud-command. It is for customization by you.") (defvar gud-command-queue nil) ;;; When we send a command to the debugger via gud-call, it's annoying ;;; to see the command and the new prompt inserted into the debugger's ;;; buffer; we have other ways of knowing the command has completed. ;;; ;;; If the buffer looks like this: ;;; -------------------- ;;; (gdb) set args foo bar ;;; (gdb) -!- ;;; -------------------- ;;; (the -!- marks the location of point), and we type `C-x SPC' in a ;;; source file to set a breakpoint, we want the buffer to end up like ;;; this: ;;; -------------------- ;;; (gdb) set args foo bar ;;; Breakpoint 1 at 0x92: file make-docfile.c, line 49. ;;; (gdb) -!- ;;; -------------------- ;;; Essentially, the old prompt is deleted, and the command's output ;;; and the new prompt take its place. ;;; ;;; Not echoing the command is easy enough; you send it directly using ;;; process-send-string, and it never enters the buffer. However, ;;; getting rid of the old prompt is trickier; you don't want to do it ;;; when you send the command, since that will result in an annoying ;;; flicker as the prompt is deleted, redisplay occurs while Emacs ;;; waits for a response from the debugger, and the new prompt is ;;; inserted. Instead, we'll wait until we actually get some output ;;; from the subprocess before we delete the prompt. If the command ;;; produced no output other than a new prompt, that prompt will most ;;; likely be in the first chunk of output received, so we will delete ;;; the prompt and then replace it with an identical one. If the ;;; command produces output, the prompt is moving anyway, so the ;;; flicker won't be annoying. ;;; ;;; So - when we want to delete the prompt upon receipt of the next ;;; chunk of debugger output, we position gud-delete-prompt-marker at ;;; the start of the prompt; the process filter will notice this, and ;;; delete all text between it and the process output marker. If ;;; gud-delete-prompt-marker points nowhere, we leave the current ;;; prompt alone. (defvar gud-delete-prompt-marker nil) (if gud-mode-map nil (setq gud-mode-map (copy-keymap comint-mode-map)) (define-key gud-mode-map "\C-c\C-l" 'gud-refresh)) ;; Global mappings --- we'll invoke these from a source buffer. (define-key ctl-x-map " " 'gud-break) (define-key ctl-x-map "&" 'send-gud-command) (defun gud-mode () "Major mode for interacting with an inferior debugger process. You start it up with one of the commands M-x gdb, M-x sdb, or M-x dbx. Each entry point finishes by executing a hook; gdb-mode-hook, sdb-mode-hook or dbx-mode-hook respectively. After startup, the following commands are available: \\{gud-mode-map} \\[gud-refresh] displays in the other window the last line referred to in the gud buffer. \\[gud-step], \\[gud-next], and \\[gud-stepi] in the gud window, do a step-one-line, step-one-line (not entering function calls), and step-one-instruction and then update the other window with the current file and position. \\[gud-cont] continues execution. The above commands are common to all supported debuggers. If you are using gdb or dbx, the following additional commands will be available: \\[gud-up] pops up through an enclosing stack frame. \\[gud-down] drops back down through one. If you are using gdb, \\[gdb-finish] runs execution to the return from the current function and stops. These functions repeat themselves the appropriate number of times if you give a prefix argument. If you are in a source file, you may do the following: Set a breakpoint at the current line by doing \\[gud-break]. This causes an appropriate set-break to be send to the debugger; of course, if the file you're visiting doesn't correspond to any code in the executable this will have no effect or raise an error. Execute a user-defined command at point with \\[send-gud-command]; the prefix argument is taken as an index into the list of strings gud-commands. A %s in a gud-commands string is substituted with a number or address picked up from