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Commit | Line | Data |
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c5f0f3d0 | 1 | /* Line completion stuff for GDB, the GNU debugger. |
b6ba6518 | 2 | Copyright 2000, 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
3 | |
4 | This file is part of GDB. | |
5 | ||
6 | This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify | |
7 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by | |
8 | the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or | |
9 | (at your option) any later version. | |
10 | ||
11 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, | |
12 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of | |
13 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the | |
14 | GNU General Public License for more details. | |
15 | ||
16 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License | |
17 | along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software | |
18 | Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, | |
19 | Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ | |
20 | ||
21 | #include "defs.h" | |
22 | #include "symtab.h" | |
23 | #include "gdbtypes.h" | |
24 | #include "expression.h" | |
c94fdfd0 | 25 | #include "filenames.h" /* for DOSish file names */ |
51065942 | 26 | #include "language.h" |
c5f0f3d0 | 27 | |
18a642a1 AC |
28 | #include "cli/cli-decode.h" |
29 | ||
03717487 MS |
30 | /* FIXME: This is needed because of lookup_cmd_1 (). We should be |
31 | calling a hook instead so we eliminate the CLI dependency. */ | |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
32 | #include "gdbcmd.h" |
33 | ||
c94fdfd0 | 34 | /* Needed for rl_completer_word_break_characters() and for |
38017ce8 | 35 | rl_filename_completion_function. */ |
dbda9972 | 36 | #include "readline/readline.h" |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
37 | |
38 | /* readline defines this. */ | |
39 | #undef savestring | |
40 | ||
41 | #include "completer.h" | |
42 | ||
43 | /* Prototypes for local functions */ | |
38017ce8 | 44 | static |
03717487 MS |
45 | char *line_completion_function (const char *text, int matches, |
46 | char *line_buffer, | |
d75b5104 | 47 | int point); |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
48 | |
49 | /* readline uses the word breaks for two things: | |
50 | (1) In figuring out where to point the TEXT parameter to the | |
51 | rl_completion_entry_function. Since we don't use TEXT for much, | |
52 | it doesn't matter a lot what the word breaks are for this purpose, but | |
53 | it does affect how much stuff M-? lists. | |
54 | (2) If one of the matches contains a word break character, readline | |
55 | will quote it. That's why we switch between | |
51065942 | 56 | current_language->la_word_break_characters() and |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
57 | gdb_completer_command_word_break_characters. I'm not sure when |
58 | we need this behavior (perhaps for funky characters in C++ symbols?). */ | |
59 | ||
60 | /* Variables which are necessary for fancy command line editing. */ | |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
61 | |
62 | /* When completing on command names, we remove '-' from the list of | |
63 | word break characters, since we use it in command names. If the | |
64 | readline library sees one in any of the current completion strings, | |
65 | it thinks that the string needs to be quoted and automatically supplies | |
66 | a leading quote. */ | |
67 | static char *gdb_completer_command_word_break_characters = | |
68 | " \t\n!@#$%^&*()+=|~`}{[]\"';:?/>.<,"; | |
69 | ||
70 | /* When completing on file names, we remove from the list of word | |
