/* Support for complaint handling during symbol reading in GDB. Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 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 "gdb_assert.h" #include "command.h" #include "gdbcmd.h" extern void _initialize_complaints (void); /* Should each complaint message be self explanatory, or should we assume that a series of complaints is being produced? */ /* case 1: First message of a series that must start off with explanation. case 2: Subsequent message of a series that needs no explanation (the user already knows we have a problem so we can just state our piece). */ 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; /* Should each complaint be self explanatory, or should we assume that a series of complaints is being produced? case 0: Isolated self explanatory message. case 1: First message of a series that must start off with explanation. case 2: Subsequent message of a series that needs no explanation (the user already knows we have a problem so we can just state our piece). */ int 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, 0, 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) = XMALLOC (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 = XMALLOC (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. */ static 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; if (complaint->file != NULL) internal_vwarning (complaint->file, complaint->line, complaint->fmt, args); else if (deprecated_warning_hook) (*deprecated_warning_hook) (complaint->fmt, args); else { if (complaints->explanation == NULL) /* A [v]warning() call always appends a newline. */ vwarning (complaint->fmt, args); else { char *msg; struct cleanup *cleanups; msg = xstrvprintf (complaint->fmt, args); cleanups = make_cleanup (xfree, msg); wrap_here (""); if (series != SUBSEQUENT_MESSAGE) begin_line (); /* XXX: i18n */ fprintf_filtered (gdb_stderr, "%s%s%s", complaints->explanation[series].prefix, msg, 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 (""); do_cleanups (cleanups); } } 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 (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); }