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authorPedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>2022-04-21 14:20:36 +0100
committerPedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>2022-04-29 12:33:27 +0100
commitd51926f06a7f4854bebdd71dcb0a78dbaa2f4168 (patch)
treeaeeb243c5da413dc2dc2b3c8d539e7f65471312b /gdb/break-catch-load.c
parent8a2ef851861706a113a080a1ff3d91c81449704d (diff)
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Slightly tweak and clarify target_resume's interface
The current target_resume interface is a bit odd & non-intuitive. I've found myself explaining it a couple times the recent past, while reviewing patches that assumed STEP/SIGNAL always applied to the passed in PTID. It goes like this today: - if the passed in PTID is a thread, then the step/signal request is for that thread. - otherwise, if PTID is a wildcard (all threads or all threads of process), the step/signal request is for inferior_ptid, and PTID indicates which set of threads run free. Because GDB always switches the current thread to "leader" thread being resumed/stepped/signalled, we can simplify this a bit to: - step/signal are always for inferior_ptid. - PTID indicates the set of threads that run free. Still not ideal, but it's a minimal change and at least there are no special cases this way. That's what this patch does. It renames the PTID parameter to SCOPE_PTID, adds some assertions to target_resume, and tweaks target_resume's description. In addition, it also renames PTID to SCOPE_PTID in the remote and linux-nat targets, and simplifies their implementation a little bit. Other targets could do the same, but they don't have to. Change-Id: I02a2ec2ab3a3e9b191de1e9a84f55c17cab7daaf
Diffstat (limited to 'gdb/break-catch-load.c')
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