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authorAndrew Burgess <andrew.burgess@embecosm.com>2023-01-19 21:15:56 +0000
committerMaciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com>2023-01-19 21:15:56 +0000
commit76b58849c5fc433f71ad7ec18f9f47f782643bc6 (patch)
tree3e50cc9b530290e4a0180ff98bd9730150cf19a4 /gdb/printcmd.c
parent7aeb03e2d4186d1184050d2ec048301f48255644 (diff)
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GDB: Add a character string limiting option
This commit splits the `set/show print elements' option into two. We retain `set/show print elements' for controlling how many elements of an array we print, but a new `set/show print characters' setting is added which is used for controlling how many characters of a string are printed. The motivation behind this change is to allow users a finer level of control over how data is printed, reflecting that, although strings can be thought of as arrays of characters, users often want to treat these two things differently. For compatibility reasons by default the `set/show print characters' option is set to `elements', which makes the limit for character strings follow the setting of the `set/show print elements' option, as it used to. Using `set print characters' with any other value makes the limit independent from the `set/show print elements' setting, however it can be restored to the default with the `set print characters elements' command at any time. A corresponding `-characters' option for the `print' command is added, with the same semantics, i.e. one can use `elements' to make a given `print' invocation follow the limit of elements, be it set with the `-elements' option also given with the same invocation or taken from the `set/show print elements' setting, for characters as well regardless of the current setting of the `set/show print characters' option. The GDB changes are all pretty straightforward, just changing references to the old 'print_max' to use a new `get_print_max_chars' helper which figures out which of the two of `print_max' and `print_max_chars' values to use. Likewise, the documentation is just updated to reference the new setting where appropriate. To make people's life easier the message shown by `show print elements' now indicates if the setting also applies to character strings: (gdb) set print characters elements (gdb) show print elements Limit on string chars or array elements to print is 200. (gdb) set print characters unlimited (gdb) show print elements Limit on array elements to print is 200. (gdb) and the help text shows the dependency as well: (gdb) help set print elements Set limit on array elements to print. "unlimited" causes there to be no limit. This setting also applies to string chars when "print characters" is set to "elements". (gdb) In the testsuite there are two minor updates, one to add `-characters' to the list of completions now shown for the `print' command, and a bare minimum pair of checks for the right handling of `set print characters' and `show print characters', copied from the corresponding checks for `set print elements' and `show print elements' respectively. Co-Authored-By: Maciej W. Rozycki <macro@embecosm.com> Approved-By: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@efficios.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'gdb/printcmd.c')
-rw-r--r--gdb/printcmd.c9
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/gdb/printcmd.c b/gdb/printcmd.c
index c3c2e5a..7f35513 100644
--- a/gdb/printcmd.c
+++ b/gdb/printcmd.c
@@ -957,17 +957,18 @@ find_string_backward (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
chars_to_read * char_size);
chars_read /= char_size;
read_error = (chars_read == chars_to_read) ? 0 : 1;
+ unsigned int print_max_chars = get_print_max_chars (options);
/* Searching for '\0' from the end of buffer in backward direction. */
for (i = 0; i < chars_read && count > 0 ; ++i, ++chars_counted)
{
int offset = (chars_to_read - i - 1) * char_size;
if (integer_is_zero (&buffer[offset], char_size)
- || chars_counted == options->print_max)
+ || chars_counted == print_max_chars)
{
- /* Found '\0' or reached print_max. As OFFSET is the offset to
- '\0', we add CHAR_SIZE to return the start address of
- a string. */
+ /* Found '\0' or reached `print_max_chars'. As OFFSET
+ is the offset to '\0', we add CHAR_SIZE to return
+ the start address of a string. */
--count;
string_start_addr = addr + offset + char_size;
chars_counted = 0;