71 | break characters any characters that are commonly used in file | |
72 | names, such as '-', '+', '~', etc. Otherwise, readline displays | |
73 | incorrect completion candidates. */ | |
c3690141 | 74 | #ifdef HAVE_DOS_BASED_FILE_SYSTEM |
7830cf6f EZ |
75 | /* MS-DOS and MS-Windows use colon as part of the drive spec, and most |
76 | programs support @foo style response files. */ | |
77 | static char *gdb_completer_file_name_break_characters = " \t\n*|\"';?><@"; | |
78 | #else | |
79 | static char *gdb_completer_file_name_break_characters = " \t\n*|\"';:?><"; | |
80 | #endif | |
c5f0f3d0 | 81 | |
c94fdfd0 EZ |
82 | /* These are used when completing on locations, which can mix file |
83 | names and symbol names separated by a colon. */ | |
84 | static char *gdb_completer_loc_break_characters = " \t\n*|\"';:?><,"; | |
85 | ||
c5f0f3d0 FN |
86 | /* Characters that can be used to quote completion strings. Note that we |
87 | can't include '"' because the gdb C parser treats such quoted sequences | |
88 | as strings. */ | |
89 | static char *gdb_completer_quote_characters = "'"; | |
90 | \f | |
91 | /* Accessor for some completer data that may interest other files. */ | |
92 | ||
c5f0f3d0 FN |
93 | char * |
94 | get_gdb_completer_quote_characters (void) | |
95 | { | |
96 | return gdb_completer_quote_characters; | |
97 | } | |
98 | ||
d75b5104 EZ |
99 | /* Line completion interface function for readline. */ |
100 | ||
101 | char * | |
38017ce8 | 102 | readline_line_completion_function (const char *text, int matches) |
d75b5104 EZ |
103 | { |
104 | return line_completion_function (text, matches, rl_line_buffer, rl_point); | |
105 | } | |
106 | ||
107 | /* This can be used for functions which don't want to complete on symbols | |
108 | but don't want to complete on anything else either. */ | |
109 | char ** | |
110 | noop_completer (char *text, char *prefix) | |
111 | { | |
112 | return NULL; | |
113 | } | |
114 | ||
c5f0f3d0 FN |
115 | /* Complete on filenames. */ |
116 | char ** | |
117 | filename_completer (char *text, char *word) | |
118 | { | |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
119 | int subsequent_name; |
120 | char **return_val; | |
121 | int return_val_used; | |
122 | int return_val_alloced; | |
123 | ||
124 | return_val_used = 0; | |
125 | /* Small for testing. */ | |
126 | return_val_alloced = 1; | |
127 | return_val = (char **) xmalloc (return_val_alloced * sizeof (char *)); | |
128 | ||
129 | subsequent_name = 0; | |
130 | while (1) | |
131 | { | |
132 | char *p; | |
38017ce8 | 133 | p = rl_filename_completion_function (text, subsequent_name); |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
134 | if (return_val_used >= return_val_alloced) |
135 | { | |
136 | return_val_alloced *= 2; | |
137 | return_val = | |
138 | (char **) xrealloc (return_val, | |
139 | return_val_alloced * sizeof (char *)); | |
140 | } | |
141 | if (p == NULL) | |
142 | { | |
143 | return_val[return_val_used++] = p; | |
144 | break; | |
145 | } | |
146 | /* We need to set subsequent_name to a non-zero value before the | |
147 | continue line below, because otherwise, if the first file seen | |
148 | by GDB is a backup file whose name ends in a `~', we will loop | |
149 | indefinitely. */ | |
150 | subsequent_name = 1; | |
151 | /* Like emacs, don't complete on old versions. Especially useful | |
152 | in the "source" command. */ | |
153 | if (p[strlen (p) - 1] == '~') | |
154 | continue; | |
155 | ||
156 | { | |
157 | char *q; | |
158 | if (word == text) | |
159 | /* Return exactly p. */ | |
160 | return_val[return_val_used++] = p; | |
161 | else if (word > text) | |
162 | { | |
163 | /* Return some portion of p. */ | |
164 | q = xmalloc (strlen (p) + 5); | |
