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b570d64b | 2 | =head1 NAME |
69893cff | 3 | |
be9a9b1d | 4 | perl5db.pl - the perl debugger |
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5 | |
6 | =head1 SYNOPSIS | |
7 | ||
8 | perl -d your_Perl_script | |
9 | ||
10 | =head1 DESCRIPTION | |
11 | ||
12 | C<perl5db.pl> is the perl debugger. It is loaded automatically by Perl when | |
13 | you invoke a script with C<perl -d>. This documentation tries to outline the | |
14 | structure and services provided by C<perl5db.pl>, and to describe how you | |
15 | can use them. | |
16 | ||
17 | =head1 GENERAL NOTES | |
18 | ||
19 | The debugger can look pretty forbidding to many Perl programmers. There are | |
20 | a number of reasons for this, many stemming out of the debugger's history. | |
21 | ||
22 | When the debugger was first written, Perl didn't have a lot of its nicer | |
23 | features - no references, no lexical variables, no closures, no object-oriented | |
24 | programming. So a lot of the things one would normally have done using such | |
b570d64b | 25 | features was done using global variables, globs and the C<local()> operator |
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26 | in creative ways. |
27 | ||
28 | Some of these have survived into the current debugger; a few of the more | |
29 | interesting and still-useful idioms are noted in this section, along with notes | |
30 | on the comments themselves. | |
31 | ||
32 | =head2 Why not use more lexicals? | |
33 | ||
34 | Experienced Perl programmers will note that the debugger code tends to use | |
35 | mostly package globals rather than lexically-scoped variables. This is done | |
36 | to allow a significant amount of control of the debugger from outside the | |
b570d64b | 37 | debugger itself. |
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38 | |
39 | Unfortunately, though the variables are accessible, they're not well | |
40 | documented, so it's generally been a decision that hasn't made a lot of | |
41 | difference to most users. Where appropriate, comments have been added to | |
42 | make variables more accessible and usable, with the understanding that these | |
be9a9b1d | 43 | I<are> debugger internals, and are therefore subject to change. Future |
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44 | development should probably attempt to replace the globals with a well-defined |
45 | API, but for now, the variables are what we've got. | |
46 | ||
47 | =head2 Automated variable stacking via C<local()> | |
48 | ||
b570d64b | 49 | As you may recall from reading C<perlfunc>, the C<local()> operator makes a |
69893cff | 50 | temporary copy of a variable in the current scope. When the scope ends, the |
b570d64b | 51 | old copy is restored. This is often used in the debugger to handle the |
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52 | automatic stacking of variables during recursive calls: |
53 | ||
54 | sub foo { | |
55 | local $some_global++; | |
56 | ||
57 | # Do some stuff, then ... | |
58 | return; | |
59 | } | |
60 | ||
61 | What happens is that on entry to the subroutine, C<$some_global> is localized, | |
b570d64b | 62 | then altered. When the subroutine returns, Perl automatically undoes the |
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63 | localization, restoring the previous value. Voila, automatic stack management. |
64 | ||
b570d64b | 65 | The debugger uses this trick a I<lot>. Of particular note is C<DB::eval>, |
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66 | which lets the debugger get control inside of C<eval>'ed code. The debugger |
67 | localizes a saved copy of C<$@> inside the subroutine, which allows it to | |
68 | keep C<$@> safe until it C<DB::eval> returns, at which point the previous | |
b570d64b | 69 | value of C<$@> is restored. This makes it simple (well, I<simpler>) to keep |
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70 | track of C<$@> inside C<eval>s which C<eval> other C<eval's>. |
71 | ||
72 | In any case, watch for this pattern. It occurs fairly often. | |
73 | ||
74 | =head2 The C<^> trick | |
75 | ||
b570d64b | 76 | This is used to cleverly reverse the sense of a logical test depending on |
69893cff | 77 | the value of an auxiliary variable. For instance, the debugger's C<S> |
b570d64b | 78 | (search for subroutines by pattern) allows you to negate the pattern |
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79 | like this: |
80 | ||
81 | # Find all non-'foo' subs: | |
b570d64b | 82 | S !/foo/ |
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83 | |
84 | Boolean algebra states that the truth table for XOR looks like this: | |
85 | ||
86 | =over 4 | |
87 | ||
b570d64b | 88 | =item * 0 ^ 0 = 0 |
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89 | |
90 | (! not present and no match) --> false, don't print | |
91 | ||
b570d64b | 92 | =item * 0 ^ 1 = 1 |
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93 | |
94 | (! not present and matches) --> true, print | |
95 | ||
b570d64b | 96 | =item * 1 ^ 0 = 1 |
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97 | |
98 | (! present and no match) --> true, print | |
99 | ||
b570d64b | 100 | =item * 1 ^ 1 = 0 |
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101 | |
102 | (! present and matches) --> false, don't print | |
103 | ||
104 | =back | |
105 | ||
106 | As you can see, the first pair applies when C<!> isn't supplied, and | |
be9a9b1d | 107 | the second pair applies when it is. The XOR simply allows us to |
b570d64b | 108 | compact a more complicated if-then-elseif-else into a more elegant |
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109 | (but perhaps overly clever) single test. After all, it needed this |
110 | explanation... | |
111 | ||
112 | =head2 FLAGS, FLAGS, FLAGS | |
113 | ||
114 | There is a certain C programming legacy in the debugger. Some variables, | |
be9a9b1d | 115 | such as C<$single>, C<$trace>, and C<$frame>, have I<magical> values composed |
69893cff | 116 | of 1, 2, 4, etc. (powers of 2) OR'ed together. This allows several pieces |
b570d64b | 117 | of state to be stored independently in a single scalar. |
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118 | |
119 | A test like | |
120 | ||
121 | if ($scalar & 4) ... | |
122 | ||
b570d64b | 123 | is checking to see if the appropriate bit is on. Since each bit can be |
69893cff | 124 | "addressed" independently in this way, C<$scalar> is acting sort of like |
b570d64b | 125 | an array of bits. Obviously, since the contents of C<$scalar> are just a |
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126 | bit-pattern, we can save and restore it easily (it will just look like |
127 | a number). | |
128 | ||
129 | The problem, is of course, that this tends to leave magic numbers scattered | |
b570d64b | 130 | all over your program whenever a bit is set, cleared, or checked. So why do |
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131 | it? |
132 | ||
133 | =over 4 | |
134 | ||
be9a9b1d | 135 | =item * |
69893cff | 136 | |
be9a9b1d | 137 | First, doing an arithmetical or bitwise operation on a scalar is |
69893cff | 138 | just about the fastest thing you can do in Perl: C<use constant> actually |
be9a9b1d | 139 | creates a subroutine call, and array and hash lookups are much slower. Is |
b570d64b | 140 | this over-optimization at the expense of readability? Possibly, but the |
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141 | debugger accesses these variables a I<lot>. Any rewrite of the code will |
142 | probably have to benchmark alternate implementations and see which is the | |
b570d64b | 143 | best balance of readability and speed, and then document how it actually |
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144 | works. |
145 | ||
be9a9b1d AT |
146 | =item * |
147 | ||
b570d64b | 148 | Second, it's very easy to serialize a scalar number. This is done in |
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149 | the restart code; the debugger state variables are saved in C<%ENV> and then |
150 | restored when the debugger is restarted. Having them be just numbers makes | |
b570d64b | 151 | this trivial. |
69893cff | 152 | |
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153 | =item * |
154 | ||
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155 | Third, some of these variables are being shared with the Perl core |
156 | smack in the middle of the interpreter's execution loop. It's much faster for | |
157 | a C program (like the interpreter) to check a bit in a scalar than to access | |
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158 | several different variables (or a Perl array). |
