1 /* Remote target communications for serial-line targets in custom GDB protocol
3 Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997,
4 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009
5 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
7 This file is part of GDB.
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 3 of the License, or
12 (at your option) any later version.
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.
19 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
20 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
22 /* See the GDB User Guide for details of the GDB remote protocol. */
25 #include "gdb_string.h"
31 #include "exceptions.h"
33 /*#include "terminal.h" */
36 #include "gdb-stabs.h"
37 #include "gdbthread.h"
41 #include "gdb_assert.h"
44 #include "cli/cli-decode.h"
45 #include "cli/cli-setshow.h"
46 #include "target-descriptions.h"
51 #include "event-loop.h"
52 #include "event-top.h"
58 #include "gdbcore.h" /* for exec_bfd */
60 #include "remote-fileio.h"
61 #include "gdb/fileio.h"
64 #include "memory-map.h"
66 /* The size to align memory write packets, when practical. The protocol
67 does not guarantee any alignment, and gdb will generate short
68 writes and unaligned writes, but even as a best-effort attempt this
69 can improve bulk transfers. For instance, if a write is misaligned
70 relative to the target's data bus, the stub may need to make an extra
71 round trip fetching data from the target. This doesn't make a
72 huge difference, but it's easy to do, so we try to be helpful.
74 The alignment chosen is arbitrary; usually data bus width is
75 important here, not the possibly larger cache line size. */
76 enum { REMOTE_ALIGN_WRITES = 16 };
78 /* Prototypes for local functions. */
79 static void cleanup_sigint_signal_handler (void *dummy);
80 static void initialize_sigint_signal_handler (void);
81 static int getpkt_sane (char **buf, long *sizeof_buf, int forever);
82 static int getpkt_or_notif_sane (char **buf, long *sizeof_buf,
85 static void handle_remote_sigint (int);
86 static void handle_remote_sigint_twice (int);
87 static void async_remote_interrupt (gdb_client_data);
88 void async_remote_interrupt_twice (gdb_client_data);
90 static void remote_files_info (struct target_ops *ignore);
92 static void remote_prepare_to_store (struct regcache *regcache);
94 static void remote_open (char *name, int from_tty);
96 static void extended_remote_open (char *name, int from_tty);
98 static void remote_open_1 (char *, int, struct target_ops *, int extended_p);
100 static void remote_close (int quitting);
102 static void remote_mourn (struct target_ops *ops);
104 static void extended_remote_restart (void);
106 static void extended_remote_mourn (struct target_ops *);
108 static void remote_mourn_1 (struct target_ops *);
110 static void remote_send (char **buf, long *sizeof_buf_p);
112 static int readchar (int timeout);
114 static void remote_kill (struct target_ops *ops);
116 static int tohex (int nib);
118 static int remote_can_async_p (void);
120 static int remote_is_async_p (void);
122 static void remote_async (void (*callback) (enum inferior_event_type event_type,
123 void *context), void *context);
125 static int remote_async_mask (int new_mask);
127 static void remote_detach (struct target_ops *ops, char *args, int from_tty);
129 static void remote_interrupt (int signo);
131 static void remote_interrupt_twice (int signo);
133 static void interrupt_query (void);
135 static void set_general_thread (struct ptid ptid);
136 static void set_continue_thread (struct ptid ptid);
138 static void get_offsets (void);
140 static void skip_frame (void);
142 static long read_frame (char **buf_p, long *sizeof_buf);
144 static int hexnumlen (ULONGEST num);
146 static void init_remote_ops (void);
148 static void init_extended_remote_ops (void);
150 static void remote_stop (ptid_t);
152 static int ishex (int ch, int *val);
154 static int stubhex (int ch);
156 static int hexnumstr (char *, ULONGEST);
158 static int hexnumnstr (char *, ULONGEST, int);
160 static CORE_ADDR remote_address_masked (CORE_ADDR);
162 static void print_packet (char *);
164 static unsigned long crc32 (unsigned char *, int, unsigned int);
166 static void compare_sections_command (char *, int);
168 static void packet_command (char *, int);
170 static int stub_unpack_int (char *buff, int fieldlength);
172 static ptid_t remote_current_thread (ptid_t oldptid);
174 static void remote_find_new_threads (void);
176 static void record_currthread (ptid_t currthread);
178 static int fromhex (int a);
180 static int hex2bin (const char *hex, gdb_byte *bin, int count);
182 static int bin2hex (const gdb_byte *bin, char *hex, int count);
184 static int putpkt_binary (char *buf, int cnt);
186 static void check_binary_download (CORE_ADDR addr);
188 struct packet_config;
190 static void show_packet_config_cmd (struct packet_config *config);
192 static void update_packet_config (struct packet_config *config);
194 static void set_remote_protocol_packet_cmd (char *args, int from_tty,
195 struct cmd_list_element *c);
197 static void show_remote_protocol_packet_cmd (struct ui_file *file,
199 struct cmd_list_element *c,
202 static char *write_ptid (char *buf, const char *endbuf, ptid_t ptid);
203 static ptid_t read_ptid (char *buf, char **obuf);
205 static void remote_query_supported (void);
207 static void remote_check_symbols (struct objfile *objfile);
209 void _initialize_remote (void);
212 static struct stop_reply *stop_reply_xmalloc (void);
213 static void stop_reply_xfree (struct stop_reply *);
214 static void do_stop_reply_xfree (void *arg);
215 static void remote_parse_stop_reply (char *buf, struct stop_reply *);
216 static void push_stop_reply (struct stop_reply *);
217 static void remote_get_pending_stop_replies (void);
218 static void discard_pending_stop_replies (int pid);
219 static int peek_stop_reply (ptid_t ptid);
221 static void remote_async_inferior_event_handler (gdb_client_data);
222 static void remote_async_get_pending_events_handler (gdb_client_data);
224 static void remote_terminal_ours (void);
226 static int remote_read_description_p (struct target_ops *target);
228 /* The non-stop remote protocol provisions for one pending stop reply.
229 This is where we keep it until it is acknowledged. */
231 static struct stop_reply *pending_stop_reply = NULL;
235 static struct cmd_list_element *remote_cmdlist;
237 /* For "set remote" and "show remote". */
239 static struct cmd_list_element *remote_set_cmdlist;
240 static struct cmd_list_element *remote_show_cmdlist;
242 /* Description of the remote protocol state for the currently
243 connected target. This is per-target state, and independent of the
244 selected architecture. */
248 /* A buffer to use for incoming packets, and its current size. The
249 buffer is grown dynamically for larger incoming packets.
250 Outgoing packets may also be constructed in this buffer.
251 BUF_SIZE is always at least REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE;
252 REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE should be used to limit the length of outgoing
257 /* If we negotiated packet size explicitly (and thus can bypass
258 heuristics for the largest packet size that will not overflow
259 a buffer in the stub), this will be set to that packet size.
260 Otherwise zero, meaning to use the guessed size. */
261 long explicit_packet_size;
263 /* remote_wait is normally called when the target is running and
264 waits for a stop reply packet. But sometimes we need to call it
265 when the target is already stopped. We can send a "?" packet
266 and have remote_wait read the response. Or, if we already have
267 the response, we can stash it in BUF and tell remote_wait to
268 skip calling getpkt. This flag is set when BUF contains a
269 stop reply packet and the target is not waiting. */
270 int cached_wait_status;
272 /* True, if in no ack mode. That is, neither GDB nor the stub will
273 expect acks from each other. The connection is assumed to be
277 /* True if we're connected in extended remote mode. */
280 /* True if the stub reported support for multi-process
282 int multi_process_aware;
284 /* True if we resumed the target and we're waiting for the target to
285 stop. In the mean time, we can't start another command/query.
286 The remote server wouldn't be ready to process it, so we'd
287 timeout waiting for a reply that would never come and eventually
288 we'd close the connection. This can happen in asynchronous mode
289 because we allow GDB commands while the target is running. */
290 int waiting_for_stop_reply;
292 /* True if the stub reports support for non-stop mode. */
295 /* True if the stub reports support for vCont;t. */
299 /* Returns true if the multi-process extensions are in effect. */
301 remote_multi_process_p (struct remote_state *rs)
303 return rs->extended && rs->multi_process_aware;
306 /* This data could be associated with a target, but we do not always
307 have access to the current target when we need it, so for now it is
308 static. This will be fine for as long as only one target is in use
310 static struct remote_state remote_state;
312 static struct remote_state *
313 get_remote_state_raw (void)
315 return &remote_state;
318 /* Description of the remote protocol for a given architecture. */
322 long offset; /* Offset into G packet. */
323 long regnum; /* GDB's internal register number. */
324 LONGEST pnum; /* Remote protocol register number. */
325 int in_g_packet; /* Always part of G packet. */
326 /* long size in bytes; == register_size (target_gdbarch, regnum);
328 /* char *name; == gdbarch_register_name (target_gdbarch, regnum);
332 struct remote_arch_state
334 /* Description of the remote protocol registers. */
335 long sizeof_g_packet;
337 /* Description of the remote protocol registers indexed by REGNUM
338 (making an array gdbarch_num_regs in size). */
339 struct packet_reg *regs;
341 /* This is the size (in chars) of the first response to the ``g''
342 packet. It is used as a heuristic when determining the maximum
343 size of memory-read and memory-write packets. A target will
344 typically only reserve a buffer large enough to hold the ``g''
345 packet. The size does not include packet overhead (headers and
347 long actual_register_packet_size;
349 /* This is the maximum size (in chars) of a non read/write packet.
350 It is also used as a cap on the size of read/write packets. */
351 long remote_packet_size;
355 /* Handle for retreving the remote protocol data from gdbarch. */
356 static struct gdbarch_data *remote_gdbarch_data_handle;
358 static struct remote_arch_state *
359 get_remote_arch_state (void)
361 return gdbarch_data (target_gdbarch, remote_gdbarch_data_handle);
364 /* Fetch the global remote target state. */
366 static struct remote_state *
367 get_remote_state (void)
369 /* Make sure that the remote architecture state has been
370 initialized, because doing so might reallocate rs->buf. Any
371 function which calls getpkt also needs to be mindful of changes
372 to rs->buf, but this call limits the number of places which run
374 get_remote_arch_state ();
376 return get_remote_state_raw ();
380 compare_pnums (const void *lhs_, const void *rhs_)
382 const struct packet_reg * const *lhs = lhs_;
383 const struct packet_reg * const *rhs = rhs_;
385 if ((*lhs)->pnum < (*rhs)->pnum)
387 else if ((*lhs)->pnum == (*rhs)->pnum)
394 init_remote_state (struct gdbarch *gdbarch)
396 int regnum, num_remote_regs, offset;
397 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state_raw ();
398 struct remote_arch_state *rsa;
399 struct packet_reg **remote_regs;
401 rsa = GDBARCH_OBSTACK_ZALLOC (gdbarch, struct remote_arch_state);
403 /* Use the architecture to build a regnum<->pnum table, which will be
404 1:1 unless a feature set specifies otherwise. */
405 rsa->regs = GDBARCH_OBSTACK_CALLOC (gdbarch,
406 gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch),
408 for (regnum = 0; regnum < gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch); regnum++)
410 struct packet_reg *r = &rsa->regs[regnum];
412 if (register_size (gdbarch, regnum) == 0)
413 /* Do not try to fetch zero-sized (placeholder) registers. */
416 r->pnum = gdbarch_remote_register_number (gdbarch, regnum);
421 /* Define the g/G packet format as the contents of each register
422 with a remote protocol number, in order of ascending protocol
425 remote_regs = alloca (gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch)
426 * sizeof (struct packet_reg *));
427 for (num_remote_regs = 0, regnum = 0;
428 regnum < gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch);
430 if (rsa->regs[regnum].pnum != -1)
431 remote_regs[num_remote_regs++] = &rsa->regs[regnum];
433 qsort (remote_regs, num_remote_regs, sizeof (struct packet_reg *),
436 for (regnum = 0, offset = 0; regnum < num_remote_regs; regnum++)
438 remote_regs[regnum]->in_g_packet = 1;
439 remote_regs[regnum]->offset = offset;
440 offset += register_size (gdbarch, remote_regs[regnum]->regnum);
443 /* Record the maximum possible size of the g packet - it may turn out
445 rsa->sizeof_g_packet = offset;
447 /* Default maximum number of characters in a packet body. Many
448 remote stubs have a hardwired buffer size of 400 bytes
449 (c.f. BUFMAX in m68k-stub.c and i386-stub.c). BUFMAX-1 is used
450 as the maximum packet-size to ensure that the packet and an extra
451 NUL character can always fit in the buffer. This stops GDB
452 trashing stubs that try to squeeze an extra NUL into what is
453 already a full buffer (As of 1999-12-04 that was most stubs). */
454 rsa->remote_packet_size = 400 - 1;
456 /* This one is filled in when a ``g'' packet is received. */
457 rsa->actual_register_packet_size = 0;
459 /* Should rsa->sizeof_g_packet needs more space than the
460 default, adjust the size accordingly. Remember that each byte is
461 encoded as two characters. 32 is the overhead for the packet
462 header / footer. NOTE: cagney/1999-10-26: I suspect that 8
463 (``$NN:G...#NN'') is a better guess, the below has been padded a
465 if (rsa->sizeof_g_packet > ((rsa->remote_packet_size - 32) / 2))
466 rsa->remote_packet_size = (rsa->sizeof_g_packet * 2 + 32);
468 /* Make sure that the packet buffer is plenty big enough for
469 this architecture. */
470 if (rs->buf_size < rsa->remote_packet_size)
472 rs->buf_size = 2 * rsa->remote_packet_size;
473 rs->buf = xrealloc (rs->buf, rs->buf_size);
479 /* Return the current allowed size of a remote packet. This is
480 inferred from the current architecture, and should be used to
481 limit the length of outgoing packets. */
483 get_remote_packet_size (void)
485 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
486 struct remote_arch_state *rsa = get_remote_arch_state ();
488 if (rs->explicit_packet_size)
489 return rs->explicit_packet_size;
491 return rsa->remote_packet_size;
494 static struct packet_reg *
495 packet_reg_from_regnum (struct remote_arch_state *rsa, long regnum)
497 if (regnum < 0 && regnum >= gdbarch_num_regs (target_gdbarch))
501 struct packet_reg *r = &rsa->regs[regnum];
502 gdb_assert (r->regnum == regnum);
507 static struct packet_reg *
508 packet_reg_from_pnum (struct remote_arch_state *rsa, LONGEST pnum)
511 for (i = 0; i < gdbarch_num_regs (target_gdbarch); i++)
513 struct packet_reg *r = &rsa->regs[i];
520 /* FIXME: graces/2002-08-08: These variables should eventually be
521 bound to an instance of the target object (as in gdbarch-tdep()),
522 when such a thing exists. */
524 /* This is set to the data address of the access causing the target
525 to stop for a watchpoint. */
526 static CORE_ADDR remote_watch_data_address;
528 /* This is non-zero if target stopped for a watchpoint. */
529 static int remote_stopped_by_watchpoint_p;
531 static struct target_ops remote_ops;
533 static struct target_ops extended_remote_ops;
535 static int remote_async_mask_value = 1;
537 /* FIXME: cagney/1999-09-23: Even though getpkt was called with
538 ``forever'' still use the normal timeout mechanism. This is
539 currently used by the ASYNC code to guarentee that target reads
540 during the initial connect always time-out. Once getpkt has been
541 modified to return a timeout indication and, in turn
542 remote_wait()/wait_for_inferior() have gained a timeout parameter
544 static int wait_forever_enabled_p = 1;
547 /* This variable chooses whether to send a ^C or a break when the user
548 requests program interruption. Although ^C is usually what remote
549 systems expect, and that is the default here, sometimes a break is
550 preferable instead. */
552 static int remote_break;
554 /* Descriptor for I/O to remote machine. Initialize it to NULL so that
555 remote_open knows that we don't have a file open when the program
557 static struct serial *remote_desc = NULL;
559 /* This variable sets the number of bits in an address that are to be
560 sent in a memory ("M" or "m") packet. Normally, after stripping
561 leading zeros, the entire address would be sent. This variable
562 restricts the address to REMOTE_ADDRESS_SIZE bits. HISTORY: The
563 initial implementation of remote.c restricted the address sent in
564 memory packets to ``host::sizeof long'' bytes - (typically 32
565 bits). Consequently, for 64 bit targets, the upper 32 bits of an
566 address was never sent. Since fixing this bug may cause a break in
567 some remote targets this variable is principly provided to
568 facilitate backward compatibility. */
570 static int remote_address_size;
572 /* Temporary to track who currently owns the terminal. See
573 remote_terminal_* for more details. */
575 static int remote_async_terminal_ours_p;
577 /* The executable file to use for "run" on the remote side. */
579 static char *remote_exec_file = "";
582 /* User configurable variables for the number of characters in a
583 memory read/write packet. MIN (rsa->remote_packet_size,
584 rsa->sizeof_g_packet) is the default. Some targets need smaller
585 values (fifo overruns, et.al.) and some users need larger values
586 (speed up transfers). The variables ``preferred_*'' (the user
587 request), ``current_*'' (what was actually set) and ``forced_*''
588 (Positive - a soft limit, negative - a hard limit). */
590 struct memory_packet_config
597 /* Compute the current size of a read/write packet. Since this makes
598 use of ``actual_register_packet_size'' the computation is dynamic. */
601 get_memory_packet_size (struct memory_packet_config *config)
603 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
604 struct remote_arch_state *rsa = get_remote_arch_state ();
606 /* NOTE: The somewhat arbitrary 16k comes from the knowledge (folk
607 law?) that some hosts don't cope very well with large alloca()
608 calls. Eventually the alloca() code will be replaced by calls to
609 xmalloc() and make_cleanups() allowing this restriction to either
610 be lifted or removed. */
611 #ifndef MAX_REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE
612 #define MAX_REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE 16384
614 /* NOTE: 20 ensures we can write at least one byte. */
615 #ifndef MIN_REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE
616 #define MIN_REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE 20
621 if (config->size <= 0)
622 what_they_get = MAX_REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE;
624 what_they_get = config->size;
628 what_they_get = get_remote_packet_size ();
629 /* Limit the packet to the size specified by the user. */
631 && what_they_get > config->size)
632 what_they_get = config->size;
634 /* Limit it to the size of the targets ``g'' response unless we have
635 permission from the stub to use a larger packet size. */
636 if (rs->explicit_packet_size == 0
637 && rsa->actual_register_packet_size > 0
638 && what_they_get > rsa->actual_register_packet_size)
639 what_they_get = rsa->actual_register_packet_size;
641 if (what_they_get > MAX_REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE)
642 what_they_get = MAX_REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE;
643 if (what_they_get < MIN_REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE)
644 what_they_get = MIN_REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE;
646 /* Make sure there is room in the global buffer for this packet
647 (including its trailing NUL byte). */
648 if (rs->buf_size < what_they_get + 1)
650 rs->buf_size = 2 * what_they_get;
651 rs->buf = xrealloc (rs->buf, 2 * what_they_get);
654 return what_they_get;
657 /* Update the size of a read/write packet. If they user wants
658 something really big then do a sanity check. */
661 set_memory_packet_size (char *args, struct memory_packet_config *config)
663 int fixed_p = config->fixed_p;
664 long size = config->size;
666 error (_("Argument required (integer, `fixed' or `limited')."));
667 else if (strcmp (args, "hard") == 0
668 || strcmp (args, "fixed") == 0)
670 else if (strcmp (args, "soft") == 0
671 || strcmp (args, "limit") == 0)
676 size = strtoul (args, &end, 0);
678 error (_("Invalid %s (bad syntax)."), config->name);
680 /* Instead of explicitly capping the size of a packet to
681 MAX_REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE or dissallowing it, the user is
682 instead allowed to set the size to something arbitrarily
684 if (size > MAX_REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE)
685 error (_("Invalid %s (too large)."), config->name);
689 if (fixed_p && !config->fixed_p)
691 if (! query (_("The target may not be able to correctly handle a %s\n"
692 "of %ld bytes. Change the packet size? "),
694 error (_("Packet size not changed."));
696 /* Update the config. */
697 config->fixed_p = fixed_p;
702 show_memory_packet_size (struct memory_packet_config *config)
704 printf_filtered (_("The %s is %ld. "), config->name, config->size);
706 printf_filtered (_("Packets are fixed at %ld bytes.\n"),
707 get_memory_packet_size (config));
709 printf_filtered (_("Packets are limited to %ld bytes.\n"),
710 get_memory_packet_size (config));
713 static struct memory_packet_config memory_write_packet_config =
715 "memory-write-packet-size",
719 set_memory_write_packet_size (char *args, int from_tty)
721 set_memory_packet_size (args, &memory_write_packet_config);
725 show_memory_write_packet_size (char *args, int from_tty)
727 show_memory_packet_size (&memory_write_packet_config);
731 get_memory_write_packet_size (void)
733 return get_memory_packet_size (&memory_write_packet_config);
736 static struct memory_packet_config memory_read_packet_config =
738 "memory-read-packet-size",
742 set_memory_read_packet_size (char *args, int from_tty)
744 set_memory_packet_size (args, &memory_read_packet_config);
748 show_memory_read_packet_size (char *args, int from_tty)
750 show_memory_packet_size (&memory_read_packet_config);
754 get_memory_read_packet_size (void)
756 long size = get_memory_packet_size (&memory_read_packet_config);
757 /* FIXME: cagney/1999-11-07: Functions like getpkt() need to get an
758 extra buffer size argument before the memory read size can be
759 increased beyond this. */
760 if (size > get_remote_packet_size ())
761 size = get_remote_packet_size ();
766 /* Generic configuration support for packets the stub optionally
767 supports. Allows the user to specify the use of the packet as well
768 as allowing GDB to auto-detect support in the remote stub. */
772 PACKET_SUPPORT_UNKNOWN = 0,
781 enum auto_boolean detect;
782 enum packet_support support;
785 /* Analyze a packet's return value and update the packet config
796 update_packet_config (struct packet_config *config)
798 switch (config->detect)
800 case AUTO_BOOLEAN_TRUE:
801 config->support = PACKET_ENABLE;
803 case AUTO_BOOLEAN_FALSE:
804 config->support = PACKET_DISABLE;
806 case AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO:
807 config->support = PACKET_SUPPORT_UNKNOWN;
813 show_packet_config_cmd (struct packet_config *config)
815 char *support = "internal-error";
816 switch (config->support)
822 support = "disabled";
824 case PACKET_SUPPORT_UNKNOWN:
828 switch (config->detect)
830 case AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO:
831 printf_filtered (_("Support for the `%s' packet is auto-detected, currently %s.\n"),
832 config->name, support);
834 case AUTO_BOOLEAN_TRUE:
835 case AUTO_BOOLEAN_FALSE:
836 printf_filtered (_("Support for the `%s' packet is currently %s.\n"),
837 config->name, support);
843 add_packet_config_cmd (struct packet_config *config, const char *name,
844 const char *title, int legacy)
851 config->title = title;
852 config->detect = AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO;
853 config->support = PACKET_SUPPORT_UNKNOWN;
854 set_doc = xstrprintf ("Set use of remote protocol `%s' (%s) packet",
856 show_doc = xstrprintf ("Show current use of remote protocol `%s' (%s) packet",
858 /* set/show TITLE-packet {auto,on,off} */
859 cmd_name = xstrprintf ("%s-packet", title);
860 add_setshow_auto_boolean_cmd (cmd_name, class_obscure,
861 &config->detect, set_doc, show_doc, NULL, /* help_doc */
862 set_remote_protocol_packet_cmd,
863 show_remote_protocol_packet_cmd,
864 &remote_set_cmdlist, &remote_show_cmdlist);
865 /* set/show remote NAME-packet {auto,on,off} -- legacy. */
869 legacy_name = xstrprintf ("%s-packet", name);
870 add_alias_cmd (legacy_name, cmd_name, class_obscure, 0,
871 &remote_set_cmdlist);
872 add_alias_cmd (legacy_name, cmd_name, class_obscure, 0,
873 &remote_show_cmdlist);
877 static enum packet_result
878 packet_check_result (const char *buf)
882 /* The stub recognized the packet request. Check that the
883 operation succeeded. */
885 && isxdigit (buf[1]) && isxdigit (buf[2])
887 /* "Enn" - definitly an error. */
890 /* Always treat "E." as an error. This will be used for
891 more verbose error messages, such as E.memtypes. */
892 if (buf[0] == 'E' && buf[1] == '.')
895 /* The packet may or may not be OK. Just assume it is. */
899 /* The stub does not support the packet. */
900 return PACKET_UNKNOWN;
903 static enum packet_result
904 packet_ok (const char *buf, struct packet_config *config)
906 enum packet_result result;
908 result = packet_check_result (buf);
913 /* The stub recognized the packet request. */
914 switch (config->support)
916 case PACKET_SUPPORT_UNKNOWN:
918 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
919 "Packet %s (%s) is supported\n",
920 config->name, config->title);
921 config->support = PACKET_ENABLE;
924 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
925 _("packet_ok: attempt to use a disabled packet"));
932 /* The stub does not support the packet. */
933 switch (config->support)
936 if (config->detect == AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO)
937 /* If the stub previously indicated that the packet was
938 supported then there is a protocol error.. */
939 error (_("Protocol error: %s (%s) conflicting enabled responses."),
940 config->name, config->title);
942 /* The user set it wrong. */
943 error (_("Enabled packet %s (%s) not recognized by stub"),
944 config->name, config->title);
946 case PACKET_SUPPORT_UNKNOWN:
948 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
949 "Packet %s (%s) is NOT supported\n",
950 config->name, config->title);
951 config->support = PACKET_DISABLE;
979 PACKET_qXfer_features,
980 PACKET_qXfer_libraries,
981 PACKET_qXfer_memory_map,
982 PACKET_qXfer_spu_read,
983 PACKET_qXfer_spu_write,
988 PACKET_qSearch_memory,
991 PACKET_QStartNoAckMode,
993 PACKET_qXfer_siginfo_read,
994 PACKET_qXfer_siginfo_write,
999 static struct packet_config remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_MAX];
1002 set_remote_protocol_packet_cmd (char *args, int from_tty,
1003 struct cmd_list_element *c)
1005 struct packet_config *packet;
1007 for (packet = remote_protocol_packets;
1008 packet < &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_MAX];
1011 if (&packet->detect == c->var)
1013 update_packet_config (packet);
1017 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "Could not find config for %s",
1022 show_remote_protocol_packet_cmd (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
1023 struct cmd_list_element *c,
1026 struct packet_config *packet;
1028 for (packet = remote_protocol_packets;
1029 packet < &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_MAX];
1032 if (&packet->detect == c->var)
1034 show_packet_config_cmd (packet);
1038 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "Could not find config for %s",
1042 /* Should we try one of the 'Z' requests? */
1046 Z_PACKET_SOFTWARE_BP,
1047 Z_PACKET_HARDWARE_BP,
1054 /* For compatibility with older distributions. Provide a ``set remote
1055 Z-packet ...'' command that updates all the Z packet types. */
1057 static enum auto_boolean remote_Z_packet_detect;
1060 set_remote_protocol_Z_packet_cmd (char *args, int from_tty,
1061 struct cmd_list_element *c)
1064 for (i = 0; i < NR_Z_PACKET_TYPES; i++)
1066 remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z0 + i].detect = remote_Z_packet_detect;
1067 update_packet_config (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z0 + i]);
1072 show_remote_protocol_Z_packet_cmd (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
1073 struct cmd_list_element *c,
1077 for (i = 0; i < NR_Z_PACKET_TYPES; i++)
1079 show_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z0 + i]);
1083 /* Should we try the 'ThreadInfo' query packet?
1085 This variable (NOT available to the user: auto-detect only!)
1086 determines whether GDB will use the new, simpler "ThreadInfo"
1087 query or the older, more complex syntax for thread queries.
1088 This is an auto-detect variable (set to true at each connect,
1089 and set to false when the target fails to recognize it). */
1091 static int use_threadinfo_query;
1092 static int use_threadextra_query;
1094 /* Tokens for use by the asynchronous signal handlers for SIGINT. */
1095 static struct async_signal_handler *sigint_remote_twice_token;
1096 static struct async_signal_handler *sigint_remote_token;
1099 /* Asynchronous signal handle registered as event loop source for
1100 when we have pending events ready to be passed to the core. */
1102 static struct async_event_handler *remote_async_inferior_event_token;
1104 /* Asynchronous signal handle registered as event loop source for when
1105 the remote sent us a %Stop notification. The registered callback
1106 will do a vStopped sequence to pull the rest of the events out of
1107 the remote side into our event queue. */
1109 static struct async_event_handler *remote_async_get_pending_events_token;
1112 static ptid_t magic_null_ptid;
1113 static ptid_t not_sent_ptid;
1114 static ptid_t any_thread_ptid;
1116 /* These are the threads which we last sent to the remote system. The
1117 TID member will be -1 for all or -2 for not sent yet. */
1119 static ptid_t general_thread;
1120 static ptid_t continue_thread;
1122 /* Find out if the stub attached to PID (and hence GDB should offer to
1123 detach instead of killing it when bailing out). */
1126 remote_query_attached (int pid)
1128 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
1130 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qAttached].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
1133 if (remote_multi_process_p (rs))
1134 sprintf (rs->buf, "qAttached:%x", pid);
1136 sprintf (rs->buf, "qAttached");
1139 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
1141 switch (packet_ok (rs->buf,
1142 &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qAttached]) == PACKET_OK)
1145 if (strcmp (rs->buf, "1") == 0)
1149 warning (_("Remote failure reply: %s"), rs->buf);
1151 case PACKET_UNKNOWN:
1158 /* Add PID to GDB's inferior table. Since we can be connected to a
1159 remote system before before knowing about any inferior, mark the
1160 target with execution when we find the first inferior. If ATTACHED
1161 is 1, then we had just attached to this inferior. If it is 0, then
1162 we just created this inferior. If it is -1, then try querying the
1163 remote stub to find out if it had attached to the inferior or
1166 static struct inferior *
1167 remote_add_inferior (int pid, int attached)
1169 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
1170 struct inferior *inf;
1172 /* Check whether this process we're learning about is to be
1173 considered attached, or if is to be considered to have been
1174 spawned by the stub. */
1176 attached = remote_query_attached (pid);
1178 inf = add_inferior (pid);
1180 inf->attach_flag = attached;
1182 /* This may be the first inferior we hear about. */
1183 if (!target_has_execution)
1186 target_mark_running (&extended_remote_ops);
1188 target_mark_running (&remote_ops);
1194 /* Add thread PTID to GDB's thread list. Tag it as executing/running
1195 according to RUNNING. */
1198 remote_add_thread (ptid_t ptid, int running)
1202 set_executing (ptid, running);
1203 set_running (ptid, running);
1206 /* Come here when we learn about a thread id from the remote target.
