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author | Andrew Cagney <cagney@redhat.com> | 2002-11-24 19:48:13 +0000 |
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committer | Andrew Cagney <cagney@redhat.com> | 2002-11-24 19:48:13 +0000 |
commit | c193f6ac9cadbfcaf4bae1a46d01b6c2a4f66bb4 (patch) | |
tree | 94e43a5b7c11851202f9ea9b4f725dd041f7b7a8 /gdb/frame.h | |
parent | e5d2af146b35918deacdec7270a9e6890410e1a5 (diff) | |
download | gdb-c193f6ac9cadbfcaf4bae1a46d01b6c2a4f66bb4.zip gdb-c193f6ac9cadbfcaf4bae1a46d01b6c2a4f66bb4.tar.gz gdb-c193f6ac9cadbfcaf4bae1a46d01b6c2a4f66bb4.tar.bz2 |
2002-11-19 Andrew Cagney <ac131313@redhat.com>
* frame.h (FRAME_FP): Delete macro.
(get_frame_base): New function declaration.
* frame.c (get_frame_base): New function.
(get_frame_id): Use ->frame.
(frame_find_by_id): Rewrite to use get_frame_id.
* blockframe.c: Use get_frame_base instead of FRAME_FP.
* cris-tdep.c, d10v-tdep.c, findvar.c, h8500-tdep.c: Ditto.
* hppa-tdep.c, i386-tdep.c, infcmd.c, infrun.c: Ditto.
* m68hc11-tdep.c, m68k-tdep.c, mcore-tdep.c, mips-tdep.c: Ditto.
* mn10200-tdep.c, mn10300-tdep.c, rs6000-tdep.c: Ditto.
* sh-tdep.c, sparc-tdep.c, stack.c, tracepoint.c: Ditto.
* v850-tdep.c, valops.c, z8k-tdep.c: Ditto.
Diffstat (limited to 'gdb/frame.h')
-rw-r--r-- | gdb/frame.h | 64 |
1 files changed, 47 insertions, 17 deletions
diff --git a/gdb/frame.h b/gdb/frame.h index 86d1172..9434cde 100644 --- a/gdb/frame.h +++ b/gdb/frame.h @@ -85,6 +85,49 @@ extern struct frame_info *frame_find_by_id (struct frame_id id); this frame. */ extern CORE_ADDR get_frame_pc (struct frame_info *); +/* Return the frame address from FI. Except in the machine-dependent + *FRAME* macros, a frame address has no defined meaning other than + as a magic cookie which identifies a frame over calls to the + inferior (um, SEE NOTE BELOW). The only known exception is + inferior.h (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY) [ON_STACK]; see comments there. You + cannot assume that a frame address contains enough information to + reconstruct the frame; if you want more than just to identify the + frame (e.g. be able to fetch variables relative to that frame), + then save the whole struct frame_info (and the next struct + frame_info, since the latter is used for fetching variables on some + machines) (um, again SEE NOTE BELOW). + + NOTE: cagney/2002-11-18: Actually, the frame address isn't + sufficient for identifying a frame, and the counter examples are + wrong! + + Code that needs to (re)identify a frame must use get_frame_id() and + frame_find_by_id() (and in the future, a frame_compare() function + instead of INNER_THAN()). Two reasons: an architecture (e.g., + ia64) can have more than one frame address (due to multiple stack + pointers) (frame ID is going to be expanded to accomodate this); + successive frameless function calls can only be differientated by + comparing both the frame's base and the frame's enclosing function + (frame_find_by_id() is going to be modified to perform this test). + + The generic dummy frame version of PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY() is able to + identify a dummy frame using only the PC value. So the frame + address is not needed. In fact, most PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY() calls now + pass zero as the frame/sp values as the caller knows that those + values won't be used. Once all architectures are using generic + dummy frames, PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY() can drop the sp/frame parameters. + When it comes to finding a dummy frame, the next frame's frame ID + (with out duing an unwind) can be used (ok, could if it wasn't for + the need to change the way the PPC defined frame base in a strange + way). + + Modern architectures should be using something like dwarf2's + location expression to describe where a variable lives. Such + expressions specify their own debug info centric frame address. + Consequently, a generic frame address is pretty meaningless. */ + +extern CORE_ADDR get_frame_base (struct frame_info *); + /* Return the per-frame unique identifer. Can be used to relocate a frame after a frame cache flush (and other similar operations). */ extern void get_frame_id (struct frame_info *fi, struct frame_id *id); @@ -235,9 +278,10 @@ struct frame_saved_regs struct frame_info { - /* Nominal address of the frame described. See comments at FRAME_FP - about what this means outside the *FRAME* macros; in the *FRAME* - macros, it can mean whatever makes most sense for this machine. */ + /* Nominal address of the frame described. See comments at + get_frame_base() about what this means outside the *FRAME* + macros; in the *FRAME* macros, it can mean whatever makes most + sense for this machine. */ CORE_ADDR frame; /* Address at which execution is occurring in this frame. @@ -334,20 +378,6 @@ enum print_what extern void *frame_obstack_alloc (unsigned long size); extern void frame_saved_regs_zalloc (struct frame_info *); -/* Return the frame address from FI. Except in the machine-dependent - *FRAME* macros, a frame address has no defined meaning other than - as a magic cookie which identifies a frame over calls to the - inferior. The only known exception is inferior.h - (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY) [ON_STACK]; see comments there. You cannot - assume that a frame address contains enough information to - reconstruct the frame; if you want more than just to identify the - frame (e.g. be able to fetch variables relative to that frame), - then save the whole struct frame_info (and the next struct - frame_info, since the latter is used for fetching variables on some - machines). */ - -#define FRAME_FP(fi) ((fi)->frame) - /* Define a default FRAME_CHAIN_VALID, in the form that is suitable for most targets. If FRAME_CHAIN_VALID returns zero it means that the given frame is the outermost one and has no caller. |