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/* Multi-process/thread control defs for GDB, the GNU debugger.
Copyright (C) 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1997, 1998, 1999,
2000, 2007, 2008, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Contributed by Lynx Real-Time Systems, Inc. Los Gatos, CA.
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/>. */
#ifndef GDBTHREAD_H
#define GDBTHREAD_H
struct symtab;
#include "breakpoint.h"
#include "frame.h"
#include "ui-out.h"
#include "inferior.h"
struct thread_info
{
struct thread_info *next;
ptid_t ptid; /* "Actual process id";
In fact, this may be overloaded with
kernel thread id, etc. */
int num; /* Convenient handle (GDB thread id) */
/* Non-zero means the thread is executing. Note: this is different
from saying that there is an active target and we are stopped at
a breakpoint, for instance. This is a real indicator whether the
thread is off and running. */
/* This field is internal to thread.c. Never access it directly,
use is_executing instead. */
int executing_;
/* Frontend view of the thread state. Note that the RUNNING/STOPPED
states are different from EXECUTING. When the thread is stopped
internally while handling an internal event, like a software
single-step breakpoint, EXECUTING will be false, but running will
still be true. As a possible future extension, this could turn
into enum { stopped, exited, stepping, finishing, until(ling),
running ... } */
/* This field is internal to thread.c. Never access it directly,
use is_running instead. */
int state_;
/* If this is > 0, then it means there's code out there that relies
on this thread being listed. Don't delete it from the lists even
if we detect it exiting. */
int refcount;
/* User/external stepping state. */
/* Step-resume or longjmp-resume breakpoint. */
struct breakpoint *step_resume_breakpoint;
/* Range to single step within.
If this is nonzero, respond to a single-step signal by continuing
to step if the pc is in this range.
If step_range_start and step_range_end are both 1, it means to
step for a single instruction (FIXME: it might clean up
wait_for_inferior in a minor way if this were changed to the
address of the instruction and that address plus one. But maybe
not.). */
CORE_ADDR step_range_start; /* Inclusive */
CORE_ADDR step_range_end; /* Exclusive */
/* Stack frame address as of when stepping command was issued.
This is how we know when we step into a subroutine call, and how
to set the frame for the breakpoint used to step out. */
struct frame_id step_frame_id;
/* Similarly, the frame ID of the underlying stack frame (skipping
any inlined frames). */
struct frame_id step_stack_frame_id;
int current_line;
struct symtab *current_symtab;
/* Internal stepping state. */
/* Record the pc of the thread the last time it stopped. This is
maintained by proceed and keep_going, and used in
adjust_pc_after_break to distinguish a hardware single-step
SIGTRAP from a breakpoint SIGTRAP. */
CORE_ADDR prev_pc;
/* Nonzero if we are presently stepping over a breakpoint.
If we hit a breakpoint or watchpoint, and then continue, we need
to single step the current thread with breakpoints disabled, to
avoid hitting the same breakpoint or watchpoint again. And we
should step just a single thread and keep other threads stopped,
so that other threads don't miss breakpoints while they are
removed.
So, this variable simultaneously means that we need to single
step the current thread, keep other threads stopped, and that
breakpoints should be removed while we step.
This variable is set either:
- in proceed, when we resume inferior on user's explicit request
- in keep_going, if handle_inferior_event decides we need to
step over breakpoint.
The variable is cleared in normal_stop. The proceed calls
wait_for_inferior, which calls handle_inferior_event in a loop,
and until wait_for_inferior exits, this variable is changed only
by keep_going. */
int trap_expected;
/* Should we step over breakpoint next time keep_going is called? */
int stepping_over_breakpoint;
/* Set to TRUE if we should finish single-stepping over a breakpoint
after hitting the current step-resume breakpoint. */
int step_after_step_resume_breakpoint;
/* This is set TRUE when a catchpoint of a shared library event
triggers. Since we don't wish to leave the inferior in the
solib hook when we report the event, we step the inferior
back to user code before stopping and reporting the event. */
int stepping_through_solib_after_catch;
/* When stepping_through_solib_after_catch is TRUE, this is a
list of the catchpoints that should be reported as triggering
when we finally do stop stepping. */
bpstat stepping_through_solib_catchpoints;
/* Per-thread command support. */
/* Pointer to what is left to do for an execution command after the
target stops. Used only in asynchronous mode, by targets that
support async execution. Several execution commands use it. */
struct continuation *continuations;
/* Similar to the above, but used when a single execution command
requires several resume/stop iterations. Used by the step
command. */
struct continuation *intermediate_continuations;
/* Nonzero if the thread is being proceeded for a "finish" command
or a similar situation when stop_registers should be saved. */
int proceed_to_finish;
/* Nonzero if the thread is being proceeded for an inferior function
call. */
int in_infcall;
enum step_over_calls_kind step_over_calls;
/* Nonzero if stopped due to a step command. */
int stop_step;
/* If stepping, nonzero means step count is > 1 so don't print frame
next time inferior stops if it stops due to stepping. */
int step_multi;
/* This is used to remember when a fork or vfork event was caught by
a catchpoint, and thus the event is to be followed at the next
resume of the thread, and not immediately. */