1207 It may be the first time we hear about such thread, so take the
1208 opportunity to add it to GDB's thread list. In case this is the
1209 first time we're noticing its corresponding inferior, add it to
1210 GDB's inferior list as well. */
1213 remote_notice_new_inferior (ptid_t currthread, int running)
1215 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
1217 /* If this is a new thread, add it to GDB's thread list.
1218 If we leave it up to WFI to do this, bad things will happen. */
1220 if (in_thread_list (currthread) && is_exited (currthread))
1222 /* We're seeing an event on a thread id we knew had exited.
1223 This has to be a new thread reusing the old id. Add it. */
1224 remote_add_thread (currthread, running);
1228 if (!in_thread_list (currthread))
1230 struct inferior *inf = NULL;
1232 if (ptid_equal (pid_to_ptid (ptid_get_pid (currthread)), inferior_ptid))
1234 /* inferior_ptid has no thread member yet. This can happen
1235 with the vAttach -> remote_wait,"TAAthread:" path if the
1236 stub doesn't support qC. This is the first stop reported
1237 after an attach, so this is the main thread. Update the
1238 ptid in the thread list. */
1239 thread_change_ptid (inferior_ptid, currthread);
1243 if (ptid_equal (magic_null_ptid, inferior_ptid))
1245 /* inferior_ptid is not set yet. This can happen with the
1246 vRun -> remote_wait,"TAAthread:" path if the stub
1247 doesn't support qC. This is the first stop reported
1248 after an attach, so this is the main thread. Update the
1249 ptid in the thread list. */
1250 thread_change_ptid (inferior_ptid, currthread);
1254 /* When connecting to a target remote, or to a target
1255 extended-remote which already was debugging an inferior, we
1256 may not know about it yet. Add it before adding its child
1257 thread, so notifications are emitted in a sensible order. */
1258 if (!in_inferior_list (ptid_get_pid (currthread)))
1259 inf = remote_add_inferior (ptid_get_pid (currthread), -1);
1261 /* This is really a new thread. Add it. */
1262 remote_add_thread (currthread, running);
1264 /* If we found a new inferior, let the common code do whatever
1265 it needs to with it (e.g., read shared libraries, insert
1268 notice_new_inferior (currthread, running, 0);
1272 /* Call this function as a result of
1273 1) A halt indication (T packet) containing a thread id
1274 2) A direct query of currthread
1275 3) Successful execution of set thread
1279 record_currthread (ptid_t currthread)
1281 general_thread = currthread;
1283 if (ptid_equal (currthread, minus_one_ptid))
1284 /* We're just invalidating the local thread mirror. */
1287 remote_notice_new_inferior (currthread, 0);
1290 static char *last_pass_packet;
1292 /* If 'QPassSignals' is supported, tell the remote stub what signals
1293 it can simply pass through to the inferior without reporting. */
1296 remote_pass_signals (void)
1298 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_QPassSignals].support != PACKET_DISABLE)
1300 char *pass_packet, *p;
1301 int numsigs = (int) TARGET_SIGNAL_LAST;
1304 gdb_assert (numsigs < 256);
1305 for (i = 0; i < numsigs; i++)
1307 if (signal_stop_state (i) == 0
1308 && signal_print_state (i) == 0
1309 && signal_pass_state (i) == 1)
1312 pass_packet = xmalloc (count * 3 + strlen ("QPassSignals:") + 1);
1313 strcpy (pass_packet, "QPassSignals:");
1314 p = pass_packet + strlen (pass_packet);
1315 for (i = 0; i < numsigs; i++)
1317 if (signal_stop_state (i) == 0
1318 && signal_print_state (i) == 0
1319 && signal_pass_state (i) == 1)
1322 *p++ = tohex (i >> 4);
1323 *p++ = tohex (i & 15);
1332 if (!last_pass_packet || strcmp (last_pass_packet, pass_packet))
1334 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
1335 char *buf = rs->buf;
1337 putpkt (pass_packet);
1338 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
1339 packet_ok (buf, &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_QPassSignals]);
1340 if (last_pass_packet)
1341 xfree (last_pass_packet);
1342 last_pass_packet = pass_packet;
1345 xfree (pass_packet);
1349 /* If PTID is MAGIC_NULL_PTID, don't set any thread. If PTID is
1350 MINUS_ONE_PTID, set the thread to -1, so the stub returns the
1351 thread. If GEN is set, set the general thread, if not, then set
1352 the step/continue thread. */
1354 set_thread (struct ptid ptid, int gen)
1356 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
1357 ptid_t state = gen ? general_thread : continue_thread;
1358 char *buf = rs->buf;
1359 char *endbuf = rs->buf + get_remote_packet_size ();
1361 if (ptid_equal (state, ptid))
1365 *buf++ = gen ? 'g' : 'c';
1366 if (ptid_equal (ptid, magic_null_ptid))
1367 xsnprintf (buf, endbuf - buf, "0");
1368 else if (ptid_equal (ptid, any_thread_ptid))
1369 xsnprintf (buf, endbuf - buf, "0");
1370 else if (ptid_equal (ptid, minus_one_ptid))
1371 xsnprintf (buf, endbuf - buf, "-1");
1373 write_ptid (buf, endbuf, ptid);
1375 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
1377 general_thread = ptid;
1379 continue_thread = ptid;
1383 set_general_thread (struct ptid ptid)
1385 set_thread (ptid, 1);
1389 set_continue_thread (struct ptid ptid)
1391 set_thread (ptid, 0);
1394 /* Change the remote current process. Which thread within the process
1395 ends up selected isn't important, as long as it is the same process
1396 as what INFERIOR_PTID points to.
1398 This comes from that fact that there is no explicit notion of
1399 "selected process" in the protocol. The selected process for
1400 general operations is the process the selected general thread
1404 set_general_process (void)
1406 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
1408 /* If the remote can't handle multiple processes, don't bother. */
1409 if (!remote_multi_process_p (rs))
1412 /* We only need to change the remote current thread if it's pointing
1413 at some other process. */
1414 if (ptid_get_pid (general_thread) != ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid))
1415 set_general_thread (inferior_ptid);
1419 /* Return nonzero if the thread PTID is still alive on the remote
1423 remote_thread_alive (struct target_ops *ops, ptid_t ptid)
1425 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
1426 int tid = ptid_get_tid (ptid);
1429 if (ptid_equal (ptid, magic_null_ptid))
1430 /* The main thread is always alive. */
1433 if (ptid_get_pid (ptid) != 0 && ptid_get_tid (ptid) == 0)
1434 /* The main thread is always alive. This can happen after a
1435 vAttach, if the remote side doesn't support
1440 endp = rs->buf + get_remote_packet_size ();
1443 write_ptid (p, endp, ptid);
1446 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
1447 return (rs->buf[0] == 'O' && rs->buf[1] == 'K');
1450 /* About these extended threadlist and threadinfo packets. They are
1451 variable length packets but, the fields within them are often fixed
1452 length. They are redundent enough to send over UDP as is the
1453 remote protocol in general. There is a matching unit test module
1456 #define OPAQUETHREADBYTES 8
1458 /* a 64 bit opaque identifier */
1459 typedef unsigned char threadref[OPAQUETHREADBYTES];
1461 /* WARNING: This threadref data structure comes from the remote O.S.,
1462 libstub protocol encoding, and remote.c. it is not particularly
1465 /* Right now, the internal structure is int. We want it to be bigger.
1469 typedef int gdb_threadref; /* Internal GDB thread reference. */
1471 /* gdb_ext_thread_info is an internal GDB data structure which is
1472 equivalent to the reply of the remote threadinfo packet. */
1474 struct gdb_ext_thread_info
1476 threadref threadid; /* External form of thread reference. */
1477 int active; /* Has state interesting to GDB?
1479 char display[256]; /* Brief state display, name,
1480 blocked/suspended. */
1481 char shortname[32]; /* To be used to name threads. */
1482 char more_display[256]; /* Long info, statistics, queue depth,
1486 /* The volume of remote transfers can be limited by submitting
1487 a mask containing bits specifying the desired information.
1488 Use a union of these values as the 'selection' parameter to
1489 get_thread_info. FIXME: Make these TAG names more thread specific.
1492 #define TAG_THREADID 1
1493 #define TAG_EXISTS 2
1494 #define TAG_DISPLAY 4
1495 #define TAG_THREADNAME 8
1496 #define TAG_MOREDISPLAY 16
1498 #define BUF_THREAD_ID_SIZE (OPAQUETHREADBYTES * 2)
1500 char *unpack_varlen_hex (char *buff, ULONGEST *result);
1502 static char *unpack_nibble (char *buf, int *val);
1504 static char *pack_nibble (char *buf, int nibble);
1506 static char *pack_hex_byte (char *pkt, int /* unsigned char */ byte);
1508 static char *unpack_byte (char *buf, int *value);
1510 static char *pack_int (char *buf, int value);
1512 static char *unpack_int (char *buf, int *value);
1514 static char *unpack_string (char *src, char *dest, int length);
1516 static char *pack_threadid (char *pkt, threadref *id);
1518 static char *unpack_threadid (char *inbuf, threadref *id);
1520 void int_to_threadref (threadref *id, int value);
1522 static int threadref_to_int (threadref *ref);
1524 static void copy_threadref (threadref *dest, threadref *src);
1526 static int threadmatch (threadref *dest, threadref *src);
1528 static char *pack_threadinfo_request (char *pkt, int mode,
1531 static int remote_unpack_thread_info_response (char *pkt,
1532 threadref *expectedref,
1533 struct gdb_ext_thread_info
1537 static int remote_get_threadinfo (threadref *threadid,
1538 int fieldset, /*TAG mask */
1539 struct gdb_ext_thread_info *info);
1541 static char *pack_threadlist_request (char *pkt, int startflag,
1543 threadref *nextthread);
1545 static int parse_threadlist_response (char *pkt,
1547 threadref *original_echo,
1548 threadref *resultlist,
1551 static int remote_get_threadlist (int startflag,
1552 threadref *nextthread,
1556 threadref *threadlist);
1558 typedef int (*rmt_thread_action) (threadref *ref, void *context);
1560 static int remote_threadlist_iterator (rmt_thread_action stepfunction,
1561 void *context, int looplimit);
1563 static int remote_newthread_step (threadref *ref, void *context);
1566 /* Write a PTID to BUF. ENDBUF points to one-passed-the-end of the
1567 buffer we're allowed to write to. Returns
1568 BUF+CHARACTERS_WRITTEN. */
1571 write_ptid (char *buf, const char *endbuf, ptid_t ptid)
1574 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
1576 if (remote_multi_process_p (rs))
1578 pid = ptid_get_pid (ptid);
1580 buf += xsnprintf (buf, endbuf - buf, "p-%x.", -pid);
1582 buf += xsnprintf (buf, endbuf - buf, "p%x.", pid);
1584 tid = ptid_get_tid (ptid);
1586 buf += xsnprintf (buf, endbuf - buf, "-%x", -tid);
1588 buf += xsnprintf (buf, endbuf - buf, "%x", tid);
1593 /* Extract a PTID from BUF. If non-null, OBUF is set to the to one
1594 passed the last parsed char. Returns null_ptid on error. */
1597 read_ptid (char *buf, char **obuf)
1601 ULONGEST pid = 0, tid = 0;
1606 /* Multi-process ptid. */
1607 pp = unpack_varlen_hex (p + 1, &pid);
1609 error (_("invalid remote ptid: %s\n"), p);
1612 pp = unpack_varlen_hex (p + 1, &tid);
1615 return ptid_build (pid, 0, tid);
1618 /* No multi-process. Just a tid. */
1619 pp = unpack_varlen_hex (p, &tid);
1621 /* Since the stub is not sending a process id, then default to
1622 what's in inferior_ptid, unless it's null at this point. If so,
1623 then since there's no way to know the pid of the reported
1624 threads, use the magic number. */
1625 if (ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, null_ptid))
1626 pid = ptid_get_pid (magic_null_ptid);
1628 pid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid);
1632 return ptid_build (pid, 0, tid);
1635 /* Encode 64 bits in 16 chars of hex. */
1637 static const char hexchars[] = "0123456789abcdef";
1640 ishex (int ch, int *val)
1642 if ((ch >= 'a') && (ch <= 'f'))
1644 *val = ch - 'a' + 10;
1647 if ((ch >= 'A') && (ch <= 'F'))
1649 *val = ch - 'A' + 10;
1652 if ((ch >= '0') && (ch <= '9'))
1663 if (ch >= 'a' && ch <= 'f')
1664 return ch - 'a' + 10;
1665 if (ch >= '0' && ch <= '9')
1667 if (ch >= 'A' && ch <= 'F')
1668 return ch - 'A' + 10;
1673 stub_unpack_int (char *buff, int fieldlength)
1680 nibble = stubhex (*buff++);
1684 retval = retval << 4;
1690 unpack_varlen_hex (char *buff, /* packet to parse */
1694 ULONGEST retval = 0;
1696 while (ishex (*buff, &nibble))
1699 retval = retval << 4;
1700 retval |= nibble & 0x0f;
1707 unpack_nibble (char *buf, int *val)
1709 *val = fromhex (*buf++);
1714 pack_nibble (char *buf, int nibble)
1716 *buf++ = hexchars[(nibble & 0x0f)];
1721 pack_hex_byte (char *pkt, int byte)
1723 *pkt++ = hexchars[(byte >> 4) & 0xf];
1724 *pkt++ = hexchars[(byte & 0xf)];
1729 unpack_byte (char *buf, int *value)
1731 *value = stub_unpack_int (buf, 2);
1736 pack_int (char *buf, int value)
1738 buf = pack_hex_byte (buf, (value >> 24) & 0xff);
1739 buf = pack_hex_byte (buf, (value >> 16) & 0xff);
1740 buf = pack_hex_byte (buf, (value >> 8) & 0x0ff);
1741 buf = pack_hex_byte (buf, (value & 0xff));
1746 unpack_int (char *buf, int *value)
1748 *value = stub_unpack_int (buf, 8);
1752 #if 0 /* Currently unused, uncomment when needed. */
1753 static char *pack_string (char *pkt, char *string);
1756 pack_string (char *pkt, char *string)
1761 len = strlen (string);
1763 len = 200; /* Bigger than most GDB packets, junk??? */
1764 pkt = pack_hex_byte (pkt, len);
1768 if ((ch == '\0') || (ch == '#'))
1769 ch = '*'; /* Protect encapsulation. */
1774 #endif /* 0 (unused) */
1777 unpack_string (char *src, char *dest, int length)
1786 pack_threadid (char *pkt, threadref *id)
1789 unsigned char *altid;
1791 altid = (unsigned char *) id;
1792 limit = pkt + BUF_THREAD_ID_SIZE;
1794 pkt = pack_hex_byte (pkt, *altid++);
1800 unpack_threadid (char *inbuf, threadref *id)
1803 char *limit = inbuf + BUF_THREAD_ID_SIZE;
1806 altref = (char *) id;
1808 while (inbuf < limit)
1810 x = stubhex (*inbuf++);
1811 y = stubhex (*inbuf++);
1812 *altref++ = (x << 4) | y;
1817 /* Externally, threadrefs are 64 bits but internally, they are still
1818 ints. This is due to a mismatch of specifications. We would like
1819 to use 64bit thread references internally. This is an adapter
1823 int_to_threadref (threadref *id, int value)
1825 unsigned char *scan;
1827 scan = (unsigned char *) id;
1833 *scan++ = (value >> 24) & 0xff;
1834 *scan++ = (value >> 16) & 0xff;
1835 *scan++ = (value >> 8) & 0xff;
1836 *scan++ = (value & 0xff);
1840 threadref_to_int (threadref *ref)
1843 unsigned char *scan;
1849 value = (value << 8) | ((*scan++) & 0xff);
1854 copy_threadref (threadref *dest, threadref *src)
1857 unsigned char *csrc, *cdest;
1859 csrc = (unsigned char *) src;
1860 cdest = (unsigned char *) dest;
1867 threadmatch (threadref *dest, threadref *src)
1869 /* Things are broken right now, so just assume we got a match. */
1871 unsigned char *srcp, *destp;
1873 srcp = (char *) src;
1874 destp = (char *) dest;
1878 result &= (*srcp++ == *destp++) ? 1 : 0;
1885 threadid:1, # always request threadid
1892 /* Encoding: 'Q':8,'P':8,mask:32,threadid:64 */
1895 pack_threadinfo_request (char *pkt, int mode, threadref *id)
1897 *pkt++ = 'q'; /* Info Query */
1898 *pkt++ = 'P'; /* process or thread info */
1899 pkt = pack_int (pkt, mode); /* mode */
1900 pkt = pack_threadid (pkt, id); /* threadid */
1901 *pkt = '\0'; /* terminate */
1905 /* These values tag the fields in a thread info response packet. */
1906 /* Tagging the fields allows us to request specific fields and to
1907 add more fields as time goes by. */
1909 #define TAG_THREADID 1 /* Echo the thread identifier. */
1910 #define TAG_EXISTS 2 /* Is this process defined enough to
1911 fetch registers and its stack? */
1912 #define TAG_DISPLAY 4 /* A short thing maybe to put on a window */
1913 #define TAG_THREADNAME 8 /* string, maps 1-to-1 with a thread is. */
1914 #define TAG_MOREDISPLAY 16 /* Whatever the kernel wants to say about
1918 remote_unpack_thread_info_response (char *pkt, threadref *expectedref,
1919 struct gdb_ext_thread_info *info)
1921 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
1925 char *limit = pkt + rs->buf_size; /* Plausible parsing limit. */
1928 /* info->threadid = 0; FIXME: implement zero_threadref. */
1930 info->display[0] = '\0';
1931 info->shortname[0] = '\0';
1932 info->more_display[0] = '\0';
1934 /* Assume the characters indicating the packet type have been
1936 pkt = unpack_int (pkt, &mask); /* arg mask */
1937 pkt = unpack_threadid (pkt, &ref);
1940 warning (_("Incomplete response to threadinfo request."));
1941 if (!threadmatch (&ref, expectedref))
1942 { /* This is an answer to a different request. */
1943 warning (_("ERROR RMT Thread info mismatch."));
1946 copy_threadref (&info->threadid, &ref);
1948 /* Loop on tagged fields , try to bail if somthing goes wrong. */
1950 /* Packets are terminated with nulls. */
1951 while ((pkt < limit) && mask && *pkt)
1953 pkt = unpack_int (pkt, &tag); /* tag */
1954 pkt = unpack_byte (pkt, &length); /* length */
1955 if (!(tag & mask)) /* Tags out of synch with mask. */
1957 warning (_("ERROR RMT: threadinfo tag mismatch."));
1961 if (tag == TAG_THREADID)
1965 warning (_("ERROR RMT: length of threadid is not 16."));
1969 pkt = unpack_threadid (pkt, &ref);
1970 mask = mask & ~TAG_THREADID;
1973 if (tag == TAG_EXISTS)
1975 info->active = stub_unpack_int (pkt, length);
1977 mask = mask & ~(TAG_EXISTS);
1980 warning (_("ERROR RMT: 'exists' length too long."));
1986 if (tag == TAG_THREADNAME)
1988 pkt = unpack_string (pkt, &info->shortname[0], length);
1989 mask = mask & ~TAG_THREADNAME;
1992 if (tag == TAG_DISPLAY)
1994 pkt = unpack_string (pkt, &info->display[0], length);
1995 mask = mask & ~TAG_DISPLAY;
1998 if (tag == TAG_MOREDISPLAY)
2000 pkt = unpack_string (pkt, &info->more_display[0], length);
2001 mask = mask & ~TAG_MOREDISPLAY;
2004 warning (_("ERROR RMT: unknown thread info tag."));
2005 break; /* Not a tag we know about. */
2011 remote_get_threadinfo (threadref *threadid, int fieldset, /* TAG mask */
2012 struct gdb_ext_thread_info *info)
2014 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
2017 pack_threadinfo_request (rs->buf, fieldset, threadid);
2019 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
2021 if (rs->buf[0] == '\0')
2024 result = remote_unpack_thread_info_response (rs->buf + 2,
2029 /* Format: i'Q':8,i"L":8,initflag:8,batchsize:16,lastthreadid:32 */
2032 pack_threadlist_request (char *pkt, int startflag, int threadcount,
2033 threadref *nextthread)
2035 *pkt++ = 'q'; /* info query packet */
2036 *pkt++ = 'L'; /* Process LIST or threadLIST request */
2037 pkt = pack_nibble (pkt, startflag); /* initflag 1 bytes */
2038 pkt = pack_hex_byte (pkt, threadcount); /* threadcount 2 bytes */
2039 pkt = pack_threadid (pkt, nextthread); /* 64 bit thread identifier */
2044 /* Encoding: 'q':8,'M':8,count:16,done:8,argthreadid:64,(threadid:64)* */
2047 parse_threadlist_response (char *pkt, int result_limit,
2048 threadref *original_echo, threadref *resultlist,
2051 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
2053 int count, resultcount, done;
2056 /* Assume the 'q' and 'M chars have been stripped. */
2057 limit = pkt + (rs->buf_size - BUF_THREAD_ID_SIZE);
2058 /* done parse past here */
2059 pkt = unpack_byte (pkt, &count); /* count field */
2060 pkt = unpack_nibble (pkt, &done);
2061 /* The first threadid is the argument threadid. */
2062 pkt = unpack_threadid (pkt, original_echo); /* should match query packet */
2063 while ((count-- > 0) && (pkt < limit))
2065 pkt = unpack_threadid (pkt, resultlist++);
2066 if (resultcount++ >= result_limit)
2075 remote_get_threadlist (int startflag, threadref *nextthread, int result_limit,
2076 int *done, int *result_count, threadref *threadlist)
2078 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
2079 static threadref echo_nextthread;
2082 /* Trancate result limit to be smaller than the packet size. */
2083 if ((((result_limit + 1) * BUF_THREAD_ID_SIZE) + 10) >= get_remote_packet_size ())
2084 result_limit = (get_remote_packet_size () / BUF_THREAD_ID_SIZE) - 2;
2086 pack_threadlist_request (rs->buf, startflag, result_limit, nextthread);
2088 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
2090 if (*rs->buf == '\0')
2094 parse_threadlist_response (rs->buf + 2, result_limit, &echo_nextthread,
2097 if (!threadmatch (&echo_nextthread, nextthread))
2099 /* FIXME: This is a good reason to drop the packet. */
2100 /* Possably, there is a duplicate response. */
2102 retransmit immediatly - race conditions
2103 retransmit after timeout - yes
2105 wait for packet, then exit
2107 warning (_("HMM: threadlist did not echo arg thread, dropping it."));
2108 return 0; /* I choose simply exiting. */
2110 if (*result_count <= 0)
2114 warning (_("RMT ERROR : failed to get remote thread list."));
2117 return result; /* break; */
2119 if (*result_count > result_limit)
2122 warning (_("RMT ERROR: threadlist response longer than requested."));
2128 /* This is the interface between remote and threads, remotes upper
2131 /* remote_find_new_threads retrieves the thread list and for each
2132 thread in the list, looks up the thread in GDB's internal list,
2133 adding the thread if it does not already exist. This involves
2134 getting partial thread lists from the remote target so, polling the
2135 quit_flag is required. */
2138 /* About this many threadisds fit in a packet. */
2140 #define MAXTHREADLISTRESULTS 32
2143 remote_threadlist_iterator (rmt_thread_action stepfunction, void *context,
2146 int done, i, result_count;
2150 static threadref nextthread;
2151 static threadref resultthreadlist[MAXTHREADLISTRESULTS];
2156 if (loopcount++ > looplimit)
2159 warning (_("Remote fetch threadlist -infinite loop-."));
2162 if (!remote_get_threadlist (startflag, &nextthread, MAXTHREADLISTRESULTS,
2163 &done, &result_count, resultthreadlist))
2168 /* Clear for later iterations. */
2170 /* Setup to resume next batch of thread references, set nextthread. */
2171 if (result_count >= 1)
2172 copy_threadref (&nextthread, &resultthreadlist[result_count - 1]);
2174 while (result_count--)
2175 if (!(result = (*stepfunction) (&resultthreadlist[i++], context)))
2182 remote_newthread_step (threadref *ref, void *context)
2184 int pid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid);
2185 ptid_t ptid = ptid_build (pid, 0, threadref_to_int (ref));
2187 if (!in_thread_list (ptid))
2189 return 1; /* continue iterator */
2192 #define CRAZY_MAX_THREADS 1000
2195 remote_current_thread (ptid_t oldpid)
2197 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
2203 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
2204 if (rs->buf[0] == 'Q' && rs->buf[1] == 'C')
2205 return read_ptid (&rs->buf[2], NULL);
2210 /* Find new threads for info threads command.
2211 * Original version, using John Metzler's thread protocol.
2215 remote_find_new_threads (void)
2217 remote_threadlist_iterator (remote_newthread_step, 0,
2222 * Find all threads for info threads command.
2223 * Uses new thread protocol contributed by Cisco.
2224 * Falls back and attempts to use the older method (above)
2225 * if the target doesn't respond to the new method.
2229 remote_threads_info (struct target_ops *ops)
2231 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
2235 if (remote_desc == 0) /* paranoia */
2236 error (_("Command can only be used when connected to the remote target."));
2238 if (use_threadinfo_query)
2240 putpkt ("qfThreadInfo");
2241 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
2243 if (bufp[0] != '\0') /* q packet recognized */
2245 while (*bufp++ == 'm') /* reply contains one or more TID */
2249 new_thread = read_ptid (bufp, &bufp);
2250 if (!ptid_equal (new_thread, null_ptid))
2252 /* In non-stop mode, we assume new found threads
2253 are running until proven otherwise with a
2254 stop reply. In all-stop, we can only get
2255 here if all threads are stopped. */
2256 int running = non_stop ? 1 : 0;
2258 remote_notice_new_inferior (new_thread, running);
2261 while (*bufp++ == ','); /* comma-separated list */
2262 putpkt ("qsThreadInfo");
2263 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
2270 /* Only qfThreadInfo is supported in non-stop mode. */
2274 /* Else fall back to old method based on jmetzler protocol. */
2275 use_threadinfo_query = 0;
2276 remote_find_new_threads ();
2281 * Collect a descriptive string about the given thread.
2282 * The target may say anything it wants to about the thread
2283 * (typically info about its blocked / runnable state, name, etc.).
2284 * This string will appear in the info threads display.
2286 * Optional: targets are not required to implement this function.