159 | ||
160 | =back | |
161 | ||
162 | =head2 What are those C<XXX> comments for? | |
163 | ||
164 | Any comment containing C<XXX> means that the comment is either somewhat | |
b570d64b | 165 | speculative - it's not exactly clear what a given variable or chunk of |
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166 | code is doing, or that it is incomplete - the basics may be clear, but the |
167 | subtleties are not completely documented. | |
168 | ||
169 | Send in a patch if you can clear up, fill out, or clarify an C<XXX>. | |
170 | ||
b570d64b | 171 | =head1 DATA STRUCTURES MAINTAINED BY CORE |
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172 | |
173 | There are a number of special data structures provided to the debugger by | |
174 | the Perl interpreter. | |
175 | ||
7e17a74c JJ |
176 | The array C<@{$main::{'_<'.$filename}}> (aliased locally to C<@dbline> |
177 | via glob assignment) contains the text from C<$filename>, with each | |
178 | element corresponding to a single line of C<$filename>. Additionally, | |
179 | breakable lines will be dualvars with the numeric component being the | |
180 | memory address of a COP node. Non-breakable lines are dualvar to 0. | |
69893cff | 181 | |
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182 | The hash C<%{'_<'.$filename}> (aliased locally to C<%dbline> via glob |
183 | assignment) contains breakpoints and actions. The keys are line numbers; | |
184 | you can set individual values, but not the whole hash. The Perl interpreter | |
69893cff | 185 | uses this hash to determine where breakpoints have been set. Any true value is |
be9a9b1d | 186 | considered to be a breakpoint; C<perl5db.pl> uses C<$break_condition\0$action>. |
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187 | Values are magical in numeric context: 1 if the line is breakable, 0 if not. |
188 | ||
da052516 | 189 | The scalar C<${"_<$filename"}> simply contains the string C<$filename>. |
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190 | This is also the case for evaluated strings that contain subroutines, or |
191 | which are currently being executed. The $filename for C<eval>ed strings looks | |
d24ca0c5 | 192 | like C<(eval 34). |
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193 | |
194 | =head1 DEBUGGER STARTUP | |
195 | ||
196 | When C<perl5db.pl> starts, it reads an rcfile (C<perl5db.ini> for | |
197 | non-interactive sessions, C<.perldb> for interactive ones) that can set a number | |
198 | of options. In addition, this file may define a subroutine C<&afterinit> | |
b570d64b | 199 | that will be executed (in the debugger's context) after the debugger has |
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200 | initialized itself. |
201 | ||
b570d64b | 202 | Next, it checks the C<PERLDB_OPTS> environment variable and treats its |
be9a9b1d | 203 | contents as the argument of a C<o> command in the debugger. |
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204 | |
205 | =head2 STARTUP-ONLY OPTIONS | |
206 | ||
207 | The following options can only be specified at startup. | |
208 | To set them in your rcfile, add a call to | |
209 | C<&parse_options("optionName=new_value")>. | |
210 | ||
211 | =over 4 | |
212 | ||
b570d64b | 213 | =item * TTY |
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214 | |
215 | the TTY to use for debugging i/o. | |
216 | ||
b570d64b | 217 | =item * noTTY |
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218 | |
219 | if set, goes in NonStop mode. On interrupt, if TTY is not set, | |
b0e77abc | 220 | uses the value of noTTY or F<$HOME/.perldbtty$$> to find TTY using |
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221 | Term::Rendezvous. Current variant is to have the name of TTY in this |
222 | file. | |
223 | ||
b570d64b | 224 | =item * ReadLine |
69893cff | 225 | |
5561b870 | 226 | if false, a dummy ReadLine is used, so you can debug |
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227 | ReadLine applications. |
228 | ||
b570d64b | 229 | =item * NonStop |
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230 | |
231 | if true, no i/o is performed until interrupt. | |
232 | ||
b570d64b | 233 | =item * LineInfo |
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234 | |
235 | file or pipe to print line number info to. If it is a | |
236 | pipe, a short "emacs like" message is used. | |
237 | ||
b570d64b | 238 | =item * RemotePort |
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239 | |
240 | host:port to connect to on remote host for remote debugging. | |
241 | ||
5561b870 A |
242 | =item * HistFile |
243 | ||
244 | file to store session history to. There is no default and so no | |
245 | history file is written unless this variable is explicitly set. | |
246 | ||
247 | =item * HistSize | |
248 | ||
249 | number of commands to store to the file specified in C<HistFile>. | |
250 | Default is 100. | |
251 | ||
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252 | =back |
253 | ||
254 | =head3 SAMPLE RCFILE | |
255 | ||
256 | &parse_options("NonStop=1 LineInfo=db.out"); | |
257 | sub afterinit { $trace = 1; } | |
258 | ||
259 | The script will run without human intervention, putting trace | |
260 | information into C<db.out>. (If you interrupt it, you had better | |
be9a9b1d | 261 | reset C<LineInfo> to something I<interactive>!) |
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262 | |
263 | =head1 INTERNALS DESCRIPTION | |
264 | ||
265 | =head2 DEBUGGER INTERFACE VARIABLES | |
266 | ||
267 | Perl supplies the values for C<%sub>. It effectively inserts | |
be9a9b1d | 268 | a C<&DB::DB();> in front of each place that can have a |
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269 | breakpoint. At each subroutine call, it calls C<&DB::sub> with |
270 | C<$DB::sub> set to the called subroutine. It also inserts a C<BEGIN | |
271 | {require 'perl5db.pl'}> before the first line. | |
272 | ||
273 | After each C<require>d file is compiled, but before it is executed, a | |
274 | call to C<&DB::postponed($main::{'_<'.$filename})> is done. C<$filename> | |
275 | is the expanded name of the C<require>d file (as found via C<%INC>). | |
276 | ||
277 | =head3 IMPORTANT INTERNAL VARIABLES | |
278 | ||
279 | =head4 C<$CreateTTY> | |
280 | ||
281 | Used to control when the debugger will attempt to acquire another TTY to be | |
b570d64b | 282 | used for input. |
69893cff | 283 | |
b570d64b | 284 | =over |
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285 | |
286 | =item * 1 - on C<fork()> | |
287 | ||
288 | =item * 2 - debugger is started inside debugger | |
289 | ||
290 | =item * 4 - on startup | |
291 | ||
292 | =back | |
293 | ||
294 | =head4 C<$doret> | |
295 | ||
296 | The value -2 indicates that no return value should be printed. | |
297 | Any other positive value causes C<DB::sub> to print return values. | |
298 | ||
299 | =head4 C<$evalarg> | |
300 | ||
301 | The item to be eval'ed by C<DB::eval>. Used to prevent messing with the current | |
302 | contents of C<@_> when C<DB::eval> is called. | |
303 | ||
304 | =head4 C<$frame> | |
305 | ||
306 | Determines what messages (if any) will get printed when a subroutine (or eval) | |
b570d64b | 307 | is entered or exited. |
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308 | |
309 | =over 4 | |
310 | ||
311 | =item * 0 - No enter/exit messages | |
312 | ||
be9a9b1d | 313 | =item * 1 - Print I<entering> messages on subroutine entry |
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314 | |
315 | =item * 2 - Adds exit messages on subroutine exit. If no other flag is on, acts like 1+2. | |
316 | ||
be9a9b1d | 317 | =item * 4 - Extended messages: C<< <in|out> I<context>=I<fully-qualified sub name> from I<file>:I<line> >>. If no other flag is on, acts like 1+4. |
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318 | |
319 | =item * 8 - Adds parameter information to messages, and overloaded stringify and tied FETCH is enabled on the printed arguments. Ignored if C<4> is not on. | |
320 | ||
321 | =item * 16 - Adds C<I<context> return from I<subname>: I<value>> messages on subroutine/eval exit. Ignored if C<4> is is not on. | |
322 | ||
323 | =back | |
324 | ||
be9a9b1d | 325 | To get everything, use C<$frame=30> (or C<o f=30> as a debugger command). |
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326 | The debugger internally juggles the value of C<$frame> during execution to |
327 | protect external modules that the debugger uses from getting traced. | |
328 | ||
329 | =head4 C<$level> | |
330 | ||
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331 | Tracks current debugger nesting level. Used to figure out how many |
