binutils-gdb/gdb/thread-fsm.h
Tom Tromey 99761c5ab5 Export "finish" return value to Python
This patch changes the Python "stop" event emission code to also add
the function return value, if it is known.  This happens when the stop
comes from a "finish" command and when the value can be fetched.

The test is in the next patch.

Reviewed-By: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>
2024-03-08 10:50:12 -07:00

133 lines
4.1 KiB
C++

/* Thread command's finish-state machine, for GDB, the GNU debugger.
Copyright (C) 2015-2024 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 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#ifndef THREAD_FSM_H
#define THREAD_FSM_H
#include "mi/mi-common.h"
struct return_value_info;
struct thread_fsm_ops;
struct type;
struct value;
/* The captured function return value/type and its position in the
value history. */
struct return_value_info
{
/* The captured return value. May be NULL if we weren't able to
retrieve it. See get_return_value. */
struct value *value;
/* The return type. In some cases, we'll not be able extract the
return value, but we always know the type. */
struct type *type;
/* If we captured a value, this is the value history index. */
int value_history_index;
};
/* A thread finite-state machine structure contains the necessary info
and callbacks to manage the state machine protocol of a thread's
execution command. */
struct thread_fsm
{
explicit thread_fsm (struct interp *cmd_interp)
: command_interp (cmd_interp)
{
}
/* The destructor. This should simply free heap allocated data
structures. Cleaning up target resources (like, e.g.,
breakpoints) should be done in the clean_up method. */
virtual ~thread_fsm () = default;
DISABLE_COPY_AND_ASSIGN (thread_fsm);
/* Called to clean up target resources after the FSM. E.g., if the
FSM created internal breakpoints, this is where they should be
deleted. */
virtual void clean_up (struct thread_info *thread)
{
}
/* Called after handle_inferior_event decides the target is done
(that is, after stop_waiting). The FSM is given a chance to
decide whether the command is done and thus the target should
stop, or whether there's still more to do and thus the thread
should be re-resumed. This is a good place to cache target data
too. For example, the "finish" command saves the just-finished
function's return value here. */
virtual bool should_stop (struct thread_info *thread) = 0;
/* If this FSM saved a function's return value, you can use this
method to retrieve it. Otherwise, this returns NULL. */
virtual struct return_value_info *return_value ()
{
return nullptr;
}
enum async_reply_reason async_reply_reason ()
{
/* If we didn't finish, then the stop reason must come from
elsewhere. E.g., a breakpoint hit or a signal intercepted. */
gdb_assert (finished_p ());
return do_async_reply_reason ();
}
/* Whether the stop should be notified to the user/frontend. */
virtual bool should_notify_stop ()
{
return true;
}
void set_finished ()
{
finished = true;
}
bool finished_p () const
{
return finished;
}
/* The interpreter that issued the execution command that caused
this thread to resume. If the top level interpreter is MI/async,
and the execution command was a CLI command (next/step/etc.),
we'll want to print stop event output to the MI console channel
(the stepped-to line, etc.), as if the user entered the execution
command on a real GDB console. */
struct interp *command_interp = nullptr;
protected:
/* Whether the FSM is done successfully. */
bool finished = false;
/* The async_reply_reason that is broadcast to MI clients if this
FSM finishes successfully. */
virtual enum async_reply_reason do_async_reply_reason ()
{
gdb_assert_not_reached ("should not call async_reply_reason here");
}
};
#endif /* THREAD_FSM_H */