2290 remote_threads_extra_info (struct thread_info *tp)
2292 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
2296 struct gdb_ext_thread_info threadinfo;
2297 static char display_buf[100]; /* arbitrary... */
2298 int n = 0; /* position in display_buf */
2300 if (remote_desc == 0) /* paranoia */
2301 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
2302 _("remote_threads_extra_info"));
2304 if (ptid_equal (tp->ptid, magic_null_ptid)
2305 || (ptid_get_pid (tp->ptid) != 0 && ptid_get_tid (tp->ptid) == 0))
2306 /* This is the main thread which was added by GDB. The remote
2307 server doesn't know about it. */
2310 if (use_threadextra_query)
2313 char *endb = rs->buf + get_remote_packet_size ();
2315 xsnprintf (b, endb - b, "qThreadExtraInfo,");
2317 write_ptid (b, endb, tp->ptid);
2320 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
2321 if (rs->buf[0] != 0)
2323 n = min (strlen (rs->buf) / 2, sizeof (display_buf));
2324 result = hex2bin (rs->buf, (gdb_byte *) display_buf, n);
2325 display_buf [result] = '\0';
2330 /* If the above query fails, fall back to the old method. */
2331 use_threadextra_query = 0;
2332 set = TAG_THREADID | TAG_EXISTS | TAG_THREADNAME
2333 | TAG_MOREDISPLAY | TAG_DISPLAY;
2334 int_to_threadref (&id, ptid_get_tid (tp->ptid));
2335 if (remote_get_threadinfo (&id, set, &threadinfo))
2336 if (threadinfo.active)
2338 if (*threadinfo.shortname)
2339 n += xsnprintf (&display_buf[0], sizeof (display_buf) - n,
2340 " Name: %s,", threadinfo.shortname);
2341 if (*threadinfo.display)
2342 n += xsnprintf (&display_buf[n], sizeof (display_buf) - n,
2343 " State: %s,", threadinfo.display);
2344 if (*threadinfo.more_display)
2345 n += xsnprintf (&display_buf[n], sizeof (display_buf) - n,
2346 " Priority: %s", threadinfo.more_display);
2350 /* For purely cosmetic reasons, clear up trailing commas. */
2351 if (',' == display_buf[n-1])
2352 display_buf[n-1] = ' ';
2360 /* Restart the remote side; this is an extended protocol operation. */
2363 extended_remote_restart (void)
2365 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
2367 /* Send the restart command; for reasons I don't understand the
2368 remote side really expects a number after the "R". */
2369 xsnprintf (rs->buf, get_remote_packet_size (), "R%x", 0);
2372 remote_fileio_reset ();
2375 /* Clean up connection to a remote debugger. */
2378 remote_close (int quitting)
2380 if (remote_desc == NULL)
2381 return; /* already closed */
2383 /* Make sure we leave stdin registered in the event loop, and we
2384 don't leave the async SIGINT signal handler installed. */
2385 remote_terminal_ours ();
2387 serial_close (remote_desc);
2390 /* We don't have a connection to the remote stub anymore. Get rid
2391 of all the inferiors and their threads we were controlling. */
2392 discard_all_inferiors ();
2394 /* We're no longer interested in any of these events. */
2395 discard_pending_stop_replies (-1);
2397 if (remote_async_inferior_event_token)
2398 delete_async_event_handler (&remote_async_inferior_event_token);
2399 if (remote_async_get_pending_events_token)
2400 delete_async_event_handler (&remote_async_get_pending_events_token);
2403 /* Query the remote side for the text, data and bss offsets. */
2408 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
2411 int lose, num_segments = 0, do_sections, do_segments;
2412 CORE_ADDR text_addr, data_addr, bss_addr, segments[2];
2413 struct section_offsets *offs;
2414 struct symfile_segment_data *data;
2416 if (symfile_objfile == NULL)
2419 putpkt ("qOffsets");
2420 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
2423 if (buf[0] == '\000')
2424 return; /* Return silently. Stub doesn't support
2428 warning (_("Remote failure reply: %s"), buf);
2432 /* Pick up each field in turn. This used to be done with scanf, but
2433 scanf will make trouble if CORE_ADDR size doesn't match
2434 conversion directives correctly. The following code will work
2435 with any size of CORE_ADDR. */
2436 text_addr = data_addr = bss_addr = 0;
2440 if (strncmp (ptr, "Text=", 5) == 0)
2443 /* Don't use strtol, could lose on big values. */
2444 while (*ptr && *ptr != ';')
2445 text_addr = (text_addr << 4) + fromhex (*ptr++);
2447 if (strncmp (ptr, ";Data=", 6) == 0)
2450 while (*ptr && *ptr != ';')
2451 data_addr = (data_addr << 4) + fromhex (*ptr++);
2456 if (!lose && strncmp (ptr, ";Bss=", 5) == 0)
2459 while (*ptr && *ptr != ';')
2460 bss_addr = (bss_addr << 4) + fromhex (*ptr++);
2462 if (bss_addr != data_addr)
2463 warning (_("Target reported unsupported offsets: %s"), buf);
2468 else if (strncmp (ptr, "TextSeg=", 8) == 0)
2471 /* Don't use strtol, could lose on big values. */
2472 while (*ptr && *ptr != ';')
2473 text_addr = (text_addr << 4) + fromhex (*ptr++);
2476 if (strncmp (ptr, ";DataSeg=", 9) == 0)
2479 while (*ptr && *ptr != ';')
2480 data_addr = (data_addr << 4) + fromhex (*ptr++);
2488 error (_("Malformed response to offset query, %s"), buf);
2489 else if (*ptr != '\0')
2490 warning (_("Target reported unsupported offsets: %s"), buf);
2492 offs = ((struct section_offsets *)
2493 alloca (SIZEOF_N_SECTION_OFFSETS (symfile_objfile->num_sections)));
2494 memcpy (offs, symfile_objfile->section_offsets,
2495 SIZEOF_N_SECTION_OFFSETS (symfile_objfile->num_sections));
2497 data = get_symfile_segment_data (symfile_objfile->obfd);
2498 do_segments = (data != NULL);
2499 do_sections = num_segments == 0;
2501 if (num_segments > 0)
2503 segments[0] = text_addr;
2504 segments[1] = data_addr;
2506 /* If we have two segments, we can still try to relocate everything
2507 by assuming that the .text and .data offsets apply to the whole
2508 text and data segments. Convert the offsets given in the packet
2509 to base addresses for symfile_map_offsets_to_segments. */
2510 else if (data && data->num_segments == 2)
2512 segments[0] = data->segment_bases[0] + text_addr;
2513 segments[1] = data->segment_bases[1] + data_addr;
2516 /* If the object file has only one segment, assume that it is text
2517 rather than data; main programs with no writable data are rare,
2518 but programs with no code are useless. Of course the code might
2519 have ended up in the data segment... to detect that we would need
2520 the permissions here. */
2521 else if (data && data->num_segments == 1)
2523 segments[0] = data->segment_bases[0] + text_addr;
2526 /* There's no way to relocate by segment. */
2532 int ret = symfile_map_offsets_to_segments (symfile_objfile->obfd, data,
2533 offs, num_segments, segments);
2535 if (ret == 0 && !do_sections)
2536 error (_("Can not handle qOffsets TextSeg response with this symbol file"));
2543 free_symfile_segment_data (data);
2547 offs->offsets[SECT_OFF_TEXT (symfile_objfile)] = text_addr;
2549 /* This is a temporary kludge to force data and bss to use the same offsets
2550 because that's what nlmconv does now. The real solution requires changes
2551 to the stub and remote.c that I don't have time to do right now. */
2553 offs->offsets[SECT_OFF_DATA (symfile_objfile)] = data_addr;
2554 offs->offsets[SECT_OFF_BSS (symfile_objfile)] = data_addr;
2557 objfile_relocate (symfile_objfile, offs);
2560 /* Callback for iterate_over_threads. Set the STOP_REQUESTED flags in
2561 threads we know are stopped already. This is used during the
2562 initial remote connection in non-stop mode --- threads that are
2563 reported as already being stopped are left stopped. */
2566 set_stop_requested_callback (struct thread_info *thread, void *data)
2568 /* If we have a stop reply for this thread, it must be stopped. */
2569 if (peek_stop_reply (thread->ptid))
2570 set_stop_requested (thread->ptid, 1);
2575 /* Stub for catch_exception. */
2577 struct start_remote_args
2581 /* The current target. */
2582 struct target_ops *target;
2584 /* Non-zero if this is an extended-remote target. */
2589 remote_start_remote (struct ui_out *uiout, void *opaque)
2591 struct start_remote_args *args = opaque;
2592 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
2593 struct packet_config *noack_config;
2594 char *wait_status = NULL;
2596 immediate_quit++; /* Allow user to interrupt it. */
2598 /* Ack any packet which the remote side has already sent. */
2599 serial_write (remote_desc, "+", 1);
2601 /* The first packet we send to the target is the optional "supported
2602 packets" request. If the target can answer this, it will tell us
2603 which later probes to skip. */
2604 remote_query_supported ();
2606 /* Next, we possibly activate noack mode.
2608 If the QStartNoAckMode packet configuration is set to AUTO,
2609 enable noack mode if the stub reported a wish for it with
2612 If set to TRUE, then enable noack mode even if the stub didn't
2613 report it in qSupported. If the stub doesn't reply OK, the
2614 session ends with an error.
2616 If FALSE, then don't activate noack mode, regardless of what the
2617 stub claimed should be the default with qSupported. */
2619 noack_config = &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_QStartNoAckMode];
2621 if (noack_config->detect == AUTO_BOOLEAN_TRUE
2622 || (noack_config->detect == AUTO_BOOLEAN_AUTO
2623 && noack_config->support == PACKET_ENABLE))
2625 putpkt ("QStartNoAckMode");
2626 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
2627 if (packet_ok (rs->buf, noack_config) == PACKET_OK)
2631 if (args->extended_p)
2633 /* Tell the remote that we are using the extended protocol. */
2635 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
2638 /* Next, if the target can specify a description, read it. We do
2639 this before anything involving memory or registers. */
2640 target_find_description ();
2642 /* On OSs where the list of libraries is global to all
2643 processes, we fetch them early. */
2644 if (gdbarch_has_global_solist (target_gdbarch))
2645 solib_add (NULL, args->from_tty, args->target, auto_solib_add);
2649 if (!rs->non_stop_aware)
2650 error (_("Non-stop mode requested, but remote does not support non-stop"));
2652 putpkt ("QNonStop:1");
2653 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
2655 if (strcmp (rs->buf, "OK") != 0)
2656 error ("Remote refused setting non-stop mode with: %s", rs->buf);
2658 /* Find about threads and processes the stub is already
2659 controlling. We default to adding them in the running state.
2660 The '?' query below will then tell us about which threads are
2662 remote_threads_info (args->target);
2664 else if (rs->non_stop_aware)
2666 /* Don't assume that the stub can operate in all-stop mode.
2667 Request it explicitely. */
2668 putpkt ("QNonStop:0");
2669 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
2671 if (strcmp (rs->buf, "OK") != 0)
2672 error ("Remote refused setting all-stop mode with: %s", rs->buf);
2675 /* Check whether the target is running now. */
2677 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
2681 if (rs->buf[0] == 'W' || rs->buf[0] == 'X')
2683 if (args->extended_p)
2685 /* We're connected, but not running. Drop out before we
2686 call start_remote. */
2687 target_mark_exited (args->target);
2691 error (_("The target is not running (try extended-remote?)"));
2695 /* Save the reply for later. */
2696 wait_status = alloca (strlen (rs->buf) + 1);
2697 strcpy (wait_status, rs->buf);
2700 /* Let the stub know that we want it to return the thread. */
2701 set_continue_thread (minus_one_ptid);
2703 /* Without this, some commands which require an active target
2704 (such as kill) won't work. This variable serves (at least)
2705 double duty as both the pid of the target process (if it has
2706 such), and as a flag indicating that a target is active.
2707 These functions should be split out into seperate variables,
2708 especially since GDB will someday have a notion of debugging
2709 several processes. */
2710 inferior_ptid = magic_null_ptid;
2712 /* Now, if we have thread information, update inferior_ptid. */
2713 inferior_ptid = remote_current_thread (inferior_ptid);
2715 remote_add_inferior (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid), -1);
2717 /* Always add the main thread. */
2718 add_thread_silent (inferior_ptid);
2720 get_offsets (); /* Get text, data & bss offsets. */
2722 /* If we could not find a description using qXfer, and we know
2723 how to do it some other way, try again. This is not
2724 supported for non-stop; it could be, but it is tricky if
2725 there are no stopped threads when we connect. */
2726 if (remote_read_description_p (args->target)
2727 && gdbarch_target_desc (target_gdbarch) == NULL)
2729 target_clear_description ();
2730 target_find_description ();
2733 /* Use the previously fetched status. */
2734 gdb_assert (wait_status != NULL);
2735 strcpy (rs->buf, wait_status);
2736 rs->cached_wait_status = 1;
2739 start_remote (args->from_tty); /* Initialize gdb process mechanisms. */
2743 /* Clear WFI global state. Do this before finding about new
2744 threads and inferiors, and setting the current inferior.
2745 Otherwise we would clear the proceed status of the current
2746 inferior when we want its stop_soon state to be preserved
2747 (see notice_new_inferior). */
2748 init_wait_for_inferior ();
2750 /* In non-stop, we will either get an "OK", meaning that there
2751 are no stopped threads at this time; or, a regular stop
2752 reply. In the latter case, there may be more than one thread
2753 stopped --- we pull them all out using the vStopped
2755 if (strcmp (rs->buf, "OK") != 0)
2757 struct stop_reply *stop_reply;
2758 struct cleanup *old_chain;
2760 stop_reply = stop_reply_xmalloc ();
2761 old_chain = make_cleanup (do_stop_reply_xfree, stop_reply);
2763 remote_parse_stop_reply (rs->buf, stop_reply);
2764 discard_cleanups (old_chain);
2766 /* get_pending_stop_replies acks this one, and gets the rest
2768 pending_stop_reply = stop_reply;
2769 remote_get_pending_stop_replies ();
2771 /* Make sure that threads that were stopped remain
2773 iterate_over_threads (set_stop_requested_callback, NULL);
2776 if (target_can_async_p ())
2777 target_async (inferior_event_handler, 0);
2779 if (thread_count () == 0)
2781 if (args->extended_p)
2783 /* We're connected, but not running. Drop out before we
2784 call start_remote. */
2785 target_mark_exited (args->target);
2789 error (_("The target is not running (try extended-remote?)"));
2792 if (args->extended_p)
2793 target_mark_running (args->target);
2795 /* Let the stub know that we want it to return the thread. */
2797 /* Force the stub to choose a thread. */
2798 set_general_thread (null_ptid);
2801 inferior_ptid = remote_current_thread (minus_one_ptid);
2802 if (ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, minus_one_ptid))
2803 error (_("remote didn't report the current thread in non-stop mode"));
2805 get_offsets (); /* Get text, data & bss offsets. */
2807 /* In non-stop mode, any cached wait status will be stored in
2808 the stop reply queue. */
2809 gdb_assert (wait_status == NULL);
2812 /* If we connected to a live target, do some additional setup. */
2813 if (target_has_execution)
2815 if (exec_bfd) /* No use without an exec file. */
2816 remote_check_symbols (symfile_objfile);
2819 /* If code is shared between processes, then breakpoints are global
2820 too; Insert them now. */
2821 if (gdbarch_has_global_solist (target_gdbarch)
2822 && breakpoints_always_inserted_mode ())
2823 insert_breakpoints ();
2826 /* Open a connection to a remote debugger.
2827 NAME is the filename used for communication. */
2830 remote_open (char *name, int from_tty)
2832 remote_open_1 (name, from_tty, &remote_ops, 0);
2835 /* Open a connection to a remote debugger using the extended
2836 remote gdb protocol. NAME is the filename used for communication. */
2839 extended_remote_open (char *name, int from_tty)
2841 remote_open_1 (name, from_tty, &extended_remote_ops, 1 /*extended_p */);
2844 /* Generic code for opening a connection to a remote target. */
2847 init_all_packet_configs (void)
2850 for (i = 0; i < PACKET_MAX; i++)
2851 update_packet_config (&remote_protocol_packets[i]);
2854 /* Symbol look-up. */
2857 remote_check_symbols (struct objfile *objfile)
2859 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
2860 char *msg, *reply, *tmp;
2861 struct minimal_symbol *sym;
2864 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qSymbol].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
2867 /* Make sure the remote is pointing at the right process. */
2868 set_general_process ();
2870 /* Allocate a message buffer. We can't reuse the input buffer in RS,
2871 because we need both at the same time. */
2872 msg = alloca (get_remote_packet_size ());
2874 /* Invite target to request symbol lookups. */
2876 putpkt ("qSymbol::");
2877 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
2878 packet_ok (rs->buf, &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qSymbol]);
2881 while (strncmp (reply, "qSymbol:", 8) == 0)
2884 end = hex2bin (tmp, (gdb_byte *) msg, strlen (tmp) / 2);
2886 sym = lookup_minimal_symbol (msg, NULL, NULL);
2888 xsnprintf (msg, get_remote_packet_size (), "qSymbol::%s", &reply[8]);
2891 CORE_ADDR sym_addr = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (sym);
2893 /* If this is a function address, return the start of code
2894 instead of any data function descriptor. */
2895 sym_addr = gdbarch_convert_from_func_ptr_addr (target_gdbarch,
2899 xsnprintf (msg, get_remote_packet_size (), "qSymbol:%s:%s",
2900 paddr_nz (sym_addr), &reply[8]);
2904 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
2909 static struct serial *
2910 remote_serial_open (char *name)
2912 static int udp_warning = 0;
2914 /* FIXME: Parsing NAME here is a hack. But we want to warn here instead
2915 of in ser-tcp.c, because it is the remote protocol assuming that the
2916 serial connection is reliable and not the serial connection promising
2918 if (!udp_warning && strncmp (name, "udp:", 4) == 0)
2921 The remote protocol may be unreliable over UDP.\n\
2922 Some events may be lost, rendering further debugging impossible."));
2926 return serial_open (name);
2929 /* This type describes each known response to the qSupported
2931 struct protocol_feature
2933 /* The name of this protocol feature. */
2936 /* The default for this protocol feature. */
2937 enum packet_support default_support;
2939 /* The function to call when this feature is reported, or after
2940 qSupported processing if the feature is not supported.
2941 The first argument points to this structure. The second
2942 argument indicates whether the packet requested support be
2943 enabled, disabled, or probed (or the default, if this function
2944 is being called at the end of processing and this feature was
2945 not reported). The third argument may be NULL; if not NULL, it
2946 is a NUL-terminated string taken from the packet following
2947 this feature's name and an equals sign. */
2948 void (*func) (const struct protocol_feature *, enum packet_support,
2951 /* The corresponding packet for this feature. Only used if
2952 FUNC is remote_supported_packet. */
2957 remote_supported_packet (const struct protocol_feature *feature,
2958 enum packet_support support,
2959 const char *argument)
2963 warning (_("Remote qSupported response supplied an unexpected value for"
2964 " \"%s\"."), feature->name);
2968 if (remote_protocol_packets[feature->packet].support
2969 == PACKET_SUPPORT_UNKNOWN)
2970 remote_protocol_packets[feature->packet].support = support;
2974 remote_packet_size (const struct protocol_feature *feature,
2975 enum packet_support support, const char *value)
2977 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
2982 if (support != PACKET_ENABLE)
2985 if (value == NULL || *value == '\0')
2987 warning (_("Remote target reported \"%s\" without a size."),
2993 packet_size = strtol (value, &value_end, 16);
2994 if (errno != 0 || *value_end != '\0' || packet_size < 0)
2996 warning (_("Remote target reported \"%s\" with a bad size: \"%s\"."),
2997 feature->name, value);
3001 if (packet_size > MAX_REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE)
3003 warning (_("limiting remote suggested packet size (%d bytes) to %d"),
3004 packet_size, MAX_REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE);
3005 packet_size = MAX_REMOTE_PACKET_SIZE;
3008 /* Record the new maximum packet size. */
3009 rs->explicit_packet_size = packet_size;
3013 remote_multi_process_feature (const struct protocol_feature *feature,
3014 enum packet_support support, const char *value)
3016 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
3017 rs->multi_process_aware = (support == PACKET_ENABLE);
3021 remote_non_stop_feature (const struct protocol_feature *feature,
3022 enum packet_support support, const char *value)
3024 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
3025 rs->non_stop_aware = (support == PACKET_ENABLE);
3028 static struct protocol_feature remote_protocol_features[] = {
3029 { "PacketSize", PACKET_DISABLE, remote_packet_size, -1 },
3030 { "qXfer:auxv:read", PACKET_DISABLE, remote_supported_packet,
3031 PACKET_qXfer_auxv },
3032 { "qXfer:features:read", PACKET_DISABLE, remote_supported_packet,
3033 PACKET_qXfer_features },
3034 { "qXfer:libraries:read", PACKET_DISABLE, remote_supported_packet,
3035 PACKET_qXfer_libraries },
3036 { "qXfer:memory-map:read", PACKET_DISABLE, remote_supported_packet,
3037 PACKET_qXfer_memory_map },
3038 { "qXfer:spu:read", PACKET_DISABLE, remote_supported_packet,
3039 PACKET_qXfer_spu_read },
3040 { "qXfer:spu:write", PACKET_DISABLE, remote_supported_packet,
3041 PACKET_qXfer_spu_write },
3042 { "qXfer:osdata:read", PACKET_DISABLE, remote_supported_packet,
3043 PACKET_qXfer_osdata },
3044 { "QPassSignals", PACKET_DISABLE, remote_supported_packet,
3045 PACKET_QPassSignals },
3046 { "QStartNoAckMode", PACKET_DISABLE, remote_supported_packet,
3047 PACKET_QStartNoAckMode },
3048 { "multiprocess", PACKET_DISABLE, remote_multi_process_feature, -1 },
3049 { "QNonStop", PACKET_DISABLE, remote_non_stop_feature, -1 },
3050 { "qXfer:siginfo:read", PACKET_DISABLE, remote_supported_packet,
3051 PACKET_qXfer_siginfo_read },
3052 { "qXfer:siginfo:write", PACKET_DISABLE, remote_supported_packet,
3053 PACKET_qXfer_siginfo_write },
3057 remote_query_supported (void)
3059 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
3062 unsigned char seen [ARRAY_SIZE (remote_protocol_features)];
3064 /* The packet support flags are handled differently for this packet
3065 than for most others. We treat an error, a disabled packet, and
3066 an empty response identically: any features which must be reported
3067 to be used will be automatically disabled. An empty buffer
3068 accomplishes this, since that is also the representation for a list
3069 containing no features. */
3072 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qSupported].support != PACKET_DISABLE)
3075 putpkt ("qSupported:multiprocess+");
3077 putpkt ("qSupported");
3079 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
3081 /* If an error occured, warn, but do not return - just reset the
3082 buffer to empty and go on to disable features. */
3083 if (packet_ok (rs->buf, &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qSupported])
3086 warning (_("Remote failure reply: %s"), rs->buf);
3091 memset (seen, 0, sizeof (seen));
3096 enum packet_support is_supported;
3097 char *p, *end, *name_end, *value;
3099 /* First separate out this item from the rest of the packet. If
3100 there's another item after this, we overwrite the separator
3101 (terminated strings are much easier to work with). */
3103 end = strchr (p, ';');
3106 end = p + strlen (p);
3116 warning (_("empty item in \"qSupported\" response"));
3121 name_end = strchr (p, '=');
3124 /* This is a name=value entry. */
3125 is_supported = PACKET_ENABLE;
3126 value = name_end + 1;
3135 is_supported = PACKET_ENABLE;
3139 is_supported = PACKET_DISABLE;
3143 is_supported = PACKET_SUPPORT_UNKNOWN;
3147 warning (_("unrecognized item \"%s\" in \"qSupported\" response"), p);
3153 for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE (remote_protocol_features); i++)
3154 if (strcmp (remote_protocol_features[i].name, p) == 0)
3156 const struct protocol_feature *feature;
3159 feature = &remote_protocol_features[i];
3160 feature->func (feature, is_supported, value);
3165 /* If we increased the packet size, make sure to increase the global
3166 buffer size also. We delay this until after parsing the entire
3167 qSupported packet, because this is the same buffer we were
3169 if (rs->buf_size < rs->explicit_packet_size)
3171 rs->buf_size = rs->explicit_packet_size;
3172 rs->buf = xrealloc (rs->buf, rs->buf_size);
3175 /* Handle the defaults for unmentioned features. */
3176 for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE (remote_protocol_features); i++)
3179 const struct protocol_feature *feature;
3181 feature = &remote_protocol_features[i];
3182 feature->func (feature, feature->default_support, NULL);
3188 remote_open_1 (char *name, int from_tty, struct target_ops *target, int extended_p)
3190 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
3193 error (_("To open a remote debug connection, you need to specify what\n"
3194 "serial device is attached to the remote system\n"
3195 "(e.g. /dev/ttyS0, /dev/ttya, COM1, etc.)."));
3197 /* See FIXME above. */
3198 if (!target_async_permitted)
3199 wait_forever_enabled_p = 1;
3201 /* If we're connected to a running target, target_preopen will kill it.
3202 But if we're connected to a target system with no running process,
3203 then we will still be connected when it returns. Ask this question
3204 first, before target_preopen has a chance to kill anything. */
3205 if (remote_desc != NULL && !target_has_execution)
3208 || query (_("Already connected to a remote target. Disconnect? ")))
3211 error (_("Still connected."));
3214 target_preopen (from_tty);
3216 unpush_target (target);
3218 /* This time without a query. If we were connected to an
3219 extended-remote target and target_preopen killed the running
3220 process, we may still be connected. If we are starting "target
3221 remote" now, the extended-remote target will not have been
3222 removed by unpush_target. */
3223 if (remote_desc != NULL && !target_has_execution)
3226 /* Make sure we send the passed signals list the next time we resume. */
3227 xfree (last_pass_packet);
3228 last_pass_packet = NULL;
3230 remote_fileio_reset ();
3231 reopen_exec_file ();
3234 remote_desc = remote_serial_open (name);
3236 perror_with_name (name);
3238 if (baud_rate != -1)
3240 if (serial_setbaudrate (remote_desc, baud_rate))
3242 /* The requested speed could not be set. Error out to
3243 top level after closing remote_desc. Take care to
3244 set remote_desc to NULL to avoid closing remote_desc
3246 serial_close (remote_desc);
3248 perror_with_name (name);
3252 serial_raw (remote_desc);
3254 /* If there is something sitting in the buffer we might take it as a
3255 response to a command, which would be bad. */
3256 serial_flush_input (remote_desc);
3260 puts_filtered ("Remote debugging using ");
3261 puts_filtered (name);
3262 puts_filtered ("\n");
3264 push_target (target); /* Switch to using remote target now. */
3266 /* Assume that the target is not running, until we learn otherwise. */
3268 target_mark_exited (target);
3270 /* Register extra event sources in the event loop. */
3271 remote_async_inferior_event_token
3272 = create_async_event_handler (remote_async_inferior_event_handler,
3274 remote_async_get_pending_events_token
3275 = create_async_event_handler (remote_async_get_pending_events_handler,
3278 /* Reset the target state; these things will be queried either by
3279 remote_query_supported or as they are needed. */
3280 init_all_packet_configs ();
3281 rs->cached_wait_status = 0;
3282 rs->explicit_packet_size = 0;
3284 rs->multi_process_aware = 0;
3285 rs->extended = extended_p;
3286 rs->non_stop_aware = 0;
3287 rs->waiting_for_stop_reply = 0;
3289 general_thread = not_sent_ptid;
3290 continue_thread = not_sent_ptid;
3292 /* Probe for ability to use "ThreadInfo" query, as required. */
3293 use_threadinfo_query = 1;
3294 use_threadextra_query = 1;
3296 if (target_async_permitted)
3298 /* With this target we start out by owning the terminal. */
3299 remote_async_terminal_ours_p = 1;
3301 /* FIXME: cagney/1999-09-23: During the initial connection it is
3302 assumed that the target is already ready and able to respond to
3303 requests. Unfortunately remote_start_remote() eventually calls
3304 wait_for_inferior() with no timeout. wait_forever_enabled_p gets
3305 around this. Eventually a mechanism that allows
3306 wait_for_inferior() to expect/get timeouts will be
3308 wait_forever_enabled_p = 0;
3311 /* First delete any symbols previously loaded from shared libraries. */
3312 no_shared_libraries (NULL, 0);
3315 init_thread_list ();
3317 /* Start the remote connection. If error() or QUIT, discard this
3318 target (we'd otherwise be in an inconsistent state) and then
3319 propogate the error on up the exception chain. This ensures that
3320 the caller doesn't stumble along blindly assuming that the
3321 function succeeded. The CLI doesn't have this problem but other
3322 UI's, such as MI do.
3324 FIXME: cagney/2002-05-19: Instead of re-throwing the exception,
3325 this function should return an error indication letting the
3326 caller restore the previous state. Unfortunately the command
3327 ``target remote'' is directly wired to this function making that
3328 impossible. On a positive note, the CLI side of this problem has
3329 been fixed - the function set_cmd_context() makes it possible for
3330 all the ``target ....'' commands to share a common callback
3331 function. See cli-dump.c. */
3333 struct gdb_exception ex;
3334 struct start_remote_args args;
3336 args.from_tty = from_tty;
3337 args.target = target;
3338 args.extended_p = extended_p;
3340 ex = catch_exception (uiout, remote_start_remote, &args, RETURN_MASK_ALL);
3343 /* Pop the partially set up target - unless something else did
3344 already before throwing the exception. */
3345 if (remote_desc != NULL)
3347 if (target_async_permitted)
3348 wait_forever_enabled_p = 1;
3349 throw_exception (ex);
3353 if (target_async_permitted)
3354 wait_forever_enabled_p = 1;
3357 /* This takes a program previously attached to and detaches it. After
3358 this is done, GDB can be used to debug some other program. We
3359 better not have left any breakpoints in the target program or it'll
3360 die when it hits one. */
3363 remote_detach_1 (char *args, int from_tty, int extended)
3365 int pid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid);
3366 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
3369 error (_("Argument given to \"detach\" when remotely debugging."));
3371 if (!target_has_execution)
3372 error (_("No process to detach from."));
3374 /* Tell the remote target to detach. */
3375 if (remote_multi_process_p (rs))
3376 sprintf (rs->buf, "D;%x", pid);
3378 strcpy (rs->buf, "D");
3381 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
3383 if (rs->buf[0] == 'O' && rs->buf[1] == 'K')
3385 else if (rs->buf[0] == '\0')
3386 error (_("Remote doesn't know how to detach"));
3388 error (_("Can't detach process."));
3392 if (remote_multi_process_p (rs))
3393 printf_filtered (_("Detached from remote %s.\n"),
3394 target_pid_to_str (pid_to_ptid (pid)));
3398 puts_filtered (_("Detached from remote process.\n"));
3400 puts_filtered (_("Ending remote debugging.\n"));
3404 discard_pending_stop_replies (pid);
3405 target_mourn_inferior ();
3409 remote_detach (struct target_ops *ops, char *args, int from_tty)
3411 remote_detach_1 (args, from_tty, 0);
3415 extended_remote_detach (struct target_ops *ops, char *args, int from_tty)
3417 remote_detach_1 (args, from_tty, 1);
3420 /* Same as remote_detach, but don't send the "D" packet; just disconnect. */
3423 remote_disconnect (struct target_ops *target, char *args, int from_tty)
3426 error (_("Argument given to \"disconnect\" when remotely debugging."));
3428 /* Make sure we unpush even the extended remote targets; mourn
3429 won't do it. So call remote_mourn_1 directly instead of
3430 target_mourn_inferior. */
3431 remote_mourn_1 (target);
3434 puts_filtered ("Ending remote debugging.\n");
3437 /* Attach to the process specified by ARGS. If FROM_TTY is non-zero,
3438 be chatty about it. */
3441 extended_remote_attach_1 (struct target_ops *target, char *args, int from_tty)
3443 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
3446 char *wait_status = NULL;
3449 error_no_arg (_("process-id to attach"));
3452 pid = strtol (args, &dummy, 0);
3453 /* Some targets don't set errno on errors, grrr! */
3454 if (pid == 0 && args == dummy)
3455 error (_("Illegal process-id: %s."), args);
3457 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vAttach].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
3458 error (_("This target does not support attaching to a process"));
3460 sprintf (rs->buf, "vAttach;%x", pid);
3462 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
3464 if (packet_ok (rs->buf, &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vAttach]) == PACKET_OK)
3467 printf_unfiltered (_("Attached to %s\n"),
3468 target_pid_to_str (pid_to_ptid (pid)));
3472 /* Save the reply for later. */
3473 wait_status = alloca (strlen (rs->buf) + 1);
3474 strcpy (wait_status, rs->buf);
3476 else if (strcmp (rs->buf, "OK") != 0)
3477 error (_("Attaching to %s failed with: %s"),
3478 target_pid_to_str (pid_to_ptid (pid)),
3481 else if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vAttach].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
3482 error (_("This target does not support attaching to a process"));
3484 error (_("Attaching to %s failed"),
3485 target_pid_to_str (pid_to_ptid (pid)));
3487 inferior_ptid = pid_to_ptid (pid);
3489 /* Now, if we have thread information, update inferior_ptid. */
3490 inferior_ptid = remote_current_thread (inferior_ptid);
3492 remote_add_inferior (pid, 1);
3495 /* Get list of threads. */
3496 remote_threads_info (target);
3498 /* Add the main thread to the thread list. */
3499 add_thread_silent (inferior_ptid);
3501 /* Next, if the target can specify a description, read it. We do
3502 this before anything involving memory or registers. */
3503 target_find_description ();
3507 /* Use the previously fetched status. */
3508 gdb_assert (wait_status != NULL);
3510 if (target_can_async_p ())
3512 struct stop_reply *stop_reply;
3513 struct cleanup *old_chain;
3515 stop_reply = stop_reply_xmalloc ();
3516 old_chain = make_cleanup (do_stop_reply_xfree, stop_reply);
3517 remote_parse_stop_reply (wait_status, stop_reply);
3518 discard_cleanups (old_chain);
3519 push_stop_reply (stop_reply);
3521 target_async (inferior_event_handler, 0);
3525 gdb_assert (wait_status != NULL);
3526 strcpy (rs->buf, wait_status);
3527 rs->cached_wait_status = 1;
3531 gdb_assert (wait_status == NULL);
3535 extended_remote_attach (struct target_ops *ops, char *args, int from_tty)
3537 extended_remote_attach_1 (ops, args, from_tty);
3540 /* Convert hex digit A to a number. */
3545 if (a >= '0' && a <= '9')
3547 else if (a >= 'a' && a <= 'f')
3548 return a - 'a' + 10;
3549 else if (a >= 'A' && a <= 'F')
3550 return a - 'A' + 10;
3552 error (_("Reply contains invalid hex digit %d"), a);
3556 hex2bin (const char *hex, gdb_byte *bin, int count)
3560 for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
3562 if (hex[0] == 0 || hex[1] == 0)
3564 /* Hex string is short, or of uneven length.
