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I was always a bit confused by next_adapter, because it kind of mixes
the element type and the iterator type. In reality, it is not much more
than a class that wraps two iterators (begin and end). However, it
assumes that:
- you can construct the begin iterator by passing a pointer to the
first element of the iterable
- you can default-construct iterator to make the end iterator
I think that by generalizing it a little bit, we can re-use it at more
places.
Rename it to "iterator_range". I think it describes a bit better: it's
a range made by wrapping a begin and end iterator. Move it to its own
file, since it's not related to next_iterator anymore.
iterator_range has two constructors. The variadic one, where arguments
are forwarded to construct the underlying begin iterator. The end
iterator is constructed through default construction. This is a
generalization of what we have today.
There is another constructor which receives already constructed begin
and end iterators, useful if the end iterator can't be obtained by
default-construction. Or, if you wanted to make a range that does not
end at the end of the container, you could pass any iterator as the
"end".
This generalization allows removing some "range" classes, like
all_inferiors_range. These classes existed only to pass some arguments
when constructing the begin iterator. With iterator_range, those same
arguments are passed to the iterator_range constructed and then
forwarded to the constructed begin iterator.
There is a small functional difference in how iterator_range works
compared to next_adapter. next_adapter stored the pointer it received
as argument and constructeur an iterator in the `begin` method.
iterator_range constructs the begin iterator and stores it as a member.
Its `begin` method returns a copy of that iterator.
With just iterator_range, uses of next_adapter<foo> would be replaced
with:
using foo_iterator = next_iterator<foo>;
using foo_range = iterator_range<foo_iterator>;
However, I added a `next_range` wrapper as a direct replacement for
next_adapter<foo>. IMO, next_range is a slightly better name than
next_adapter.
The rest of the changes are applications of this new class.
gdbsupport/ChangeLog:
* next-iterator.h (class next_adapter): Remove.
* iterator-range.h: New.
gdb/ChangeLog:
* breakpoint.h (bp_locations_range): Remove.
(bp_location_range): New.
(struct breakpoint) <locations>: Adjust type.
(breakpoint_range): Use iterator_range.
(tracepoint_range): Use iterator_range.
* breakpoint.c (breakpoint::locations): Adjust return type.
* gdb_bfd.h (gdb_bfd_section_range): Use iterator_range.
* gdbthread.h (all_threads_safe): Pass argument to
all_threads_safe_range.
* inferior-iter.h (all_inferiors_range): Use iterator_range.
(all_inferiors_safe_range): Use iterator_range.
(all_non_exited_inferiors_range): Use iterator_range.
* inferior.h (all_inferiors, all_non_exited_inferiors): Pass
inferior_list as argument.
* objfiles.h (struct objfile) <compunits_range>: Remove.
<compunits>: Return compunit_symtab_range.
* progspace.h (unwrapping_objfile_iterator)
<unwrapping_objfile_iterator>: Take parameter by value.
(unwrapping_objfile_range): Use iterator_range.
(struct program_space) <objfiles_range>: Define with "using".
<objfiles>: Adjust.
<objfiles_safe_range>: Define with "using".
<objfiles_safe>: Adjust.
<solibs>: Return so_list_range, define here.
* progspace.c (program_space::solibs): Remove.
* psymtab.h (class psymtab_storage) <partial_symtab_iterator>:
New.
<partial_symtab_range>: Use iterator_range.
* solist.h (so_list_range): New.
* symtab.h (compunit_symtab_range):
New.
(symtab_range): New.
(compunit_filetabs): Change to a function.
* thread-iter.h (inf_threads_range,
inf_non_exited_threads_range, safe_inf_threads_range,
all_threads_safe_range): Use iterator_range.
* top.h (ui_range): New.
(all_uis): Use ui_range.
Change-Id: Ib7a9d2a3547f45f01aa1c6b24536ba159db9b854
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