332 | C<E<lt>E<gt>> pairs to surround the line number with when the debugger | |
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333 | outputs a prompt. Also used to help determine if the program has finished |
334 | during command parsing. | |
335 | ||
336 | =head4 C<$onetimeDump> | |
337 | ||
338 | Controls what (if anything) C<DB::eval()> will print after evaluating an | |
339 | expression. | |
340 | ||
341 | =over 4 | |
342 | ||
343 | =item * C<undef> - don't print anything | |
344 | ||
345 | =item * C<dump> - use C<dumpvar.pl> to display the value returned | |
346 | ||
347 | =item * C<methods> - print the methods callable on the first item returned | |
348 | ||
349 | =back | |
350 | ||
351 | =head4 C<$onetimeDumpDepth> | |
352 | ||
be9a9b1d | 353 | Controls how far down C<dumpvar.pl> will go before printing C<...> while |
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354 | dumping a structure. Numeric. If C<undef>, print all levels. |
355 | ||
356 | =head4 C<$signal> | |
357 | ||
358 | Used to track whether or not an C<INT> signal has been detected. C<DB::DB()>, | |
359 | which is called before every statement, checks this and puts the user into | |
360 | command mode if it finds C<$signal> set to a true value. | |
361 | ||
362 | =head4 C<$single> | |
363 | ||
364 | Controls behavior during single-stepping. Stacked in C<@stack> on entry to | |
365 | each subroutine; popped again at the end of each subroutine. | |
366 | ||
b570d64b | 367 | =over 4 |
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368 | |
369 | =item * 0 - run continuously. | |
370 | ||
be9a9b1d | 371 | =item * 1 - single-step, go into subs. The C<s> command. |
69893cff | 372 | |
be9a9b1d | 373 | =item * 2 - single-step, don't go into subs. The C<n> command. |
69893cff | 374 | |
be9a9b1d AT |
375 | =item * 4 - print current sub depth (turned on to force this when C<too much |
376 | recursion> occurs. | |
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377 | |
378 | =back | |
379 | ||
380 | =head4 C<$trace> | |
381 | ||
b570d64b | 382 | Controls the output of trace information. |
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383 | |
384 | =over 4 | |
385 | ||
386 | =item * 1 - The C<t> command was entered to turn on tracing (every line executed is printed) | |
387 | ||
388 | =item * 2 - watch expressions are active | |
389 | ||
390 | =item * 4 - user defined a C<watchfunction()> in C<afterinit()> | |
391 | ||
392 | =back | |
393 | ||
394 | =head4 C<$slave_editor> | |
395 | ||
396 | 1 if C<LINEINFO> was directed to a pipe; 0 otherwise. | |
397 | ||
398 | =head4 C<@cmdfhs> | |
399 | ||
400 | Stack of filehandles that C<DB::readline()> will read commands from. | |
401 | Manipulated by the debugger's C<source> command and C<DB::readline()> itself. | |
402 | ||
403 | =head4 C<@dbline> | |
404 | ||
b570d64b | 405 | Local alias to the magical line array, C<@{$main::{'_<'.$filename}}> , |
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406 | supplied by the Perl interpreter to the debugger. Contains the source. |
407 | ||
408 | =head4 C<@old_watch> | |
409 | ||
410 | Previous values of watch expressions. First set when the expression is | |
411 | entered; reset whenever the watch expression changes. | |
412 | ||
413 | =head4 C<@saved> | |
414 | ||
415 | Saves important globals (C<$@>, C<$!>, C<$^E>, C<$,>, C<$/>, C<$\>, C<$^W>) | |
416 | so that the debugger can substitute safe values while it's running, and | |
417 | restore them when it returns control. | |
418 | ||
419 | =head4 C<@stack> | |
420 | ||
421 | Saves the current value of C<$single> on entry to a subroutine. | |
422 | Manipulated by the C<c> command to turn off tracing in all subs above the | |
423 | current one. | |
424 | ||
425 | =head4 C<@to_watch> | |
426 | ||
427 | The 'watch' expressions: to be evaluated before each line is executed. | |
428 | ||
429 | =head4 C<@typeahead> | |
430 | ||
431 | The typeahead buffer, used by C<DB::readline>. | |
432 | ||
433 | =head4 C<%alias> | |
434 | ||
435 | Command aliases. Stored as character strings to be substituted for a command | |
436 | entered. | |
437 | ||
438 | =head4 C<%break_on_load> | |
439 | ||
440 | Keys are file names, values are 1 (break when this file is loaded) or undef | |
441 | (don't break when it is loaded). | |
442 | ||
443 | =head4 C<%dbline> | |
444 | ||
be9a9b1d | 445 | Keys are line numbers, values are C<condition\0action>. If used in numeric |
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446 | context, values are 0 if not breakable, 1 if breakable, no matter what is |
447 | in the actual hash entry. | |
448 | ||
449 | =head4 C<%had_breakpoints> | |
450 | ||
451 | Keys are file names; values are bitfields: | |
452 | ||
b570d64b | 453 | =over 4 |
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454 | |
455 | =item * 1 - file has a breakpoint in it. | |
456 | ||
457 | =item * 2 - file has an action in it. | |
458 | ||
459 | =back | |
460 | ||
461 | A zero or undefined value means this file has neither. | |
462 | ||
463 | =head4 C<%option> | |
464 | ||
465 | Stores the debugger options. These are character string values. | |
466 | ||
467 | =head4 C<%postponed> | |
468 | ||
469 | Saves breakpoints for code that hasn't been compiled yet. | |
470 | Keys are subroutine names, values are: | |
471 | ||
472 | =over 4 | |
473 | ||
be9a9b1d | 474 | =item * C<compile> - break when this sub is compiled |
69893cff | 475 | |
be9a9b1d | 476 | =item * C<< break +0 if <condition> >> - break (conditionally) at the start of this routine. The condition will be '1' if no condition was specified. |
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477 | |
478 | =back | |
479 | ||
480 | =head4 C<%postponed_file> | |
481 | ||
482 | This hash keeps track of breakpoints that need to be set for files that have | |
483 | not yet been compiled. Keys are filenames; values are references to hashes. | |
484 | Each of these hashes is keyed by line number, and its values are breakpoint | |
be9a9b1d | 485 | definitions (C<condition\0action>). |
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486 | |
487 | =head1 DEBUGGER INITIALIZATION | |
488 | ||
489 | The debugger's initialization actually jumps all over the place inside this | |
b570d64b SF |
490 | package. This is because there are several BEGIN blocks (which of course |
491 | execute immediately) spread through the code. Why is that? | |
69893cff | 492 | |
b570d64b | 493 | The debugger needs to be able to change some things and set some things up |
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494 | before the debugger code is compiled; most notably, the C<$deep> variable that |
495 | C<DB::sub> uses to tell when a program has recursed deeply. In addition, the | |
496 | debugger has to turn off warnings while the debugger code is compiled, but then | |
497 | restore them to their original setting before the program being debugged begins | |
498 | executing. | |
499 | ||
500 | The first C<BEGIN> block simply turns off warnings by saving the current | |
501 | setting of C<$^W> and then setting it to zero. The second one initializes | |
502 | the debugger variables that are needed before the debugger begins executing. | |
b570d64b | 503 | The third one puts C<$^X> back to its former value. |
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504 | |
505 | We'll detail the second C<BEGIN> block later; just remember that if you need | |
506 | to initialize something before the debugger starts really executing, that's | |
507 | where it has to go. | |
508 | ||
509 | =cut | |
510 | ||
a687059c LW |
511 | package DB; |
512 | ||
6b24a4b7 SF |
513 | use strict; |
514 | ||
2dbd01ad | 515 | BEGIN {eval 'use IO::Handle'}; # Needed for flush only? breaks under miniperl |
9eba6a4e | 516 | |
e56c1e8d SF |
517 | BEGIN { |
518 | require feature; | |
519 | $^V =~ /^v(\d+\.\d+)/; | |
520 | feature->import(":$1"); | |
521 | } | |
522 | ||
54d04a52 | 523 | # Debugger for Perl 5.00x; perl5db.pl patch level: |
6b24a4b7 SF |
524 | use vars qw($VERSION $header); |
525 | ||
931d9438 | 526 | $VERSION = '1.39_05'; |
69893cff | 527 | |
e22ea7cc | 528 | $header = "perl5db.pl version $VERSION"; |
d338d6fe | 529 | |
69893cff RGS |
530 | =head1 DEBUGGER ROUTINES |
531 | ||
532 | =head2 C<DB::eval()> | |
533 | ||
534 | This function replaces straight C<eval()> inside the debugger; it simplifies | |
535 | the process of evaluating code in the user's context. | |
536 | ||
b570d64b | 537 | The code to be evaluated is passed via the package global variable |
69893cff RGS |
538 | C<$DB::evalarg>; this is done to avoid fiddling with the contents of C<@_>. |
539 | ||
be9a9b1d AT |