3565 Return the count that has been converted so far. */
3568 *bin++ = fromhex (hex[0]) * 16 + fromhex (hex[1]);
3574 /* Convert number NIB to a hex digit. */
3582 return 'a' + nib - 10;
3586 bin2hex (const gdb_byte *bin, char *hex, int count)
3589 /* May use a length, or a nul-terminated string as input. */
3591 count = strlen ((char *) bin);
3593 for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
3595 *hex++ = tohex ((*bin >> 4) & 0xf);
3596 *hex++ = tohex (*bin++ & 0xf);
3602 /* Check for the availability of vCont. This function should also check
3606 remote_vcont_probe (struct remote_state *rs)
3610 strcpy (rs->buf, "vCont?");
3612 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
3615 /* Make sure that the features we assume are supported. */
3616 if (strncmp (buf, "vCont", 5) == 0)
3619 int support_s, support_S, support_c, support_C;
3625 rs->support_vCont_t = 0;
3626 while (p && *p == ';')
3629 if (*p == 's' && (*(p + 1) == ';' || *(p + 1) == 0))
3631 else if (*p == 'S' && (*(p + 1) == ';' || *(p + 1) == 0))
3633 else if (*p == 'c' && (*(p + 1) == ';' || *(p + 1) == 0))
3635 else if (*p == 'C' && (*(p + 1) == ';' || *(p + 1) == 0))
3637 else if (*p == 't' && (*(p + 1) == ';' || *(p + 1) == 0))
3638 rs->support_vCont_t = 1;
3640 p = strchr (p, ';');
3643 /* If s, S, c, and C are not all supported, we can't use vCont. Clearing
3644 BUF will make packet_ok disable the packet. */
3645 if (!support_s || !support_S || !support_c || !support_C)
3649 packet_ok (buf, &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vCont]);
3652 /* Resume the remote inferior by using a "vCont" packet. The thread
3653 to be resumed is PTID; STEP and SIGGNAL indicate whether the
3654 resumed thread should be single-stepped and/or signalled. If PTID
3655 equals minus_one_ptid, then all threads are resumed; the thread to
3656 be stepped and/or signalled is given in the global INFERIOR_PTID.
3657 This function returns non-zero iff it resumes the inferior.
3659 This function issues a strict subset of all possible vCont commands at the
3663 remote_vcont_resume (ptid_t ptid, int step, enum target_signal siggnal)
3665 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
3669 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vCont].support == PACKET_SUPPORT_UNKNOWN)
3670 remote_vcont_probe (rs);
3672 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vCont].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
3676 endp = rs->buf + get_remote_packet_size ();
3678 /* If we could generate a wider range of packets, we'd have to worry
3679 about overflowing BUF. Should there be a generic
3680 "multi-part-packet" packet? */
3682 if (ptid_equal (ptid, magic_null_ptid))
3684 /* MAGIC_NULL_PTID means that we don't have any active threads,
3685 so we don't have any TID numbers the inferior will
3686 understand. Make sure to only send forms that do not specify
3688 if (step && siggnal != TARGET_SIGNAL_0)
3689 xsnprintf (p, endp - p, "vCont;S%02x", siggnal);
3691 xsnprintf (p, endp - p, "vCont;s");
3692 else if (siggnal != TARGET_SIGNAL_0)
3693 xsnprintf (p, endp - p, "vCont;C%02x", siggnal);
3695 xsnprintf (p, endp - p, "vCont;c");
3697 else if (ptid_equal (ptid, minus_one_ptid))
3699 /* Resume all threads, with preference for INFERIOR_PTID. */
3700 if (step && siggnal != TARGET_SIGNAL_0)
3702 /* Step inferior_ptid with signal. */
3703 p += xsnprintf (p, endp - p, "vCont;S%02x:", siggnal);
3704 p = write_ptid (p, endp, inferior_ptid);
3705 /* And continue others. */
3706 p += xsnprintf (p, endp - p, ";c");
3710 /* Step inferior_ptid. */
3711 p += xsnprintf (p, endp - p, "vCont;s:");
3712 p = write_ptid (p, endp, inferior_ptid);
3713 /* And continue others. */
3714 p += xsnprintf (p, endp - p, ";c");
3716 else if (siggnal != TARGET_SIGNAL_0)
3718 /* Continue inferior_ptid with signal. */
3719 p += xsnprintf (p, endp - p, "vCont;C%02x:", siggnal);
3720 p = write_ptid (p, endp, inferior_ptid);
3721 /* And continue others. */
3722 p += xsnprintf (p, endp - p, ";c");
3725 xsnprintf (p, endp - p, "vCont;c");
3729 /* Scheduler locking; resume only PTID. */
3730 if (step && siggnal != TARGET_SIGNAL_0)
3732 /* Step ptid with signal. */
3733 p += xsnprintf (p, endp - p, "vCont;S%02x:", siggnal);
3734 p = write_ptid (p, endp, ptid);
3739 p += xsnprintf (p, endp - p, "vCont;s:");
3740 p = write_ptid (p, endp, ptid);
3742 else if (siggnal != TARGET_SIGNAL_0)
3744 /* Continue ptid with signal. */
3745 p += xsnprintf (p, endp - p, "vCont;C%02x:", siggnal);
3746 p = write_ptid (p, endp, ptid);
3750 /* Continue ptid. */
3751 p += xsnprintf (p, endp - p, "vCont;c:");
3752 p = write_ptid (p, endp, ptid);
3756 gdb_assert (strlen (rs->buf) < get_remote_packet_size ());
3761 /* In non-stop, the stub replies to vCont with "OK". The stop
3762 reply will be reported asynchronously by means of a `%Stop'
3764 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
3765 if (strcmp (rs->buf, "OK") != 0)
3766 error (_("Unexpected vCont reply in non-stop mode: %s"), rs->buf);
3772 /* Tell the remote machine to resume. */
3774 static enum target_signal last_sent_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0;
3776 static int last_sent_step;
3779 remote_resume (struct target_ops *ops,
3780 ptid_t ptid, int step, enum target_signal siggnal)
3782 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
3785 last_sent_signal = siggnal;
3786 last_sent_step = step;
3788 /* Update the inferior on signals to silently pass, if they've changed. */
3789 remote_pass_signals ();
3791 /* The vCont packet doesn't need to specify threads via Hc. */
3792 if (remote_vcont_resume (ptid, step, siggnal))
3795 /* All other supported resume packets do use Hc, so set the continue
3797 if (ptid_equal (ptid, minus_one_ptid))
3798 set_continue_thread (any_thread_ptid);
3800 set_continue_thread (ptid);
3803 if (execution_direction == EXEC_REVERSE)
3805 /* We don't pass signals to the target in reverse exec mode. */
3806 if (info_verbose && siggnal != TARGET_SIGNAL_0)
3807 warning (" - Can't pass signal %d to target in reverse: ignored.\n",
3809 strcpy (buf, step ? "bs" : "bc");
3811 else if (siggnal != TARGET_SIGNAL_0)
3813 buf[0] = step ? 'S' : 'C';
3814 buf[1] = tohex (((int) siggnal >> 4) & 0xf);
3815 buf[2] = tohex (((int) siggnal) & 0xf);
3819 strcpy (buf, step ? "s" : "c");
3824 /* We are about to start executing the inferior, let's register it
3825 with the event loop. NOTE: this is the one place where all the
3826 execution commands end up. We could alternatively do this in each
3827 of the execution commands in infcmd.c. */
3828 /* FIXME: ezannoni 1999-09-28: We may need to move this out of here
3829 into infcmd.c in order to allow inferior function calls to work
3830 NOT asynchronously. */
3831 if (target_can_async_p ())
3832 target_async (inferior_event_handler, 0);
3834 /* We've just told the target to resume. The remote server will
3835 wait for the inferior to stop, and then send a stop reply. In
3836 the mean time, we can't start another command/query ourselves
3837 because the stub wouldn't be ready to process it. This applies
3838 only to the base all-stop protocol, however. In non-stop (which
3839 only supports vCont), the stub replies with an "OK", and is
3840 immediate able to process further serial input. */
3842 rs->waiting_for_stop_reply = 1;
3846 /* Set up the signal handler for SIGINT, while the target is
3847 executing, ovewriting the 'regular' SIGINT signal handler. */
3849 initialize_sigint_signal_handler (void)
3851 signal (SIGINT, handle_remote_sigint);
3854 /* Signal handler for SIGINT, while the target is executing. */
3856 handle_remote_sigint (int sig)
3858 signal (sig, handle_remote_sigint_twice);
3859 mark_async_signal_handler_wrapper (sigint_remote_token);
3862 /* Signal handler for SIGINT, installed after SIGINT has already been
3863 sent once. It will take effect the second time that the user sends
3866 handle_remote_sigint_twice (int sig)
3868 signal (sig, handle_remote_sigint);
3869 mark_async_signal_handler_wrapper (sigint_remote_twice_token);
3872 /* Perform the real interruption of the target execution, in response
3875 async_remote_interrupt (gdb_client_data arg)
3878 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "remote_interrupt called\n");
3880 target_stop (inferior_ptid);
3883 /* Perform interrupt, if the first attempt did not succeed. Just give
3884 up on the target alltogether. */
3886 async_remote_interrupt_twice (gdb_client_data arg)
3889 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "remote_interrupt_twice called\n");
3894 /* Reinstall the usual SIGINT handlers, after the target has
3897 cleanup_sigint_signal_handler (void *dummy)
3899 signal (SIGINT, handle_sigint);
3902 /* Send ^C to target to halt it. Target will respond, and send us a
3904 static void (*ofunc) (int);
3906 /* The command line interface's stop routine. This function is installed
3907 as a signal handler for SIGINT. The first time a user requests a
3908 stop, we call remote_stop to send a break or ^C. If there is no
3909 response from the target (it didn't stop when the user requested it),
3910 we ask the user if he'd like to detach from the target. */
3912 remote_interrupt (int signo)
3914 /* If this doesn't work, try more severe steps. */
3915 signal (signo, remote_interrupt_twice);
3917 gdb_call_async_signal_handler (sigint_remote_token, 1);
3920 /* The user typed ^C twice. */
3923 remote_interrupt_twice (int signo)
3925 signal (signo, ofunc);
3926 gdb_call_async_signal_handler (sigint_remote_twice_token, 1);
3927 signal (signo, remote_interrupt);
3930 /* Non-stop version of target_stop. Uses `vCont;t' to stop a remote
3931 thread, all threads of a remote process, or all threads of all
3935 remote_stop_ns (ptid_t ptid)
3937 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
3939 char *endp = rs->buf + get_remote_packet_size ();
3940 struct stop_reply *reply, *next;
3942 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vCont].support == PACKET_SUPPORT_UNKNOWN)
3943 remote_vcont_probe (rs);
3945 if (!rs->support_vCont_t)
3946 error (_("Remote server does not support stopping threads"));
3948 if (ptid_equal (ptid, minus_one_ptid))
3949 p += xsnprintf (p, endp - p, "vCont;t");
3954 /* Step inferior_ptid. */
3955 p += xsnprintf (p, endp - p, "vCont;t:");
3957 if (ptid_is_pid (ptid))
3958 /* All (-1) threads of process. */
3959 nptid = ptid_build (ptid_get_pid (ptid), 0, -1);
3962 /* Small optimization: if we already have a stop reply for
3963 this thread, no use in telling the stub we want this
3965 if (peek_stop_reply (ptid))
3971 p = write_ptid (p, endp, nptid);
3974 /* In non-stop, we get an immediate OK reply. The stop reply will
3975 come in asynchronously by notification. */
3977 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
3978 if (strcmp (rs->buf, "OK") != 0)
3979 error (_("Stopping %s failed: %s"), target_pid_to_str (ptid), rs->buf);
3982 /* All-stop version of target_stop. Sends a break or a ^C to stop the
3983 remote target. It is undefined which thread of which process
3984 reports the stop. */
3987 remote_stop_as (ptid_t ptid)
3989 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
3991 /* If the inferior is stopped already, but the core didn't know
3992 about it yet, just ignore the request. The cached wait status
3993 will be collected in remote_wait. */
3994 if (rs->cached_wait_status)
3997 /* Send a break or a ^C, depending on user preference. */
4000 serial_send_break (remote_desc);
4002 serial_write (remote_desc, "\003", 1);
4005 /* This is the generic stop called via the target vector. When a target
4006 interrupt is requested, either by the command line or the GUI, we
4007 will eventually end up here. */
4010 remote_stop (ptid_t ptid)
4013 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "remote_stop called\n");
4016 remote_stop_ns (ptid);
4018 remote_stop_as (ptid);
4021 /* Ask the user what to do when an interrupt is received. */
4024 interrupt_query (void)
4026 target_terminal_ours ();
4028 if (target_can_async_p ())
4030 signal (SIGINT, handle_sigint);
4031 deprecated_throw_reason (RETURN_QUIT);
4035 if (query (_("Interrupted while waiting for the program.\n\
4036 Give up (and stop debugging it)? ")))
4039 deprecated_throw_reason (RETURN_QUIT);
4043 target_terminal_inferior ();
4046 /* Enable/disable target terminal ownership. Most targets can use
4047 terminal groups to control terminal ownership. Remote targets are
4048 different in that explicit transfer of ownership to/from GDB/target
4052 remote_terminal_inferior (void)
4054 if (!target_async_permitted)
4055 /* Nothing to do. */
4058 /* FIXME: cagney/1999-09-27: Shouldn't need to test for
4059 sync_execution here. This function should only be called when
4060 GDB is resuming the inferior in the forground. A background
4061 resume (``run&'') should leave GDB in control of the terminal and
4062 consequently should not call this code. */
4063 if (!sync_execution)
4065 /* FIXME: cagney/1999-09-27: Closely related to the above. Make
4066 calls target_terminal_*() idenpotent. The event-loop GDB talking
4067 to an asynchronous target with a synchronous command calls this
4068 function from both event-top.c and infrun.c/infcmd.c. Once GDB
4069 stops trying to transfer the terminal to the target when it
4070 shouldn't this guard can go away. */
4071 if (!remote_async_terminal_ours_p)
4073 delete_file_handler (input_fd);
4074 remote_async_terminal_ours_p = 0;
4075 initialize_sigint_signal_handler ();
4076 /* NOTE: At this point we could also register our selves as the
4077 recipient of all input. Any characters typed could then be
4078 passed on down to the target. */
4082 remote_terminal_ours (void)
4084 if (!target_async_permitted)
4085 /* Nothing to do. */
4088 /* See FIXME in remote_terminal_inferior. */
4089 if (!sync_execution)
4091 /* See FIXME in remote_terminal_inferior. */
4092 if (remote_async_terminal_ours_p)
4094 cleanup_sigint_signal_handler (NULL);
4095 add_file_handler (input_fd, stdin_event_handler, 0);
4096 remote_async_terminal_ours_p = 1;
4100 remote_console_output (char *msg)
4104 for (p = msg; p[0] && p[1]; p += 2)
4107 char c = fromhex (p[0]) * 16 + fromhex (p[1]);
4110 fputs_unfiltered (tb, gdb_stdtarg);
4112 gdb_flush (gdb_stdtarg);
4115 typedef struct cached_reg
4118 gdb_byte data[MAX_REGISTER_SIZE];
4121 DEF_VEC_O(cached_reg_t);
4125 struct stop_reply *next;
4129 struct target_waitstatus ws;
4131 VEC(cached_reg_t) *regcache;
4133 int stopped_by_watchpoint_p;
4134 CORE_ADDR watch_data_address;
4140 /* The list of already fetched and acknowledged stop events. */
4141 static struct stop_reply *stop_reply_queue;
4143 static struct stop_reply *
4144 stop_reply_xmalloc (void)
4146 struct stop_reply *r = XMALLOC (struct stop_reply);
4152 stop_reply_xfree (struct stop_reply *r)
4156 VEC_free (cached_reg_t, r->regcache);
4161 /* Discard all pending stop replies of inferior PID. If PID is -1,
4162 discard everything. */
4165 discard_pending_stop_replies (int pid)
4167 struct stop_reply *prev = NULL, *reply, *next;
4169 /* Discard the in-flight notification. */
4170 if (pending_stop_reply != NULL
4172 || ptid_get_pid (pending_stop_reply->ptid) == pid))
4174 stop_reply_xfree (pending_stop_reply);
4175 pending_stop_reply = NULL;
4178 /* Discard the stop replies we have already pulled with
4180 for (reply = stop_reply_queue; reply; reply = next)
4184 || ptid_get_pid (reply->ptid) == pid)
4186 if (reply == stop_reply_queue)
4187 stop_reply_queue = reply->next;
4189 prev->next = reply->next;
4191 stop_reply_xfree (reply);
4198 /* Cleanup wrapper. */
4201 do_stop_reply_xfree (void *arg)
4203 struct stop_reply *r = arg;
4204 stop_reply_xfree (r);
4207 /* Look for a queued stop reply belonging to PTID. If one is found,
4208 remove it from the queue, and return it. Returns NULL if none is
4209 found. If there are still queued events left to process, tell the
4210 event loop to get back to target_wait soon. */
4212 static struct stop_reply *
4213 queued_stop_reply (ptid_t ptid)
4215 struct stop_reply *it, *prev;
4216 struct stop_reply head;
4218 head.next = stop_reply_queue;
4223 if (!ptid_equal (ptid, minus_one_ptid))
4224 for (; it; prev = it, it = it->next)
4225 if (ptid_equal (ptid, it->ptid))
4230 prev->next = it->next;
4234 stop_reply_queue = head.next;
4236 if (stop_reply_queue)
4237 /* There's still at least an event left. */
4238 mark_async_event_handler (remote_async_inferior_event_token);
4243 /* Push a fully parsed stop reply in the stop reply queue. Since we
4244 know that we now have at least one queued event left to pass to the
4245 core side, tell the event loop to get back to target_wait soon. */
4248 push_stop_reply (struct stop_reply *new_event)
4250 struct stop_reply *event;
4252 if (stop_reply_queue)
4254 for (event = stop_reply_queue;
4255 event && event->next;
4256 event = event->next)
4259 event->next = new_event;
4262 stop_reply_queue = new_event;
4264 mark_async_event_handler (remote_async_inferior_event_token);
4267 /* Returns true if we have a stop reply for PTID. */
4270 peek_stop_reply (ptid_t ptid)
4272 struct stop_reply *it;
4274 for (it = stop_reply_queue; it; it = it->next)
4275 if (ptid_equal (ptid, it->ptid))
4277 if (it->ws.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED)
4284 /* Parse the stop reply in BUF. Either the function succeeds, and the
4285 result is stored in EVENT, or throws an error. */
4288 remote_parse_stop_reply (char *buf, struct stop_reply *event)
4290 struct remote_arch_state *rsa = get_remote_arch_state ();
4294 event->ptid = null_ptid;
4295 event->ws.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
4296 event->ws.value.integer = 0;
4297 event->solibs_changed = 0;
4298 event->replay_event = 0;
4299 event->stopped_by_watchpoint_p = 0;
4300 event->regcache = NULL;
4304 case 'T': /* Status with PC, SP, FP, ... */
4306 gdb_byte regs[MAX_REGISTER_SIZE];
4308 /* Expedited reply, containing Signal, {regno, reg} repeat. */
4309 /* format is: 'Tssn...:r...;n...:r...;n...:r...;#cc', where
4311 n... = register number
4312 r... = register contents
4315 p = &buf[3]; /* after Txx */
4323 /* If the packet contains a register number, save it in
4324 pnum and set p1 to point to the character following it.
4325 Otherwise p1 points to p. */
4327 /* If this packet is an awatch packet, don't parse the 'a'
4328 as a register number. */
4330 if (strncmp (p, "awatch", strlen("awatch")) != 0)
4332 /* Read the ``P'' register number. */
4333 pnum = strtol (p, &p_temp, 16);
4339 if (p1 == p) /* No register number present here. */
4341 p1 = strchr (p, ':');
4343 error (_("Malformed packet(a) (missing colon): %s\n\
4346 if (strncmp (p, "thread", p1 - p) == 0)
4347 event->ptid = read_ptid (++p1, &p);
4348 else if ((strncmp (p, "watch", p1 - p) == 0)
4349 || (strncmp (p, "rwatch", p1 - p) == 0)
4350 || (strncmp (p, "awatch", p1 - p) == 0))
4352 event->stopped_by_watchpoint_p = 1;
4353 p = unpack_varlen_hex (++p1, &addr);
4354 event->watch_data_address = (CORE_ADDR) addr;
4356 else if (strncmp (p, "library", p1 - p) == 0)
4360 while (*p_temp && *p_temp != ';')
4363 event->solibs_changed = 1;
4366 else if (strncmp (p, "replaylog", p1 - p) == 0)
4368 /* NO_HISTORY event.
4369 p1 will indicate "begin" or "end", but
4370 it makes no difference for now, so ignore it. */
4371 event->replay_event = 1;
4372 p_temp = strchr (p1 + 1, ';');
4378 /* Silently skip unknown optional info. */
4379 p_temp = strchr (p1 + 1, ';');
4386 struct packet_reg *reg = packet_reg_from_pnum (rsa, pnum);
4387 cached_reg_t cached_reg;
4392 error (_("Malformed packet(b) (missing colon): %s\n\
4398 error (_("Remote sent bad register number %s: %s\n\
4400 phex_nz (pnum, 0), p, buf);
4402 cached_reg.num = reg->regnum;
4404 fieldsize = hex2bin (p, cached_reg.data,
4405 register_size (target_gdbarch,
4408 if (fieldsize < register_size (target_gdbarch,
4410 warning (_("Remote reply is too short: %s"), buf);
4412 VEC_safe_push (cached_reg_t, event->regcache, &cached_reg);
4416 error (_("Remote register badly formatted: %s\nhere: %s"),
4422 case 'S': /* Old style status, just signal only. */
4423 if (event->solibs_changed)
4424 event->ws.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_LOADED;
4425 else if (event->replay_event)
4426 event->ws.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_NO_HISTORY;
4429 event->ws.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED;
4430 event->ws.value.sig = (enum target_signal)
4431 (((fromhex (buf[1])) << 4) + (fromhex (buf[2])));
4434 case 'W': /* Target exited. */
4441 /* GDB used to accept only 2 hex chars here. Stubs should
4442 only send more if they detect GDB supports multi-process
4444 p = unpack_varlen_hex (&buf[1], &value);
4448 /* The remote process exited. */
4449 event->ws.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED;
4450 event->ws.value.integer = value;
4454 /* The remote process exited with a signal. */
4455 event->ws.kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED;
4456 event->ws.value.sig = (enum target_signal) value;
4459 /* If no process is specified, assume inferior_ptid. */
4460 pid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid);
4469 else if (strncmp (p,
4470 "process:", sizeof ("process:") - 1) == 0)
4473 p += sizeof ("process:") - 1;
4474 unpack_varlen_hex (p, &upid);
4478 error (_("unknown stop reply packet: %s"), buf);
4481 error (_("unknown stop reply packet: %s"), buf);
4482 event->ptid = pid_to_ptid (pid);
4487 if (non_stop && ptid_equal (event->ptid, null_ptid))
4488 error (_("No process or thread specified in stop reply: %s"), buf);
4491 /* When the stub wants to tell GDB about a new stop reply, it sends a
4492 stop notification (%Stop). Those can come it at any time, hence,
4493 we have to make sure that any pending putpkt/getpkt sequence we're
4494 making is finished, before querying the stub for more events with
4495 vStopped. E.g., if we started a vStopped sequence immediatelly
4496 upon receiving the %Stop notification, something like this could
4504 1.6) <-- (registers reply to step #1.3)
4506 Obviously, the reply in step #1.6 would be unexpected to a vStopped
4509 To solve this, whenever we parse a %Stop notification sucessfully,
4510 we mark the REMOTE_ASYNC_GET_PENDING_EVENTS_TOKEN, and carry on
4511 doing whatever we were doing:
4517 <GDB marks the REMOTE_ASYNC_GET_PENDING_EVENTS_TOKEN>
4518 2.5) <-- (registers reply to step #2.3)
4520 Eventualy after step #2.5, we return to the event loop, which
4521 notices there's an event on the
4522 REMOTE_ASYNC_GET_PENDING_EVENTS_TOKEN event and calls the
4523 associated callback --- the function below. At this point, we're
4524 always safe to start a vStopped sequence. :
4527 2.7) <-- T05 thread:2
4533 remote_get_pending_stop_replies (void)
4535 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
4538 if (pending_stop_reply)
4541 putpkt ("vStopped");
4543 /* Now we can rely on it. */
4544 push_stop_reply (pending_stop_reply);
4545 pending_stop_reply = NULL;
4549 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
4550 if (strcmp (rs->buf, "OK") == 0)
4554 struct cleanup *old_chain;
4555 struct stop_reply *stop_reply = stop_reply_xmalloc ();
4557 old_chain = make_cleanup (do_stop_reply_xfree, stop_reply);
4558 remote_parse_stop_reply (rs->buf, stop_reply);
4561 putpkt ("vStopped");
4563 if (stop_reply->ws.kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE)
4565 /* Now we can rely on it. */
4566 discard_cleanups (old_chain);
4567 push_stop_reply (stop_reply);
4570 /* We got an unknown stop reply. */
4571 do_cleanups (old_chain);
4578 /* Called when it is decided that STOP_REPLY holds the info of the
4579 event that is to be returned to the core. This function always
4580 destroys STOP_REPLY. */
4583 process_stop_reply (struct stop_reply *stop_reply,
4584 struct target_waitstatus *status)
4588 *status = stop_reply->ws;
4589 ptid = stop_reply->ptid;
4591 /* If no thread/process was reported by the stub, assume the current
4593 if (ptid_equal (ptid, null_ptid))
4594 ptid = inferior_ptid;
4596 if (status->kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED
4597 && status->kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED)
4599 /* Expedited registers. */
4600 if (stop_reply->regcache)
4606 VEC_iterate(cached_reg_t, stop_reply->regcache, ix, reg);
4608 regcache_raw_supply (get_thread_regcache (ptid),
4609 reg->num, reg->data);
4610 VEC_free (cached_reg_t, stop_reply->regcache);
4613 remote_stopped_by_watchpoint_p = stop_reply->stopped_by_watchpoint_p;
4614 remote_watch_data_address = stop_reply->watch_data_address;
4616 remote_notice_new_inferior (ptid, 0);
4619 stop_reply_xfree (stop_reply);
4623 /* The non-stop mode version of target_wait. */
4626 remote_wait_ns (ptid_t ptid, struct target_waitstatus *status)
4628 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
4629 struct remote_arch_state *rsa = get_remote_arch_state ();
4630 ptid_t event_ptid = null_ptid;
4631 struct stop_reply *stop_reply;
4634 /* If in non-stop mode, get out of getpkt even if a
4635 notification is received. */
4637 ret = getpkt_or_notif_sane (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size,
4644 case 'E': /* Error of some sort. */
4645 /* We're out of sync with the target now. Did it continue
4646 or not? We can't tell which thread it was in non-stop,
4647 so just ignore this. */
4648 warning (_("Remote failure reply: %s"), rs->buf);
4650 case 'O': /* Console output. */
4651 remote_console_output (rs->buf + 1);
4654 warning (_("Invalid remote reply: %s"), rs->buf);
4658 /* Acknowledge a pending stop reply that may have arrived in the
4660 if (pending_stop_reply != NULL)
4661 remote_get_pending_stop_replies ();
4663 /* If indeed we noticed a stop reply, we're done. */
4664 stop_reply = queued_stop_reply (ptid);
4665 if (stop_reply != NULL)
4666 return process_stop_reply (stop_reply, status);
4668 /* Still no event. If we're in asynchronous mode, then just
4669 return to the event loop. */
4670 if (remote_is_async_p ())
4672 status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
4673 return minus_one_ptid;
4676 /* Otherwise, asynchronous mode is masked, so do a blocking
4678 ret = getpkt_or_notif_sane (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size,
4683 /* Wait until the remote machine stops, then return, storing status in
4684 STATUS just as `wait' would. */
4687 remote_wait_as (ptid_t ptid, struct target_waitstatus *status)
4689 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
4690 struct remote_arch_state *rsa = get_remote_arch_state ();
4691 ptid_t event_ptid = null_ptid;
4693 int solibs_changed = 0;
4695 struct stop_reply *stop_reply;
4697 status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE;
4698 status->value.integer = 0;
4700 stop_reply = queued_stop_reply (ptid);
4701 if (stop_reply != NULL)
4702 return process_stop_reply (stop_reply, status);
4704 if (rs->cached_wait_status)
4705 /* Use the cached wait status, but only once. */
4706 rs->cached_wait_status = 0;
4711 if (!target_is_async_p ())
4713 ofunc = signal (SIGINT, remote_interrupt);
4714 /* If the user hit C-c before this packet, or between packets,
4715 pretend that it was hit right here. */
4719 remote_interrupt (SIGINT);
4723 /* FIXME: cagney/1999-09-27: If we're in async mode we should
4724 _never_ wait for ever -> test on target_is_async_p().