point. Other commands for interacting with the debugger process are inherited from comint mode, which see." (interactive) (comint-mode) ; (kill-all-local-variables) (setq major-mode 'gud-mode) (setq mode-name "Debugger") (setq mode-line-process '(": %s")) (use-local-map gud-mode-map) (make-local-variable 'gud-last-frame) (setq gud-last-frame nil) (make-local-variable 'comint-prompt-regexp) (make-local-variable 'gud-delete-prompt-marker) (setq gud-delete-prompt-marker (make-marker)) (run-hooks 'gud-mode-hook) ) (defvar current-gud-buffer nil) (defun gud-common-init (path) ;; perform initializations common to all debuggers (setq path (expand-file-name path)) (let ((file (file-name-nondirectory path))) (switch-to-buffer (concat "*gud-" file "*")) (setq default-directory (file-name-directory path)) (or (bolp) (newline)) (insert "Current directory is " default-directory "\n") (gud-debugger-startup file default-directory)) (gud-mode) (set-process-filter (get-buffer-process (current-buffer)) 'gud-filter) (set-process-sentinel (get-buffer-process (current-buffer)) 'gud-sentinel) (setq gud-command-queue nil) (gud-set-buffer) ) (defun gud-set-buffer () (cond ((eq major-mode 'gud-mode) (setq current-gud-buffer (current-buffer))))) (defun gud-filter (proc string) ;; This function is responsible for inserting output from your debugger ;; into the buffer. The hard work is done by the method that is ;; the value of gud-marker-filter. (let ((inhibit-quit t)) (gud-filter-insert proc (gud-marker-filter proc string)) ;; If we've got queued commands and we see a prompt, pop one and send it. ;; In theory we should check that a prompt has been issued before sending ;; queued commands. In practice, command responses from the first through ;; penultimate elements of a command sequence are short enough that we ;; don't really have to bother. (if gud-command-queue (progn (gud-call (car gud-command-queue)) (setq gud-command-queue (cdr gud-command-queue)) ) ))) (defun gud-filter-insert (proc string) ;; Here's where the actual buffer insertion is done (save-excursion (set-buffer (process-buffer proc)) (let ((moving (= (point) (process-mark proc))) (output-after-point (< (point) (process-mark proc)))) (save-excursion (goto-char (process-mark proc)) ;; If we have been so requested, delete the debugger prompt. (if (marker-buffer gud-delete-prompt-marker) (progn (delete-region (point) gud-delete-prompt-marker) (set-marker gud-delete-prompt-marker nil))) (insert-before-markers string) ;; Check for a filename-and-line number. ;; Don't display the specified file ;; unless (1) point is at or after the position where output appears ;; and (2) this buffer is on the screen. (if (and gud-last-frame (not output-after-point) (get-buffer-window (current-buffer))) (gud-display-frame))) (if moving (goto-char (process-mark proc)))))) (defun gud-sentinel (proc msg) (cond ((null (buffer-name (process-buffer proc))) ;; buffer killed ;; Stop displaying an arrow in a source file. (setq overlay-arrow-position nil) (set-process-buffer proc nil)) ((memq (process-status proc) '(signal exit)) ;; Stop displaying an arrow in a source file. (setq overlay-arrow-position nil) ;; Fix the mode line. (setq mode-line-process (concat ": " (symbol-name (process-status proc)))) (let* ((obuf (current-buffer))) ;; save-excursion isn't the right thing if ;; process-buffer is current-buffer (unwind-protect (progn ;; Write something in *compilation* and hack its mode line, (set-buffer (process-buffer proc)) ;; Force mode line redisplay soon (set-buffer-modified-p (buffer-modified-p)) (if (eobp) (insert ?\n mode-name " " msg) (save-excursion (goto-char (point-max)) (insert ?