/* Code dealing with dummy stack frames, for GDB, the GNU debugger. Copyright 2002 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 2 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, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ #if !defined (DUMMY_FRAME_H) #define DUMMY_FRAME_H 1 struct frame_info; struct regcache; struct frame_unwind; struct frame_id; /* GENERIC DUMMY FRAMES The following code serves to maintain the dummy stack frames for inferior function calls (ie. when gdb calls into the inferior via call_function_by_hand). This code saves the machine state before the call in host memory, so we must maintain an independent stack and keep it consistant etc. I am attempting to make this code generic enough to be used by many targets. The cheapest and most generic way to do CALL_DUMMY on a new target is probably to define CALL_DUMMY to be empty, DEPRECATED_CALL_DUMMY_LENGTH to zero, and CALL_DUMMY_LOCATION to AT_ENTRY. Then you must remember to define PUSH_RETURN_ADDRESS, because no call instruction will be being executed by the target. Also DEPRECATED_FRAME_CHAIN_VALID as generic_{file,func}_frame_chain_valid and do not set DEPRECATED_FIX_CALL_DUMMY. */ /* If the PC falls in a dummy frame, return a dummy frame unwinder. */ extern const struct frame_unwind *dummy_frame_sniffer (struct frame_info *next_frame); /* Does the PC fall in a dummy frame? This function is used by "frame.c" when creating a new `struct frame_info'. Note that there is also very similar code in breakpoint.c (where the bpstat stop reason is computed). It is looking for a PC falling on a dummy_frame breakpoint. Perhaphs this, and that code should be combined? Architecture dependant code, that has access to a frame, should not use this function. Instead (get_frame_type() == DUMMY_FRAME) should be used. Hmm, but what about threads? When the dummy-frame code tries to relocate a dummy frame's saved registers it definitly needs to differentiate between threads (otherwize it will do things like clean-up the wrong threads frames). However, when just trying to identify a dummy-frame that shouldn't matter. The wost that can happen is that a thread is marked as sitting in a dummy frame when, in reality, its corrupted its stack, to the point that a PC is pointing into a dummy frame. */ extern int pc_in_dummy_frame (CORE_ADDR pc); /* Return the regcache that belongs to the dummy-frame identifed by PC and FP, or NULL if no such frame exists. */ /* FIXME: cagney/2002-11-08: The function only exists because of deprecated_generic_get_saved_register. Eliminate that function and this, to, can go. */ extern struct regcache *deprecated_find_dummy_frame_regcache (CORE_ADDR pc, CORE_ADDR fp); #endif /* !defined (DUMMY_FRAME_H) */