4725 However, before we do that we need to ensure that the caller
4726 knows how to take the target into/out of async mode. */
4727 ret = getpkt_sane (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, wait_forever_enabled_p);
4728 if (!target_is_async_p ())
4729 signal (SIGINT, ofunc);
4734 remote_stopped_by_watchpoint_p = 0;
4736 /* We got something. */
4737 rs->waiting_for_stop_reply = 0;
4741 case 'E': /* Error of some sort. */
4742 /* We're out of sync with the target now. Did it continue or
4743 not? Not is more likely, so report a stop. */
4744 warning (_("Remote failure reply: %s"), buf);
4745 status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED;
4746 status->value.sig = TARGET_SIGNAL_0;
4748 case 'F': /* File-I/O request. */
4749 remote_fileio_request (buf);
4751 case 'T': case 'S': case 'X': case 'W':
4753 struct stop_reply *stop_reply;
4754 struct cleanup *old_chain;
4756 stop_reply = stop_reply_xmalloc ();
4757 old_chain = make_cleanup (do_stop_reply_xfree, stop_reply);
4758 remote_parse_stop_reply (buf, stop_reply);
4759 discard_cleanups (old_chain);
4760 event_ptid = process_stop_reply (stop_reply, status);
4763 case 'O': /* Console output. */
4764 remote_console_output (buf + 1);
4766 /* The target didn't really stop; keep waiting. */
4767 rs->waiting_for_stop_reply = 1;
4771 if (last_sent_signal != TARGET_SIGNAL_0)
4773 /* Zero length reply means that we tried 'S' or 'C' and the
4774 remote system doesn't support it. */
4775 target_terminal_ours_for_output ();
4777 ("Can't send signals to this remote system. %s not sent.\n",
4778 target_signal_to_name (last_sent_signal));
4779 last_sent_signal = TARGET_SIGNAL_0;
4780 target_terminal_inferior ();
4782 strcpy ((char *) buf, last_sent_step ? "s" : "c");
4783 putpkt ((char *) buf);
4785 /* We just told the target to resume, so a stop reply is in
4787 rs->waiting_for_stop_reply = 1;
4790 /* else fallthrough */
4792 warning (_("Invalid remote reply: %s"), buf);
4794 rs->waiting_for_stop_reply = 1;
4798 if (status->kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE)
4799 /* Nothing interesting happened. */
4800 return minus_one_ptid;
4801 else if (status->kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED
4802 && status->kind != TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED)
4804 if (!ptid_equal (event_ptid, null_ptid))
4805 record_currthread (event_ptid);
4807 event_ptid = inferior_ptid;
4810 /* A process exit. Invalidate our notion of current thread. */
4811 record_currthread (minus_one_ptid);
4816 /* Wait until the remote machine stops, then return, storing status in
4817 STATUS just as `wait' would. */
4820 remote_wait (struct target_ops *ops,
4821 ptid_t ptid, struct target_waitstatus *status)
4826 event_ptid = remote_wait_ns (ptid, status);
4829 /* In synchronous mode, keep waiting until the target stops. In
4830 asynchronous mode, always return to the event loop. */
4834 event_ptid = remote_wait_as (ptid, status);
4836 while (status->kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_IGNORE
4837 && !target_can_async_p ());
4840 if (target_can_async_p ())
4842 /* If there are are events left in the queue tell the event loop
4844 if (stop_reply_queue)
4845 mark_async_event_handler (remote_async_inferior_event_token);
4851 /* Fetch a single register using a 'p' packet. */
4854 fetch_register_using_p (struct regcache *regcache, struct packet_reg *reg)
4856 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
4858 char regp[MAX_REGISTER_SIZE];
4861 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_p].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
4864 if (reg->pnum == -1)
4869 p += hexnumstr (p, reg->pnum);
4871 remote_send (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size);
4875 switch (packet_ok (buf, &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_p]))
4879 case PACKET_UNKNOWN:
4882 error (_("Could not fetch register \"%s\""),
4883 gdbarch_register_name (get_regcache_arch (regcache), reg->regnum));
4886 /* If this register is unfetchable, tell the regcache. */
4889 regcache_raw_supply (regcache, reg->regnum, NULL);
4893 /* Otherwise, parse and supply the value. */
4899 error (_("fetch_register_using_p: early buf termination"));
4901 regp[i++] = fromhex (p[0]) * 16 + fromhex (p[1]);
4904 regcache_raw_supply (regcache, reg->regnum, regp);
4908 /* Fetch the registers included in the target's 'g' packet. */
4911 send_g_packet (void)
4913 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
4918 sprintf (rs->buf, "g");
4919 remote_send (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size);
4921 /* We can get out of synch in various cases. If the first character
4922 in the buffer is not a hex character, assume that has happened
4923 and try to fetch another packet to read. */
4924 while ((rs->buf[0] < '0' || rs->buf[0] > '9')
4925 && (rs->buf[0] < 'A' || rs->buf[0] > 'F')
4926 && (rs->buf[0] < 'a' || rs->buf[0] > 'f')
4927 && rs->buf[0] != 'x') /* New: unavailable register value. */
4930 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
4931 "Bad register packet; fetching a new packet\n");
4932 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
4935 buf_len = strlen (rs->buf);
4937 /* Sanity check the received packet. */
4938 if (buf_len % 2 != 0)
4939 error (_("Remote 'g' packet reply is of odd length: %s"), rs->buf);
4945 process_g_packet (struct regcache *regcache)
4947 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
4948 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
4949 struct remote_arch_state *rsa = get_remote_arch_state ();
4954 buf_len = strlen (rs->buf);
4956 /* Further sanity checks, with knowledge of the architecture. */
4957 if (buf_len > 2 * rsa->sizeof_g_packet)
4958 error (_("Remote 'g' packet reply is too long: %s"), rs->buf);
4960 /* Save the size of the packet sent to us by the target. It is used
4961 as a heuristic when determining the max size of packets that the
4962 target can safely receive. */
4963 if (rsa->actual_register_packet_size == 0)
4964 rsa->actual_register_packet_size = buf_len;
4966 /* If this is smaller than we guessed the 'g' packet would be,
4967 update our records. A 'g' reply that doesn't include a register's
4968 value implies either that the register is not available, or that
4969 the 'p' packet must be used. */
4970 if (buf_len < 2 * rsa->sizeof_g_packet)
4972 rsa->sizeof_g_packet = buf_len / 2;
4974 for (i = 0; i < gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch); i++)
4976 if (rsa->regs[i].pnum == -1)
4979 if (rsa->regs[i].offset >= rsa->sizeof_g_packet)
4980 rsa->regs[i].in_g_packet = 0;
4982 rsa->regs[i].in_g_packet = 1;
4986 regs = alloca (rsa->sizeof_g_packet);
4988 /* Unimplemented registers read as all bits zero. */
4989 memset (regs, 0, rsa->sizeof_g_packet);
4991 /* Reply describes registers byte by byte, each byte encoded as two
4992 hex characters. Suck them all up, then supply them to the
4993 register cacheing/storage mechanism. */
4996 for (i = 0; i < rsa->sizeof_g_packet; i++)
4998 if (p[0] == 0 || p[1] == 0)
4999 /* This shouldn't happen - we adjusted sizeof_g_packet above. */
5000 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
5001 "unexpected end of 'g' packet reply");
5003 if (p[0] == 'x' && p[1] == 'x')
5004 regs[i] = 0; /* 'x' */
5006 regs[i] = fromhex (p[0]) * 16 + fromhex (p[1]);
5012 for (i = 0; i < gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch); i++)
5014 struct packet_reg *r = &rsa->regs[i];
5017 if (r->offset * 2 >= strlen (rs->buf))
5018 /* This shouldn't happen - we adjusted in_g_packet above. */
5019 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
5020 "unexpected end of 'g' packet reply");
5021 else if (rs->buf[r->offset * 2] == 'x')
5023 gdb_assert (r->offset * 2 < strlen (rs->buf));
5024 /* The register isn't available, mark it as such (at
5025 the same time setting the value to zero). */
5026 regcache_raw_supply (regcache, r->regnum, NULL);
5029 regcache_raw_supply (regcache, r->regnum,
5037 fetch_registers_using_g (struct regcache *regcache)
5040 process_g_packet (regcache);
5044 remote_fetch_registers (struct target_ops *ops,
5045 struct regcache *regcache, int regnum)
5047 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
5048 struct remote_arch_state *rsa = get_remote_arch_state ();
5051 set_general_thread (inferior_ptid);
5055 struct packet_reg *reg = packet_reg_from_regnum (rsa, regnum);
5056 gdb_assert (reg != NULL);
5058 /* If this register might be in the 'g' packet, try that first -
5059 we are likely to read more than one register. If this is the
5060 first 'g' packet, we might be overly optimistic about its
5061 contents, so fall back to 'p'. */
5062 if (reg->in_g_packet)
5064 fetch_registers_using_g (regcache);
5065 if (reg->in_g_packet)
5069 if (fetch_register_using_p (regcache, reg))
5072 /* This register is not available. */
5073 regcache_raw_supply (regcache, reg->regnum, NULL);
5078 fetch_registers_using_g (regcache);
5080 for (i = 0; i < gdbarch_num_regs (get_regcache_arch (regcache)); i++)
5081 if (!rsa->regs[i].in_g_packet)
5082 if (!fetch_register_using_p (regcache, &rsa->regs[i]))
5084 /* This register is not available. */
5085 regcache_raw_supply (regcache, i, NULL);
5089 /* Prepare to store registers. Since we may send them all (using a
5090 'G' request), we have to read out the ones we don't want to change
5094 remote_prepare_to_store (struct regcache *regcache)
5096 struct remote_arch_state *rsa = get_remote_arch_state ();
5098 gdb_byte buf[MAX_REGISTER_SIZE];
5100 /* Make sure the entire registers array is valid. */
5101 switch (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_P].support)
5103 case PACKET_DISABLE:
5104 case PACKET_SUPPORT_UNKNOWN:
5105 /* Make sure all the necessary registers are cached. */
5106 for (i = 0; i < gdbarch_num_regs (get_regcache_arch (regcache)); i++)
5107 if (rsa->regs[i].in_g_packet)
5108 regcache_raw_read (regcache, rsa->regs[i].regnum, buf);
5115 /* Helper: Attempt to store REGNUM using the P packet. Return fail IFF
5116 packet was not recognized. */
5119 store_register_using_P (const struct regcache *regcache, struct packet_reg *reg)
5121 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
5122 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
5123 struct remote_arch_state *rsa = get_remote_arch_state ();
5124 /* Try storing a single register. */
5125 char *buf = rs->buf;
5126 gdb_byte regp[MAX_REGISTER_SIZE];
5129 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_P].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
5132 if (reg->pnum == -1)
5135 xsnprintf (buf, get_remote_packet_size (), "P%s=", phex_nz (reg->pnum, 0));
5136 p = buf + strlen (buf);
5137 regcache_raw_collect (regcache, reg->regnum, regp);
5138 bin2hex (regp, p, register_size (gdbarch, reg->regnum));
5139 remote_send (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size);
5141 switch (packet_ok (rs->buf, &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_P]))
5146 error (_("Could not write register \"%s\""),
5147 gdbarch_register_name (gdbarch, reg->regnum));
5148 case PACKET_UNKNOWN:
5151 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("Bad result from packet_ok"));
5155 /* Store register REGNUM, or all registers if REGNUM == -1, from the
5156 contents of the register cache buffer. FIXME: ignores errors. */
5159 store_registers_using_G (const struct regcache *regcache)
5161 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
5162 struct remote_arch_state *rsa = get_remote_arch_state ();
5166 /* Extract all the registers in the regcache copying them into a
5170 regs = alloca (rsa->sizeof_g_packet);
5171 memset (regs, 0, rsa->sizeof_g_packet);
5172 for (i = 0; i < gdbarch_num_regs (get_regcache_arch (regcache)); i++)
5174 struct packet_reg *r = &rsa->regs[i];
5176 regcache_raw_collect (regcache, r->regnum, regs + r->offset);
5180 /* Command describes registers byte by byte,
5181 each byte encoded as two hex characters. */
5184 /* remote_prepare_to_store insures that rsa->sizeof_g_packet gets
5186 bin2hex (regs, p, rsa->sizeof_g_packet);
5187 remote_send (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size);
5190 /* Store register REGNUM, or all registers if REGNUM == -1, from the contents
5191 of the register cache buffer. FIXME: ignores errors. */
5194 remote_store_registers (struct target_ops *ops,
5195 struct regcache *regcache, int regnum)
5197 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
5198 struct remote_arch_state *rsa = get_remote_arch_state ();
5201 set_general_thread (inferior_ptid);
5205 struct packet_reg *reg = packet_reg_from_regnum (rsa, regnum);
5206 gdb_assert (reg != NULL);
5208 /* Always prefer to store registers using the 'P' packet if
5209 possible; we often change only a small number of registers.
5210 Sometimes we change a larger number; we'd need help from a
5211 higher layer to know to use 'G'. */
5212 if (store_register_using_P (regcache, reg))
5215 /* For now, don't complain if we have no way to write the
5216 register. GDB loses track of unavailable registers too
5217 easily. Some day, this may be an error. We don't have
5218 any way to read the register, either... */
5219 if (!reg->in_g_packet)
5222 store_registers_using_G (regcache);
5226 store_registers_using_G (regcache);
5228 for (i = 0; i < gdbarch_num_regs (get_regcache_arch (regcache)); i++)
5229 if (!rsa->regs[i].in_g_packet)
5230 if (!store_register_using_P (regcache, &rsa->regs[i]))
5231 /* See above for why we do not issue an error here. */
5236 /* Return the number of hex digits in num. */
5239 hexnumlen (ULONGEST num)
5243 for (i = 0; num != 0; i++)
5249 /* Set BUF to the minimum number of hex digits representing NUM. */
5252 hexnumstr (char *buf, ULONGEST num)
5254 int len = hexnumlen (num);
5255 return hexnumnstr (buf, num, len);
5259 /* Set BUF to the hex digits representing NUM, padded to WIDTH characters. */
5262 hexnumnstr (char *buf, ULONGEST num, int width)
5268 for (i = width - 1; i >= 0; i--)
5270 buf[i] = "0123456789abcdef"[(num & 0xf)];
5277 /* Mask all but the least significant REMOTE_ADDRESS_SIZE bits. */
5280 remote_address_masked (CORE_ADDR addr)
5282 int address_size = remote_address_size;
5283 /* If "remoteaddresssize" was not set, default to target address size. */
5285 address_size = gdbarch_addr_bit (target_gdbarch);
5287 if (address_size > 0
5288 && address_size < (sizeof (ULONGEST) * 8))
5290 /* Only create a mask when that mask can safely be constructed
5291 in a ULONGEST variable. */
5293 mask = (mask << address_size) - 1;
5299 /* Convert BUFFER, binary data at least LEN bytes long, into escaped
5300 binary data in OUT_BUF. Set *OUT_LEN to the length of the data
5301 encoded in OUT_BUF, and return the number of bytes in OUT_BUF
5302 (which may be more than *OUT_LEN due to escape characters). The
5303 total number of bytes in the output buffer will be at most
5307 remote_escape_output (const gdb_byte *buffer, int len,
5308 gdb_byte *out_buf, int *out_len,
5311 int input_index, output_index;
5314 for (input_index = 0; input_index < len; input_index++)
5316 gdb_byte b = buffer[input_index];
5318 if (b == '$' || b == '#' || b == '}')
5320 /* These must be escaped. */
5321 if (output_index + 2 > out_maxlen)
5323 out_buf[output_index++] = '}';
5324 out_buf[output_index++] = b ^ 0x20;
5328 if (output_index + 1 > out_maxlen)
5330 out_buf[output_index++] = b;
5334 *out_len = input_index;
5335 return output_index;
5338 /* Convert BUFFER, escaped data LEN bytes long, into binary data
5339 in OUT_BUF. Return the number of bytes written to OUT_BUF.
5340 Raise an error if the total number of bytes exceeds OUT_MAXLEN.
5342 This function reverses remote_escape_output. It allows more
5343 escaped characters than that function does, in particular because
5344 '*' must be escaped to avoid the run-length encoding processing
5345 in reading packets. */
5348 remote_unescape_input (const gdb_byte *buffer, int len,
5349 gdb_byte *out_buf, int out_maxlen)
5351 int input_index, output_index;
5356 for (input_index = 0; input_index < len; input_index++)
5358 gdb_byte b = buffer[input_index];
5360 if (output_index + 1 > out_maxlen)
5362 warning (_("Received too much data from remote target;"
5363 " ignoring overflow."));
5364 return output_index;
5369 out_buf[output_index++] = b ^ 0x20;
5375 out_buf[output_index++] = b;
5379 error (_("Unmatched escape character in target response."));
5381 return output_index;
5384 /* Determine whether the remote target supports binary downloading.
5385 This is accomplished by sending a no-op memory write of zero length
5386 to the target at the specified address. It does not suffice to send
5387 the whole packet, since many stubs strip the eighth bit and
5388 subsequently compute a wrong checksum, which causes real havoc with
5391 NOTE: This can still lose if the serial line is not eight-bit
5392 clean. In cases like this, the user should clear "remote
5396 check_binary_download (CORE_ADDR addr)
5398 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
5400 switch (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_X].support)
5402 case PACKET_DISABLE:
5406 case PACKET_SUPPORT_UNKNOWN:
5412 p += hexnumstr (p, (ULONGEST) addr);
5414 p += hexnumstr (p, (ULONGEST) 0);
5418 putpkt_binary (rs->buf, (int) (p - rs->buf));
5419 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
5421 if (rs->buf[0] == '\0')
5424 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
5425 "binary downloading NOT suppported by target\n");
5426 remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_X].support = PACKET_DISABLE;
5431 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
5432 "binary downloading suppported by target\n");
5433 remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_X].support = PACKET_ENABLE;
5440 /* Write memory data directly to the remote machine.
5441 This does not inform the data cache; the data cache uses this.
5442 HEADER is the starting part of the packet.
5443 MEMADDR is the address in the remote memory space.
5444 MYADDR is the address of the buffer in our space.
5445 LEN is the number of bytes.
5446 PACKET_FORMAT should be either 'X' or 'M', and indicates if we
5447 should send data as binary ('X'), or hex-encoded ('M').
5449 The function creates packet of the form
5450 <HEADER><ADDRESS>,<LENGTH>:<DATA>
5452 where encoding of <DATA> is termined by PACKET_FORMAT.
5454 If USE_LENGTH is 0, then the <LENGTH> field and the preceding comma
5457 Returns the number of bytes transferred, or 0 (setting errno) for
5458 error. Only transfer a single packet. */
5461 remote_write_bytes_aux (const char *header, CORE_ADDR memaddr,
5462 const gdb_byte *myaddr, int len,
5463 char packet_format, int use_length)
5465 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
5475 if (packet_format != 'X' && packet_format != 'M')
5476 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
5477 "remote_write_bytes_aux: bad packet format");
5482 payload_size = get_memory_write_packet_size ();
5484 /* The packet buffer will be large enough for the payload;
5485 get_memory_packet_size ensures this. */
5488 /* Compute the size of the actual payload by subtracting out the
5489 packet header and footer overhead: "$M<memaddr>,<len>:...#nn".
5491 payload_size -= strlen ("$,:#NN");
5493 /* The comma won't be used. */
5495 header_length = strlen (header);
5496 payload_size -= header_length;
5497 payload_size -= hexnumlen (memaddr);
5499 /* Construct the packet excluding the data: "<header><memaddr>,<len>:". */
5501 strcat (rs->buf, header);
5502 p = rs->buf + strlen (header);
5504 /* Compute a best guess of the number of bytes actually transfered. */
5505 if (packet_format == 'X')
5507 /* Best guess at number of bytes that will fit. */
5508 todo = min (len, payload_size);
5510 payload_size -= hexnumlen (todo);
5511 todo = min (todo, payload_size);
5515 /* Num bytes that will fit. */
5516 todo = min (len, payload_size / 2);
5518 payload_size -= hexnumlen (todo);
5519 todo = min (todo, payload_size / 2);
5523 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
5524 _("minumum packet size too small to write data"));
5526 /* If we already need another packet, then try to align the end
5527 of this packet to a useful boundary. */
5528 if (todo > 2 * REMOTE_ALIGN_WRITES && todo < len)
5529 todo = ((memaddr + todo) & ~(REMOTE_ALIGN_WRITES - 1)) - memaddr;
5531 /* Append "<memaddr>". */
5532 memaddr = remote_address_masked (memaddr);
5533 p += hexnumstr (p, (ULONGEST) memaddr);
5540 /* Append <len>. Retain the location/size of <len>. It may need to
5541 be adjusted once the packet body has been created. */
5543 plenlen = hexnumstr (p, (ULONGEST) todo);
5551 /* Append the packet body. */
5552 if (packet_format == 'X')
5554 /* Binary mode. Send target system values byte by byte, in
5555 increasing byte addresses. Only escape certain critical
5557 payload_length = remote_escape_output (myaddr, todo, p, &nr_bytes,
5560 /* If not all TODO bytes fit, then we'll need another packet. Make
5561 a second try to keep the end of the packet aligned. Don't do
5562 this if the packet is tiny. */
5563 if (nr_bytes < todo && nr_bytes > 2 * REMOTE_ALIGN_WRITES)
5567 new_nr_bytes = (((memaddr + nr_bytes) & ~(REMOTE_ALIGN_WRITES - 1))
5569 if (new_nr_bytes != nr_bytes)
5570 payload_length = remote_escape_output (myaddr, new_nr_bytes,
5575 p += payload_length;
5576 if (use_length && nr_bytes < todo)
5578 /* Escape chars have filled up the buffer prematurely,
5579 and we have actually sent fewer bytes than planned.
5580 Fix-up the length field of the packet. Use the same
5581 number of characters as before. */
5582 plen += hexnumnstr (plen, (ULONGEST) nr_bytes, plenlen);
5583 *plen = ':'; /* overwrite \0 from hexnumnstr() */
5588 /* Normal mode: Send target system values byte by byte, in
5589 increasing byte addresses. Each byte is encoded as a two hex
5591 nr_bytes = bin2hex (myaddr, p, todo);
5595 putpkt_binary (rs->buf, (int) (p - rs->buf));
5596 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
5598 if (rs->buf[0] == 'E')
5600 /* There is no correspondance between what the remote protocol
5601 uses for errors and errno codes. We would like a cleaner way
5602 of representing errors (big enough to include errno codes,
5603 bfd_error codes, and others). But for now just return EIO. */
5608 /* Return NR_BYTES, not TODO, in case escape chars caused us to send
5609 fewer bytes than we'd planned. */
5613 /* Write memory data directly to the remote machine.
5614 This does not inform the data cache; the data cache uses this.
5615 MEMADDR is the address in the remote memory space.
5616 MYADDR is the address of the buffer in our space.
5617 LEN is the number of bytes.
5619 Returns number of bytes transferred, or 0 (setting errno) for
5620 error. Only transfer a single packet. */
5623 remote_write_bytes (CORE_ADDR memaddr, const gdb_byte *myaddr, int len)
5625 char *packet_format = 0;
5627 /* Check whether the target supports binary download. */
5628 check_binary_download (memaddr);
5630 switch (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_X].support)
5633 packet_format = "X";
5635 case PACKET_DISABLE:
5636 packet_format = "M";
5638 case PACKET_SUPPORT_UNKNOWN:
5639 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
5640 _("remote_write_bytes: bad internal state"));
5642 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("bad switch"));
5645 return remote_write_bytes_aux (packet_format,
5646 memaddr, myaddr, len, packet_format[0], 1);
5649 /* Read memory data directly from the remote machine.
5650 This does not use the data cache; the data cache uses this.
5651 MEMADDR is the address in the remote memory space.
5652 MYADDR is the address of the buffer in our space.
5653 LEN is the number of bytes.
5655 Returns number of bytes transferred, or 0 for error. */
5657 /* NOTE: cagney/1999-10-18: This function (and its siblings in other
5658 remote targets) shouldn't attempt to read the entire buffer.
5659 Instead it should read a single packet worth of data and then
5660 return the byte size of that packet to the caller. The caller (its
5661 caller and its callers caller ;-) already contains code for
5662 handling partial reads. */
5665 remote_read_bytes (CORE_ADDR memaddr, gdb_byte *myaddr, int len)
5667 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
5668 int max_buf_size; /* Max size of packet output buffer. */
5674 max_buf_size = get_memory_read_packet_size ();
5675 /* The packet buffer will be large enough for the payload;
5676 get_memory_packet_size ensures this. */
5685 todo = min (len, max_buf_size / 2); /* num bytes that will fit */
5687 /* construct "m"<memaddr>","<len>" */
5688 /* sprintf (rs->buf, "m%lx,%x", (unsigned long) memaddr, todo); */
5689 memaddr = remote_address_masked (memaddr);
5692 p += hexnumstr (p, (ULONGEST) memaddr);
5694 p += hexnumstr (p, (ULONGEST) todo);
5698 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
5700 if (rs->buf[0] == 'E'
5701 && isxdigit (rs->buf[1]) && isxdigit (rs->buf[2])
5702 && rs->buf[3] == '\0')
5704 /* There is no correspondance between what the remote
5705 protocol uses for errors and errno codes. We would like
5706 a cleaner way of representing errors (big enough to
5707 include errno codes, bfd_error codes, and others). But
5708 for now just return EIO. */
5713 /* Reply describes memory byte by byte,
5714 each byte encoded as two hex characters. */
5717 if ((i = hex2bin (p, myaddr, todo)) < todo)
5719 /* Reply is short. This means that we were able to read
5720 only part of what we wanted to. */
5721 return i + (origlen - len);
5731 /* Remote notification handler. */
5734 handle_notification (char *buf, size_t length)
5736 if (strncmp (buf, "Stop:", 5) == 0)
5738 if (pending_stop_reply)
5739 /* We've already parsed the in-flight stop-reply, but the stub
5740 for some reason thought we didn't, possibly due to timeout
5741 on its side. Just ignore it. */
5745 struct cleanup *old_chain;
5746 struct stop_reply *reply = stop_reply_xmalloc ();
5747 old_chain = make_cleanup (do_stop_reply_xfree, reply);
5749 remote_parse_stop_reply (buf + 5, reply);
5751 discard_cleanups (old_chain);
5753 /* Be careful to only set it after parsing, since an error
5754 may be thrown then. */
5755 pending_stop_reply = reply;
5757 /* Notify the event loop there's a stop reply to acknowledge
5758 and that there may be more events to fetch. */
5759 mark_async_event_handler (remote_async_get_pending_events_token);
5763 /* We ignore notifications we don't recognize, for compatibility
5764 with newer stubs. */
5769 /* Read or write LEN bytes from inferior memory at MEMADDR,
5770 transferring to or from debugger address BUFFER. Write to inferior
5771 if SHOULD_WRITE is nonzero. Returns length of data written or
5772 read; 0 for error. TARGET is unused. */
5775 remote_xfer_memory (CORE_ADDR mem_addr, gdb_byte *buffer, int mem_len,
5776 int should_write, struct mem_attrib *attrib,
5777 struct target_ops *target)
5781 set_general_thread (inferior_ptid);
5784 res = remote_write_bytes (mem_addr, buffer, mem_len);
5786 res = remote_read_bytes (mem_addr, buffer, mem_len);
5791 /* Sends a packet with content determined by the printf format string
5792 FORMAT and the remaining arguments, then gets the reply. Returns
5793 whether the packet was a success, a failure, or unknown. */
5795 static enum packet_result
5796 remote_send_printf (const char *format, ...)
5798 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
5799 int max_size = get_remote_packet_size ();
5802 va_start (ap, format);
5805 if (vsnprintf (rs->buf, max_size, format, ap) >= max_size)
5806 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "Too long remote packet.");
5808 if (putpkt (rs->buf) < 0)
5809 error (_("Communication problem with target."));
5812 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
5814 return packet_check_result (rs->buf);
5818 restore_remote_timeout (void *p)
5820 int value = *(int *)p;
5821 remote_timeout = value;
5824 /* Flash writing can take quite some time. We'll set
5825 effectively infinite timeout for flash operations.