165 | strcpy (q, p + (word - text)); | |
166 | return_val[return_val_used++] = q; | |
b8c9b27d | 167 | xfree (p); |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
168 | } |
169 | else | |
170 | { | |
171 | /* Return some of TEXT plus p. */ | |
172 | q = xmalloc (strlen (p) + (text - word) + 5); | |
173 | strncpy (q, word, text - word); | |
174 | q[text - word] = '\0'; | |
175 | strcat (q, p); | |
176 | return_val[return_val_used++] = q; | |
b8c9b27d | 177 | xfree (p); |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
178 | } |
179 | } | |
180 | } | |
181 | #if 0 | |
182 | /* There is no way to do this just long enough to affect quote inserting | |
183 | without also affecting the next completion. This should be fixed in | |
184 | readline. FIXME. */ | |
185 | /* Insure that readline does the right thing | |
186 | with respect to inserting quotes. */ | |
187 | rl_completer_word_break_characters = ""; | |
188 | #endif | |
189 | return return_val; | |
190 | } | |
191 | ||
c94fdfd0 EZ |
192 | /* Complete on locations, which might be of two possible forms: |
193 | ||
194 | file:line | |
195 | or | |
196 | symbol+offset | |
197 | ||
198 | This is intended to be used in commands that set breakpoints etc. */ | |
199 | char ** | |
200 | location_completer (char *text, char *word) | |
201 | { | |
202 | int n_syms = 0, n_files = 0; | |
203 | char ** fn_list = NULL; | |
204 | char ** list = NULL; | |
205 | char *p; | |
206 | int quote_found = 0; | |
207 | int quoted = *text == '\'' || *text == '"'; | |
208 | int quote_char = '\0'; | |
209 | char *colon = NULL; | |
210 | char *file_to_match = NULL; | |
211 | char *symbol_start = text; | |
212 | char *orig_text = text; | |
213 | size_t text_len; | |
214 | ||
215 | /* Do we have an unquoted colon, as in "break foo.c::bar"? */ | |
216 | for (p = text; *p != '\0'; ++p) | |
217 | { | |
218 | if (*p == '\\' && p[1] == '\'') | |
219 | p++; | |
220 | else if (*p == '\'' || *p == '"') | |
221 | { | |
222 | quote_found = *p; | |
223 | quote_char = *p++; | |
224 | while (*p != '\0' && *p != quote_found) | |
225 | { | |
226 | if (*p == '\\' && p[1] == quote_found) | |
227 | p++; | |
228 | p++; | |
229 | } | |
230 | ||
231 | if (*p == quote_found) | |
232 | quote_found = 0; | |
233 | else | |
234 | break; /* hit the end of text */ | |
235 | } | |
236 | #if HAVE_DOS_BASED_FILE_SYSTEM | |
237 | /* If we have a DOS-style absolute file name at the beginning of | |
238 | TEXT, and the colon after the drive letter is the only colon | |
239 | we found, pretend the colon is not there. */ | |
240 | else if (p < text + 3 && *p == ':' && p == text + 1 + quoted) | |
241 | ; | |
242 | #endif | |
243 | else if (*p == ':' && !colon) | |
244 | { | |
245 | colon = p; | |
246 | symbol_start = p + 1; | |
247 | } | |
51065942 | 248 | else if (strchr (current_language->la_word_break_characters(), *p)) |
c94fdfd0 EZ |
249 | symbol_start = p + 1; |
250 | } | |
251 | ||
252 | if (quoted) | |
253 | text++; | |
254 | text_len = strlen (text); | |
255 | ||
256 | /* Where is the file name? */ | |
257 | if (colon) | |
258 | { | |
259 | char *s; | |
260 | ||
261 | file_to_match = (char *) xmalloc (colon - text + 1); | |
262 | strncpy (file_to_match, text, colon - text + 1); | |
263 | /* Remove trailing colons and quotes from the file name. */ | |
264 | for (s = file_to_match + (colon - text); | |
265 | s > file_to_match; | |
266 | s--) | |
267 | if (*s == ':' || *s == quote_char) | |
268 | *s = '\0'; | |
269 | } | |
270 | /* If the text includes a colon, they want completion only on a | |
271 | symbol name after the colon. Otherwise, we need to complete on | |
272 | symbols as well as on files. */ | |
273 | if (colon) | |
