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6aa4f97c2b
This commit adds a new maintenance feature, the ability to print a (limited) backtrace if GDB dies due to a fatal signal. The backtrace is produced using the backtrace and backtrace_symbols_fd functions which are declared in the execinfo.h header, and both of which are async signal safe. A configure check has been added to check for these features, if they are not available then the new code is not compiled into GDB and the backtrace will not be printed. The motivation for this new feature is to aid in debugging GDB in situations where GDB has crashed at a users site, but the user is reluctant to share core files, possibly due to concerns about what might be in the memory image within the core file. Such a user might be happy to share a simple backtrace that was written to stderr. The production of the backtrace is on by default, but can switched off using the new commands: maintenance set backtrace-on-fatal-signal on|off maintenance show backtrace-on-fatal-signal Right now, I have hooked this feature in to GDB's existing handling of SIGSEGV only, but this will be extended to more signals in a later commit. One additional change I have made in this commit is that, when we decide GDB should terminate due to the fatal signal, we now raise the same fatal signal rather than raising SIGABRT. Currently, this is only effecting our handling of SIGSEGV. So, previously, if GDB hit a SEGV then we would terminate GDB with a SIGABRT. After this commit we will terminate GDB with a SIGSEGV. This feels like an improvement to me, we should still get a core dump, but in many shells, the user will see a more specific message once GDB exits, in bash for example "Segmentation fault" rather than "Aborted". Finally then, here is an example of the output a user would see if GDB should hit an internal SIGSEGV: Fatal signal: Segmentation fault ----- Backtrace ----- ./gdb/gdb[0x8078e6] ./gdb/gdb[0x807b20] /lib64/libpthread.so.0(+0x14b20)[0x7f6648c92b20] /lib64/libc.so.6(__poll+0x4f)[0x7f66484d3a5f] ./gdb/gdb[0x1540f4c] ./gdb/gdb[0x154034a] ./gdb/gdb[0x9b002d] ./gdb/gdb[0x9b014d] ./gdb/gdb[0x9b1aa6] ./gdb/gdb[0x9b1b0c] ./gdb/gdb[0x41756d] /lib64/libc.so.6(__libc_start_main+0xf3)[0x7f66484041a3] ./gdb/gdb[0x41746e] --------------------- A fatal error internal to GDB has been detected, further debugging is not possible. GDB will now terminate. This is a bug, please report it. For instructions, see: <https://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/>. Segmentation fault (core dumped) It is disappointing that backtrace_symbols_fd does not actually map the addresses back to symbols, this appears, in part, to be due to GDB not being built with -rdynamic as the manual page for backtrace_symbols_fd suggests, however, even when I do add -rdynamic to the build of GDB I only see symbols for some addresses. We could potentially look at alternative libraries to provide the backtrace (e.g. libunwind) however, the solution presented here, which is available as part of glibc is probably a good baseline from which we might improve things in future.
304 lines
9.2 KiB
C++
304 lines
9.2 KiB
C++
/* UI_FILE - a generic STDIO like output stream.
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Copyright (C) 1999-2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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This file is part of GDB.
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This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
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(at your option) any later version.
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This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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GNU General Public License for more details.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
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#ifndef UI_FILE_H
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#define UI_FILE_H
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#include <string>
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#include "ui-style.h"
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/* The abstract ui_file base class. */
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class ui_file
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{
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public:
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ui_file ();
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virtual ~ui_file () = 0;
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/* Public non-virtual API. */
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void printf (const char *, ...) ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (2, 3);
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/* Print a string whose delimiter is QUOTER. Note that these
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routines should only be called for printing things which are
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independent of the language of the program being debugged. */
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void putstr (const char *str, int quoter);
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void putstrn (const char *str, int n, int quoter);
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int putc (int c);
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void vprintf (const char *, va_list) ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (2, 0);
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/* Methods below are both public, and overridable by ui_file
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subclasses. */
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virtual void write (const char *buf, long length_buf) = 0;
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/* This version of "write" is safe for use in signal handlers. It's
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not guaranteed that all existing output will have been flushed
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first. Implementations are also free to ignore some or all of
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the request. puts_async is not provided as the async versions
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are rarely used, no point in having both for a rarely used
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interface. */
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virtual void write_async_safe (const char *buf, long length_buf)
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{ gdb_assert_not_reached ("write_async_safe"); }
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/* Some ui_files override this to provide a efficient implementation
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that avoids a strlen. */
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virtual void puts (const char *str)
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{ this->write (str, strlen (str)); }
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virtual long read (char *buf, long length_buf)
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{ gdb_assert_not_reached ("can't read from this file type"); }
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virtual bool isatty ()
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{ return false; }
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/* true indicates terminal output behaviour such as cli_styling.
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This default implementation indicates to do terminal output
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behaviour if the UI_FILE is a tty. A derived class can override
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TERM_OUT to have cli_styling behaviour without being a tty. */
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virtual bool term_out ()
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{ return isatty (); }
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/* true if ANSI escapes can be used on STREAM. */
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virtual bool can_emit_style_escape ()
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{ return false; }
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virtual void flush ()
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{}
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/* If this object has an underlying file descriptor, then return it.