5826 In future, we'll need to decide on a better approach. */
5827 static const int remote_flash_timeout = 1000;
5830 remote_flash_erase (struct target_ops *ops,
5831 ULONGEST address, LONGEST length)
5833 int saved_remote_timeout = remote_timeout;
5834 enum packet_result ret;
5836 struct cleanup *back_to = make_cleanup (restore_remote_timeout,
5837 &saved_remote_timeout);
5838 remote_timeout = remote_flash_timeout;
5840 ret = remote_send_printf ("vFlashErase:%s,%s",
5845 case PACKET_UNKNOWN:
5846 error (_("Remote target does not support flash erase"));
5848 error (_("Error erasing flash with vFlashErase packet"));
5853 do_cleanups (back_to);
5857 remote_flash_write (struct target_ops *ops,
5858 ULONGEST address, LONGEST length,
5859 const gdb_byte *data)
5861 int saved_remote_timeout = remote_timeout;
5863 struct cleanup *back_to = make_cleanup (restore_remote_timeout,
5864 &saved_remote_timeout);
5866 remote_timeout = remote_flash_timeout;
5867 ret = remote_write_bytes_aux ("vFlashWrite:", address, data, length, 'X', 0);
5868 do_cleanups (back_to);
5874 remote_flash_done (struct target_ops *ops)
5876 int saved_remote_timeout = remote_timeout;
5878 struct cleanup *back_to = make_cleanup (restore_remote_timeout,
5879 &saved_remote_timeout);
5881 remote_timeout = remote_flash_timeout;
5882 ret = remote_send_printf ("vFlashDone");
5883 do_cleanups (back_to);
5887 case PACKET_UNKNOWN:
5888 error (_("Remote target does not support vFlashDone"));
5890 error (_("Error finishing flash operation"));
5897 remote_files_info (struct target_ops *ignore)
5899 puts_filtered ("Debugging a target over a serial line.\n");
5902 /* Stuff for dealing with the packets which are part of this protocol.
5903 See comment at top of file for details. */
5905 /* Read a single character from the remote end. */
5908 readchar (int timeout)
5912 ch = serial_readchar (remote_desc, timeout);
5917 switch ((enum serial_rc) ch)
5921 error (_("Remote connection closed"));
5924 perror_with_name (_("Remote communication error"));
5926 case SERIAL_TIMEOUT:
5932 /* Send the command in *BUF to the remote machine, and read the reply
5933 into *BUF. Report an error if we get an error reply. Resize
5934 *BUF using xrealloc if necessary to hold the result, and update
5938 remote_send (char **buf,
5942 getpkt (buf, sizeof_buf, 0);
5944 if ((*buf)[0] == 'E')
5945 error (_("Remote failure reply: %s"), *buf);
5948 /* Return a pointer to an xmalloc'ed string representing an escaped
5949 version of BUF, of len N. E.g. \n is converted to \\n, \t to \\t,
5950 etc. The caller is responsible for releasing the returned
5954 escape_buffer (const char *buf, int n)
5956 struct cleanup *old_chain;
5957 struct ui_file *stb;
5961 stb = mem_fileopen ();
5962 old_chain = make_cleanup_ui_file_delete (stb);
5964 fputstrn_unfiltered (buf, n, 0, stb);
5965 str = ui_file_xstrdup (stb, &length);
5966 do_cleanups (old_chain);
5970 /* Display a null-terminated packet on stdout, for debugging, using C
5974 print_packet (char *buf)
5976 puts_filtered ("\"");
5977 fputstr_filtered (buf, '"', gdb_stdout);
5978 puts_filtered ("\"");
5984 return putpkt_binary (buf, strlen (buf));
5987 /* Send a packet to the remote machine, with error checking. The data
5988 of the packet is in BUF. The string in BUF can be at most
5989 get_remote_packet_size () - 5 to account for the $, # and checksum,
5990 and for a possible /0 if we are debugging (remote_debug) and want
5991 to print the sent packet as a string. */
5994 putpkt_binary (char *buf, int cnt)
5996 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
5998 unsigned char csum = 0;
5999 char *buf2 = alloca (cnt + 6);
6005 /* Catch cases like trying to read memory or listing threads while
6006 we're waiting for a stop reply. The remote server wouldn't be
6007 ready to handle this request, so we'd hang and timeout. We don't
6008 have to worry about this in synchronous mode, because in that
6009 case it's not possible to issue a command while the target is
6010 running. This is not a problem in non-stop mode, because in that
6011 case, the stub is always ready to process serial input. */
6012 if (!non_stop && target_can_async_p () && rs->waiting_for_stop_reply)
6013 error (_("Cannot execute this command while the target is running."));
6015 /* We're sending out a new packet. Make sure we don't look at a
6016 stale cached response. */
6017 rs->cached_wait_status = 0;
6019 /* Copy the packet into buffer BUF2, encapsulating it
6020 and giving it a checksum. */
6025 for (i = 0; i < cnt; i++)
6031 *p++ = tohex ((csum >> 4) & 0xf);
6032 *p++ = tohex (csum & 0xf);
6034 /* Send it over and over until we get a positive ack. */
6038 int started_error_output = 0;
6042 struct cleanup *old_chain;
6046 str = escape_buffer (buf2, p - buf2);
6047 old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, str);
6048 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "Sending packet: %s...", str);
6049 gdb_flush (gdb_stdlog);
6050 do_cleanups (old_chain);
6052 if (serial_write (remote_desc, buf2, p - buf2))
6053 perror_with_name (_("putpkt: write failed"));
6055 /* If this is a no acks version of the remote protocol, send the
6056 packet and move on. */
6060 /* Read until either a timeout occurs (-2) or '+' is read.
6061 Handle any notification that arrives in the mean time. */
6064 ch = readchar (remote_timeout);
6072 case SERIAL_TIMEOUT:
6075 if (started_error_output)
6077 putchar_unfiltered ('\n');
6078 started_error_output = 0;
6087 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "Ack\n");
6091 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "Nak\n");
6092 case SERIAL_TIMEOUT:
6096 break; /* Retransmit buffer. */
6100 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
6101 "Packet instead of Ack, ignoring it\n");
6102 /* It's probably an old response sent because an ACK
6103 was lost. Gobble up the packet and ack it so it
6104 doesn't get retransmitted when we resend this
6107 serial_write (remote_desc, "+", 1);
6108 continue; /* Now, go look for +. */
6115 /* If we got a notification, handle it, and go back to looking
6117 /* We've found the start of a notification. Now
6118 collect the data. */
6119 val = read_frame (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size);
6124 struct cleanup *old_chain;
6127 str = escape_buffer (rs->buf, val);
6128 old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, str);
6129 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
6130 " Notification received: %s\n",
6132 do_cleanups (old_chain);
6134 handle_notification (rs->buf, val);
6135 /* We're in sync now, rewait for the ack. */
6142 if (!started_error_output)
6144 started_error_output = 1;
6145 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "putpkt: Junk: ");
6147 fputc_unfiltered (ch & 0177, gdb_stdlog);
6148 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "%s", rs->buf);
6157 if (!started_error_output)
6159 started_error_output = 1;
6160 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "putpkt: Junk: ");
6162 fputc_unfiltered (ch & 0177, gdb_stdlog);
6166 break; /* Here to retransmit. */
6170 /* This is wrong. If doing a long backtrace, the user should be
6171 able to get out next time we call QUIT, without anything as
6172 violent as interrupt_query. If we want to provide a way out of
6173 here without getting to the next QUIT, it should be based on
6174 hitting ^C twice as in remote_wait. */
6185 /* Come here after finding the start of a frame when we expected an
6186 ack. Do our best to discard the rest of this packet. */
6195 c = readchar (remote_timeout);
6198 case SERIAL_TIMEOUT:
6199 /* Nothing we can do. */
6202 /* Discard the two bytes of checksum and stop. */
6203 c = readchar (remote_timeout);
6205 c = readchar (remote_timeout);
6208 case '*': /* Run length encoding. */
6209 /* Discard the repeat count. */
6210 c = readchar (remote_timeout);
6215 /* A regular character. */
6221 /* Come here after finding the start of the frame. Collect the rest
6222 into *BUF, verifying the checksum, length, and handling run-length
6223 compression. NUL terminate the buffer. If there is not enough room,
6224 expand *BUF using xrealloc.
6226 Returns -1 on error, number of characters in buffer (ignoring the
6227 trailing NULL) on success. (could be extended to return one of the
6228 SERIAL status indications). */
6231 read_frame (char **buf_p,
6238 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
6245 c = readchar (remote_timeout);
6248 case SERIAL_TIMEOUT:
6250 fputs_filtered ("Timeout in mid-packet, retrying\n", gdb_stdlog);
6254 fputs_filtered ("Saw new packet start in middle of old one\n",
6256 return -1; /* Start a new packet, count retries. */
6259 unsigned char pktcsum;
6265 check_0 = readchar (remote_timeout);
6267 check_1 = readchar (remote_timeout);
6269 if (check_0 == SERIAL_TIMEOUT || check_1 == SERIAL_TIMEOUT)
6272 fputs_filtered ("Timeout in checksum, retrying\n",
6276 else if (check_0 < 0 || check_1 < 0)
6279 fputs_filtered ("Communication error in checksum\n",
6284 /* Don't recompute the checksum; with no ack packets we
6285 don't have any way to indicate a packet retransmission
6290 pktcsum = (fromhex (check_0) << 4) | fromhex (check_1);
6291 if (csum == pktcsum)
6296 struct cleanup *old_chain;
6299 str = escape_buffer (buf, bc);
6300 old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, str);
6301 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
6303 Bad checksum, sentsum=0x%x, csum=0x%x, buf=%s\n",
6304 pktcsum, csum, str);
6305 do_cleanups (old_chain);
6307 /* Number of characters in buffer ignoring trailing
6311 case '*': /* Run length encoding. */
6316 c = readchar (remote_timeout);
6318 repeat = c - ' ' + 3; /* Compute repeat count. */
6320 /* The character before ``*'' is repeated. */
6322 if (repeat > 0 && repeat <= 255 && bc > 0)
6324 if (bc + repeat - 1 >= *sizeof_buf - 1)
6326 /* Make some more room in the buffer. */
6327 *sizeof_buf += repeat;
6328 *buf_p = xrealloc (*buf_p, *sizeof_buf);
6332 memset (&buf[bc], buf[bc - 1], repeat);
6338 printf_filtered (_("Invalid run length encoding: %s\n"), buf);
6342 if (bc >= *sizeof_buf - 1)
6344 /* Make some more room in the buffer. */
6346 *buf_p = xrealloc (*buf_p, *sizeof_buf);
6357 /* Read a packet from the remote machine, with error checking, and
6358 store it in *BUF. Resize *BUF using xrealloc if necessary to hold
6359 the result, and update *SIZEOF_BUF. If FOREVER, wait forever
6360 rather than timing out; this is used (in synchronous mode) to wait
6361 for a target that is is executing user code to stop. */
6362 /* FIXME: ezannoni 2000-02-01 this wrapper is necessary so that we
6363 don't have to change all the calls to getpkt to deal with the
6364 return value, because at the moment I don't know what the right
6365 thing to do it for those. */
6373 timed_out = getpkt_sane (buf, sizeof_buf, forever);
6377 /* Read a packet from the remote machine, with error checking, and
6378 store it in *BUF. Resize *BUF using xrealloc if necessary to hold
6379 the result, and update *SIZEOF_BUF. If FOREVER, wait forever
6380 rather than timing out; this is used (in synchronous mode) to wait
6381 for a target that is is executing user code to stop. If FOREVER ==
6382 0, this function is allowed to time out gracefully and return an
6383 indication of this to the caller. Otherwise return the number of
6384 bytes read. If EXPECTING_NOTIF, consider receiving a notification
6385 enough reason to return to the caller. */
6388 getpkt_or_notif_sane_1 (char **buf, long *sizeof_buf, int forever,
6389 int expecting_notif)
6391 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
6397 /* We're reading a new response. Make sure we don't look at a
6398 previously cached response. */
6399 rs->cached_wait_status = 0;
6401 strcpy (*buf, "timeout");
6404 timeout = watchdog > 0 ? watchdog : -1;
6405 else if (expecting_notif)
6406 timeout = 0; /* There should already be a char in the buffer. If
6409 timeout = remote_timeout;
6413 /* Process any number of notifications, and then return when
6417 /* If we get a timeout or bad checksm, retry up to MAX_TRIES
6419 for (tries = 1; tries <= MAX_TRIES; tries++)
6421 /* This can loop forever if the remote side sends us
6422 characters continuously, but if it pauses, we'll get
6423 SERIAL_TIMEOUT from readchar because of timeout. Then
6424 we'll count that as a retry.
6426 Note that even when forever is set, we will only wait
6427 forever prior to the start of a packet. After that, we
6428 expect characters to arrive at a brisk pace. They should
6429 show up within remote_timeout intervals. */
6431 c = readchar (timeout);
6432 while (c != SERIAL_TIMEOUT && c != '$' && c != '%');
6434 if (c == SERIAL_TIMEOUT)
6436 if (expecting_notif)
6437 return -1; /* Don't complain, it's normal to not get
6438 anything in this case. */
6440 if (forever) /* Watchdog went off? Kill the target. */
6444 error (_("Watchdog timeout has expired. Target detached."));
6447 fputs_filtered ("Timed out.\n", gdb_stdlog);
6451 /* We've found the start of a packet or notification.
6452 Now collect the data. */
6453 val = read_frame (buf, sizeof_buf);
6458 serial_write (remote_desc, "-", 1);
6461 if (tries > MAX_TRIES)
6463 /* We have tried hard enough, and just can't receive the
6464 packet/notification. Give up. */
6465 printf_unfiltered (_("Ignoring packet error, continuing...\n"));
6467 /* Skip the ack char if we're in no-ack mode. */
6468 if (!rs->noack_mode)
6469 serial_write (remote_desc, "+", 1);
6473 /* If we got an ordinary packet, return that to our caller. */
6478 struct cleanup *old_chain;
6481 str = escape_buffer (*buf, val);
6482 old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, str);
6483 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "Packet received: %s\n", str);
6484 do_cleanups (old_chain);
6487 /* Skip the ack char if we're in no-ack mode. */
6488 if (!rs->noack_mode)
6489 serial_write (remote_desc, "+", 1);
6493 /* If we got a notification, handle it, and go back to looking
6497 gdb_assert (c == '%');
6501 struct cleanup *old_chain;
6504 str = escape_buffer (*buf, val);
6505 old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, str);
6506 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
6507 " Notification received: %s\n",
6509 do_cleanups (old_chain);
6512 handle_notification (*buf, val);
6514 /* Notifications require no acknowledgement. */
6516 if (expecting_notif)
6523 getpkt_sane (char **buf, long *sizeof_buf, int forever)
6525 return getpkt_or_notif_sane_1 (buf, sizeof_buf, forever, 0);
6529 getpkt_or_notif_sane (char **buf, long *sizeof_buf, int forever)
6531 return getpkt_or_notif_sane_1 (buf, sizeof_buf, forever, 1);
6536 remote_kill (struct target_ops *ops)
6538 /* Use catch_errors so the user can quit from gdb even when we
6539 aren't on speaking terms with the remote system. */
6540 catch_errors ((catch_errors_ftype *) putpkt, "k", "", RETURN_MASK_ERROR);
6542 /* Don't wait for it to die. I'm not really sure it matters whether
6543 we do or not. For the existing stubs, kill is a noop. */
6544 target_mourn_inferior ();
6548 remote_vkill (int pid, struct remote_state *rs)
6550 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vKill].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
6553 /* Tell the remote target to detach. */
6554 sprintf (rs->buf, "vKill;%x", pid);
6556 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
6558 if (packet_ok (rs->buf,
6559 &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vKill]) == PACKET_OK)
6561 else if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vKill].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
6568 extended_remote_kill (struct target_ops *ops)
6571 int pid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid);
6572 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
6574 res = remote_vkill (pid, rs);
6575 if (res == -1 && !remote_multi_process_p (rs))
6577 /* Don't try 'k' on a multi-process aware stub -- it has no way
6578 to specify the pid. */
6582 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
6583 if (rs->buf[0] != 'O' || rs->buf[0] != 'K')
6586 /* Don't wait for it to die. I'm not really sure it matters whether
6587 we do or not. For the existing stubs, kill is a noop. */
6593 error (_("Can't kill process"));
6595 target_mourn_inferior ();
6599 remote_mourn (struct target_ops *ops)
6601 remote_mourn_1 (ops);
6604 /* Worker function for remote_mourn. */
6606 remote_mourn_1 (struct target_ops *target)
6608 unpush_target (target);
6610 /* remote_close takes care of doing most of the clean up. */
6611 generic_mourn_inferior ();
6615 extended_remote_mourn_1 (struct target_ops *target)
6617 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
6619 /* In case we got here due to an error, but we're going to stay
6621 rs->waiting_for_stop_reply = 0;
6623 /* We're no longer interested in these events. */
6624 discard_pending_stop_replies (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid));
6626 /* If the current general thread belonged to the process we just
6627 detached from or has exited, the remote side current general
6628 thread becomes undefined. Considering a case like this:
6630 - We just got here due to a detach.
6631 - The process that we're detaching from happens to immediately
6632 report a global breakpoint being hit in non-stop mode, in the
6633 same thread we had selected before.
6634 - GDB attaches to this process again.
6635 - This event happens to be the next event we handle.
6637 GDB would consider that the current general thread didn't need to
6638 be set on the stub side (with Hg), since for all it knew,
6639 GENERAL_THREAD hadn't changed.
6641 Notice that although in all-stop mode, the remote server always
6642 sets the current thread to the thread reporting the stop event,
6643 that doesn't happen in non-stop mode; in non-stop, the stub *must
6644 not* change the current thread when reporting a breakpoint hit,
6645 due to the decoupling of event reporting and event handling.
6647 To keep things simple, we always invalidate our notion of the
6649 record_currthread (minus_one_ptid);
6651 /* Unlike "target remote", we do not want to unpush the target; then
6652 the next time the user says "run", we won't be connected. */
6654 /* Call common code to mark the inferior as not running. */
6655 generic_mourn_inferior ();
6657 if (!have_inferiors ())
6659 if (!remote_multi_process_p (rs))
6661 /* Check whether the target is running now - some remote stubs
6662 automatically restart after kill. */
6664 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
6666 if (rs->buf[0] == 'S' || rs->buf[0] == 'T')
6668 /* Assume that the target has been restarted. Set inferior_ptid
6669 so that bits of core GDB realizes there's something here, e.g.,
6670 so that the user can say "kill" again. */
6671 inferior_ptid = magic_null_ptid;
6675 /* Mark this (still pushed) target as not executable until we
6677 target_mark_exited (target);
6681 /* Always remove execution if this was the last process. */
6682 target_mark_exited (target);
6687 extended_remote_mourn (struct target_ops *ops)
6689 extended_remote_mourn_1 (ops);
6693 extended_remote_run (char *args)
6695 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
6699 /* If the user has disabled vRun support, or we have detected that
6700 support is not available, do not try it. */
6701 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vRun].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
6704 strcpy (rs->buf, "vRun;");
6705 len = strlen (rs->buf);
6707 if (strlen (remote_exec_file) * 2 + len >= get_remote_packet_size ())
6708 error (_("Remote file name too long for run packet"));
6709 len += 2 * bin2hex ((gdb_byte *) remote_exec_file, rs->buf + len, 0);
6711 gdb_assert (args != NULL);
6714 struct cleanup *back_to;
6718 argv = gdb_buildargv (args);
6719 back_to = make_cleanup ((void (*) (void *)) freeargv, argv);
6720 for (i = 0; argv[i] != NULL; i++)
6722 if (strlen (argv[i]) * 2 + 1 + len >= get_remote_packet_size ())
6723 error (_("Argument list too long for run packet"));
6724 rs->buf[len++] = ';';
6725 len += 2 * bin2hex ((gdb_byte *) argv[i], rs->buf + len, 0);
6727 do_cleanups (back_to);
6730 rs->buf[len++] = '\0';
6733 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
6735 if (packet_ok (rs->buf, &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vRun]) == PACKET_OK)
6737 /* We have a wait response; we don't need it, though. All is well. */
6740 else if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vRun].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
6741 /* It wasn't disabled before, but it is now. */
6745 if (remote_exec_file[0] == '\0')
6746 error (_("Running the default executable on the remote target failed; "
6747 "try \"set remote exec-file\"?"));
6749 error (_("Running \"%s\" on the remote target failed"),
6754 /* In the extended protocol we want to be able to do things like
6755 "run" and have them basically work as expected. So we need
6756 a special create_inferior function. We support changing the
6757 executable file and the command line arguments, but not the
6761 extended_remote_create_inferior_1 (char *exec_file, char *args,
6762 char **env, int from_tty)
6764 /* If running asynchronously, register the target file descriptor
6765 with the event loop. */
6766 if (target_can_async_p ())
6767 target_async (inferior_event_handler, 0);
6769 /* Now restart the remote server. */
6770 if (extended_remote_run (args) == -1)
6772 /* vRun was not supported. Fail if we need it to do what the
6774 if (remote_exec_file[0])
6775 error (_("Remote target does not support \"set remote exec-file\""));
6777 error (_("Remote target does not support \"set args\" or run <ARGS>"));
6779 /* Fall back to "R". */
6780 extended_remote_restart ();
6783 /* Clean up from the last time we ran, before we mark the target
6784 running again. This will mark breakpoints uninserted, and
6785 get_offsets may insert breakpoints. */
6786 init_thread_list ();
6787 init_wait_for_inferior ();
6789 /* Now mark the inferior as running before we do anything else. */
6790 inferior_ptid = magic_null_ptid;
6792 /* Now, if we have thread information, update inferior_ptid. */
6793 inferior_ptid = remote_current_thread (inferior_ptid);
6795 remote_add_inferior (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid), 0);
6796 add_thread_silent (inferior_ptid);
6798 /* Get updated offsets, if the stub uses qOffsets. */
6803 extended_remote_create_inferior (struct target_ops *ops,
6804 char *exec_file, char *args,
6805 char **env, int from_tty)
6807 extended_remote_create_inferior_1 (exec_file, args, env, from_tty);
6811 /* Insert a breakpoint. On targets that have software breakpoint
6812 support, we ask the remote target to do the work; on targets
6813 which don't, we insert a traditional memory breakpoint. */
6816 remote_insert_breakpoint (struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt)
6818 /* Try the "Z" s/w breakpoint packet if it is not already disabled.
6819 If it succeeds, then set the support to PACKET_ENABLE. If it
6820 fails, and the user has explicitly requested the Z support then
6821 report an error, otherwise, mark it disabled and go on. */
6823 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z0].support != PACKET_DISABLE)
6825 CORE_ADDR addr = bp_tgt->placed_address;
6826 struct remote_state *rs;
6830 gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc (target_gdbarch, &addr, &bpsize);
6832 rs = get_remote_state ();
6838 addr = (ULONGEST) remote_address_masked (addr);
6839 p += hexnumstr (p, addr);
6840 sprintf (p, ",%d", bpsize);
6843 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
6845 switch (packet_ok (rs->buf, &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z0]))
6850 bp_tgt->placed_address = addr;
6851 bp_tgt->placed_size = bpsize;
6853 case PACKET_UNKNOWN:
6858 return memory_insert_breakpoint (bp_tgt);
6862 remote_remove_breakpoint (struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt)
6864 CORE_ADDR addr = bp_tgt->placed_address;
6865 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
6868 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z0].support != PACKET_DISABLE)
6876 addr = (ULONGEST) remote_address_masked (bp_tgt->placed_address);
6877 p += hexnumstr (p, addr);
6878 sprintf (p, ",%d", bp_tgt->placed_size);
6881 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
6883 return (rs->buf[0] == 'E');
6886 return memory_remove_breakpoint (bp_tgt);
6890 watchpoint_to_Z_packet (int type)
6895 return Z_PACKET_WRITE_WP;
6898 return Z_PACKET_READ_WP;
6901 return Z_PACKET_ACCESS_WP;
6904 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
6905 _("hw_bp_to_z: bad watchpoint type %d"), type);
6910 remote_insert_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int type)
6912 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
6914 enum Z_packet_type packet = watchpoint_to_Z_packet (type);
6916 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z0 + packet].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
6919 sprintf (rs->buf, "Z%x,", packet);
6920 p = strchr (rs->buf, '\0');
6921 addr = remote_address_masked (addr);
6922 p += hexnumstr (p, (ULONGEST) addr);
6923 sprintf (p, ",%x", len);
6926 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
6928 switch (packet_ok (rs->buf, &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z0 + packet]))
6931 case PACKET_UNKNOWN:
6936 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
6937 _("remote_insert_watchpoint: reached end of function"));
6942 remote_remove_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int type)
6944 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
6946 enum Z_packet_type packet = watchpoint_to_Z_packet (type);
6948 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z0 + packet].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
6951 sprintf (rs->buf, "z%x,", packet);
6952 p = strchr (rs->buf, '\0');
6953 addr = remote_address_masked (addr);
6954 p += hexnumstr (p, (ULONGEST) addr);
6955 sprintf (p, ",%x", len);
6957 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
6959 switch (packet_ok (rs->buf, &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z0 + packet]))
6962 case PACKET_UNKNOWN:
6967 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
6968 _("remote_remove_watchpoint: reached end of function"));
6972 int remote_hw_watchpoint_limit = -1;
6973 int remote_hw_breakpoint_limit = -1;
6976 remote_check_watch_resources (int type, int cnt, int ot)
6978 if (type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
6980 if (remote_hw_breakpoint_limit == 0)
6982 else if (remote_hw_breakpoint_limit < 0)
6984 else if (cnt <= remote_hw_breakpoint_limit)
6989 if (remote_hw_watchpoint_limit == 0)
6991 else if (remote_hw_watchpoint_limit < 0)
6995 else if (cnt <= remote_hw_watchpoint_limit)
7002 remote_stopped_by_watchpoint (void)
7004 return remote_stopped_by_watchpoint_p;
7008 remote_stopped_data_address (struct target_ops *target, CORE_ADDR *addr_p)
7011 if (remote_stopped_by_watchpoint ())
7013 *addr_p = remote_watch_data_address;
7022 remote_insert_hw_breakpoint (struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt)
7025 struct remote_state *rs;
7028 /* The length field should be set to the size of a breakpoint
7029 instruction, even though we aren't inserting one ourselves. */
7031 gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc
7032 (target_gdbarch, &bp_tgt->placed_address, &bp_tgt->placed_size);
7034 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z1].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
7037 rs = get_remote_state ();
7044 addr = remote_address_masked (bp_tgt->placed_address);
7045 p += hexnumstr (p, (ULONGEST) addr);
7046 sprintf (p, ",%x", bp_tgt->placed_size);
7049 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
7051 switch (packet_ok (rs->buf, &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z1]))
7054 case PACKET_UNKNOWN:
7059 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
7060 _("remote_insert_hw_breakpoint: reached end of function"));
7065 remote_remove_hw_breakpoint (struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt)
7068 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
7071 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z1].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
7078 addr = remote_address_masked (bp_tgt->placed_address);
7079 p += hexnumstr (p, (ULONGEST) addr);
7080 sprintf (p, ",%x", bp_tgt->placed_size);
7083 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
7085 switch (packet_ok (rs->buf, &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z1]))
7088 case PACKET_UNKNOWN:
7093 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
7094 _("remote_remove_hw_breakpoint: reached end of function"));
7097 /* Table used by the crc32 function to calcuate the checksum. */
7099 static unsigned long crc32_table[256] =
7102 static unsigned long
7103 crc32 (unsigned char *buf, int len, unsigned int crc)
7105 if (!crc32_table[1])
7107 /* Initialize the CRC table and the decoding table. */
7111 for (i = 0; i < 256; i++)
7113 for (c = i << 24, j = 8; j > 0; --j)
7114 c = c & 0x80000000 ? (c << 1) ^ 0x04c11db7 : (c << 1);
7121 crc = (crc << 8) ^ crc32_table[((crc >> 24) ^ *buf) & 255];
7127 /* compare-sections command
7129 With no arguments, compares each loadable section in the exec bfd
7130 with the same memory range on the target, and reports mismatches.