274 | { | |
275 | list = make_file_symbol_completion_list (symbol_start, word, | |
276 | file_to_match); | |
277 | xfree (file_to_match); | |
278 | } | |
279 | else | |
280 | { | |
281 | list = make_symbol_completion_list (symbol_start, word); | |
282 | /* If text includes characters which cannot appear in a file | |
283 | name, they cannot be asking for completion on files. */ | |
284 | if (strcspn (text, gdb_completer_file_name_break_characters) == text_len) | |
285 | fn_list = make_source_files_completion_list (text, text); | |
286 | } | |
287 | ||
288 | /* How many completions do we have in both lists? */ | |
289 | if (fn_list) | |
290 | for ( ; fn_list[n_files]; n_files++) | |
291 | ; | |
292 | if (list) | |
293 | for ( ; list[n_syms]; n_syms++) | |
294 | ; | |
295 | ||
296 | /* Make list[] large enough to hold both lists, then catenate | |
297 | fn_list[] onto the end of list[]. */ | |
298 | if (n_syms && n_files) | |
299 | { | |
300 | list = xrealloc (list, (n_syms + n_files + 1) * sizeof (char *)); | |
301 | memcpy (list + n_syms, fn_list, (n_files + 1) * sizeof (char *)); | |
302 | xfree (fn_list); | |
303 | } | |
304 | else if (n_files) | |
305 | { | |
306 | /* If we only have file names as possible completion, we should | |
307 | bring them in sync with what rl_complete expects. The | |
308 | problem is that if the user types "break /foo/b TAB", and the | |
309 | possible completions are "/foo/bar" and "/foo/baz" | |
310 | rl_complete expects us to return "bar" and "baz", without the | |
311 | leading directories, as possible completions, because `word' | |
312 | starts at the "b". But we ignore the value of `word' when we | |
313 | call make_source_files_completion_list above (because that | |
314 | would not DTRT when the completion results in both symbols | |
315 | and file names), so make_source_files_completion_list returns | |
316 | the full "/foo/bar" and "/foo/baz" strings. This produces | |
317 | wrong results when, e.g., there's only one possible | |
318 | completion, because rl_complete will prepend "/foo/" to each | |
319 | candidate completion. The loop below removes that leading | |
320 | part. */ | |
321 | for (n_files = 0; fn_list[n_files]; n_files++) | |
322 | { | |
323 | memmove (fn_list[n_files], fn_list[n_files] + (word - text), | |
324 | strlen (fn_list[n_files]) + 1 - (word - text)); | |
325 | } | |
326 | /* Return just the file-name list as the result. */ | |
327 | list = fn_list; | |
328 | } | |
329 | else if (!n_syms) | |
330 | { | |
331 | /* No completions at all. As the final resort, try completing | |
332 | on the entire text as a symbol. */ | |
333 | list = make_symbol_completion_list (orig_text, word); | |
334 | } | |
335 | ||
336 | return list; | |
337 | } | |
338 | ||
db60ec62 EZ |
339 | /* Complete on command names. Used by "help". */ |
340 | char ** | |
341 | command_completer (char *text, char *word) | |
342 | { | |
343 | return complete_on_cmdlist (cmdlist, text, word); | |
344 | } | |
345 | ||
346 | ||
c5f0f3d0 FN |
347 | /* Here are some useful test cases for completion. FIXME: These should |
348 | be put in the test suite. They should be tested with both M-? and TAB. | |
349 | ||
350 | "show output-" "radix" | |
351 | "show output" "-radix" | |
352 | "p" ambiguous (commands starting with p--path, print, printf, etc.) | |
353 | "p " ambiguous (all symbols) | |
354 | "info t foo" no completions | |
355 | "info t " no completions | |
356 | "info t" ambiguous ("info target", "info terminal", etc.) | |
357 | "info ajksdlfk" no completions | |
358 | "info ajksdlfk " no completions | |
359 | "info" " " | |
360 | "info " ambiguous (all info commands) | |
361 | "p \"a" no completions (string constant) | |