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Otherwise, return -1. */
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virtual int fd () const
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{ return -1; }
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};
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typedef std::unique_ptr<ui_file> ui_file_up;
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/* A ui_file that writes to nowhere. */
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class null_file : public ui_file
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{
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public:
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void write (const char *buf, long length_buf) override;
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void write_async_safe (const char *buf, long sizeof_buf) override;
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void puts (const char *str) override;
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};
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/* A preallocated null_file stream. */
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extern null_file null_stream;
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extern int gdb_console_fputs (const char *, FILE *);
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/* A std::string-based ui_file. Can be used as a scratch buffer for
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collecting output. */
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class string_file : public ui_file
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{
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public:
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/* Construct a string_file to collect 'raw' output, i.e. without
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'terminal' behaviour such as cli_styling. */
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string_file () : m_term_out (false) {};
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/* If TERM_OUT, construct a string_file with terminal output behaviour
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such as cli_styling)
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else collect 'raw' output like the previous constructor. */
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explicit string_file (bool term_out) : m_term_out (term_out) {};
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~string_file () override;
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/* Override ui_file methods. */
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void write (const char *buf, long length_buf) override;
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long read (char *buf, long length_buf) override
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{ gdb_assert_not_reached ("a string_file is not readable"); }
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bool term_out () override;
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bool can_emit_style_escape () override;
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/* string_file-specific public API. */
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/* Accesses the std::string containing the entire output collected
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so far.
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Returns a non-const reference so that it's easy to move the
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string contents out of the string_file. E.g.:
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string_file buf;
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buf.printf (....);
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buf.printf (....);
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return std::move (buf.string ());
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*/
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std::string &string () { return m_string; }
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/* Provide a few convenience methods with the same API as the
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underlying std::string. */
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const char *data () const { return m_string.data (); }
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const char *c_str () const { return m_string.c_str (); }
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size_t size () const { return m_string.size (); }
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bool empty () const { return m_string.empty (); }
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void clear () { return m_string.clear (); }
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private:
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/* The internal buffer. */
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std::string m_string;
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bool m_term_out;
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};
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/* A ui_file implementation that maps directly onto <stdio.h>'s FILE.
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A stdio_file can either own its underlying file, or not. If it
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owns the file, then destroying the stdio_file closes the underlying
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file, otherwise it is left open. */
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class stdio_file : public ui_file
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{
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public:
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/* Create a ui_file from a previously opened FILE. CLOSE_P
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indicates whether the underlying file should be closed when the
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stdio_file is destroyed. */
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explicit stdio_file (FILE *file, bool close_p = false);
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/* Create an stdio_file that is not managing any file yet. Call
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open to actually open something. */
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stdio_file ();
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~stdio_file () override;
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/* Open NAME in mode MODE, and own the resulting file. Returns true
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on success, false otherwise. If the stdio_file previously owned
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a file, it is closed. */
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bool open (const char *name, const char *mode);
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void flush () override;
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void write (const char *buf, long length_buf) override;
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void write_async_safe (const char *buf, long length_buf) override;
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void puts (const char *) override;
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long read (char *buf, long length_buf) override;
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bool isatty () override;
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bool can_emit_style_escape () override;
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/* Return the underlying file descriptor. */
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int fd () const override
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{ return m_fd; }
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private:
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/* Sets the internal stream to FILE, and saves the FILE's file
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descriptor in M_FD. */
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void set_stream (FILE *file);
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/* The file. */
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FILE *m_file;
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/* The associated file descriptor is extracted ahead of time for
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stdio_file::write_async_safe's benefit, in case fileno isn't
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async-safe. */
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int m_fd;
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/* If true, M_FILE is closed on destruction. */
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bool m_close_p;
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};
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typedef std::unique_ptr<stdio_file> stdio_file_up;
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/* Like stdio_file, but specifically for stderr.
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This exists because there is no real line-buffering on Windows, see
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<http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/86cebhfs%28v=vs.71%29.aspx>
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so the stdout is either fully-buffered or non-buffered. We can't
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make stdout non-buffered, because of two concerns:
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1. Non-buffering hurts performance.
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2. Non-buffering may change GDB's behavior when it is interacting
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with a front-end, such as Emacs.
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We leave stdout as fully buffered, but flush it first when
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something is written to stderr.
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Note that the 'write_async_safe' method is not overridden, because
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there's no way to flush a stream in an async-safe manner.
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Fortunately, it doesn't really matter, because:
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1. That method is only used for printing internal debug output
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from signal handlers.
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2. Windows hosts don't have a concept of async-safeness. Signal
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handlers run in a separate thread, so they can call the regular
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non-async-safe output routines freely.
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*/
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class stderr_file : public stdio_file
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{
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public:
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explicit stderr_file (FILE *stream);
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/* Override the output routines to flush gdb_stdout before deferring
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to stdio_file for the actual outputting. */
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void write (const char *buf, long length_buf) override;
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void puts (const char *linebuffer) override;
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};
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/* A ui_file implementation that maps onto two ui-file objects. */
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class tee_file : public ui_file
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{
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public:
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/* Create a file which writes to both ONE and TWO. ONE will remain
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open when this object is destroyed; but TWO will be closed. */
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tee_file (ui_file *one, ui_file_up &&two);
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~tee_file () override;
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void write (const char *buf, long length_buf) override;
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void write_async_safe (const char *buf, long length_buf) override;
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void puts (const char *) override;
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bool isatty () override;
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bool term_out () override;
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bool can_emit_style_escape () override;
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void flush () override;
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private:
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/* The two underlying ui_files. */
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ui_file *m_one;
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ui_file_up m_two;
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};
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/* A ui_file implementation that filters out terminal escape
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sequences. */
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class no_terminal_escape_file : public stdio_file
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{
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public:
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no_terminal_escape_file ()
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{
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}
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/* Like the stdio_file methods, but these filter out terminal escape
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sequences. */
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void write (const char *buf, long length_buf) override;
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void puts (const char *linebuffer) override;
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};
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#endif
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