7131 Useful for verifying the image on the target against the exec file.
7132 Depends on the target understanding the new "qCRC:" request. */
7134 /* FIXME: cagney/1999-10-26: This command should be broken down into a
7135 target method (target verify memory) and generic version of the
7136 actual command. This will allow other high-level code (especially
7137 generic_load()) to make use of this target functionality. */
7140 compare_sections_command (char *args, int from_tty)
7142 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
7144 unsigned long host_crc, target_crc;
7145 extern bfd *exec_bfd;
7146 struct cleanup *old_chain;
7149 const char *sectname;
7156 error (_("command cannot be used without an exec file"));
7157 if (!current_target.to_shortname ||
7158 strcmp (current_target.to_shortname, "remote") != 0)
7159 error (_("command can only be used with remote target"));
7161 for (s = exec_bfd->sections; s; s = s->next)
7163 if (!(s->flags & SEC_LOAD))
7164 continue; /* skip non-loadable section */
7166 size = bfd_get_section_size (s);
7168 continue; /* skip zero-length section */
7170 sectname = bfd_get_section_name (exec_bfd, s);
7171 if (args && strcmp (args, sectname) != 0)
7172 continue; /* not the section selected by user */
7174 matched = 1; /* do this section */
7176 /* FIXME: assumes lma can fit into long. */
7177 xsnprintf (rs->buf, get_remote_packet_size (), "qCRC:%lx,%lx",
7178 (long) lma, (long) size);
7181 /* Be clever; compute the host_crc before waiting for target
7183 sectdata = xmalloc (size);
7184 old_chain = make_cleanup (xfree, sectdata);
7185 bfd_get_section_contents (exec_bfd, s, sectdata, 0, size);
7186 host_crc = crc32 ((unsigned char *) sectdata, size, 0xffffffff);
7188 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
7189 if (rs->buf[0] == 'E')
7190 error (_("target memory fault, section %s, range 0x%s -- 0x%s"),
7191 sectname, paddr (lma), paddr (lma + size));
7192 if (rs->buf[0] != 'C')
7193 error (_("remote target does not support this operation"));
7195 for (target_crc = 0, tmp = &rs->buf[1]; *tmp; tmp++)
7196 target_crc = target_crc * 16 + fromhex (*tmp);
7198 printf_filtered ("Section %s, range 0x%s -- 0x%s: ",
7199 sectname, paddr (lma), paddr (lma + size));
7200 if (host_crc == target_crc)
7201 printf_filtered ("matched.\n");
7204 printf_filtered ("MIS-MATCHED!\n");
7208 do_cleanups (old_chain);
7211 warning (_("One or more sections of the remote executable does not match\n\
7212 the loaded file\n"));
7213 if (args && !matched)
7214 printf_filtered (_("No loaded section named '%s'.\n"), args);
7217 /* Write LEN bytes from WRITEBUF into OBJECT_NAME/ANNEX at OFFSET
7218 into remote target. The number of bytes written to the remote
7219 target is returned, or -1 for error. */
7222 remote_write_qxfer (struct target_ops *ops, const char *object_name,
7223 const char *annex, const gdb_byte *writebuf,
7224 ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len,
7225 struct packet_config *packet)
7230 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
7231 int max_size = get_memory_write_packet_size ();
7233 if (packet->support == PACKET_DISABLE)
7236 /* Insert header. */
7237 i = snprintf (rs->buf, max_size,
7238 "qXfer:%s:write:%s:%s:",
7239 object_name, annex ? annex : "",
7240 phex_nz (offset, sizeof offset));
7241 max_size -= (i + 1);
7243 /* Escape as much data as fits into rs->buf. */
7244 buf_len = remote_escape_output
7245 (writebuf, len, (rs->buf + i), &max_size, max_size);
7247 if (putpkt_binary (rs->buf, i + buf_len) < 0
7248 || getpkt_sane (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0) < 0
7249 || packet_ok (rs->buf, packet) != PACKET_OK)
7252 unpack_varlen_hex (rs->buf, &n);
7256 /* Read OBJECT_NAME/ANNEX from the remote target using a qXfer packet.
7257 Data at OFFSET, of up to LEN bytes, is read into READBUF; the
7258 number of bytes read is returned, or 0 for EOF, or -1 for error.
7259 The number of bytes read may be less than LEN without indicating an
7260 EOF. PACKET is checked and updated to indicate whether the remote
7261 target supports this object. */
7264 remote_read_qxfer (struct target_ops *ops, const char *object_name,
7266 gdb_byte *readbuf, ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len,
7267 struct packet_config *packet)
7269 static char *finished_object;
7270 static char *finished_annex;
7271 static ULONGEST finished_offset;
7273 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
7274 unsigned int total = 0;
7275 LONGEST i, n, packet_len;
7277 if (packet->support == PACKET_DISABLE)
7280 /* Check whether we've cached an end-of-object packet that matches
7282 if (finished_object)
7284 if (strcmp (object_name, finished_object) == 0
7285 && strcmp (annex ? annex : "", finished_annex) == 0
7286 && offset == finished_offset)
7289 /* Otherwise, we're now reading something different. Discard
7291 xfree (finished_object);
7292 xfree (finished_annex);
7293 finished_object = NULL;
7294 finished_annex = NULL;
7297 /* Request only enough to fit in a single packet. The actual data
7298 may not, since we don't know how much of it will need to be escaped;
7299 the target is free to respond with slightly less data. We subtract
7300 five to account for the response type and the protocol frame. */
7301 n = min (get_remote_packet_size () - 5, len);
7302 snprintf (rs->buf, get_remote_packet_size () - 4, "qXfer:%s:read:%s:%s,%s",
7303 object_name, annex ? annex : "",
7304 phex_nz (offset, sizeof offset),
7305 phex_nz (n, sizeof n));
7306 i = putpkt (rs->buf);
7311 packet_len = getpkt_sane (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
7312 if (packet_len < 0 || packet_ok (rs->buf, packet) != PACKET_OK)
7315 if (rs->buf[0] != 'l' && rs->buf[0] != 'm')
7316 error (_("Unknown remote qXfer reply: %s"), rs->buf);
7318 /* 'm' means there is (or at least might be) more data after this
7319 batch. That does not make sense unless there's at least one byte
7320 of data in this reply. */
7321 if (rs->buf[0] == 'm' && packet_len == 1)
7322 error (_("Remote qXfer reply contained no data."));
7324 /* Got some data. */
7325 i = remote_unescape_input (rs->buf + 1, packet_len - 1, readbuf, n);
7327 /* 'l' is an EOF marker, possibly including a final block of data,
7328 or possibly empty. If we have the final block of a non-empty
7329 object, record this fact to bypass a subsequent partial read. */
7330 if (rs->buf[0] == 'l' && offset + i > 0)
7332 finished_object = xstrdup (object_name);
7333 finished_annex = xstrdup (annex ? annex : "");
7334 finished_offset = offset + i;
7341 remote_xfer_partial (struct target_ops *ops, enum target_object object,
7342 const char *annex, gdb_byte *readbuf,
7343 const gdb_byte *writebuf, ULONGEST offset, LONGEST len)
7345 struct remote_state *rs;
7350 set_general_thread (inferior_ptid);
7352 rs = get_remote_state ();
7354 /* Handle memory using the standard memory routines. */
7355 if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY)
7360 /* If the remote target is connected but not running, we should
7361 pass this request down to a lower stratum (e.g. the executable
7363 if (!target_has_execution)
7366 if (writebuf != NULL)
7367 xfered = remote_write_bytes (offset, writebuf, len);
7369 xfered = remote_read_bytes (offset, readbuf, len);
7373 else if (xfered == 0 && errno == 0)
7379 /* Handle SPU memory using qxfer packets. */
7380 if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_SPU)
7383 return remote_read_qxfer (ops, "spu", annex, readbuf, offset, len,
7384 &remote_protocol_packets
7385 [PACKET_qXfer_spu_read]);
7387 return remote_write_qxfer (ops, "spu", annex, writebuf, offset, len,
7388 &remote_protocol_packets
7389 [PACKET_qXfer_spu_write]);
7392 /* Handle extra signal info using qxfer packets. */
7393 if (object == TARGET_OBJECT_SIGNAL_INFO)
7396 return remote_read_qxfer (ops, "siginfo", annex, readbuf, offset, len,
7397 &remote_protocol_packets
7398 [PACKET_qXfer_siginfo_read]);
7400 return remote_write_qxfer (ops, "siginfo", annex, writebuf, offset, len,
7401 &remote_protocol_packets
7402 [PACKET_qXfer_siginfo_write]);
7405 /* Only handle flash writes. */
7406 if (writebuf != NULL)
7412 case TARGET_OBJECT_FLASH:
7413 xfered = remote_flash_write (ops, offset, len, writebuf);
7417 else if (xfered == 0 && errno == 0)
7427 /* Map pre-existing objects onto letters. DO NOT do this for new
7428 objects!!! Instead specify new query packets. */
7431 case TARGET_OBJECT_AVR:
7435 case TARGET_OBJECT_AUXV:
7436 gdb_assert (annex == NULL);
7437 return remote_read_qxfer (ops, "auxv", annex, readbuf, offset, len,
7438 &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qXfer_auxv]);
7440 case TARGET_OBJECT_AVAILABLE_FEATURES:
7441 return remote_read_qxfer
7442 (ops, "features", annex, readbuf, offset, len,
7443 &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qXfer_features]);
7445 case TARGET_OBJECT_LIBRARIES:
7446 return remote_read_qxfer
7447 (ops, "libraries", annex, readbuf, offset, len,
7448 &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qXfer_libraries]);
7450 case TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY_MAP:
7451 gdb_assert (annex == NULL);
7452 return remote_read_qxfer (ops, "memory-map", annex, readbuf, offset, len,
7453 &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qXfer_memory_map]);
7455 case TARGET_OBJECT_OSDATA:
7456 /* Should only get here if we're connected. */
7457 gdb_assert (remote_desc);
7458 return remote_read_qxfer
7459 (ops, "osdata", annex, readbuf, offset, len,
7460 &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qXfer_osdata]);
7466 /* Note: a zero OFFSET and LEN can be used to query the minimum
7468 if (offset == 0 && len == 0)
7469 return (get_remote_packet_size ());
7470 /* Minimum outbuf size is get_remote_packet_size (). If LEN is not
7471 large enough let the caller deal with it. */
7472 if (len < get_remote_packet_size ())
7474 len = get_remote_packet_size ();
7476 /* Except for querying the minimum buffer size, target must be open. */
7478 error (_("remote query is only available after target open"));
7480 gdb_assert (annex != NULL);
7481 gdb_assert (readbuf != NULL);
7487 /* We used one buffer char for the remote protocol q command and
7488 another for the query type. As the remote protocol encapsulation
7489 uses 4 chars plus one extra in case we are debugging
7490 (remote_debug), we have PBUFZIZ - 7 left to pack the query
7493 while (annex[i] && (i < (get_remote_packet_size () - 8)))
7495 /* Bad caller may have sent forbidden characters. */
7496 gdb_assert (isprint (annex[i]) && annex[i] != '$' && annex[i] != '#');
7501 gdb_assert (annex[i] == '\0');
7503 i = putpkt (rs->buf);
7507 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
7508 strcpy ((char *) readbuf, rs->buf);
7510 return strlen ((char *) readbuf);
7514 remote_search_memory (struct target_ops* ops,
7515 CORE_ADDR start_addr, ULONGEST search_space_len,
7516 const gdb_byte *pattern, ULONGEST pattern_len,
7517 CORE_ADDR *found_addrp)
7519 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
7520 int max_size = get_memory_write_packet_size ();
7521 struct packet_config *packet =
7522 &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qSearch_memory];
7523 /* number of packet bytes used to encode the pattern,
7524 this could be more than PATTERN_LEN due to escape characters */
7525 int escaped_pattern_len;
7526 /* amount of pattern that was encodable in the packet */
7527 int used_pattern_len;
7530 ULONGEST found_addr;
7532 /* Don't go to the target if we don't have to.
7533 This is done before checking packet->support to avoid the possibility that
7534 a success for this edge case means the facility works in general. */
7535 if (pattern_len > search_space_len)
7537 if (pattern_len == 0)
7539 *found_addrp = start_addr;
7543 /* If we already know the packet isn't supported, fall back to the simple
7544 way of searching memory. */
7546 if (packet->support == PACKET_DISABLE)
7548 /* Target doesn't provided special support, fall back and use the
7549 standard support (copy memory and do the search here). */
7550 return simple_search_memory (ops, start_addr, search_space_len,
7551 pattern, pattern_len, found_addrp);
7554 /* Insert header. */
7555 i = snprintf (rs->buf, max_size,
7556 "qSearch:memory:%s;%s;",
7557 paddr_nz (start_addr),
7558 phex_nz (search_space_len, sizeof (search_space_len)));
7559 max_size -= (i + 1);
7561 /* Escape as much data as fits into rs->buf. */
7562 escaped_pattern_len =
7563 remote_escape_output (pattern, pattern_len, (rs->buf + i),
7564 &used_pattern_len, max_size);
7566 /* Bail if the pattern is too large. */
7567 if (used_pattern_len != pattern_len)
7568 error ("Pattern is too large to transmit to remote target.");
7570 if (putpkt_binary (rs->buf, i + escaped_pattern_len) < 0
7571 || getpkt_sane (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0) < 0
7572 || packet_ok (rs->buf, packet) != PACKET_OK)
7574 /* The request may not have worked because the command is not
7575 supported. If so, fall back to the simple way. */
7576 if (packet->support == PACKET_DISABLE)
7578 return simple_search_memory (ops, start_addr, search_space_len,
7579 pattern, pattern_len, found_addrp);
7584 if (rs->buf[0] == '0')
7586 else if (rs->buf[0] == '1')
7589 if (rs->buf[1] != ',')
7590 error (_("Unknown qSearch:memory reply: %s"), rs->buf);
7591 unpack_varlen_hex (rs->buf + 2, &found_addr);
7592 *found_addrp = found_addr;
7595 error (_("Unknown qSearch:memory reply: %s"), rs->buf);
7601 remote_rcmd (char *command,
7602 struct ui_file *outbuf)
7604 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
7608 error (_("remote rcmd is only available after target open"));
7610 /* Send a NULL command across as an empty command. */
7611 if (command == NULL)
7614 /* The query prefix. */
7615 strcpy (rs->buf, "qRcmd,");
7616 p = strchr (rs->buf, '\0');
7618 if ((strlen (rs->buf) + strlen (command) * 2 + 8/*misc*/) > get_remote_packet_size ())
7619 error (_("\"monitor\" command ``%s'' is too long."), command);
7621 /* Encode the actual command. */
7622 bin2hex ((gdb_byte *) command, p, 0);
7624 if (putpkt (rs->buf) < 0)
7625 error (_("Communication problem with target."));
7627 /* get/display the response */
7632 /* XXX - see also tracepoint.c:remote_get_noisy_reply(). */
7634 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
7637 error (_("Target does not support this command."));
7638 if (buf[0] == 'O' && buf[1] != 'K')
7640 remote_console_output (buf + 1); /* 'O' message from stub. */
7643 if (strcmp (buf, "OK") == 0)
7645 if (strlen (buf) == 3 && buf[0] == 'E'
7646 && isdigit (buf[1]) && isdigit (buf[2]))
7648 error (_("Protocol error with Rcmd"));
7650 for (p = buf; p[0] != '\0' && p[1] != '\0'; p += 2)
7652 char c = (fromhex (p[0]) << 4) + fromhex (p[1]);
7653 fputc_unfiltered (c, outbuf);
7659 static VEC(mem_region_s) *
7660 remote_memory_map (struct target_ops *ops)
7662 VEC(mem_region_s) *result = NULL;
7663 char *text = target_read_stralloc (¤t_target,
7664 TARGET_OBJECT_MEMORY_MAP, NULL);
7668 struct cleanup *back_to = make_cleanup (xfree, text);
7669 result = parse_memory_map (text);
7670 do_cleanups (back_to);
7677 packet_command (char *args, int from_tty)
7679 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
7682 error (_("command can only be used with remote target"));
7685 error (_("remote-packet command requires packet text as argument"));
7687 puts_filtered ("sending: ");
7688 print_packet (args);
7689 puts_filtered ("\n");
7692 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
7693 puts_filtered ("received: ");
7694 print_packet (rs->buf);
7695 puts_filtered ("\n");
7699 /* --------- UNIT_TEST for THREAD oriented PACKETS ------------------- */
7701 static void display_thread_info (struct gdb_ext_thread_info *info);
7703 static void threadset_test_cmd (char *cmd, int tty);
7705 static void threadalive_test (char *cmd, int tty);
7707 static void threadlist_test_cmd (char *cmd, int tty);
7709 int get_and_display_threadinfo (threadref *ref);
7711 static void threadinfo_test_cmd (char *cmd, int tty);
7713 static int thread_display_step (threadref *ref, void *context);
7715 static void threadlist_update_test_cmd (char *cmd, int tty);
7717 static void init_remote_threadtests (void);
7719 #define SAMPLE_THREAD 0x05060708 /* Truncated 64 bit threadid. */
7722 threadset_test_cmd (char *cmd, int tty)
7724 int sample_thread = SAMPLE_THREAD;
7726 printf_filtered (_("Remote threadset test\n"));
7727 set_general_thread (sample_thread);
7732 threadalive_test (char *cmd, int tty)
7734 int sample_thread = SAMPLE_THREAD;
7735 int pid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid);
7736 ptid_t ptid = ptid_build (pid, 0, sample_thread);
7738 if (remote_thread_alive (ptid))
7739 printf_filtered ("PASS: Thread alive test\n");
7741 printf_filtered ("FAIL: Thread alive test\n");
7744 void output_threadid (char *title, threadref *ref);
7747 output_threadid (char *title, threadref *ref)
7751 pack_threadid (&hexid[0], ref); /* Convert threead id into hex. */
7753 printf_filtered ("%s %s\n", title, (&hexid[0]));
7757 threadlist_test_cmd (char *cmd, int tty)
7760 threadref nextthread;
7761 int done, result_count;
7762 threadref threadlist[3];
7764 printf_filtered ("Remote Threadlist test\n");
7765 if (!remote_get_threadlist (startflag, &nextthread, 3, &done,
7766 &result_count, &threadlist[0]))
7767 printf_filtered ("FAIL: threadlist test\n");
7770 threadref *scan = threadlist;
7771 threadref *limit = scan + result_count;
7773 while (scan < limit)
7774 output_threadid (" thread ", scan++);
7779 display_thread_info (struct gdb_ext_thread_info *info)
7781 output_threadid ("Threadid: ", &info->threadid);
7782 printf_filtered ("Name: %s\n ", info->shortname);
7783 printf_filtered ("State: %s\n", info->display);
7784 printf_filtered ("other: %s\n\n", info->more_display);
7788 get_and_display_threadinfo (threadref *ref)
7792 struct gdb_ext_thread_info threadinfo;
7794 set = TAG_THREADID | TAG_EXISTS | TAG_THREADNAME
7795 | TAG_MOREDISPLAY | TAG_DISPLAY;
7796 if (0 != (result = remote_get_threadinfo (ref, set, &threadinfo)))
7797 display_thread_info (&threadinfo);
7802 threadinfo_test_cmd (char *cmd, int tty)
7804 int athread = SAMPLE_THREAD;
7808 int_to_threadref (&thread, athread);
7809 printf_filtered ("Remote Threadinfo test\n");
7810 if (!get_and_display_threadinfo (&thread))
7811 printf_filtered ("FAIL cannot get thread info\n");
7815 thread_display_step (threadref *ref, void *context)
7817 /* output_threadid(" threadstep ",ref); *//* simple test */
7818 return get_and_display_threadinfo (ref);
7822 threadlist_update_test_cmd (char *cmd, int tty)
7824 printf_filtered ("Remote Threadlist update test\n");
7825 remote_threadlist_iterator (thread_display_step, 0, CRAZY_MAX_THREADS);
7829 init_remote_threadtests (void)
7831 add_com ("tlist", class_obscure, threadlist_test_cmd, _("\
7832 Fetch and print the remote list of thread identifiers, one pkt only"));
7833 add_com ("tinfo", class_obscure, threadinfo_test_cmd,
7834 _("Fetch and display info about one thread"));
7835 add_com ("tset", class_obscure, threadset_test_cmd,
7836 _("Test setting to a different thread"));
7837 add_com ("tupd", class_obscure, threadlist_update_test_cmd,
7838 _("Iterate through updating all remote thread info"));
7839 add_com ("talive", class_obscure, threadalive_test,
7840 _(" Remote thread alive test "));
7845 /* Convert a thread ID to a string. Returns the string in a static
7849 remote_pid_to_str (struct target_ops *ops, ptid_t ptid)
7851 static char buf[64];
7852 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
7854 if (ptid_equal (magic_null_ptid, ptid))
7856 xsnprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "Thread <main>");
7859 else if (remote_multi_process_p (rs)
7860 && ptid_get_tid (ptid) != 0 && ptid_get_pid (ptid) != 0)
7862 xsnprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "Thread %d.%ld",
7863 ptid_get_pid (ptid), ptid_get_tid (ptid));
7866 else if (ptid_get_tid (ptid) != 0)
7868 xsnprintf (buf, sizeof buf, "Thread %ld",
7869 ptid_get_tid (ptid));
7873 return normal_pid_to_str (ptid);
7876 /* Get the address of the thread local variable in OBJFILE which is
7877 stored at OFFSET within the thread local storage for thread PTID. */
7880 remote_get_thread_local_address (struct target_ops *ops,
7881 ptid_t ptid, CORE_ADDR lm, CORE_ADDR offset)
7883 if (remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qGetTLSAddr].support != PACKET_DISABLE)
7885 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
7887 char *endp = rs->buf + get_remote_packet_size ();
7888 enum packet_result result;
7890 strcpy (p, "qGetTLSAddr:");
7892 p = write_ptid (p, endp, ptid);
7894 p += hexnumstr (p, offset);
7896 p += hexnumstr (p, lm);
7900 getpkt (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
7901 result = packet_ok (rs->buf, &remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qGetTLSAddr]);
7902 if (result == PACKET_OK)
7906 unpack_varlen_hex (rs->buf, &result);
7909 else if (result == PACKET_UNKNOWN)
7910 throw_error (TLS_GENERIC_ERROR,
7911 _("Remote target doesn't support qGetTLSAddr packet"));
7913 throw_error (TLS_GENERIC_ERROR,
7914 _("Remote target failed to process qGetTLSAddr request"));
7917 throw_error (TLS_GENERIC_ERROR,
7918 _("TLS not supported or disabled on this target"));
7923 /* Support for inferring a target description based on the current
7924 architecture and the size of a 'g' packet. While the 'g' packet
7925 can have any size (since optional registers can be left off the
7926 end), some sizes are easily recognizable given knowledge of the
7927 approximate architecture. */
7929 struct remote_g_packet_guess
7932 const struct target_desc *tdesc;
7934 typedef struct remote_g_packet_guess remote_g_packet_guess_s;
7935 DEF_VEC_O(remote_g_packet_guess_s);
7937 struct remote_g_packet_data
7939 VEC(remote_g_packet_guess_s) *guesses;
7942 static struct gdbarch_data *remote_g_packet_data_handle;
7945 remote_g_packet_data_init (struct obstack *obstack)
7947 return OBSTACK_ZALLOC (obstack, struct remote_g_packet_data);
7951 register_remote_g_packet_guess (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int bytes,
7952 const struct target_desc *tdesc)
7954 struct remote_g_packet_data *data
7955 = gdbarch_data (gdbarch, remote_g_packet_data_handle);
7956 struct remote_g_packet_guess new_guess, *guess;
7959 gdb_assert (tdesc != NULL);
7962 VEC_iterate (remote_g_packet_guess_s, data->guesses, ix, guess);
7964 if (guess->bytes == bytes)
7965 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
7966 "Duplicate g packet description added for size %d",
7969 new_guess.bytes = bytes;
7970 new_guess.tdesc = tdesc;
7971 VEC_safe_push (remote_g_packet_guess_s, data->guesses, &new_guess);
7974 /* Return 1 if remote_read_description would do anything on this target
7975 and architecture, 0 otherwise. */
7978 remote_read_description_p (struct target_ops *target)
7980 struct remote_g_packet_data *data
7981 = gdbarch_data (target_gdbarch, remote_g_packet_data_handle);
7983 if (!VEC_empty (remote_g_packet_guess_s, data->guesses))
7989 static const struct target_desc *
7990 remote_read_description (struct target_ops *target)
7992 struct remote_g_packet_data *data
7993 = gdbarch_data (target_gdbarch, remote_g_packet_data_handle);
7995 /* Do not try this during initial connection, when we do not know
7996 whether there is a running but stopped thread. */
7997 if (!target_has_execution || ptid_equal (inferior_ptid, null_ptid))
8000 if (!VEC_empty (remote_g_packet_guess_s, data->guesses))
8002 struct remote_g_packet_guess *guess;
8004 int bytes = send_g_packet ();
8007 VEC_iterate (remote_g_packet_guess_s, data->guesses, ix, guess);
8009 if (guess->bytes == bytes)
8010 return guess->tdesc;
8012 /* We discard the g packet. A minor optimization would be to
8013 hold on to it, and fill the register cache once we have selected
8014 an architecture, but it's too tricky to do safely. */
8020 /* Remote file transfer support. This is host-initiated I/O, not
8021 target-initiated; for target-initiated, see remote-fileio.c. */
8023 /* If *LEFT is at least the length of STRING, copy STRING to
8024 *BUFFER, update *BUFFER to point to the new end of the buffer, and
8025 decrease *LEFT. Otherwise raise an error. */
8028 remote_buffer_add_string (char **buffer, int *left, char *string)
8030 int len = strlen (string);
8033 error (_("Packet too long for target."));
8035 memcpy (*buffer, string, len);
8039 /* NUL-terminate the buffer as a convenience, if there is
8045 /* If *LEFT is large enough, hex encode LEN bytes from BYTES into
8046 *BUFFER, update *BUFFER to point to the new end of the buffer, and
8047 decrease *LEFT. Otherwise raise an error. */
8050 remote_buffer_add_bytes (char **buffer, int *left, const gdb_byte *bytes,
8053 if (2 * len > *left)
8054 error (_("Packet too long for target."));
8056 bin2hex (bytes, *buffer, len);
8060 /* NUL-terminate the buffer as a convenience, if there is
8066 /* If *LEFT is large enough, convert VALUE to hex and add it to
8067 *BUFFER, update *BUFFER to point to the new end of the buffer, and
8068 decrease *LEFT. Otherwise raise an error. */
8071 remote_buffer_add_int (char **buffer, int *left, ULONGEST value)
8073 int len = hexnumlen (value);
8076 error (_("Packet too long for target."));
8078 hexnumstr (*buffer, value);
8082 /* NUL-terminate the buffer as a convenience, if there is
8088 /* Parse an I/O result packet from BUFFER. Set RETCODE to the return
8089 value, *REMOTE_ERRNO to the remote error number or zero if none
8090 was included, and *ATTACHMENT to point to the start of the annex
8091 if any. The length of the packet isn't needed here; there may
8092 be NUL bytes in BUFFER, but they will be after *ATTACHMENT.
8094 Return 0 if the packet could be parsed, -1 if it could not. If
8095 -1 is returned, the other variables may not be initialized. */
8098 remote_hostio_parse_result (char *buffer, int *retcode,
8099 int *remote_errno, char **attachment)
8106 if (buffer[0] != 'F')
8110 *retcode = strtol (&buffer[1], &p, 16);
8111 if (errno != 0 || p == &buffer[1])
8114 /* Check for ",errno". */
8118 *remote_errno = strtol (p + 1, &p2, 16);
8119 if (errno != 0 || p + 1 == p2)
8124 /* Check for ";attachment". If there is no attachment, the
8125 packet should end here. */
8128 *attachment = p + 1;
8131 else if (*p == '\0')
8137 /* Send a prepared I/O packet to the target and read its response.
8138 The prepared packet is in the global RS->BUF before this function
8139 is called, and the answer is there when we return.
8141 COMMAND_BYTES is the length of the request to send, which may include
8142 binary data. WHICH_PACKET is the packet configuration to check
8143 before attempting a packet. If an error occurs, *REMOTE_ERRNO
8144 is set to the error number and -1 is returned. Otherwise the value
8145 returned by the function is returned.
8147 ATTACHMENT and ATTACHMENT_LEN should be non-NULL if and only if an
8148 attachment is expected; an error will be reported if there's a
8149 mismatch. If one is found, *ATTACHMENT will be set to point into
8150 the packet buffer and *ATTACHMENT_LEN will be set to the
8151 attachment's length. */
8154 remote_hostio_send_command (int command_bytes, int which_packet,
8155 int *remote_errno, char **attachment,
8156 int *attachment_len)
8158 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
8159 int ret, bytes_read;
8160 char *attachment_tmp;
8163 || remote_protocol_packets[which_packet].support == PACKET_DISABLE)
8165 *remote_errno = FILEIO_ENOSYS;
8169 putpkt_binary (rs->buf, command_bytes);
8170 bytes_read = getpkt_sane (&rs->buf, &rs->buf_size, 0);
8172 /* If it timed out, something is wrong. Don't try to parse the
8176 *remote_errno = FILEIO_EINVAL;
8180 switch (packet_ok (rs->buf, &remote_protocol_packets[which_packet]))
8183 *remote_errno = FILEIO_EINVAL;
8185 case PACKET_UNKNOWN:
8186 *remote_errno = FILEIO_ENOSYS;
8192 if (remote_hostio_parse_result (rs->buf, &ret, remote_errno,
8195 *remote_errno = FILEIO_EINVAL;
8199 /* Make sure we saw an attachment if and only if we expected one. */
8200 if ((attachment_tmp == NULL && attachment != NULL)
8201 || (attachment_tmp != NULL && attachment == NULL))
8203 *remote_errno = FILEIO_EINVAL;
8207 /* If an attachment was found, it must point into the packet buffer;
8208 work out how many bytes there were. */
8209 if (attachment_tmp != NULL)
8211 *attachment = attachment_tmp;
8212 *attachment_len = bytes_read - (*attachment - rs->buf);
8218 /* Open FILENAME on the remote target, using FLAGS and MODE. Return a
8219 remote file descriptor, or -1 if an error occurs (and set
8223 remote_hostio_open (const char *filename, int flags, int mode,
8226 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
8228 int left = get_remote_packet_size () - 1;
8230 remote_buffer_add_string (&p, &left, "vFile:open:");
8232 remote_buffer_add_bytes (&p, &left, (const gdb_byte *) filename,
8234 remote_buffer_add_string (&p, &left, ",");
8236 remote_buffer_add_int (&p, &left, flags);
8237 remote_buffer_add_string (&p, &left, ",");
8239 remote_buffer_add_int (&p, &left, mode);
8241 return remote_hostio_send_command (p - rs->buf, PACKET_vFile_open,
8242 remote_errno, NULL, NULL);
8245 /* Write up to LEN bytes from WRITE_BUF to FD on the remote target.
