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author | Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> | 2014-10-29 14:23:57 +0000 |
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committer | Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> | 2014-10-29 14:23:57 +0000 |
commit | 84eda397bcf3ebea00383e4a6a864af59723dafd (patch) | |
tree | 161c747fb5b59b1793456b6dec6644e1b81316a8 /gdb/tui/tui.h | |
parent | 563e8d85161198df8a13de4bc660a047305458c9 (diff) | |
download | gdb-84eda397bcf3ebea00383e4a6a864af59723dafd.zip gdb-84eda397bcf3ebea00383e4a6a864af59723dafd.tar.gz gdb-84eda397bcf3ebea00383e4a6a864af59723dafd.tar.bz2 |
PR tui/16138, PR tui/17519, and misc failures to initialize the terminal
PR tui/16138 is about failure to initialize curses resulting in GDB
exiting instead of throwing an error. E.g.:
$ TERM=foo gdb
(gdb) layout asm
Error opening terminal: foo.
$
The problem is that we're calling initscr to initialize the screen.
As mentioned in
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xcurses/initscr.html:
If errors occur, initscr() writes an appropriate error message to
standard error and exits.
^^^^^
Instead, we should use newterm:
"A program that needs an indication of error conditions, so it can
continue to run in a line-oriented mode if the terminal cannot support
a screen-oriented program, would also use this function."
After the patch:
$ TERM=foo gdb -q -nx
(gdb) layout asm
Cannot enable the TUI: error opening terminal [TERM=foo]
(gdb)
And then PR tui/17519 is about GDB not validating whether the terminal
has the necessary capabilities when enabling the TUI. If one tries to
enable the TUI with TERM=dumb (and e.g., from a shell within emacs),
GDB ends up with a clear screen, the cursor is placed at the
bottom/right corner of the screen, there's no prompt, typing shows no
echo, and there's no indication of what's going on. c-x,a gets you
out of the TUI, but it's completely non-obvious.
After the patch, we get:
$ TERM=dumb gdb -q -nx
(gdb) layout asm
Cannot enable the TUI: terminal doesn't support cursor addressing [TERM=dumb]
(gdb)
While at it, I've moved all the tui_allowed_p validation to
tui_enable, and expanded the error messages. Previously we'd get:
$ gdb -q -nx -i=mi
(gdb)
layout asm
&"layout asm\n"
&"TUI mode not allowed\n"
^error,msg="TUI mode not allowed"
and:
$ gdb -q -nx -ex "layout asm" > foo
TUI mode not allowed
While now we get:
$ gdb -q -nx -i=mi
(gdb)
layout asm
&"layout asm\n"
&"Cannot enable the TUI when the interpreter is 'mi'\n"
^error,msg="Cannot enable the TUI when the interpreter is 'mi'"
(gdb)
and:
$ gdb -q -nx -ex "layout asm" > foo
Cannot enable the TUI when output is not a terminal
Tested on x86_64 Fedora 20.
gdb/
2014-10-29 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
PR tui/16138
PR tui/17519
* tui/tui-interp.c (tui_is_toplevel): Delete global.
(tui_allowed_p): Delete function.
* tui/tui.c: Include "interps.h".
(tui_enable): Don't use tui_allowed_p. Error out here with
detailed error messages if the TUI is the top level interpreter,
or if output is not a terminal. Use newterm instead of initscr,
and error out if initializing the terminal fails. Also error out if
the terminal doesn't support cursor addressing.
* tui/tui.h (tui_allowed_p): Delete declaration.
Diffstat (limited to 'gdb/tui/tui.h')
-rw-r--r-- | gdb/tui/tui.h | 4 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/gdb/tui/tui.h b/gdb/tui/tui.h index 9afadb2..b1dddc0 100644 --- a/gdb/tui/tui.h +++ b/gdb/tui/tui.h @@ -64,10 +64,6 @@ extern int tui_get_command_dimension (unsigned int *width, key shortcut. */ extern void tui_initialize_readline (void); -/* True if enabling the TUI is allowed. Example, if the top level - interpreter is MI, enabling curses will certainly lose. */ -extern int tui_allowed_p (void); - /* Enter in the tui mode (curses). */ extern void tui_enable (void); |