| /* Definitions used by the GDB event loop. |
| Copyright (C) 1999-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| Written by Elena Zannoni <ezannoni@cygnus.com> of Cygnus Solutions. |
| |
| This file is part of GDB. |
| |
| This program 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 3 of the License, or |
| (at your option) any later version. |
| |
| This program 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 this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ |
| |
| /* An event loop listens for events from multiple event sources. When |
| an event arrives, it is queued and processed by calling the |
| appropriate event handler. The event loop then continues to listen |
| for more events. An event loop completes when there are no event |
| sources to listen on. External event sources can be plugged into |
| the loop. |
| |
| There are 4 main components: |
| - a list of file descriptors to be monitored, GDB_NOTIFIER. |
| - a list of asynchronous event sources to be monitored, |
| ASYNC_EVENT_HANDLER_LIST. |
| - a list of events that have occurred, EVENT_QUEUE. |
| - a list of signal handling functions, SIGHANDLER_LIST. |
| |
| GDB_NOTIFIER keeps track of the file descriptor based event |
| sources. ASYNC_EVENT_HANDLER_LIST keeps track of asynchronous |
| event sources that are signalled by some component of gdb, usually |
| a target_ops instance. Event sources for gdb are currently the UI |
| and the target. Gdb communicates with the command line user |
| interface via the readline library and usually communicates with |
| remote targets via a serial port. Serial ports are represented in |
| GDB as file descriptors and select/poll calls. For native targets |
| instead, the communication varies across operating system debug |
| APIs, but usually consists of calls to ptrace and waits (via |
| signals) or calls to poll/select (via file descriptors). In the |
| current gdb, the code handling events related to the target resides |
| in wait_for_inferior for synchronous targets; or, for asynchronous |
| capable targets, by having the target register either a target |
| controlled file descriptor and/or an asynchronous event source in |
| the event loop, with the fetch_inferior_event function as the event |
| callback. In both the synchronous and asynchronous cases, usually |
| the target event is collected through the target_wait interface. |
| The target is free to install other event sources in the event loop |
| if it so requires. |
| |
| EVENT_QUEUE keeps track of the events that have happened during the |
| last iteration of the event loop, and need to be processed. An |
| event is represented by a procedure to be invoked in order to |
| process the event. The queue is scanned head to tail. If the |
| event of interest is a change of state in a file descriptor, then a |
| call to poll or select will be made to detect it. |
| |
| If the events generate signals, they are also queued by special |
| functions that are invoked through traditional signal handlers. |
| The actions to be taken is response to such events will be executed |
| when the SIGHANDLER_LIST is scanned, the next time through the |
| infinite loop. |
| |
| Corollary tasks are the creation and deletion of event sources. */ |
| |
| typedef void *gdb_client_data; |
| struct async_signal_handler; |
| struct async_event_handler; |
| typedef void (handler_func) (int, gdb_client_data); |
| typedef void (sig_handler_func) (gdb_client_data); |
| typedef void (async_event_handler_func) (gdb_client_data); |
| typedef void (timer_handler_func) (gdb_client_data); |
| |
| /* Exported functions from event-loop.c */ |
| |
| extern void start_event_loop (void); |
| extern int gdb_do_one_event (void); |
| extern void delete_file_handler (int fd); |
| extern void add_file_handler (int fd, handler_func *proc, |
| gdb_client_data client_data); |
| extern struct async_signal_handler * |
| create_async_signal_handler (sig_handler_func *proc, |
| gdb_client_data client_data); |
| extern void delete_async_signal_handler (struct async_signal_handler **); |
| extern int create_timer (int milliseconds, |
| timer_handler_func *proc, |
| gdb_client_data client_data); |
| extern void delete_timer (int id); |
| |
| /* Call the handler from HANDLER the next time through the event |
| loop. */ |
| extern void mark_async_signal_handler (struct async_signal_handler *handler); |
| |
| /* Returns true if HANDLER is marked ready. */ |
| |
| extern int |
| async_signal_handler_is_marked (struct async_signal_handler *handler); |
| |
| /* Mark HANDLER as NOT ready. */ |
| |
| extern void clear_async_signal_handler (struct async_signal_handler *handler); |
| |
| /* Create and register an asynchronous event source in the event loop, |
| and set PROC as its callback. CLIENT_DATA is passed as argument to |
| PROC upon its invocation. Returns a pointer to an opaque structure |
| used to mark as ready and to later delete this event source from |
| the event loop. */ |
| extern struct async_event_handler * |
| create_async_event_handler (async_event_handler_func *proc, |
| gdb_client_data client_data); |
| |
| /* Remove the event source pointed by HANDLER_PTR created by |
| CREATE_ASYNC_EVENT_HANDLER from the event loop, and release it. */ |
| extern void |
| delete_async_event_handler (struct async_event_handler **handler_ptr); |
| |
| /* Call the handler from HANDLER the next time through the event |
| loop. */ |
| extern void mark_async_event_handler (struct async_event_handler *handler); |
| |
| /* Mark the handler (ASYNC_HANDLER_PTR) as NOT ready. */ |
| |
| extern void clear_async_event_handler (struct async_event_handler *handler); |
| |
| extern void initialize_async_signal_handlers (void); |