8246 Return the number of bytes written, or -1 if an error occurs (and
8247 set *REMOTE_ERRNO). */
8250 remote_hostio_pwrite (int fd, const gdb_byte *write_buf, int len,
8251 ULONGEST offset, int *remote_errno)
8253 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
8255 int left = get_remote_packet_size ();
8258 remote_buffer_add_string (&p, &left, "vFile:pwrite:");
8260 remote_buffer_add_int (&p, &left, fd);
8261 remote_buffer_add_string (&p, &left, ",");
8263 remote_buffer_add_int (&p, &left, offset);
8264 remote_buffer_add_string (&p, &left, ",");
8266 p += remote_escape_output (write_buf, len, p, &out_len,
8267 get_remote_packet_size () - (p - rs->buf));
8269 return remote_hostio_send_command (p - rs->buf, PACKET_vFile_pwrite,
8270 remote_errno, NULL, NULL);
8273 /* Read up to LEN bytes FD on the remote target into READ_BUF
8274 Return the number of bytes read, or -1 if an error occurs (and
8275 set *REMOTE_ERRNO). */
8278 remote_hostio_pread (int fd, gdb_byte *read_buf, int len,
8279 ULONGEST offset, int *remote_errno)
8281 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
8284 int left = get_remote_packet_size ();
8285 int ret, attachment_len;
8288 remote_buffer_add_string (&p, &left, "vFile:pread:");
8290 remote_buffer_add_int (&p, &left, fd);
8291 remote_buffer_add_string (&p, &left, ",");
8293 remote_buffer_add_int (&p, &left, len);
8294 remote_buffer_add_string (&p, &left, ",");
8296 remote_buffer_add_int (&p, &left, offset);
8298 ret = remote_hostio_send_command (p - rs->buf, PACKET_vFile_pread,
8299 remote_errno, &attachment,
8305 read_len = remote_unescape_input (attachment, attachment_len,
8307 if (read_len != ret)
8308 error (_("Read returned %d, but %d bytes."), ret, (int) read_len);
8313 /* Close FD on the remote target. Return 0, or -1 if an error occurs
8314 (and set *REMOTE_ERRNO). */
8317 remote_hostio_close (int fd, int *remote_errno)
8319 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
8321 int left = get_remote_packet_size () - 1;
8323 remote_buffer_add_string (&p, &left, "vFile:close:");
8325 remote_buffer_add_int (&p, &left, fd);
8327 return remote_hostio_send_command (p - rs->buf, PACKET_vFile_close,
8328 remote_errno, NULL, NULL);
8331 /* Unlink FILENAME on the remote target. Return 0, or -1 if an error
8332 occurs (and set *REMOTE_ERRNO). */
8335 remote_hostio_unlink (const char *filename, int *remote_errno)
8337 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
8339 int left = get_remote_packet_size () - 1;
8341 remote_buffer_add_string (&p, &left, "vFile:unlink:");
8343 remote_buffer_add_bytes (&p, &left, (const gdb_byte *) filename,
8346 return remote_hostio_send_command (p - rs->buf, PACKET_vFile_unlink,
8347 remote_errno, NULL, NULL);
8351 remote_fileio_errno_to_host (int errnum)
8375 case FILEIO_ENOTDIR:
8395 case FILEIO_ENAMETOOLONG:
8396 return ENAMETOOLONG;
8402 remote_hostio_error (int errnum)
8404 int host_error = remote_fileio_errno_to_host (errnum);
8406 if (host_error == -1)
8407 error (_("Unknown remote I/O error %d"), errnum);
8409 error (_("Remote I/O error: %s"), safe_strerror (host_error));
8413 remote_hostio_close_cleanup (void *opaque)
8415 int fd = *(int *) opaque;
8418 remote_hostio_close (fd, &remote_errno);
8423 remote_bfd_iovec_open (struct bfd *abfd, void *open_closure)
8425 const char *filename = bfd_get_filename (abfd);
8426 int fd, remote_errno;
8429 gdb_assert (remote_filename_p (filename));
8431 fd = remote_hostio_open (filename + 7, FILEIO_O_RDONLY, 0, &remote_errno);
8434 errno = remote_fileio_errno_to_host (remote_errno);
8435 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_system_call);
8439 stream = xmalloc (sizeof (int));
8445 remote_bfd_iovec_close (struct bfd *abfd, void *stream)
8447 int fd = *(int *)stream;
8452 /* Ignore errors on close; these may happen if the remote
8453 connection was already torn down. */
8454 remote_hostio_close (fd, &remote_errno);
8460 remote_bfd_iovec_pread (struct bfd *abfd, void *stream, void *buf,
8461 file_ptr nbytes, file_ptr offset)
8463 int fd = *(int *)stream;
8465 file_ptr pos, bytes;
8468 while (nbytes > pos)
8470 bytes = remote_hostio_pread (fd, (char *)buf + pos, nbytes - pos,
8471 offset + pos, &remote_errno);
8473 /* Success, but no bytes, means end-of-file. */
8477 errno = remote_fileio_errno_to_host (remote_errno);
8478 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_system_call);
8489 remote_bfd_iovec_stat (struct bfd *abfd, void *stream, struct stat *sb)
8491 /* FIXME: We should probably implement remote_hostio_stat. */
8492 sb->st_size = INT_MAX;
8497 remote_filename_p (const char *filename)
8499 return strncmp (filename, "remote:", 7) == 0;
8503 remote_bfd_open (const char *remote_file, const char *target)
8505 return bfd_openr_iovec (remote_file, target,
8506 remote_bfd_iovec_open, NULL,
8507 remote_bfd_iovec_pread,
8508 remote_bfd_iovec_close,
8509 remote_bfd_iovec_stat);
8513 remote_file_put (const char *local_file, const char *remote_file, int from_tty)
8515 struct cleanup *back_to, *close_cleanup;
8516 int retcode, fd, remote_errno, bytes, io_size;
8519 int bytes_in_buffer;
8524 error (_("command can only be used with remote target"));
8526 file = fopen (local_file, "rb");
8528 perror_with_name (local_file);
8529 back_to = make_cleanup_fclose (file);
8531 fd = remote_hostio_open (remote_file, (FILEIO_O_WRONLY | FILEIO_O_CREAT
8533 0700, &remote_errno);
8535 remote_hostio_error (remote_errno);
8537 /* Send up to this many bytes at once. They won't all fit in the
8538 remote packet limit, so we'll transfer slightly fewer. */
8539 io_size = get_remote_packet_size ();
8540 buffer = xmalloc (io_size);
8541 make_cleanup (xfree, buffer);
8543 close_cleanup = make_cleanup (remote_hostio_close_cleanup, &fd);
8545 bytes_in_buffer = 0;
8548 while (bytes_in_buffer || !saw_eof)
8552 bytes = fread (buffer + bytes_in_buffer, 1, io_size - bytes_in_buffer,
8557 error (_("Error reading %s."), local_file);
8560 /* EOF. Unless there is something still in the
8561 buffer from the last iteration, we are done. */
8563 if (bytes_in_buffer == 0)
8571 bytes += bytes_in_buffer;
8572 bytes_in_buffer = 0;
8574 retcode = remote_hostio_pwrite (fd, buffer, bytes, offset, &remote_errno);
8577 remote_hostio_error (remote_errno);
8578 else if (retcode == 0)
8579 error (_("Remote write of %d bytes returned 0!"), bytes);
8580 else if (retcode < bytes)
8582 /* Short write. Save the rest of the read data for the next
8584 bytes_in_buffer = bytes - retcode;
8585 memmove (buffer, buffer + retcode, bytes_in_buffer);
8591 discard_cleanups (close_cleanup);
8592 if (remote_hostio_close (fd, &remote_errno))
8593 remote_hostio_error (remote_errno);
8596 printf_filtered (_("Successfully sent file \"%s\".\n"), local_file);
8597 do_cleanups (back_to);
8601 remote_file_get (const char *remote_file, const char *local_file, int from_tty)
8603 struct cleanup *back_to, *close_cleanup;
8604 int retcode, fd, remote_errno, bytes, io_size;
8610 error (_("command can only be used with remote target"));
8612 fd = remote_hostio_open (remote_file, FILEIO_O_RDONLY, 0, &remote_errno);
8614 remote_hostio_error (remote_errno);
8616 file = fopen (local_file, "wb");
8618 perror_with_name (local_file);
8619 back_to = make_cleanup_fclose (file);
8621 /* Send up to this many bytes at once. They won't all fit in the
8622 remote packet limit, so we'll transfer slightly fewer. */
8623 io_size = get_remote_packet_size ();
8624 buffer = xmalloc (io_size);
8625 make_cleanup (xfree, buffer);
8627 close_cleanup = make_cleanup (remote_hostio_close_cleanup, &fd);
8632 bytes = remote_hostio_pread (fd, buffer, io_size, offset, &remote_errno);
8634 /* Success, but no bytes, means end-of-file. */
8637 remote_hostio_error (remote_errno);
8641 bytes = fwrite (buffer, 1, bytes, file);
8643 perror_with_name (local_file);
8646 discard_cleanups (close_cleanup);
8647 if (remote_hostio_close (fd, &remote_errno))
8648 remote_hostio_error (remote_errno);
8651 printf_filtered (_("Successfully fetched file \"%s\".\n"), remote_file);
8652 do_cleanups (back_to);
8656 remote_file_delete (const char *remote_file, int from_tty)
8658 int retcode, remote_errno;
8661 error (_("command can only be used with remote target"));
8663 retcode = remote_hostio_unlink (remote_file, &remote_errno);
8665 remote_hostio_error (remote_errno);
8668 printf_filtered (_("Successfully deleted file \"%s\".\n"), remote_file);
8672 remote_put_command (char *args, int from_tty)
8674 struct cleanup *back_to;
8678 error_no_arg (_("file to put"));
8680 argv = gdb_buildargv (args);
8681 back_to = make_cleanup_freeargv (argv);
8682 if (argv[0] == NULL || argv[1] == NULL || argv[2] != NULL)
8683 error (_("Invalid parameters to remote put"));
8685 remote_file_put (argv[0], argv[1], from_tty);
8687 do_cleanups (back_to);
8691 remote_get_command (char *args, int from_tty)
8693 struct cleanup *back_to;
8697 error_no_arg (_("file to get"));
8699 argv = gdb_buildargv (args);
8700 back_to = make_cleanup_freeargv (argv);
8701 if (argv[0] == NULL || argv[1] == NULL || argv[2] != NULL)
8702 error (_("Invalid parameters to remote get"));
8704 remote_file_get (argv[0], argv[1], from_tty);
8706 do_cleanups (back_to);
8710 remote_delete_command (char *args, int from_tty)
8712 struct cleanup *back_to;
8716 error_no_arg (_("file to delete"));
8718 argv = gdb_buildargv (args);
8719 back_to = make_cleanup_freeargv (argv);
8720 if (argv[0] == NULL || argv[1] != NULL)
8721 error (_("Invalid parameters to remote delete"));
8723 remote_file_delete (argv[0], from_tty);
8725 do_cleanups (back_to);
8729 remote_command (char *args, int from_tty)
8731 help_list (remote_cmdlist, "remote ", -1, gdb_stdout);
8734 static int remote_target_can_reverse = 1;
8737 remote_can_execute_reverse (void)
8739 return remote_target_can_reverse;
8743 remote_supports_non_stop (void)
8749 remote_supports_multi_process (void)
8751 struct remote_state *rs = get_remote_state ();
8752 return remote_multi_process_p (rs);
8756 init_remote_ops (void)
8758 remote_ops.to_shortname = "remote";
8759 remote_ops.to_longname = "Remote serial target in gdb-specific protocol";
8761 "Use a remote computer via a serial line, using a gdb-specific protocol.\n\
8762 Specify the serial device it is connected to\n\
8763 (e.g. /dev/ttyS0, /dev/ttya, COM1, etc.).";
8764 remote_ops.to_open = remote_open;
8765 remote_ops.to_close = remote_close;
8766 remote_ops.to_detach = remote_detach;
8767 remote_ops.to_disconnect = remote_disconnect;
8768 remote_ops.to_resume = remote_resume;
8769 remote_ops.to_wait = remote_wait;
8770 remote_ops.to_fetch_registers = remote_fetch_registers;
8771 remote_ops.to_store_registers = remote_store_registers;
8772 remote_ops.to_prepare_to_store = remote_prepare_to_store;
8773 remote_ops.deprecated_xfer_memory = remote_xfer_memory;
8774 remote_ops.to_files_info = remote_files_info;
8775 remote_ops.to_insert_breakpoint = remote_insert_breakpoint;
8776 remote_ops.to_remove_breakpoint = remote_remove_breakpoint;
8777 remote_ops.to_stopped_by_watchpoint = remote_stopped_by_watchpoint;
8778 remote_ops.to_stopped_data_address = remote_stopped_data_address;
8779 remote_ops.to_can_use_hw_breakpoint = remote_check_watch_resources;
8780 remote_ops.to_insert_hw_breakpoint = remote_insert_hw_breakpoint;
8781 remote_ops.to_remove_hw_breakpoint = remote_remove_hw_breakpoint;
8782 remote_ops.to_insert_watchpoint = remote_insert_watchpoint;
8783 remote_ops.to_remove_watchpoint = remote_remove_watchpoint;
8784 remote_ops.to_kill = remote_kill;
8785 remote_ops.to_load = generic_load;
8786 remote_ops.to_mourn_inferior = remote_mourn;
8787 remote_ops.to_thread_alive = remote_thread_alive;
8788 remote_ops.to_find_new_threads = remote_threads_info;
8789 remote_ops.to_pid_to_str = remote_pid_to_str;
8790 remote_ops.to_extra_thread_info = remote_threads_extra_info;
8791 remote_ops.to_stop = remote_stop;
8792 remote_ops.to_xfer_partial = remote_xfer_partial;
8793 remote_ops.to_rcmd = remote_rcmd;
8794 remote_ops.to_log_command = serial_log_command;
8795 remote_ops.to_get_thread_local_address = remote_get_thread_local_address;
8796 remote_ops.to_stratum = process_stratum;
8797 remote_ops.to_has_all_memory = 1;
8798 remote_ops.to_has_memory = 1;
8799 remote_ops.to_has_stack = 1;
8800 remote_ops.to_has_registers = 1;
8801 remote_ops.to_has_execution = 1;
8802 remote_ops.to_has_thread_control = tc_schedlock; /* can lock scheduler */
8803 remote_ops.to_can_execute_reverse = remote_can_execute_reverse;
8804 remote_ops.to_magic = OPS_MAGIC;
8805 remote_ops.to_memory_map = remote_memory_map;
8806 remote_ops.to_flash_erase = remote_flash_erase;
8807 remote_ops.to_flash_done = remote_flash_done;
8808 remote_ops.to_read_description = remote_read_description;
8809 remote_ops.to_search_memory = remote_search_memory;
8810 remote_ops.to_can_async_p = remote_can_async_p;
8811 remote_ops.to_is_async_p = remote_is_async_p;
8812 remote_ops.to_async = remote_async;
8813 remote_ops.to_async_mask = remote_async_mask;
8814 remote_ops.to_terminal_inferior = remote_terminal_inferior;
8815 remote_ops.to_terminal_ours = remote_terminal_ours;
8816 remote_ops.to_supports_non_stop = remote_supports_non_stop;
8817 remote_ops.to_supports_multi_process = remote_supports_multi_process;
8820 /* Set up the extended remote vector by making a copy of the standard
8821 remote vector and adding to it. */
8824 init_extended_remote_ops (void)
8826 extended_remote_ops = remote_ops;
8828 extended_remote_ops.to_shortname = "extended-remote";
8829 extended_remote_ops.to_longname =
8830 "Extended remote serial target in gdb-specific protocol";
8831 extended_remote_ops.to_doc =
8832 "Use a remote computer via a serial line, using a gdb-specific protocol.\n\
8833 Specify the serial device it is connected to (e.g. /dev/ttya).";
8834 extended_remote_ops.to_open = extended_remote_open;
8835 extended_remote_ops.to_create_inferior = extended_remote_create_inferior;
8836 extended_remote_ops.to_mourn_inferior = extended_remote_mourn;
8837 extended_remote_ops.to_detach = extended_remote_detach;
8838 extended_remote_ops.to_attach = extended_remote_attach;
8839 extended_remote_ops.to_kill = extended_remote_kill;
8843 remote_can_async_p (void)
8845 if (!target_async_permitted)
8846 /* We only enable async when the user specifically asks for it. */
8849 /* We're async whenever the serial device is. */
8850 return remote_async_mask_value && serial_can_async_p (remote_desc);
8854 remote_is_async_p (void)
8856 if (!target_async_permitted)
8857 /* We only enable async when the user specifically asks for it. */
8860 /* We're async whenever the serial device is. */
8861 return remote_async_mask_value && serial_is_async_p (remote_desc);
8864 /* Pass the SERIAL event on and up to the client. One day this code
8865 will be able to delay notifying the client of an event until the
8866 point where an entire packet has been received. */
8868 static void (*async_client_callback) (enum inferior_event_type event_type,
8870 static void *async_client_context;
8871 static serial_event_ftype remote_async_serial_handler;
8874 remote_async_serial_handler (struct serial *scb, void *context)
8876 /* Don't propogate error information up to the client. Instead let
8877 the client find out about the error by querying the target. */
8878 async_client_callback (INF_REG_EVENT, async_client_context);
8882 remote_async_inferior_event_handler (gdb_client_data data)
8884 inferior_event_handler (INF_REG_EVENT, NULL);
8888 remote_async_get_pending_events_handler (gdb_client_data data)
8890 remote_get_pending_stop_replies ();
8894 remote_async (void (*callback) (enum inferior_event_type event_type,
8895 void *context), void *context)
8897 if (remote_async_mask_value == 0)
8898 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
8899 _("Calling remote_async when async is masked"));
8901 if (callback != NULL)
8903 serial_async (remote_desc, remote_async_serial_handler, NULL);
8904 async_client_callback = callback;
8905 async_client_context = context;
8908 serial_async (remote_desc, NULL, NULL);
8912 remote_async_mask (int new_mask)
8914 int curr_mask = remote_async_mask_value;
8915 remote_async_mask_value = new_mask;
8920 set_remote_cmd (char *args, int from_tty)
8922 help_list (remote_set_cmdlist, "set remote ", -1, gdb_stdout);
8926 show_remote_cmd (char *args, int from_tty)
8928 /* We can't just use cmd_show_list here, because we want to skip
8929 the redundant "show remote Z-packet" and the legacy aliases. */
8930 struct cleanup *showlist_chain;
8931 struct cmd_list_element *list = remote_show_cmdlist;
8933 showlist_chain = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "showlist");
8934 for (; list != NULL; list = list->next)
8935 if (strcmp (list->name, "Z-packet") == 0)
8937 else if (list->type == not_set_cmd)
8938 /* Alias commands are exactly like the original, except they
8939 don't have the normal type. */
8943 struct cleanup *option_chain
8944 = make_cleanup_ui_out_tuple_begin_end (uiout, "option");
8945 ui_out_field_string (uiout, "name", list->name);
8946 ui_out_text (uiout, ": ");
8947 if (list->type == show_cmd)
8948 do_setshow_command ((char *) NULL, from_tty, list);
8950 cmd_func (list, NULL, from_tty);
8951 /* Close the tuple. */
8952 do_cleanups (option_chain);
8955 /* Close the tuple. */
8956 do_cleanups (showlist_chain);
8960 /* Function to be called whenever a new objfile (shlib) is detected. */
8962 remote_new_objfile (struct objfile *objfile)
8964 if (remote_desc != 0) /* Have a remote connection. */
8965 remote_check_symbols (objfile);
8969 _initialize_remote (void)
8971 struct remote_state *rs;
8973 /* architecture specific data */
8974 remote_gdbarch_data_handle =
8975 gdbarch_data_register_post_init (init_remote_state);
8976 remote_g_packet_data_handle =
8977 gdbarch_data_register_pre_init (remote_g_packet_data_init);
8979 /* Initialize the per-target state. At the moment there is only one
8980 of these, not one per target. Only one target is active at a
8981 time. The default buffer size is unimportant; it will be expanded
8982 whenever a larger buffer is needed. */
8983 rs = get_remote_state_raw ();
8985 rs->buf = xmalloc (rs->buf_size);
8988 add_target (&remote_ops);
8990 init_extended_remote_ops ();
8991 add_target (&extended_remote_ops);
8993 /* Hook into new objfile notification. */
8994 observer_attach_new_objfile (remote_new_objfile);
8996 /* Set up signal handlers. */
8997 sigint_remote_token =
8998 create_async_signal_handler (async_remote_interrupt, NULL);
8999 sigint_remote_twice_token =
9000 create_async_signal_handler (inferior_event_handler_wrapper, NULL);
9003 init_remote_threadtests ();
9006 /* set/show remote ... */
9008 add_prefix_cmd ("remote", class_maintenance, set_remote_cmd, _("\
9009 Remote protocol specific variables\n\
9010 Configure various remote-protocol specific variables such as\n\
9011 the packets being used"),
9012 &remote_set_cmdlist, "set remote ",
9013 0 /* allow-unknown */, &setlist);
9014 add_prefix_cmd ("remote", class_maintenance, show_remote_cmd, _("\
9015 Remote protocol specific variables\n\
9016 Configure various remote-protocol specific variables such as\n\
9017 the packets being used"),
9018 &remote_show_cmdlist, "show remote ",
9019 0 /* allow-unknown */, &showlist);
9021 add_cmd ("compare-sections", class_obscure, compare_sections_command, _("\
9022 Compare section data on target to the exec file.\n\
9023 Argument is a single section name (default: all loaded sections)."),
9026 add_cmd ("packet", class_maintenance, packet_command, _("\
9027 Send an arbitrary packet to a remote target.\n\
9028 maintenance packet TEXT\n\
9029 If GDB is talking to an inferior via the GDB serial protocol, then\n\
9030 this command sends the string TEXT to the inferior, and displays the\n\
9031 response packet. GDB supplies the initial `$' character, and the\n\
9032 terminating `#' character and checksum."),
9035 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("remotebreak", no_class, &remote_break, _("\
9036 Set whether to send break if interrupted."), _("\
9037 Show whether to send break if interrupted."), _("\
9038 If set, a break, instead of a cntrl-c, is sent to the remote target."),
9039 NULL, NULL, /* FIXME: i18n: Whether to send break if interrupted is %s. */
9040 &setlist, &showlist);
9042 /* Install commands for configuring memory read/write packets. */
9044 add_cmd ("remotewritesize", no_class, set_memory_write_packet_size, _("\
9045 Set the maximum number of bytes per memory write packet (deprecated)."),
9047 add_cmd ("remotewritesize", no_class, show_memory_write_packet_size, _("\
9048 Show the maximum number of bytes per memory write packet (deprecated)."),
9050 add_cmd ("memory-write-packet-size", no_class,
9051 set_memory_write_packet_size, _("\
9052 Set the maximum number of bytes per memory-write packet.\n\
9053 Specify the number of bytes in a packet or 0 (zero) for the\n\
9054 default packet size. The actual limit is further reduced\n\
9055 dependent on the target. Specify ``fixed'' to disable the\n\
9056 further restriction and ``limit'' to enable that restriction."),
9057 &remote_set_cmdlist);
9058 add_cmd ("memory-read-packet-size", no_class,
9059 set_memory_read_packet_size, _("\
9060 Set the maximum number of bytes per memory-read packet.\n\
9061 Specify the number of bytes in a packet or 0 (zero) for the\n\
9062 default packet size. The actual limit is further reduced\n\
9063 dependent on the target. Specify ``fixed'' to disable the\n\
9064 further restriction and ``limit'' to enable that restriction."),
9065 &remote_set_cmdlist);
9066 add_cmd ("memory-write-packet-size", no_class,
9067 show_memory_write_packet_size,
9068 _("Show the maximum number of bytes per memory-write packet."),
9069 &remote_show_cmdlist);
9070 add_cmd ("memory-read-packet-size", no_class,
9071 show_memory_read_packet_size,
9072 _("Show the maximum number of bytes per memory-read packet."),
9073 &remote_show_cmdlist);
9075 add_setshow_zinteger_cmd ("hardware-watchpoint-limit", no_class,
9076 &remote_hw_watchpoint_limit, _("\
9077 Set the maximum number of target hardware watchpoints."), _("\
9078 Show the maximum number of target hardware watchpoints."), _("\
9079 Specify a negative limit for unlimited."),
9080 NULL, NULL, /* FIXME: i18n: The maximum number of target hardware watchpoints is %s. */
9081 &remote_set_cmdlist, &remote_show_cmdlist);
9082 add_setshow_zinteger_cmd ("hardware-breakpoint-limit", no_class,
9083 &remote_hw_breakpoint_limit, _("\
9084 Set the maximum number of target hardware breakpoints."), _("\
9085 Show the maximum number of target hardware breakpoints."), _("\
9086 Specify a negative limit for unlimited."),
9087 NULL, NULL, /* FIXME: i18n: The maximum number of target hardware breakpoints is %s. */
9088 &remote_set_cmdlist, &remote_show_cmdlist);
9090 add_setshow_integer_cmd ("remoteaddresssize", class_obscure,
9091 &remote_address_size, _("\
9092 Set the maximum size of the address (in bits) in a memory packet."), _("\
9093 Show the maximum size of the address (in bits) in a memory packet."), NULL,
9095 NULL, /* FIXME: i18n: */
9096 &setlist, &showlist);
9098 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_X],
9099 "X", "binary-download", 1);
9101 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vCont],
9102 "vCont", "verbose-resume", 0);
9104 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_QPassSignals],
9105 "QPassSignals", "pass-signals", 0);
9107 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qSymbol],
9108 "qSymbol", "symbol-lookup", 0);
9110 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_P],
9111 "P", "set-register", 1);
9113 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_p],
9114 "p", "fetch-register", 1);
9116 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z0],
9117 "Z0", "software-breakpoint", 0);
9119 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z1],
9120 "Z1", "hardware-breakpoint", 0);
9122 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z2],
9123 "Z2", "write-watchpoint", 0);
9125 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z3],
9126 "Z3", "read-watchpoint", 0);
9128 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_Z4],
9129 "Z4", "access-watchpoint", 0);
9131 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qXfer_auxv],
9132 "qXfer:auxv:read", "read-aux-vector", 0);
9134 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qXfer_features],
9135 "qXfer:features:read", "target-features", 0);
9137 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qXfer_libraries],
9138 "qXfer:libraries:read", "library-info", 0);
9140 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qXfer_memory_map],
9141 "qXfer:memory-map:read", "memory-map", 0);
9143 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qXfer_spu_read],
9144 "qXfer:spu:read", "read-spu-object", 0);
9146 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qXfer_spu_write],
9147 "qXfer:spu:write", "write-spu-object", 0);
9149 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qXfer_osdata],
9150 "qXfer:osdata:read", "osdata", 0);
9152 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qXfer_siginfo_read],
9153 "qXfer:siginfo:read", "read-siginfo-object", 0);
9155 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qXfer_siginfo_write],
9156 "qXfer:siginfo:write", "write-siginfo-object", 0);
9158 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qGetTLSAddr],
9159 "qGetTLSAddr", "get-thread-local-storage-address",
9162 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qSupported],
9163 "qSupported", "supported-packets", 0);
9165 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qSearch_memory],
9166 "qSearch:memory", "search-memory", 0);
9168 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vFile_open],
9169 "vFile:open", "hostio-open", 0);
9171 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vFile_pread],
9172 "vFile:pread", "hostio-pread", 0);
9174 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vFile_pwrite],
9175 "vFile:pwrite", "hostio-pwrite", 0);
9177 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vFile_close],
9178 "vFile:close", "hostio-close", 0);
9180 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vFile_unlink],
9181 "vFile:unlink", "hostio-unlink", 0);
9183 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vAttach],
9184 "vAttach", "attach", 0);
9186 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vRun],
9189 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_QStartNoAckMode],
9190 "QStartNoAckMode", "noack", 0);
9192 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_vKill],
9193 "vKill", "kill", 0);
9195 add_packet_config_cmd (&remote_protocol_packets[PACKET_qAttached],
9196 "qAttached", "query-attached", 0);
9198 /* Keep the old ``set remote Z-packet ...'' working. Each individual
9199 Z sub-packet has its own set and show commands, but users may
9200 have sets to this variable in their .gdbinit files (or in their
9202 add_setshow_auto_boolean_cmd ("Z-packet", class_obscure,
9203 &remote_Z_packet_detect, _("\
9204 Set use of remote protocol `Z' packets"), _("\
9205 Show use of remote protocol `Z' packets "), _("\
9206 When set, GDB will attempt to use the remote breakpoint and watchpoint\n\
9208 set_remote_protocol_Z_packet_cmd,
9209 show_remote_protocol_Z_packet_cmd, /* FIXME: i18n: Use of remote protocol `Z' packets is %s. */
9210 &remote_set_cmdlist, &remote_show_cmdlist);
9212 add_prefix_cmd ("remote", class_files, remote_command, _("\
9213 Manipulate files on the remote system\n\
9214 Transfer files to and from the remote target system."),
9215 &remote_cmdlist, "remote ",
9216 0 /* allow-unknown */, &cmdlist);
9218 add_cmd ("put", class_files, remote_put_command,
9219 _("Copy a local file to the remote system."),
9222 add_cmd ("get", class_files, remote_get_command,
9223 _("Copy a remote file to the local system."),
9226 add_cmd ("delete", class_files, remote_delete_command,
9227 _("Delete a remote file."),
9230 remote_exec_file = xstrdup ("");
9231 add_setshow_string_noescape_cmd ("exec-file", class_files,
9232 &remote_exec_file, _("\
9233 Set the remote pathname for \"run\""), _("\
9234 Show the remote pathname for \"run\""), NULL, NULL, NULL,
9235 &remote_set_cmdlist, &remote_show_cmdlist);
9237 /* Eventually initialize fileio. See fileio.c */
9238 initialize_remote_fileio (remote_set_cmdlist, remote_show_cmdlist);
9240 /* Take advantage of the fact that the LWP field is not used, to tag
9241 special ptids with it set to != 0. */
9242 magic_null_ptid = ptid_build (42000, 1, -1);
9243 not_sent_ptid = ptid_build (42000, 1, -2);
9244 any_thread_ptid = ptid_build (42000, 1, 0);