540 | Before we do the C<eval()>, we preserve the current settings of C<$trace>, |
541 | C<$single>, C<$^D> and C<$usercontext>. The latter contains the | |
542 | preserved values of C<$@>, C<$!>, C<$^E>, C<$,>, C<$/>, C<$\>, C<$^W> and the | |
543 | user's current package, grabbed when C<DB::DB> got control. This causes the | |
544 | proper context to be used when the eval is actually done. Afterward, we | |
545 | restore C<$trace>, C<$single>, and C<$^D>. | |
69893cff RGS |
546 | |
547 | Next we need to handle C<$@> without getting confused. We save C<$@> in a | |
b570d64b SF |
548 | local lexical, localize C<$saved[0]> (which is where C<save()> will put |
549 | C<$@>), and then call C<save()> to capture C<$@>, C<$!>, C<$^E>, C<$,>, | |
69893cff | 550 | C<$/>, C<$\>, and C<$^W>) and set C<$,>, C<$/>, C<$\>, and C<$^W> to values |
b570d64b SF |
551 | considered sane by the debugger. If there was an C<eval()> error, we print |
552 | it on the debugger's output. If C<$onetimedump> is defined, we call | |
553 | C<dumpit> if it's set to 'dump', or C<methods> if it's set to | |
554 | 'methods'. Setting it to something else causes the debugger to do the eval | |
555 | but not print the result - handy if you want to do something else with it | |
69893cff RGS |
556 | (the "watch expressions" code does this to get the value of the watch |
557 | expression but not show it unless it matters). | |
558 | ||
b570d64b SF |
559 | In any case, we then return the list of output from C<eval> to the caller, |
560 | and unwinding restores the former version of C<$@> in C<@saved> as well | |
69893cff RGS |
561 | (the localization of C<$saved[0]> goes away at the end of this scope). |
562 | ||
563 | =head3 Parameters and variables influencing execution of DB::eval() | |
564 | ||
565 | C<DB::eval> isn't parameterized in the standard way; this is to keep the | |
566 | debugger's calls to C<DB::eval()> from mucking with C<@_>, among other things. | |
b570d64b | 567 | The variables listed below influence C<DB::eval()>'s execution directly. |
69893cff RGS |
568 | |
569 | =over 4 | |
570 | ||
571 | =item C<$evalarg> - the thing to actually be eval'ed | |
572 | ||
be9a9b1d | 573 | =item C<$trace> - Current state of execution tracing |
69893cff | 574 | |
be9a9b1d | 575 | =item C<$single> - Current state of single-stepping |
69893cff | 576 | |
b570d64b | 577 | =item C<$onetimeDump> - what is to be displayed after the evaluation |
69893cff RGS |
578 | |
579 | =item C<$onetimeDumpDepth> - how deep C<dumpit()> should go when dumping results | |
580 | ||
581 | =back | |
582 | ||
583 | The following variables are altered by C<DB::eval()> during its execution. They | |
b570d64b | 584 | are "stacked" via C<local()>, enabling recursive calls to C<DB::eval()>. |
69893cff RGS |
585 | |
586 | =over 4 | |
587 | ||
588 | =item C<@res> - used to capture output from actual C<eval>. | |
589 | ||
590 | =item C<$otrace> - saved value of C<$trace>. | |
591 | ||
b570d64b | 592 | =item C<$osingle> - saved value of C<$single>. |
69893cff RGS |
593 | |
594 | =item C<$od> - saved value of C<$^D>. | |
595 | ||
596 | =item C<$saved[0]> - saved value of C<$@>. | |
597 | ||
b570d64b | 598 | =item $\ - for output of C<$@> if there is an evaluation error. |
69893cff RGS |
599 | |
600 | =back | |
601 | ||
602 | =head3 The problem of lexicals | |
603 | ||
604 | The context of C<DB::eval()> presents us with some problems. Obviously, | |
605 | we want to be 'sandboxed' away from the debugger's internals when we do | |
606 | the eval, but we need some way to control how punctuation variables and | |
b570d64b | 607 | debugger globals are used. |
69893cff RGS |
608 | |
609 | We can't use local, because the code inside C<DB::eval> can see localized | |
610 | variables; and we can't use C<my> either for the same reason. The code | |
611 | in this routine compromises and uses C<my>. | |
612 | ||
613 | After this routine is over, we don't have user code executing in the debugger's | |
614 | context, so we can use C<my> freely. | |
615 | ||
616 | =cut | |
617 | ||
618 | ############################################## Begin lexical danger zone | |
619 | ||
620 | # 'my' variables used here could leak into (that is, be visible in) | |
621 | # the context that the code being evaluated is executing in. This means that | |
622 | # the code could modify the debugger's variables. | |
623 | # | |
624 | # Fiddling with the debugger's context could be Bad. We insulate things as | |
625 | # much as we can. | |
626 | ||
6b24a4b7 SF |
627 | use vars qw( |
628 | @args | |
629 | %break_on_load | |
6b24a4b7 SF |
630 | $CommandSet |
631 | $CreateTTY | |
632 | $DBGR | |
633 | @dbline | |
634 | $dbline | |
635 | %dbline | |
636 | $dieLevel | |
6b24a4b7 | 637 | $filename |
6b24a4b7 SF |
638 | $histfile |
639 | $histsize | |
6b24a4b7 SF |
640 | $IN |
641 | $inhibit_exit | |
642 | @ini_INC | |
643 | $ini_warn | |
6b24a4b7 SF |
644 | $maxtrace |
645 | $od | |
6b24a4b7 SF |
646 | @options |
647 | $osingle | |
648 | $otrace | |
6b24a4b7 SF |
649 | $pager |
650 | $post | |
651 | %postponed | |
652 | $prc | |
653 | $pre | |
654 | $pretype | |
655 | $psh | |
656 | @RememberOnROptions | |
657 | $remoteport | |
658 | @res | |
659 | $rl | |
660 | @saved | |
6b24a4b7 | 661 | $signalLevel |
6b24a4b7 | 662 | $sub |
6b24a4b7 | 663 | $term |
6b24a4b7 SF |
664 | $usercontext |
665 | $warnLevel | |
6b24a4b7 SF |
666 | ); |
667 | ||
0b83f3d9 | 668 | our ( |
2ef1dcdb | 669 | @cmdfhs, |
0b83f3d9 SF |
670 | $evalarg, |
671 | $frame, | |
0664c09a | 672 | $hist, |
0b83f3d9 SF |
673 | $ImmediateStop, |
674 | $line, | |
675 | $onetimeDump, | |
b8d11fe0 | 676 | $onetimedumpDepth, |
1ce985d2 | 677 | %option, |
0b83f3d9 | 678 | $OUT, |
1ce985d2 | 679 | $packname, |
0b83f3d9 SF |
680 | $signal, |
681 | $single, | |
d1450c23 | 682 | $start, |
9d0b71b3 SF |
683 | %sub, |
684 | $subname, | |
0b83f3d9 | 685 | $trace, |
d1450c23 | 686 | $window, |
18b5b545 | 687 | ); |
931ac036 | 688 | |
6b24a4b7 SF |
689 | # Used to save @ARGV and extract any debugger-related flags. |
690 | use vars qw(@ARGS); | |
691 | ||
692 | # Used to prevent multiple entries to diesignal() | |
693 | # (if for instance diesignal() itself dies) | |
694 | use vars qw($panic); | |
695 | ||
696 | # Used to prevent the debugger from running nonstop | |
697 | # after a restart | |
ebd0282e | 698 | our ($second_time); |
6b24a4b7 SF |
699 | |
700 | sub _calc_usercontext { | |
701 | my ($package) = @_; | |
702 | ||
703 | # Cancel strict completely for the evaluated code, so the code | |
704 | # the user evaluates won't be affected by it. (Shlomi Fish) | |
22fc883d | 705 | return 'no strict; ($@, $!, $^E, $,, $/, $\, $^W) = @DB::saved;' |
6b24a4b7 SF |
706 | . "package $package;"; # this won't let them modify, alas |
707 | } | |
708 | ||
c1051fcf | 709 | sub eval { |
69893cff | 710 | |
c1051fcf | 711 | # 'my' would make it visible from user code |
e22ea7cc | 712 | # but so does local! --tchrist |
69893cff | 713 | # Remember: this localizes @DB::res, not @main::res. |
c1051fcf IZ |
714 | local @res; |
715 | { | |
e22ea7cc RF |
716 | |
717 | # Try to keep the user code from messing with us. Save these so that | |
718 | # even if the eval'ed code changes them, we can put them back again. | |
719 | # Needed because the user could refer directly to the debugger's | |
69893cff RGS |
720 | # package globals (and any 'my' variables in this containing scope) |
721 | # inside the eval(), and we want to try to stay safe. | |
e22ea7cc | 722 | local $otrace = $trace; |
69893cff RGS |
723 | local $osingle = $single; |
724 | local $od = $^D; | |
725 | ||
726 | # Untaint the incoming eval() argument. | |
727 | { ($evalarg) = $evalarg =~ /(.*)/s; } | |
728 | ||
e22ea7cc | 729 | # $usercontext built in DB::DB near the comment |
69893cff RGS |
730 | # "set up the context for DB::eval ..." |
731 | # Evaluate and save any results. | |
e22ea7cc | 732 | @res = eval "$usercontext $evalarg;\n"; # '\n' for nice recursive debug |
69893cff RGS |
733 | |
734 | # Restore those old values. | |
735 | $trace = $otrace; | |
736 | $single = $osingle; | |
737 | $^D = $od; | |
c1051fcf | 738 | } |
69893cff RGS |
739 | |
740 | # Save the current value of $@, and preserve it in the debugger's copy | |
741 | # of the saved precious globals. | |
c1051fcf | 742 | my $at = $@; |
69893cff RGS |
743 | |
744 | # Since we're only saving $@, we only have to localize the array element | |
745 | # that it will be stored in. | |
e22ea7cc | 746 | local $saved[0]; # Preserve the old value of $@ |
7c54f46a | 747 | eval { DB::save() }; |
69893cff RGS |
748 | |
749 | # Now see whether we need to report an error back to the user. | |
c1051fcf | 750 | if ($at) { |