362 | "p 'a" ambiguous (all symbols starting with a) | |
363 | "p b-a" ambiguous (all symbols starting with a) | |
364 | "p b-" ambiguous (all symbols) | |
365 | "file Make" "file" (word break hard to screw up here) | |
366 | "file ../gdb.stabs/we" "ird" (needs to not break word at slash) | |
367 | */ | |
368 | ||
83d31a92 TT |
369 | /* Generate completions all at once. Returns a NULL-terminated array |
370 | of strings. Both the array and each element are allocated with | |
371 | xmalloc. It can also return NULL if there are no completions. | |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
372 | |
373 | TEXT is the caller's idea of the "word" we are looking at. | |
374 | ||
c5f0f3d0 FN |
375 | LINE_BUFFER is available to be looked at; it contains the entire text |
376 | of the line. POINT is the offset in that line of the cursor. You | |
83d31a92 | 377 | should pretend that the line ends at POINT. */ |
c5f0f3d0 | 378 | |
83d31a92 | 379 | char ** |
38017ce8 | 380 | complete_line (const char *text, char *line_buffer, int point) |
c5f0f3d0 | 381 | { |
83d31a92 | 382 | char **list = NULL; |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
383 | char *tmp_command, *p; |
384 | /* Pointer within tmp_command which corresponds to text. */ | |
385 | char *word; | |
386 | struct cmd_list_element *c, *result_list; | |
387 | ||
83d31a92 TT |
388 | /* Choose the default set of word break characters to break completions. |
389 | If we later find out that we are doing completions on command strings | |
390 | (as opposed to strings supplied by the individual command completer | |
391 | functions, which can be any string) then we will switch to the | |
392 | special word break set for command strings, which leaves out the | |
393 | '-' character used in some commands. */ | |
c5f0f3d0 | 394 | |
83d31a92 | 395 | rl_completer_word_break_characters = |
51065942 | 396 | current_language->la_word_break_characters(); |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
397 | |
398 | /* Decide whether to complete on a list of gdb commands or on symbols. */ | |
83d31a92 TT |
399 | tmp_command = (char *) alloca (point + 1); |
400 | p = tmp_command; | |
c5f0f3d0 | 401 | |
83d31a92 TT |
402 | strncpy (tmp_command, line_buffer, point); |
403 | tmp_command[point] = '\0'; | |
404 | /* Since text always contains some number of characters leading up | |
405 | to point, we can find the equivalent position in tmp_command | |
406 | by subtracting that many characters from the end of tmp_command. */ | |
407 | word = tmp_command + point - strlen (text); | |
c5f0f3d0 | 408 | |
83d31a92 TT |
409 | if (point == 0) |
410 | { | |
411 | /* An empty line we want to consider ambiguous; that is, it | |
412 | could be any command. */ | |
413 | c = (struct cmd_list_element *) -1; | |
414 | result_list = 0; | |
415 | } | |
416 | else | |
417 | { | |
418 | c = lookup_cmd_1 (&p, cmdlist, &result_list, 1); | |
419 | } | |
c5f0f3d0 | 420 | |
83d31a92 TT |
421 | /* Move p up to the next interesting thing. */ |
422 | while (*p == ' ' || *p == '\t') | |
423 | { | |
424 | p++; | |
425 | } | |
c5f0f3d0 | 426 | |
83d31a92 TT |
427 | if (!c) |
428 | { | |
429 | /* It is an unrecognized command. So there are no | |
430 | possible completions. */ | |
431 | list = NULL; | |
432 | } | |
433 | else if (c == (struct cmd_list_element *) -1) | |
434 | { | |
435 | char *q; | |
436 | ||
437 | /* lookup_cmd_1 advances p up to the first ambiguous thing, but | |
438 | doesn't advance over that thing itself. Do so now. */ | |
439 | q = p; | |
440 | while (*q && (isalnum (*q) || *q == '-' || *q == '_')) | |
441 | ++q; | |
442 | if (q != tmp_command + point) | |
c5f0f3d0 | 443 | { |
83d31a92 TT |
