/* Support for complaint handling during symbol reading in GDB. Copyright (C) 1990-2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GDB. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . */ #include "defs.h" #include "complaints.h" #include "command.h" #include "gdbcmd.h" /* Should each complaint message be self explanatory, or should we assume that a series of complaints is being produced? */ enum complaint_series { /* Isolated self explanatory message. */ ISOLATED_MESSAGE, /* First message of a series, includes an explanation. */ FIRST_MESSAGE, /* First message of a series, but does not need to include any sort of explanation. */ SHORT_FIRST_MESSAGE, /* Subsequent message of a series that needs no explanation (the user already knows we have a problem so we can just state our piece). */ SUBSEQUENT_MESSAGE }; /* Structure to manage complaints about symbol file contents. */ struct complain { const char *file; int line; const char *fmt; int counter; struct complain *next; }; /* The explanatory message that should accompany the complaint. The message is in two parts - pre and post - that are printed around the complaint text. */ struct explanation { const char *prefix; const char *postfix; }; struct complaints { struct complain *root; enum complaint_series series; /* The explanatory messages that should accompany the complaint. NOTE: cagney/2002-08-14: In a desperate attempt at being vaguely i18n friendly, this is an array of two messages. When present, the PRE and POST EXPLANATION[SERIES] are used to wrap the message. */ const struct explanation *explanation; }; static struct complain complaint_sentinel; /* The symbol table complaint table. */ static struct explanation symfile_explanations[] = { { "During symbol reading, ", "." }, { "During symbol reading...", "..."}, { "", "..."}, { "", "..."}, { NULL, NULL } }; static struct complaints symfile_complaint_book = { &complaint_sentinel, ISOLATED_MESSAGE, symfile_explanations }; struct complaints *symfile_complaints = &symfile_complaint_book; /* Wrapper function to, on-demand, fill in a complaints object. */ static struct complaints * get_complaints (struct complaints **c) { if ((*c) != NULL) return (*c); (*c) = XNEW (struct complaints); (*c)->root = &complaint_sentinel; (*c)->series = ISOLATED_MESSAGE; (*c)->explanation = NULL; return (*c); } static struct complain * ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (4, 0) find_complaint (struct complaints *complaints, const char *file, int line, const char *fmt) { struct complain *complaint; /* Find the complaint in the table. A more efficient search algorithm (based on hash table or something) could be used. But that can wait until someone shows evidence that this lookup is a real bottle neck. */ for (complaint = complaints->root; complaint != NULL; complaint = complaint->next) { if (complaint->fmt == fmt && complaint->file == file && complaint->line == line) return complaint; } /* Oops not seen before, fill in a new complaint. */ complaint = XNEW (struct complain); complaint->fmt = fmt; complaint->file = file; complaint->line = line; complaint->counter = 0; complaint->next = NULL; /* File it, return it. */ complaint->next = complaints->root; complaints->root = complaint; return complaint; } /* How many complaints about a particular thing should be printed before we stop whining about it? Default is no whining at all, since so many systems have ill-constructed symbol files. */ int stop_whining = 0; /* Print a complaint, and link the complaint block into a chain for later handling. */ static void ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (4, 0) vcomplaint (struct complaints **c, const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, va_list args) { struct complaints *complaints = get_complaints (c); struct complain *complaint = find_complaint (complaints, file, line, fmt); enum complaint_series series; gdb_assert (complaints != NULL); complaint->counter++; if (complaint->counter > stop_whining) return; if (info_verbose) series = SUBSEQUENT_MESSAGE; else series = complaints->series; /* Pass 'fmt' instead of 'complaint->fmt' to printf-like callees from here on, to avoid "format string is not a string literal" warnings. 'fmt' is this function's printf-format parameter, so the compiler can assume the passed in argument is a literal string somewhere up the call chain. */ gdb_assert (complaint->fmt == fmt); if (complaint->file != NULL) internal_vwarning (complaint->file, complaint->line, fmt, args); else if (deprecated_warning_hook) (*deprecated_warning_hook) (fmt, args); else { if (complaints->explanation == NULL) /* A [v]warning() call always appends a newline. */ vwarning (fmt, args); else { std::string msg = string_vprintf (fmt, args); wrap_here (""); if (series != SUBSEQUENT_MESSAGE) begin_line (); /* XXX: i18n */ fprintf_filtered (gdb_stderr, "%s%s%s", complaints->explanation[series].prefix, msg.c_str (), complaints->explanation[series].postfix); /* Force a line-break after any isolated message. For the other cases, clear_complaints() takes care of any missing trailing newline, the wrap_here() is just a hint. */ if (series == ISOLATED_MESSAGE) /* It would be really nice to use begin_line() here. Unfortunately that function doesn't track GDB_STDERR and consequently will sometimes supress a line when it shouldn't. */ fputs_filtered ("\n", gdb_stderr); else wrap_here (""); } } switch (series) { case ISOLATED_MESSAGE: break; case FIRST_MESSAGE: complaints->series = SUBSEQUENT_MESSAGE; break; case SUBSEQUENT_MESSAGE: case SHORT_FIRST_MESSAGE: complaints->series = SUBSEQUENT_MESSAGE; break; } /* If GDB dumps core, we'd like to see the complaints first. Presumably GDB will not be sending so many complaints that this becomes a performance hog. */ gdb_flush (gdb_stderr); } void complaint_internal (struct complaints **complaints, const char *fmt, ...) { va_list args; va_start (args, fmt); vcomplaint (complaints, NULL/*file*/, 0/*line*/, fmt, args); va_end (args); } void internal_complaint (struct complaints **complaints, const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, ...) { va_list args; va_start (args, fmt); vcomplaint (complaints, file, line, fmt, args); va_end (args); } /* Clear out / initialize all complaint counters that have ever been incremented. If LESS_VERBOSE is 1, be less verbose about successive complaints, since the messages are appearing all together during a command that is reporting a contiguous block of complaints (rather than being interleaved with other messages). If noisy is 1, we are in a noisy command, and our caller will print enough context for the user to figure it out. */ void clear_complaints (struct complaints **c, int less_verbose, int noisy) { struct complaints *complaints = get_complaints (c); struct complain *p; for (p = complaints->root; p != NULL; p = p->next) { p->counter = 0; } switch (complaints->series) { case FIRST_MESSAGE: /* Haven't yet printed anything. */ break; case SHORT_FIRST_MESSAGE: /* Haven't yet printed anything. */ break; case ISOLATED_MESSAGE: /* The code above, always forces a line-break. No need to do it here. */ break; case SUBSEQUENT_MESSAGE: /* It would be really nice to use begin_line() here. Unfortunately that function doesn't track GDB_STDERR and consequently will sometimes supress a line when it shouldn't. */ fputs_unfiltered ("\n", gdb_stderr); break; default: internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("bad switch")); } if (!less_verbose) complaints->series = ISOLATED_MESSAGE; else if (!noisy) complaints->series = FIRST_MESSAGE; else complaints->series = SHORT_FIRST_MESSAGE; } static void complaints_show_value (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element *cmd, const char *value) { fprintf_filtered (file, _("Max number of complaints about incorrect" " symbols is %s.\n"), value); } void _initialize_complaints (void) { add_setshow_zinteger_cmd ("complaints", class_support, &stop_whining, _("\ Set max number of complaints about incorrect symbols."), _("\ Show max number of complaints about incorrect symbols."), NULL, NULL, complaints_show_value, &setlist, &showlist); }