69893cff RGS |
751 | local $\ = ''; |
752 | print $OUT $at; | |
753 | } | |
754 | ||
755 | # Display as required by the caller. $onetimeDump and $onetimedumpDepth | |
756 | # are package globals. | |
757 | elsif ($onetimeDump) { | |
e22ea7cc RF |
758 | if ( $onetimeDump eq 'dump' ) { |
759 | local $option{dumpDepth} = $onetimedumpDepth | |
760 | if defined $onetimedumpDepth; | |
761 | dumpit( $OUT, \@res ); | |
762 | } | |
763 | elsif ( $onetimeDump eq 'methods' ) { | |
764 | methods( $res[0] ); | |
765 | } | |
69893cff | 766 | } ## end elsif ($onetimeDump) |
c1051fcf | 767 | @res; |
69893cff RGS |
768 | } ## end sub eval |
769 | ||
770 | ############################################## End lexical danger zone | |
c1051fcf | 771 | |
e22ea7cc RF |
772 | # After this point it is safe to introduce lexicals. |
773 | # The code being debugged will be executing in its own context, and | |
69893cff | 774 | # can't see the inside of the debugger. |
d338d6fe | 775 | # |
e22ea7cc | 776 | # However, one should not overdo it: leave as much control from outside as |
69893cff RGS |
777 | # possible. If you make something a lexical, it's not going to be addressable |
778 | # from outside the debugger even if you know its name. | |
779 | ||
d338d6fe | 780 | # This file is automatically included if you do perl -d. |
781 | # It's probably not useful to include this yourself. | |
782 | # | |
e22ea7cc | 783 | # Before venturing further into these twisty passages, it is |
2f7e9187 MS |
784 | # wise to read the perldebguts man page or risk the ire of dragons. |
785 | # | |
69893cff RGS |
786 | # (It should be noted that perldebguts will tell you a lot about |
787 | # the underlying mechanics of how the debugger interfaces into the | |
788 | # Perl interpreter, but not a lot about the debugger itself. The new | |
789 | # comments in this code try to address this problem.) | |
790 | ||
d338d6fe | 791 | # Note that no subroutine call is possible until &DB::sub is defined |
36477c24 | 792 | # (for subroutines defined outside of the package DB). In fact the same is |
d338d6fe | 793 | # true if $deep is not defined. |
055fd3a9 GS |
794 | |
795 | # Enhanced by ilya@math.ohio-state.edu (Ilya Zakharevich) | |
055fd3a9 GS |
796 | |
797 | # modified Perl debugger, to be run from Emacs in perldb-mode | |
798 | # Ray Lischner (uunet!mntgfx!lisch) as of 5 Nov 1990 | |
799 | # Johan Vromans -- upgrade to 4.0 pl 10 | |
800 | # Ilya Zakharevich -- patches after 5.001 (and some before ;-) | |
6fae1ad7 | 801 | ######################################################################## |
d338d6fe | 802 | |
69893cff RGS |
803 | =head1 DEBUGGER INITIALIZATION |
804 | ||
805 | The debugger starts up in phases. | |
806 | ||
807 | =head2 BASIC SETUP | |
808 | ||
809 | First, it initializes the environment it wants to run in: turning off | |
810 | warnings during its own compilation, defining variables which it will need | |
811 | to avoid warnings later, setting itself up to not exit when the program | |
812 | terminates, and defaulting to printing return values for the C<r> command. | |
813 | ||
814 | =cut | |
815 | ||
eda6e075 | 816 | # Needed for the statement after exec(): |
69893cff RGS |
817 | # |
818 | # This BEGIN block is simply used to switch off warnings during debugger | |
98dc9551 | 819 | # compilation. Probably it would be better practice to fix the warnings, |
69893cff | 820 | # but this is how it's done at the moment. |
eda6e075 | 821 | |
e22ea7cc RF |
822 | BEGIN { |
823 | $ini_warn = $^W; | |
824 | $^W = 0; | |
825 | } # Switch compilation warnings off until another BEGIN. | |
d12a4851 | 826 | |
69893cff RGS |
827 | local ($^W) = 0; # Switch run-time warnings off during init. |
828 | ||
2cbb2ee1 RGS |
829 | =head2 THREADS SUPPORT |
830 | ||
831 | If we are running under a threaded Perl, we require threads and threads::shared | |
832 | if the environment variable C<PERL5DB_THREADED> is set, to enable proper | |
833 | threaded debugger control. C<-dt> can also be used to set this. | |
834 | ||
835 | Each new thread will be announced and the debugger prompt will always inform | |
836 | you of each new thread created. It will also indicate the thread id in which | |
837 | we are currently running within the prompt like this: | |
838 | ||
2dbd01ad | 839 | [tid] DB<$i> |
2cbb2ee1 RGS |
840 | |
841 | Where C<[tid]> is an integer thread id and C<$i> is the familiar debugger | |
842 | command prompt. The prompt will show: C<[0]> when running under threads, but | |
843 | not actually in a thread. C<[tid]> is consistent with C<gdb> usage. | |
844 | ||
845 | While running under threads, when you set or delete a breakpoint (etc.), this | |
b570d64b | 846 | will apply to all threads, not just the currently running one. When you are |
2cbb2ee1 RGS |
847 | in a currently executing thread, you will stay there until it completes. With |
848 | the current implementation it is not currently possible to hop from one thread | |
849 | to another. | |
850 | ||
851 | The C<e> and C<E> commands are currently fairly minimal - see C<h e> and C<h E>. | |
852 | ||
853 | Note that threading support was built into the debugger as of Perl version | |
854 | C<5.8.6> and debugger version C<1.2.8>. | |
855 | ||
856 | =cut | |
857 | ||
858 | BEGIN { | |
2dbd01ad SF |
859 | # ensure we can share our non-threaded variables or no-op |
860 | if ($ENV{PERL5DB_THREADED}) { | |
861 | require threads; | |
862 | require threads::shared; | |
863 | import threads::shared qw(share); | |
864 | $DBGR; | |
865 | share(\$DBGR); | |
866 | lock($DBGR); | |
867 | print "Threads support enabled\n"; | |
868 | } else { | |
cde405a6 | 869 | *share = sub(\[$@%]) {}; |
2dbd01ad | 870 | } |
2cbb2ee1 RGS |
871 | } |
872 | ||
2218c045 SF |
873 | # These variables control the execution of 'dumpvar.pl'. |
874 | { | |
875 | package dumpvar; | |
876 | use vars qw( | |
877 | $hashDepth | |
878 | $arrayDepth | |
879 | $dumpDBFiles | |
880 | $dumpPackages | |
881 | $quoteHighBit | |
882 | $printUndef | |
883 | $globPrint | |
884 | $usageOnly | |
885 | ); | |
886 | } | |
69893cff | 887 | |
2218c045 SF |
888 | # used to control die() reporting in diesignal() |
889 | { | |
890 | package Carp; | |
891 | use vars qw($CarpLevel); | |
892 | } | |
d338d6fe | 893 | |
422c59bf | 894 | # without threads, $filename is not defined until DB::DB is called |
cde405a6 | 895 | share($main::{'_<'.$filename}) if defined $filename; |
2cbb2ee1 | 896 | |
54d04a52 | 897 | # Command-line + PERLLIB: |
69893cff | 898 | # Save the contents of @INC before they are modified elsewhere. |
54d04a52 IZ |
899 | @ini_INC = @INC; |
900 | ||
69893cff RGS |
901 | # This was an attempt to clear out the previous values of various |
902 | # trapped errors. Apparently it didn't help. XXX More info needed! | |
d338d6fe | 903 | # $prevwarn = $prevdie = $prevbus = $prevsegv = ''; # Does not help?! |
904 | ||
69893cff RGS |
905 | # We set these variables to safe values. We don't want to blindly turn |
906 | # off warnings, because other packages may still want them. | |
e22ea7cc RF |
907 | $trace = $signal = $single = 0; # Uninitialized warning suppression |
908 | # (local $^W cannot help - other packages!). | |
69893cff RGS |
909 | |
910 | # Default to not exiting when program finishes; print the return | |
911 | # value when the 'r' command is used to return from a subroutine. | |
55497cff | 912 | $inhibit_exit = $option{PrintRet} = 1; |
d338d6fe | 913 | |
6b24a4b7 SF |
914 | use vars qw($trace_to_depth); |
915 | ||
5e2b42dd SF |
916 | # Default to 1E9 so it won't be limited to a certain recursion depth. |
917 | $trace_to_depth = 1E9; | |
bdba49ad | 918 | |
69893cff RGS |
919 | =head1 OPTION PROCESSING |
920 | ||
b570d64b SF |
921 | The debugger's options are actually spread out over the debugger itself and |
922 | C<dumpvar.pl>; some of these are variables to be set, while others are | |
69893cff RGS |
923 | subs to be called with a value. To try to make this a little easier to |
924 | manage, the debugger uses a few data structures to define what options | |
925 | are legal and how they are to be processed. | |
926 | ||
927 | First, the C<@options> array defines the I<names> of all the options that | |
928 | are to be accepted. | |
929 | ||
930 | =cut | |
931 | ||
932 | @options = qw( | |
5561b870 | 933 | CommandSet HistFile HistSize |
e22ea7cc RF |
934 | hashDepth arrayDepth dumpDepth |
935 | DumpDBFiles DumpPackages DumpReused | |
936 | compactDump veryCompact quote | |
937 | HighBit undefPrint globPrint | |
938 | PrintRet UsageOnly frame | |
939 | AutoTrace TTY noTTY | |
940 | ReadLine NonStop LineInfo | |
941 | maxTraceLen recallCommand ShellBang | |
942 | pager tkRunning ornaments | |