444 | /* There is something beyond the ambiguous |
445 | command, so there are no possible completions. For | |
446 | example, "info t " or "info t foo" does not complete | |
447 | to anything, because "info t" can be "info target" or | |
448 | "info terminal". */ | |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
449 | list = NULL; |
450 | } | |
83d31a92 | 451 | else |
c5f0f3d0 | 452 | { |
83d31a92 TT |
453 | /* We're trying to complete on the command which was ambiguous. |
454 | This we can deal with. */ | |
455 | if (result_list) | |
c5f0f3d0 | 456 | { |
83d31a92 TT |
457 | list = complete_on_cmdlist (*result_list->prefixlist, p, |
458 | word); | |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
459 | } |
460 | else | |
461 | { | |
83d31a92 | 462 | list = complete_on_cmdlist (cmdlist, p, word); |
c5f0f3d0 | 463 | } |
83d31a92 TT |
464 | /* Insure that readline does the right thing with respect to |
465 | inserting quotes. */ | |
466 | rl_completer_word_break_characters = | |
467 | gdb_completer_command_word_break_characters; | |
c5f0f3d0 | 468 | } |
83d31a92 TT |
469 | } |
470 | else | |
471 | { | |
472 | /* We've recognized a full command. */ | |
473 | ||
474 | if (p == tmp_command + point) | |
c5f0f3d0 | 475 | { |
83d31a92 | 476 | /* There is no non-whitespace in the line beyond the command. */ |
c5f0f3d0 | 477 | |
83d31a92 | 478 | if (p[-1] == ' ' || p[-1] == '\t') |
c5f0f3d0 | 479 | { |
83d31a92 TT |
480 | /* The command is followed by whitespace; we need to complete |
481 | on whatever comes after command. */ | |
482 | if (c->prefixlist) | |
c5f0f3d0 | 483 | { |
83d31a92 TT |
484 | /* It is a prefix command; what comes after it is |
485 | a subcommand (e.g. "info "). */ | |
486 | list = complete_on_cmdlist (*c->prefixlist, p, word); | |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
487 | |
488 | /* Insure that readline does the right thing | |
83d31a92 | 489 | with respect to inserting quotes. */ |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
490 | rl_completer_word_break_characters = |
491 | gdb_completer_command_word_break_characters; | |
492 | } | |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
493 | else if (c->enums) |
494 | { | |
495 | list = complete_on_enum (c->enums, p, word); | |
83d31a92 TT |
496 | rl_completer_word_break_characters = |
497 | gdb_completer_command_word_break_characters; | |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
498 | } |
499 | else | |
500 | { | |
83d31a92 TT |
501 | /* It is a normal command; what comes after it is |
502 | completed by the command's completer function. */ | |
c5f0f3d0 | 503 | if (c->completer == filename_completer) |
7830cf6f | 504 | { |
83d31a92 TT |
505 | /* Many commands which want to complete on |
506 | file names accept several file names, as | |
507 | in "run foo bar >>baz". So we don't want | |
508 | to complete the entire text after the | |
509 | command, just the last word. To this | |
510 | end, we need to find the beginning of the | |
511 | file name by starting at `word' and going | |
512 | backwards. */ | |
7830cf6f EZ |
513 | for (p = word; |
514 | p > tmp_command | |
515 | && strchr (gdb_completer_file_name_break_characters, p[-1]) == NULL; | |
516 | p--) | |
517 | ; | |
518 | rl_completer_word_break_characters = | |
519 | gdb_completer_file_name_break_characters; | |
520 | } | |
c94fdfd0 EZ |
521 | else if (c->completer == location_completer) |
522 | { | |
83d31a92 TT |
523 | /* Commands which complete on locations want to |
524 | see the entire argument. */ | |
c94fdfd0 EZ |
525 | for (p = word; |
526 | p > tmp_command | |
527 | && p[-1] != ' ' && p[-1] != '\t'; | |
528 | p--) | |
529 | ; | |
530 | } | |