\n mode-name " " msg))) ;; If buffer and mode line will show that the process ;; is dead, we can delete it now. Otherwise it ;; will stay around until M-x list-processes. (delete-process proc)) ;; Restore old buffer, but don't restore old point ;; if obuf is the gud buffer. (set-buffer obuf)))))) (defun gud-refresh (&optional arg) "Fix up a possibly garbled display, and redraw the arrow." (interactive "P") (recenter arg) (gud-display-frame)) (defun gud-display-frame () "Find and obey the last filename-and-line marker from the debugger. Obeying it means displaying in another window the specified file and line." (interactive) (if gud-last-frame (progn (gud-set-buffer) (gud-display-line (car gud-last-frame) (cdr gud-last-frame)) (setq gud-last-frame nil)))) ;; Make sure the file named TRUE-FILE is in a buffer that appears on the screen ;; and that its line LINE is visible. ;; Put the overlay-arrow on the line LINE in that buffer. (defun gud-display-line (true-file line) (let* ((buffer (gud-visit-file true-file)) (window (display-buffer buffer t)) (pos)) (save-excursion (set-buffer buffer) (save-restriction (widen) (goto-line line) (setq pos (point)) (setq overlay-arrow-string "=>") (or overlay-arrow-position (setq overlay-arrow-position (make-marker))) (set-marker overlay-arrow-position (point) (current-buffer))) (cond ((or (< pos (point-min)) (> pos (point-max))) (widen) (goto-char pos)))) (set-window-point window overlay-arrow-position))) (defun gud-call (command &rest args) "Invoke the debugger COMMAND displaying source in other window." (interactive) (gud-set-buffer) (let ((command (concat (apply 'format command args) "\n")) (proc (get-buffer-process current-gud-buffer))) ;; Arrange for the current prompt to get deleted. (save-excursion (set-buffer current-gud-buffer) (goto-char (process-mark proc)) (beginning-of-line) (if (looking-at comint-prompt-regexp) (set-marker gud-delete-prompt-marker (point)))) (goto-char (point-max)) (process-send-string proc command))) (defun gud-queue-send (&rest cmdlist) ;; Send the first command, queue the rest for send after successive ;; send on subsequent prompts (interactive) (gud-call (car cmdlist)) (setq gud-command-queue (append gud-command-queue (cdr cmdlist)))) (defun gud-apply-from-source (func &rest args) ;; Apply a method from the gud buffer environment, passing it file ;; and line, then ARGS. This is intended to be used for gud ;; commands called from a source file. (if (not buffer-file-name) (error "There is no file associated with this buffer")) (let ((file (file-name-nondirectory buffer-file-name)) (line (save-restriction (widen) (1+ (count-lines 1 (point)))))) (save-excursion (gud-set-buffer) (apply func (get-buffer-process current-gud-buffer) file line args) ))) (defun gud-break (arg) "Set breakpoint at this source line. With prefix argument, set a temporary breakpoint, if the debugger in use supports such things. (A temporary breakpoint is one which will be deleted when it is reached.)" (interactive "P") (gud-apply-from-source 'gud-set-break arg)) (defun gud-read-address () "Return a string containing the core-address found in the buffer at point." (save-excursion (let ((pt (point)) found begin) (setq found (if (search-backward "0x" (- pt 7) t)(point))) (cond (found (forward-char 2) (buffer-substring found (progn (re-search-forward "[^0-9a-f]") (forward-char -1) (point)))) (t (setq begin (progn (re-search-backward "[^0-9]") (forward-char 1) (point))) (forward-char 1) (re-search-forward "[^0-9]") (forward-char -1) (buffer-substring begin (point))))))) (defun send-gud-command (arg) "This command reads the number where the cursor is positioned. A numeric arg selects the ARG'th member COMMAND of the list gud-commands. If COMMAND is a string, (format COMMAND ADDR) is inserted at the end of the debugger buffer, otherwise (funcall COMMAND ADDR) is inserted. For example, \"p (rtx)%s->fld[0].rtint\" is a possible string to be a member of gud-commands." (interactive "P") (let (comm addr) (if arg (setq comm (nth arg gud-commands))) (setq addr (gud-read-address)) (if (eq (current-buffer) current-gud-buffer) (set-mark (point))) (cond (comm (setq comm (if (stringp comm) (format comm addr) (funcall comm addr)))) (t (setq comm addr))) (switch-to-buffer current-gud-buffer) (goto-char (point-max)) (insert-string comm))) ;;; gud.el ends here