943 | signalLevel warnLevel dieLevel | |
944 | inhibit_exit ImmediateStop bareStringify | |
945 | CreateTTY RemotePort windowSize | |
584420f0 | 946 | DollarCaretP |
e22ea7cc | 947 | ); |
d12a4851 | 948 | |
584420f0 | 949 | @RememberOnROptions = qw(DollarCaretP); |
d12a4851 | 950 | |
69893cff RGS |
951 | =pod |
952 | ||
953 | Second, C<optionVars> lists the variables that each option uses to save its | |
954 | state. | |
955 | ||
956 | =cut | |
957 | ||
6b24a4b7 SF |
958 | use vars qw(%optionVars); |
959 | ||
69893cff | 960 | %optionVars = ( |
e22ea7cc RF |
961 | hashDepth => \$dumpvar::hashDepth, |
962 | arrayDepth => \$dumpvar::arrayDepth, | |
963 | CommandSet => \$CommandSet, | |
964 | DumpDBFiles => \$dumpvar::dumpDBFiles, | |
965 | DumpPackages => \$dumpvar::dumpPackages, | |
966 | DumpReused => \$dumpvar::dumpReused, | |
967 | HighBit => \$dumpvar::quoteHighBit, | |
968 | undefPrint => \$dumpvar::printUndef, | |
969 | globPrint => \$dumpvar::globPrint, | |
970 | UsageOnly => \$dumpvar::usageOnly, | |
971 | CreateTTY => \$CreateTTY, | |
972 | bareStringify => \$dumpvar::bareStringify, | |
973 | frame => \$frame, | |
974 | AutoTrace => \$trace, | |
975 | inhibit_exit => \$inhibit_exit, | |
976 | maxTraceLen => \$maxtrace, | |
977 | ImmediateStop => \$ImmediateStop, | |
978 | RemotePort => \$remoteport, | |
979 | windowSize => \$window, | |
5561b870 A |
980 | HistFile => \$histfile, |
981 | HistSize => \$histsize, | |
69893cff RGS |
982 | ); |
983 | ||
984 | =pod | |
985 | ||
986 | Third, C<%optionAction> defines the subroutine to be called to process each | |
987 | option. | |
988 | ||
b570d64b | 989 | =cut |
69893cff | 990 | |
6b24a4b7 SF |
991 | use vars qw(%optionAction); |
992 | ||
69893cff RGS |
993 | %optionAction = ( |
994 | compactDump => \&dumpvar::compactDump, | |
995 | veryCompact => \&dumpvar::veryCompact, | |
996 | quote => \&dumpvar::quote, | |
997 | TTY => \&TTY, | |
998 | noTTY => \&noTTY, | |
999 | ReadLine => \&ReadLine, | |
1000 | NonStop => \&NonStop, | |
1001 | LineInfo => \&LineInfo, | |
1002 | recallCommand => \&recallCommand, | |
1003 | ShellBang => \&shellBang, | |
1004 | pager => \&pager, | |
1005 | signalLevel => \&signalLevel, | |
1006 | warnLevel => \&warnLevel, | |
1007 | dieLevel => \&dieLevel, | |
1008 | tkRunning => \&tkRunning, | |
1009 | ornaments => \&ornaments, | |
1010 | RemotePort => \&RemotePort, | |
1011 | DollarCaretP => \&DollarCaretP, | |
d12a4851 JH |
1012 | ); |
1013 | ||
69893cff RGS |
1014 | =pod |
1015 | ||
1016 | Last, the C<%optionRequire> notes modules that must be C<require>d if an | |
1017 | option is used. | |
1018 | ||
1019 | =cut | |
d338d6fe | 1020 | |
69893cff RGS |
1021 | # Note that this list is not complete: several options not listed here |
1022 | # actually require that dumpvar.pl be loaded for them to work, but are | |
1023 | # not in the table. A subsequent patch will correct this problem; for | |
1024 | # the moment, we're just recommenting, and we are NOT going to change | |
1025 | # function. | |
6b24a4b7 SF |
1026 | use vars qw(%optionRequire); |
1027 | ||
eda6e075 | 1028 | %optionRequire = ( |
69893cff RGS |
1029 | compactDump => 'dumpvar.pl', |
1030 | veryCompact => 'dumpvar.pl', | |
1031 | quote => 'dumpvar.pl', | |
e22ea7cc | 1032 | ); |
69893cff RGS |
1033 | |
1034 | =pod | |
1035 | ||
1036 | There are a number of initialization-related variables which can be set | |
1037 | by putting code to set them in a BEGIN block in the C<PERL5DB> environment | |
1038 | variable. These are: | |
1039 | ||
1040 | =over 4 | |
1041 | ||
1042 | =item C<$rl> - readline control XXX needs more explanation | |
1043 | ||
1044 | =item C<$warnLevel> - whether or not debugger takes over warning handling | |
1045 | ||
1046 | =item C<$dieLevel> - whether or not debugger takes over die handling | |
1047 | ||
1048 | =item C<$signalLevel> - whether or not debugger takes over signal handling | |
1049 | ||
1050 | =item C<$pre> - preprompt actions (array reference) | |
1051 | ||
1052 | =item C<$post> - postprompt actions (array reference) | |
1053 | ||
1054 | =item C<$pretype> | |
1055 | ||
1056 | =item C<$CreateTTY> - whether or not to create a new TTY for this debugger | |
1057 | ||
1058 | =item C<$CommandSet> - which command set to use (defaults to new, documented set) | |
1059 | ||
1060 | =back | |
1061 | ||
1062 | =cut | |
d338d6fe | 1063 | |
1064 | # These guys may be defined in $ENV{PERL5DB} : | |
69893cff RGS |
1065 | $rl = 1 unless defined $rl; |
1066 | $warnLevel = 1 unless defined $warnLevel; | |
1067 | $dieLevel = 1 unless defined $dieLevel; | |
1068 | $signalLevel = 1 unless defined $signalLevel; | |
1069 | $pre = [] unless defined $pre; | |
1070 | $post = [] unless defined $post; | |
1071 | $pretype = [] unless defined $pretype; | |
1072 | $CreateTTY = 3 unless defined $CreateTTY; | |
1073 | $CommandSet = '580' unless defined $CommandSet; | |
1074 | ||
2cbb2ee1 RGS |
1075 | share($rl); |
1076 | share($warnLevel); | |
1077 | share($dieLevel); | |
1078 | share($signalLevel); | |
1079 | share($pre); | |
1080 | share($post); | |
1081 | share($pretype); | |
1082 | share($rl); | |
1083 | share($CreateTTY); | |
1084 | share($CommandSet); | |
1085 | ||
69893cff RGS |
1086 | =pod |
1087 | ||
1088 | The default C<die>, C<warn>, and C<signal> handlers are set up. | |
1089 | ||
1090 | =cut | |
055fd3a9 | 1091 | |
d338d6fe | 1092 | warnLevel($warnLevel); |
1093 | dieLevel($dieLevel); | |
1094 | signalLevel($signalLevel); | |
055fd3a9 | 1095 | |
69893cff RGS |
1096 | =pod |
1097 | ||
1098 | The pager to be used is needed next. We try to get it from the | |
5561b870 | 1099 | environment first. If it's not defined there, we try to find it in |
69893cff RGS |
1100 | the Perl C<Config.pm>. If it's not there, we default to C<more>. We |
1101 | then call the C<pager()> function to save the pager name. | |
1102 | ||
1103 | =cut | |
1104 | ||
1105 | # This routine makes sure $pager is set up so that '|' can use it. | |
4865a36d | 1106 | pager( |
e22ea7cc | 1107 | |
69893cff | 1108 | # If PAGER is defined in the environment, use it. |
e22ea7cc RF |
1109 | defined $ENV{PAGER} |
1110 | ? $ENV{PAGER} | |
69893cff RGS |
1111 | |
1112 | # If not, see if Config.pm defines it. | |
e22ea7cc RF |
1113 | : eval { require Config } |
1114 | && defined $Config::Config{pager} | |
1115 | ? $Config::Config{pager} | |
69893cff RGS |
1116 | |
1117 | # If not, fall back to 'more'. | |
e22ea7cc RF |
1118 | : 'more' |
1119 | ) | |
1120 | unless defined $pager; | |
69893cff RGS |
1121 | |
1122 | =pod | |
1123 | ||
1124 | We set up the command to be used to access the man pages, the command | |
be9a9b1d AT |
1125 | recall character (C<!> unless otherwise defined) and the shell escape |
1126 | character (C<!> unless otherwise defined). Yes, these do conflict, and | |
69893cff RGS |
1127 | neither works in the debugger at the moment. |
1128 | ||
1129 | =cut | |
1130 | ||
055fd3a9 | 1131 | setman(); |
69893cff RGS |
1132 | |
1133 | # Set up defaults for command recall and shell escape (note: | |
1134 | # these currently don't work in linemode debugging). | |
2218c045 SF |
1135 | recallCommand("!") unless defined $prc; |
1136 | shellBang("!") unless defined $psh; | |
69893cff RGS |
1137 | |
1138 | =pod | |
1139 | ||
1140 | We then set up the gigantic string containing the debugger help. | |
1141 | We also set the limit on the number of arguments we'll display during a | |
1142 | trace. | |
1143 | ||
1144 | =cut | |
1145 | ||
04e43a21 | 1146 | sethelp(); |
69893cff RGS |
1147 | |
1148 | # If we didn't get a default for the length of eval/stack trace args, | |
1149 | # set it here. | |
1d06cb2d | 1150 | $maxtrace = 400 unless defined $maxtrace; |
69893cff RGS |
1151 | |
1152 | =head2 SETTING UP THE DEBUGGER GREETING | |
1153 | ||
be9a9b1d | 1154 | The debugger I<greeting> helps to inform the user how many debuggers are |
69893cff RGS |
1155 | running, and whether the current debugger is the primary or a child. |
1156 | ||
1157 | If we are the primary, we just hang onto our pid so we'll have it when | |
1158 | or if we start a child debugger. If we are a child, we'll set things up | |
1159 | so we'll have a unique greeting and so the parent will give us our own | |
1160 | TTY later. | |
1161 | ||
1162 | We save the current contents of the C<PERLDB_PIDS> environment variable | |
1163 | because we mess around with it. We'll also need to hang onto it because | |
1164 | we'll need it if we restart. | |
1165 | ||
1166 | Child debuggers make a label out of the current PID structure recorded in | |
1167 | PERLDB_PIDS plus the new PID. They also mark themselves as not having a TTY | |
1168 | yet so the parent will give them one later via C<resetterm()>. | |