7830cf6f | 531 | list = (*c->completer) (p, word); |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
532 | } |
533 | } | |
83d31a92 TT |
534 | else |
535 | { | |
536 | /* The command is not followed by whitespace; we need to | |
537 | complete on the command itself. e.g. "p" which is a | |
538 | command itself but also can complete to "print", "ptype" | |
539 | etc. */ | |
540 | char *q; | |
541 | ||
542 | /* Find the command we are completing on. */ | |
543 | q = p; | |
544 | while (q > tmp_command) | |
545 | { | |
546 | if (isalnum (q[-1]) || q[-1] == '-' || q[-1] == '_') | |
547 | --q; | |
548 | else | |
549 | break; | |
550 | } | |
551 | ||
552 | list = complete_on_cmdlist (result_list, q, word); | |
553 | ||
554 | /* Insure that readline does the right thing | |
555 | with respect to inserting quotes. */ | |
556 | rl_completer_word_break_characters = | |
557 | gdb_completer_command_word_break_characters; | |
558 | } | |
559 | } | |
560 | else | |
561 | { | |
562 | /* There is non-whitespace beyond the command. */ | |
563 | ||
564 | if (c->prefixlist && !c->allow_unknown) | |
565 | { | |
566 | /* It is an unrecognized subcommand of a prefix command, | |
567 | e.g. "info adsfkdj". */ | |
568 | list = NULL; | |
569 | } | |
570 | else if (c->enums) | |
571 | { | |
572 | list = complete_on_enum (c->enums, p, word); | |
573 | } | |
574 | else | |
575 | { | |
576 | /* It is a normal command. */ | |
577 | if (c->completer == filename_completer) | |
578 | { | |
579 | /* See the commentary above about the specifics | |
580 | of file-name completion. */ | |
581 | for (p = word; | |
582 | p > tmp_command | |
583 | && strchr (gdb_completer_file_name_break_characters, p[-1]) == NULL; | |
584 | p--) | |
585 | ; | |
586 | rl_completer_word_break_characters = | |
587 | gdb_completer_file_name_break_characters; | |
588 | } | |
589 | else if (c->completer == location_completer) | |
590 | { | |
591 | for (p = word; | |
592 | p > tmp_command | |
593 | && p[-1] != ' ' && p[-1] != '\t'; | |
594 | p--) | |
595 | ; | |
596 | } | |
597 | list = (*c->completer) (p, word); | |
598 | } | |
599 | } | |
600 | } | |
601 | ||
602 | return list; | |
603 | } | |
604 | ||
605 | /* Generate completions one by one for the completer. Each time we are | |
606 | called return another potential completion to the caller. | |
607 | line_completion just completes on commands or passes the buck to the | |
608 | command's completer function, the stuff specific to symbol completion | |
609 | is in make_symbol_completion_list. | |
610 | ||
611 | TEXT is the caller's idea of the "word" we are looking at. | |
612 | ||
613 | MATCHES is the number of matches that have currently been collected from | |
614 | calling this completion function. When zero, then we need to initialize, | |
615 | otherwise the initialization has already taken place and we can just | |
616 | return the next potential completion string. | |
617 | ||
618 | LINE_BUFFER is available to be looked at; it contains the entire text | |
619 | of the line. POINT is the offset in that line of the cursor. You | |
620 | should pretend that the line ends at POINT. | |
621 | ||
622 | Returns NULL if there are no more completions, else a pointer to a string | |
623 | which is a possible completion, it is the caller's responsibility to | |
624 | free the string. */ | |
625 | ||
38017ce8 EZ |
626 | static char * |
627 | line_completion_function (const char *text, int matches, char *line_buffer, int point) | |
83d31a92 TT |
628 | { |
629 | static char **list = (char **) NULL; /* Cache of completions */ | |
630 | static int index; /* Next cached completion */ | |
631 | char *output = NULL; | |
632 | ||
633 | if (matches == 0) | |
634 | { | |
