binutils-gdb/gdb/cli/cli-utils.h
Andrew Burgess 1d506c26d9 Update copyright year range in header of all files managed by GDB
This commit is the result of the following actions:

  - Running gdb/copyright.py to update all of the copyright headers to
    include 2024,

  - Manually updating a few files the copyright.py script told me to
    update, these files had copyright headers embedded within the
    file,

  - Regenerating gdbsupport/Makefile.in to refresh it's copyright
    date,

  - Using grep to find other files that still mentioned 2023.  If
    these files were updated last year from 2022 to 2023 then I've
    updated them this year to 2024.

I'm sure I've probably missed some dates.  Feel free to fix them up as
you spot them.
2024-01-12 15:49:57 +00:00

229 lines
7.0 KiB
C++

/* CLI utilities.
Copyright (C) 2011-2024 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 CLI_CLI_UTILS_H
#define CLI_CLI_UTILS_H
#include "completer.h"
struct cmd_list_element;
/* *PP is a string denoting a number. Get the number. Advance *PP
after the string and any trailing whitespace.
The string can either be a number, or "$" followed by the name of a
convenience variable, or ("$" or "$$") followed by digits.
TRAILER is a character which can be found after the number; most
commonly this is `-'. If you don't want a trailer, use \0. */
extern int get_number_trailer (const char **pp, int trailer);
/* Convenience. Like get_number_trailer, but with no TRAILER. */
extern int get_number (const char **);
/* Like the above, but takes a non-const "char **". */
extern int get_number (char **);
/* Like get_number_trailer, but works with ULONGEST, and throws on
error instead of returning 0. */
extern ULONGEST get_ulongest (const char **pp, int trailer = '\0');
/* Throws an error telling the user that ARGS starts with an option
unrecognized by COMMAND. */
extern void report_unrecognized_option_error (const char *command,
const char *args);
/* Builds the help string for a command documented by PREFIX,
followed by the extract_info_print_args help for ENTITY_KIND. If
DOCUMENT_N_FLAG is true then help text describing the -n flag is also
included. */
const char *info_print_args_help (const char *prefix,
const char *entity_kind,
bool document_n_flag);
/* Parse a number or a range.
A number will be of the form handled by get_number.
A range will be of the form <number1> - <number2>, and
will represent all the integers between number1 and number2,
inclusive. */
class number_or_range_parser
{
public:
/* Default construction. Must call init before calling
get_next. */
number_or_range_parser () {}
/* Calls init automatically. */
number_or_range_parser (const char *string);
/* STRING is the string to be parsed. */
void init (const char *string);
/* While processing a range, this fuction is called iteratively; At
each call it will return the next value in the range.
At the beginning of parsing a range, the char pointer
STATE->m_cur_tok will be advanced past <number1> and left
pointing at the '-' token. Subsequent calls will not advance the
pointer until the range is completed. The call that completes
the range will advance the pointer past <number2>. */
int get_number ();
/* Setup internal state such that get_next() returns numbers in the
START_VALUE to END_VALUE range. END_PTR is where the string is
advanced to when get_next() returns END_VALUE. */
void setup_range (int start_value, int end_value,
const char *end_ptr);
/* Returns true if parsing has completed. */
bool finished () const;
/* Return the string being parsed. When parsing has finished, this
points past the last parsed token. */
const char *cur_tok () const
{ return m_cur_tok; }
/* True when parsing a range. */
bool in_range () const
{ return m_in_range; }
/* When parsing a range, the final value in the range. */
int end_value () const
{ return m_end_value; }
/* When parsing a range, skip past the final token in the range. */
void skip_range ()
{
gdb_assert (m_in_range);
m_cur_tok = m_end_ptr;
m_in_range = false;
}
private:
/* No need for these. They are intentionally not defined anywhere. */
number_or_range_parser (const number_or_range_parser &);
number_or_range_parser &operator= (const number_or_range_parser &);
/* The string being parsed. When parsing has finished, this points
past the last parsed token. */
const char *m_cur_tok;
/* Last value returned. */
int m_last_retval;
/* When parsing a range, the final value in the range. */
int m_end_value;
/* When parsing a range, a pointer past the final token in the
range. */
const char *m_end_ptr;
/* True when parsing a range. */
bool m_in_range;
};
/* Accept a number and a string-form list of numbers such as is
accepted by get_number_or_range. Return TRUE if the number is
in the list.
By definition, an empty list includes all numbers. This is to
be interpreted as typing a command such as "delete break" with
no arguments. */
extern int number_is_in_list (const char *list, int number);
/* Reverse S to the last non-whitespace character without skipping past
START. */
extern const char *remove_trailing_whitespace (const char *start,
const char *s);
/* Same, for non-const S. */
static inline char *
remove_trailing_whitespace (const char *start, char *s)
{
return (char *) remove_trailing_whitespace (start, (const char *) s);
}
/* A helper function to extract an argument from *ARG. An argument is
delimited by whitespace. The return value is empty if no argument
was found. */
extern std::string extract_arg (char **arg);
/* A const-correct version of the above. */
extern std::string extract_arg (const char **arg);
/* A helper function that looks for an argument at the start of a
string. The argument must also either be at the end of the string,
or be followed by whitespace. Returns 1 if it finds the argument,
0 otherwise. If the argument is found, it updates *STR to point
past the argument and past any whitespace following the
argument. */
extern int check_for_argument (const char **str, const char *arg, int arg_len);
/* Same as above, but ARG's length is computed. */
static inline int
check_for_argument (const char **str, const char *arg)
{
return check_for_argument (str, arg, strlen (arg));
}
/* Same, for non-const STR. */
static inline int
check_for_argument (char **str, const char *arg, int arg_len)
{
return check_for_argument (const_cast<const char **> (str),
arg, arg_len);
}
static inline int
check_for_argument (char **str, const char *arg)
{
return check_for_argument (str, arg, strlen (arg));
}
/* qcs_flags struct groups the -q, -c, and -s flags parsed by "thread
apply" and "frame apply" commands */
struct qcs_flags
{
bool quiet = false;
bool cont = false;
bool silent = false;
};
/* Validate FLAGS. Throws an error if both FLAGS->CONT and
FLAGS->SILENT are true. WHICH_COMMAND is included in the error
message. */
extern void validate_flags_qcs (const char *which_command, qcs_flags *flags);
#endif /* CLI_CLI_UTILS_H */