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authorMatthew "strager" Glazar <strager.nds@gmail.com>2023-01-27 16:19:45 -0800
committerPedro Alves <pedro@palves.net>2023-09-20 16:35:36 +0100
commit0f6a69947891fc448c37e944d6c3e266621d35a8 (patch)
tree24fabc6ae9aeb340b42ae5d6a9c495111d7a71a6 /gdb/gdbthread.h
parent973db6fae304c2bcafff5f169610f663adc9e817 (diff)
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gdb/tui: add 'set tui mouse-events off' to restore mouse selection
Rationale: I use the mouse with my terminal to select and copy text. In gdb, I use the mouse to select a function name to set a breakpoint, or a variable name to print, for example. When gdb is compiled with ncurses mouse support, gdb's TUI mode intercepts mouse events. Left-clicking and dragging, which would normally select text, seems to do nothing. This means I cannot select text using my mouse anymore. This makes it harder to set breakpoints, print variables, etc. Solution: I tried to fix this issue by editing the 'mousemask' call to only enable buttons 4 and 5. However, this still caused my terminal (gnome-terminal) to not allow text to be selected. The only way I could make it work is by calling 'mousemask (0, NULL);'. But doing so disables the mouse code entirely, which other people might want. I therefore decided to make a setting in gdb called 'tui mouse-events'. If enabled (the default), the behavior is as it is now: terminal mouse events are given to gdb, disabling the terminal's default behavior. If disabled (opt-in), the behavior is as it was before the year 2020: terminal mouse events are not given to gdb, therefore the mouse can be used to select and copy text. Notes: I am not attached to the setting name or its description. Feel free to suggest better wording. Testing: I tested this change in gnome-terminal by performing the following steps manually: 1. Run: gdb --args ./myprogram 2. Enable TUI: press ctrl-x ctrl-a 3. Click and drag text with the mouse. Observe no selection. 4. Input: set tui mouse-events off 5. Click and drag text with the mouse. Observe that selection works now. 6. Input: set tui mouse-events on. 7. Click and drag text with the mouse. Observe no selection.
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