struct target_waitstatus pending_follow;
/* Last signal that the inferior received (why it stopped). */
enum target_signal stop_signal;
/* Chain containing status of breakpoint(s) the thread stopped
at. */
bpstat stop_bpstat;
/* True if this thread has been explicitly requested to stop. */
int stop_requested;
/* Private data used by the target vector implementation. */
struct private_thread_info *private;
};
/* Create an empty thread list, or empty the existing one. */
extern void init_thread_list (void);
/* Add a thread to the thread list, print a message
that a new thread is found, and return the pointer to
the new thread. Caller my use this pointer to
initialize the private thread data. */
extern struct thread_info *add_thread (ptid_t ptid);
/* Same as add_thread, but does not print a message
about new thread. */
extern struct thread_info *add_thread_silent (ptid_t ptid);
/* Same as add_thread, and sets the private info. */
extern struct thread_info *add_thread_with_info (ptid_t ptid,
struct private_thread_info *);
/* Delete an existing thread list entry. */
extern void delete_thread (ptid_t);
/* Delete an existing thread list entry, and be quiet about it. Used
after the process this thread having belonged to having already
exited, for example. */
extern void delete_thread_silent (ptid_t);
/* Delete a step_resume_breakpoint from the thread database. */
extern void delete_step_resume_breakpoint (struct thread_info *);
/* Translate the integer thread id (GDB's homegrown id, not the system's)
into a "pid" (which may be overloaded with extra thread information). */
extern ptid_t thread_id_to_pid (int);
/* Translate a 'pid' (which may be overloaded with extra thread information)
into the integer thread id (GDB's homegrown id, not the system's). */
extern int pid_to_thread_id (ptid_t ptid);
/* Boolean test for an already-known pid (which may be overloaded with
extra thread information). */
extern int in_thread_list (ptid_t ptid);
/* Boolean test for an already-known thread id (GDB's homegrown id,
not the system's). */
extern int valid_thread_id (int thread);
/* Search function to lookup a thread by 'pid'. */
extern struct thread_info *find_thread_ptid (ptid_t ptid);
/* Find thread by GDB user-visible thread number. */
struct thread_info *find_thread_id (int num);
/* Finds the first thread of the inferior given by PID. If PID is -1,
returns the first thread in the list. */
struct thread_info *first_thread_of_process (int pid);
/* Returns any thread of process PID. */
extern struct thread_info *any_thread_of_process (int pid);
/* Change the ptid of thread OLD_PTID to NEW_PTID. */
void thread_change_ptid (ptid_t old_ptid, ptid_t new_ptid);
/* Iterator function to call a user-provided callback function
once for each known thread. */
typedef int (*thread_callback_func) (struct thread_info *, void *);
extern struct thread_info *iterate_over_threads (thread_callback_func, void *);
extern int thread_count (void);
/* Switch from one thread to another. */
extern void switch_to_thread (ptid_t ptid);
/* Marks thread PTID is running, or stopped.
If PIDGET (PTID) is -1, marks all threads. */
extern void set_running (ptid_t ptid, int running);
/* Marks or clears thread(s) PTID as having been requested to stop.
If PTID is MINUS_ONE_PTID, applies to all threads. If
ptid_is_pid(PTID) is true, applies to all threads of the process
pointed at by PTID. If STOP, then the THREAD_STOP_REQUESTED
observer is called with PTID as argument. */
extern void set_stop_requested (ptid_t ptid, int stop);
/* NOTE: Since the thread state is not a boolean, most times, you do
not want to check it with negation. If you really want to check if
the thread is stopped,
use (good):
if (is_stopped (ptid))
instead of (bad):
if (!is_running (ptid))
The latter also returns true on exited threads, most likelly not
what you want. */
/* Reports if in the frontend's perpective, thread PTID is running. */
extern int is_running (ptid_t ptid);
/* Is this thread listed, but known to have exited? We keep it listed
(but not visible) until it's safe to delete. */
extern int is_exited (ptid_t ptid);
/* In the frontend's perpective, is this thread stopped? */
extern int is_stopped (ptid_t ptid);
/* In the frontend's perpective is there any thread running? */
extern int any_running (void);
/* Marks thread PTID as executing, or not. If PIDGET (PTID) is -1,
marks all threads.
Note that this is different from the running state. See the
description of state_ and executing_ fields of struct
thread_info. */
extern void set_executing (ptid_t ptid, int executing);
/* Reports if thread PTID is executing. */
extern int is_executing (ptid_t ptid);
/* Merge the executing property of thread PTID over to its thread
state property (frontend running/stopped view).
"not executing" -> "stopped"
"executing" -> "running"
"exited" -> "exited"
If PIDGET (PTID) is -1, go over all threads.
Notifications are only emitted if the thread state did change. */
extern void finish_thread_state (ptid_t ptid);
/* Same as FINISH_THREAD_STATE, but with an interface suitable to be
registered as a cleanup. PTID_P points to the ptid_t that is
passed to FINISH_THREAD_STATE. */
extern void finish_thread_state_cleanup (void *ptid_p);
/* Commands with a prefix of `thread'. */
extern struct cmd_list_element *thread_cmd_list;
/* Print notices on thread events (attach, detach, etc.), set with
`set print thread-events'. */
extern int print_thread_events;
extern void print_thread_info (struct ui_out *uiout, int thread,
int pid);
extern struct cleanup *make_cleanup_restore_current_thread (void);
/* Returns a pointer into the thread_info corresponding to
INFERIOR_PTID. INFERIOR_PTID *must* be in the thread list. */
extern struct thread_info* inferior_thread (void);
#endif /* GDBTHREAD_H */