1169 | ||
1170 | =cut | |
1171 | ||
e22ea7cc | 1172 | # Save the current contents of the environment; we're about to |
69893cff | 1173 | # much with it. We'll need this if we have to restart. |
6b24a4b7 | 1174 | use vars qw($ini_pids); |
f1583d8f | 1175 | $ini_pids = $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS}; |
69893cff | 1176 | |
6b24a4b7 SF |
1177 | use vars qw ($pids $term_pid); |
1178 | ||
e22ea7cc RF |
1179 | if ( defined $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} ) { |
1180 | ||
69893cff | 1181 | # We're a child. Make us a label out of the current PID structure |
e22ea7cc | 1182 | # recorded in PERLDB_PIDS plus our (new) PID. Mark us as not having |
69893cff | 1183 | # a term yet so the parent will give us one later via resetterm(). |
55f4245e JM |
1184 | |
1185 | my $env_pids = $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS}; | |
1186 | $pids = "[$env_pids]"; | |
1187 | ||
1188 | # Unless we are on OpenVMS, all programs under the DCL shell run under | |
1189 | # the same PID. | |
1190 | ||
1191 | if (($^O eq 'VMS') && ($env_pids =~ /\b$$\b/)) { | |
1192 | $term_pid = $$; | |
1193 | } | |
1194 | else { | |
1195 | $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} .= "->$$"; | |
1196 | $term_pid = -1; | |
1197 | } | |
1198 | ||
69893cff RGS |
1199 | } ## end if (defined $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS... |
1200 | else { | |
e22ea7cc RF |
1201 | |
1202 | # We're the parent PID. Initialize PERLDB_PID in case we end up with a | |
69893cff RGS |
1203 | # child debugger, and mark us as the parent, so we'll know to set up |
1204 | # more TTY's is we have to. | |
1205 | $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} = "$$"; | |
619a0444 | 1206 | $pids = "[pid=$$]"; |
e22ea7cc | 1207 | $term_pid = $$; |
f1583d8f | 1208 | } |
69893cff | 1209 | |
6b24a4b7 | 1210 | use vars qw($pidprompt); |
f1583d8f | 1211 | $pidprompt = ''; |
69893cff RGS |
1212 | |
1213 | # Sets up $emacs as a synonym for $slave_editor. | |
7793e5c2 | 1214 | our ($slave_editor); |
69893cff RGS |
1215 | *emacs = $slave_editor if $slave_editor; # May be used in afterinit()... |
1216 | ||
1217 | =head2 READING THE RC FILE | |
1218 | ||
b570d64b | 1219 | The debugger will read a file of initialization options if supplied. If |
69893cff RGS |
1220 | running interactively, this is C<.perldb>; if not, it's C<perldb.ini>. |
1221 | ||
b570d64b | 1222 | =cut |
69893cff RGS |
1223 | |
1224 | # As noted, this test really doesn't check accurately that the debugger | |
1225 | # is running at a terminal or not. | |
d338d6fe | 1226 | |
6b24a4b7 | 1227 | use vars qw($rcfile); |
fb4d8a6c SF |
1228 | { |
1229 | my $dev_tty = (($^O eq 'VMS') ? 'TT:' : '/dev/tty'); | |
1230 | # this is the wrong metric! | |
1231 | $rcfile = ((-e $dev_tty) ? ".perldb" : "perldb.ini"); | |
d338d6fe | 1232 | } |
1233 | ||
69893cff RGS |
1234 | =pod |
1235 | ||
1236 | The debugger does a safety test of the file to be read. It must be owned | |
1237 | either by the current user or root, and must only be writable by the owner. | |
1238 | ||
1239 | =cut | |
1240 | ||
1241 | # This wraps a safety test around "do" to read and evaluate the init file. | |
1242 | # | |
055fd3a9 GS |
1243 | # This isn't really safe, because there's a race |
1244 | # between checking and opening. The solution is to | |
1245 | # open and fstat the handle, but then you have to read and | |
1246 | # eval the contents. But then the silly thing gets | |
69893cff RGS |
1247 | # your lexical scope, which is unfortunate at best. |
1248 | sub safe_do { | |
055fd3a9 GS |
1249 | my $file = shift; |
1250 | ||
1251 | # Just exactly what part of the word "CORE::" don't you understand? | |
69893cff RGS |
1252 | local $SIG{__WARN__}; |
1253 | local $SIG{__DIE__}; | |
055fd3a9 | 1254 | |
e22ea7cc | 1255 | unless ( is_safe_file($file) ) { |
69893cff | 1256 | CORE::warn <<EO_GRIPE; |
055fd3a9 | 1257 | perldb: Must not source insecure rcfile $file. |
b570d64b | 1258 | You or the superuser must be the owner, and it must not |
69893cff | 1259 | be writable by anyone but its owner. |
055fd3a9 | 1260 | EO_GRIPE |
69893cff RGS |
1261 | return; |
1262 | } ## end unless (is_safe_file($file... | |
055fd3a9 GS |
1263 | |
1264 | do $file; | |
1265 | CORE::warn("perldb: couldn't parse $file: $@") if $@; | |
69893cff | 1266 | } ## end sub safe_do |
055fd3a9 | 1267 | |
69893cff RGS |
1268 | # This is the safety test itself. |
1269 | # | |
055fd3a9 GS |
1270 | # Verifies that owner is either real user or superuser and that no |
1271 | # one but owner may write to it. This function is of limited use | |
1272 | # when called on a path instead of upon a handle, because there are | |
1273 | # no guarantees that filename (by dirent) whose file (by ino) is | |
e22ea7cc | 1274 | # eventually accessed is the same as the one tested. |
055fd3a9 GS |
1275 | # Assumes that the file's existence is not in doubt. |
1276 | sub is_safe_file { | |
1277 | my $path = shift; | |
69893cff | 1278 | stat($path) || return; # mysteriously vaporized |
e22ea7cc | 1279 | my ( $dev, $ino, $mode, $nlink, $uid, $gid ) = stat(_); |
055fd3a9 GS |
1280 | |
1281 | return 0 if $uid != 0 && $uid != $<; | |
1282 | return 0 if $mode & 022; | |
1283 | return 1; | |
69893cff | 1284 | } ## end sub is_safe_file |
055fd3a9 | 1285 | |
69893cff | 1286 | # If the rcfile (whichever one we decided was the right one to read) |
e22ea7cc RF |
1287 | # exists, we safely do it. |
1288 | if ( -f $rcfile ) { | |
055fd3a9 | 1289 | safe_do("./$rcfile"); |
69893cff | 1290 | } |
e22ea7cc | 1291 | |
69893cff | 1292 | # If there isn't one here, try the user's home directory. |
e22ea7cc | 1293 | elsif ( defined $ENV{HOME} && -f "$ENV{HOME}/$rcfile" ) { |
055fd3a9 GS |
1294 | safe_do("$ENV{HOME}/$rcfile"); |
1295 | } | |
e22ea7cc | 1296 | |
69893cff | 1297 | # Else try the login directory. |
e22ea7cc | 1298 | elsif ( defined $ENV{LOGDIR} && -f "$ENV{LOGDIR}/$rcfile" ) { |
055fd3a9 | 1299 | safe_do("$ENV{LOGDIR}/$rcfile"); |
d338d6fe | 1300 | } |
1301 | ||
69893cff | 1302 | # If the PERLDB_OPTS variable has options in it, parse those out next. |
e22ea7cc RF |
1303 | if ( defined $ENV{PERLDB_OPTS} ) { |
1304 | parse_options( $ENV{PERLDB_OPTS} ); | |
d338d6fe | 1305 | } |
1306 | ||
69893cff RGS |
1307 | =pod |
1308 | ||
1309 | The last thing we do during initialization is determine which subroutine is | |
1310 | to be used to obtain a new terminal when a new debugger is started. Right now, | |
b0b54b5e | 1311 | the debugger only handles TCP sockets, X11, OS/2, amd Mac OS X |
11653f7f | 1312 | (darwin). |
69893cff RGS |
1313 | |
1314 | =cut | |
1315 | ||
1316 | # Set up the get_fork_TTY subroutine to be aliased to the proper routine. | |
1317 | # Works if you're running an xterm or xterm-like window, or you're on | |
6fae1ad7 RF |
1318 | # OS/2, or on Mac OS X. This may need some expansion. |
1319 | ||
1320 | if (not defined &get_fork_TTY) # only if no routine exists | |
69893cff | 1321 | { |
b570d64b | 1322 | if ( defined $remoteport ) { |
11653f7f JJ |
1323 | # Expect an inetd-like server |
1324 | *get_fork_TTY = \&socket_get_fork_TTY; # to listen to us | |
1325 | } | |
1326 | elsif (defined $ENV{TERM} # If we know what kind | |
6fae1ad7 RF |
1327 | # of terminal this is, |
1328 | and $ENV{TERM} eq 'xterm' # and it's an xterm, | |
1329 | and defined $ENV{DISPLAY} # and what display it's on, | |
1330 | ) | |
1331 | { | |
1332 | *get_fork_TTY = \&xterm_get_fork_TTY; # use the xterm version | |
1333 | } | |
1334 | elsif ( $^O eq 'os2' ) { # If this is OS/2, | |
1335 | *get_fork_TTY = \&os2_get_fork_TTY; # use the OS/2 version | |
1336 | } | |
1337 | elsif ( $^O eq 'darwin' # If this is Mac OS X | |
1338 | and defined $ENV{TERM_PROGRAM} # and we're running inside | |
1339 | and $ENV{TERM_PROGRAM} | |
1340 | eq 'Apple_Terminal' # Terminal.app | |
1341 | ) | |
1342 | { | |
1343 | *get_fork_TTY = \&macosx_get_fork_TTY; # use the Mac OS X version | |
1344 | } | |
69893cff | 1345 | } ## end if (not defined &get_fork_TTY... |
e22ea7cc | 1346 | |
dbb46cec DQ |
1347 | # untaint $^O, which may have been tainted by the last statement. |
1348 | # see bug [perl #24674] | |
e22ea7cc RF |
1349 | $^O =~ m/^(.*)\z/; |
1350 | $^O = $1; | |
f1583d8f | 1351 | |
d12a4851 | 1352 | # Here begin the unreadable code. It needs fixing. |
055fd3a9 | 1353 | |
69893cff RGS |
1354 | =head2 RESTART PROCESSING |
1355 | ||
1356 | This section handles the restart command. When the C<R> command is invoked, it | |
1357 | tries to capture all of the state it can into environment variables, and | |
1358 | then sets C<PERLDB_RESTART>. When we start executing again, we check to see | |