635 | /* The caller is beginning to accumulate a new set of completions, so | |
636 | we need to find all of them now, and cache them for returning one at | |
637 | a time on future calls. */ | |
638 | ||
639 | if (list) | |
640 | { | |
641 | /* Free the storage used by LIST, but not by the strings inside. | |
642 | This is because rl_complete_internal () frees the strings. */ | |
643 | xfree (list); | |
c5f0f3d0 | 644 | } |
83d31a92 TT |
645 | index = 0; |
646 | list = complete_line (text, line_buffer, point); | |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
647 | } |
648 | ||
649 | /* If we found a list of potential completions during initialization then | |
650 | dole them out one at a time. The vector of completions is NULL | |
651 | terminated, so after returning the last one, return NULL (and continue | |
652 | to do so) each time we are called after that, until a new list is | |
653 | available. */ | |
654 | ||
655 | if (list) | |
656 | { | |
657 | output = list[index]; | |
658 | if (output) | |
659 | { | |
660 | index++; | |
661 | } | |
662 | } | |
663 | ||
664 | #if 0 | |
665 | /* Can't do this because readline hasn't yet checked the word breaks | |
666 | for figuring out whether to insert a quote. */ | |
667 | if (output == NULL) | |
668 | /* Make sure the word break characters are set back to normal for the | |
669 | next time that readline tries to complete something. */ | |
670 | rl_completer_word_break_characters = | |
51065942 | 671 | current_language->la_word_break_characters(); |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
672 | #endif |
673 | ||
674 | return (output); | |
675 | } | |
4e87b832 KD |
676 | |
677 | /* Skip over the possibly quoted word STR (as defined by the quote | |
678 | characters QUOTECHARS and the the word break characters | |
679 | BREAKCHARS). Returns pointer to the location after the "word". If | |
680 | either QUOTECHARS or BREAKCHARS is NULL, use the same values used | |
681 | by the completer. */ | |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
682 | |
683 | char * | |
4e87b832 | 684 | skip_quoted_chars (char *str, char *quotechars, char *breakchars) |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
685 | { |
686 | char quote_char = '\0'; | |
687 | char *scan; | |
688 | ||
4e87b832 KD |
689 | if (quotechars == NULL) |
690 | quotechars = gdb_completer_quote_characters; | |
691 | ||
692 | if (breakchars == NULL) | |
51065942 | 693 | breakchars = current_language->la_word_break_characters(); |
4e87b832 | 694 | |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
695 | for (scan = str; *scan != '\0'; scan++) |
696 | { | |
697 | if (quote_char != '\0') | |
698 | { | |
699 | /* Ignore everything until the matching close quote char */ | |
700 | if (*scan == quote_char) | |
701 | { | |
702 | /* Found matching close quote. */ | |
703 | scan++; | |
704 | break; | |
705 | } | |
706 | } | |
4e87b832 | 707 | else if (strchr (quotechars, *scan)) |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
708 | { |
709 | /* Found start of a quoted string. */ | |
710 | quote_char = *scan; | |
711 | } | |
4e87b832 | 712 | else if (strchr (breakchars, *scan)) |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
713 | { |
714 | break; | |
715 | } | |
716 | } | |
4e87b832 | 717 | |
c5f0f3d0 FN |
718 | return (scan); |
719 | } | |
720 | ||
4e87b832 KD |
721 | /* Skip over the possibly quoted word STR (as defined by the quote |
722 | characters and word break characters used by the completer). | |
723 | Returns pointer to the location after the "word". */ | |
724 | ||
725 | char * | |
726 | skip_quoted (char *str) | |
727 | { | |
728 | return skip_quoted_chars (str, NULL, NULL); | |
729 | } |