1359 | if C<PERLDB_RESTART> is there; if so, we reload all the information that | |
1360 | the R command stuffed into the environment variables. | |
1361 | ||
b570d64b | 1362 | PERLDB_RESTART - flag only, contains no restart data itself. |
69893cff RGS |
1363 | PERLDB_HIST - command history, if it's available |
1364 | PERLDB_ON_LOAD - breakpoints set by the rc file | |
1365 | PERLDB_POSTPONE - subs that have been loaded/not executed, and have actions | |
1366 | PERLDB_VISITED - files that had breakpoints | |
1367 | PERLDB_FILE_... - breakpoints for a file | |
1368 | PERLDB_OPT - active options | |
1369 | PERLDB_INC - the original @INC | |
1370 | PERLDB_PRETYPE - preprompt debugger actions | |
1371 | PERLDB_PRE - preprompt Perl code | |
1372 | PERLDB_POST - post-prompt Perl code | |
1373 | PERLDB_TYPEAHEAD - typeahead captured by readline() | |
1374 | ||
1375 | We chug through all these variables and plug the values saved in them | |
1376 | back into the appropriate spots in the debugger. | |
1377 | ||
1378 | =cut | |
1379 | ||
0664c09a | 1380 | use vars qw(%postponed_file @typeahead); |
14f38b27 | 1381 | |
0664c09a | 1382 | our (@hist, @truehist); |
6b24a4b7 | 1383 | |
fb0fb5f4 SF |
1384 | sub _restore_shared_globals_after_restart |
1385 | { | |
1386 | @hist = get_list('PERLDB_HIST'); | |
1387 | %break_on_load = get_list("PERLDB_ON_LOAD"); | |
1388 | %postponed = get_list("PERLDB_POSTPONE"); | |
1389 | ||
1390 | share(@hist); | |
1391 | share(@truehist); | |
1392 | share(%break_on_load); | |
1393 | share(%postponed); | |
1394 | } | |
1395 | ||
e18a02a6 | 1396 | sub _restore_breakpoints_and_actions { |
e22ea7cc | 1397 | |
e22ea7cc | 1398 | my @had_breakpoints = get_list("PERLDB_VISITED"); |
e18a02a6 | 1399 | |
bdba49ad SF |
1400 | for my $file_idx ( 0 .. $#had_breakpoints ) { |
1401 | my $filename = $had_breakpoints[$file_idx]; | |
1402 | my %pf = get_list("PERLDB_FILE_$file_idx"); | |
1403 | $postponed_file{ $filename } = \%pf if %pf; | |
1404 | my @lines = sort {$a <=> $b} keys(%pf); | |
1405 | my @enabled_statuses = get_list("PERLDB_FILE_ENABLED_$file_idx"); | |
1406 | for my $line_idx (0 .. $#lines) { | |
1407 | _set_breakpoint_enabled_status( | |
1408 | $filename, | |
1409 | $lines[$line_idx], | |
1410 | ($enabled_statuses[$line_idx] ? 1 : ''), | |
1411 | ); | |
1412 | } | |
e22ea7cc | 1413 | } |
69893cff | 1414 | |
e18a02a6 SF |
1415 | return; |
1416 | } | |
1417 | ||
ca50076b SF |
1418 | sub _restore_options_after_restart |
1419 | { | |
1420 | my %options_map = get_list("PERLDB_OPT"); | |
1421 | ||
1422 | while ( my ( $opt, $val ) = each %options_map ) { | |
1423 | $val =~ s/[\\\']/\\$1/g; | |
1424 | parse_options("$opt'$val'"); | |
1425 | } | |
1426 | ||
1427 | return; | |
1428 | } | |
1429 | ||
18580168 SF |
1430 | sub _restore_globals_after_restart |
1431 | { | |
1432 | # restore original @INC | |
1433 | @INC = get_list("PERLDB_INC"); | |
1434 | @ini_INC = @INC; | |
1435 | ||
1436 | # return pre/postprompt actions and typeahead buffer | |
1437 | $pretype = [ get_list("PERLDB_PRETYPE") ]; | |
1438 | $pre = [ get_list("PERLDB_PRE") ]; | |
1439 | $post = [ get_list("PERLDB_POST") ]; | |
1440 | @typeahead = get_list( "PERLDB_TYPEAHEAD", @typeahead ); | |
1441 | ||
1442 | return; | |
1443 | } | |
1444 | ||
fb0fb5f4 | 1445 | |
e18a02a6 SF |
1446 | if ( exists $ENV{PERLDB_RESTART} ) { |
1447 | ||
1448 | # We're restarting, so we don't need the flag that says to restart anymore. | |
1449 | delete $ENV{PERLDB_RESTART}; | |
1450 | ||
1451 | # $restart = 1; | |
fb0fb5f4 | 1452 | _restore_shared_globals_after_restart(); |
e18a02a6 SF |
1453 | |
1454 | _restore_breakpoints_and_actions(); | |
1455 | ||
69893cff | 1456 | # restore options |
ca50076b | 1457 | _restore_options_after_restart(); |
69893cff | 1458 | |
18580168 | 1459 | _restore_globals_after_restart(); |
69893cff RGS |
1460 | } ## end if (exists $ENV{PERLDB_RESTART... |
1461 | ||
1462 | =head2 SETTING UP THE TERMINAL | |
1463 | ||
1464 | Now, we'll decide how the debugger is going to interact with the user. | |
1465 | If there's no TTY, we set the debugger to run non-stop; there's not going | |
1466 | to be anyone there to enter commands. | |
1467 | ||
1468 | =cut | |
54d04a52 | 1469 | |
ebd0282e | 1470 | use vars qw($notty $console $tty $LINEINFO); |
6b24a4b7 SF |
1471 | use vars qw($lineinfo $doccmd); |
1472 | ||
ebd0282e SF |
1473 | our ($runnonstop); |
1474 | ||
d338d6fe | 1475 | if ($notty) { |
69893cff | 1476 | $runnonstop = 1; |
2dbd01ad | 1477 | share($runnonstop); |
69893cff | 1478 | } |
d12a4851 | 1479 | |
69893cff RGS |
1480 | =pod |
1481 | ||
1482 | If there is a TTY, we have to determine who it belongs to before we can | |
1483 | proceed. If this is a slave editor or graphical debugger (denoted by | |
1484 | the first command-line switch being '-emacs'), we shift this off and | |
1485 | set C<$rl> to 0 (XXX ostensibly to do straight reads). | |
1486 | ||
1487 | =cut | |
1488 | ||
1489 | else { | |
e22ea7cc | 1490 | |
69893cff RGS |
1491 | # Is Perl being run from a slave editor or graphical debugger? |
1492 | # If so, don't use readline, and set $slave_editor = 1. | |
2b0b9dd1 SF |
1493 | if ($slave_editor = ( @main::ARGV && ( $main::ARGV[0] eq '-emacs' ) )) { |
1494 | $rl = 0; | |
1495 | shift(@main::ARGV); | |
1496 | } | |
e22ea7cc RF |
1497 | |
1498 | #require Term::ReadLine; | |
d12a4851 | 1499 | |
69893cff RGS |
1500 | =pod |
1501 | ||
1502 | We then determine what the console should be on various systems: | |
1503 | ||
1504 | =over 4 | |
1505 | ||
1506 | =item * Cygwin - We use C<stdin> instead of a separate device. | |
1507 | ||
1508 | =cut | |
1509 | ||
e22ea7cc RF |
1510 | if ( $^O eq 'cygwin' ) { |
1511 | ||
69893cff RGS |
1512 | # /dev/tty is binary. use stdin for textmode |
1513 | undef $console; | |
1514 | } | |
1515 | ||
1516 | =item * Unix - use C</dev/tty>. | |
1517 | ||
1518 | =cut | |
1519 | ||
e22ea7cc | 1520 | elsif ( -e "/dev/tty" ) { |
69893cff RGS |
1521 | $console = "/dev/tty"; |
1522 | } | |
1523 | ||
1524 | =item * Windows or MSDOS - use C<con>. | |
1525 | ||
1526 | =cut | |
1527 | ||
e22ea7cc | 1528 | elsif ( $^O eq 'dos' or -e "con" or $^O eq 'MSWin32' ) { |
69893cff RGS |
1529 | $console = "con"; |
1530 | } | |
1531 | ||
69893cff RGS |
1532 | =item * VMS - use C<sys$command>. |
1533 | ||
1534 | =cut | |
1535 | ||
1536 | else { | |
e22ea7cc | 1537 | |
69893cff RGS |
1538 | # everything else is ... |
1539 | $console = "sys\$command"; | |
d12a4851 | 1540 | } |
69893cff RGS |
1541 | |
1542 | =pod | |
1543 | ||
1544 | =back | |
1545 | ||
1546 | Several other systems don't use a specific console. We C<undef $console> | |
1547 | for those (Windows using a slave editor/graphical debugger, NetWare, OS/2 | |
1548 | with a slave editor, Epoc). | |
1549 | ||
1550 | =cut | |
d12a4851 | 1551 | |
e22ea7cc RF |
1552 | if ( ( $^O eq 'MSWin32' ) and ( $slave_editor or defined $ENV{EMACS} ) ) { |
1553 | ||
69893cff | 1554 | # /dev/tty is binary. use stdin for textmode |
e22ea7cc RF |
1555 | $console = undef; |
1556 | } | |
1557 | ||
1558 | if ( $^O eq 'NetWare' ) { | |
d12a4851 | 1559 | |
69893cff RGS |
1560 | # /dev/tty is binary. use stdin for textmode |
1561 | $console = undef; | |
1562 | } | |
d12a4851 | 1563 | |
69893cff RGS |
1564 | # In OS/2, we need to use STDIN to get textmode too, even though |
1565 | # it pretty much looks like Unix otherwise. | |
e22ea7cc RF |
1566 | if ( defined $ENV{OS2_SHELL} and ( $slave_editor or $ENV{WINDOWID} ) ) |
1567 | { # In OS/2 | |
1568 | $console = undef; | |
1569 | } | |
1570 | ||
1571 | # EPOC also falls into the 'got to use STDIN' camp. | |
1572 | if ( $^O eq 'epoc' ) { | |
1573 | $console = undef; | |
1574 | } | |
d12a4851 | 1575 | |
69893cff RGS |
1576 | =pod |
1577 | ||
1578 | If there is a TTY hanging around from a parent, we use that as the console. | |
1579 | ||
1580 | =cut | |
1581 | ||
e22ea7cc | 1582 | $console = $tty if defined $tty; |
d12a4851 | 1583 | |
b570d64b | 1584 | =head2 SOCKET HANDLING |
69893cff RGS |
1585 | |
1586 | The debugger is capable of opening a socket and carrying out a debugging | |
1587 | session over the socket. | |
1588 | ||
1589 | If C<RemotePort> was defined in the options, the debugger assumes that it | |
1590 | should try to start a debugging session on that port. It builds the socket | |
1591 | and then tries to connect the input and output filehandles to it. | |
1592 | ||
1593 | =cut | |
1594 | ||
1595 | # Handle socket stuff. | |
e22ea7cc RF |
1596 | |
1597 | if ( defined $remoteport ) { | |
1598 | ||
69893cff RGS |
1599 | # If RemotePort was defined in the options, connect input and output |
1600 | # to the socket. | |
11653f7f | 1601 | $IN = $OUT = connect_remoteport(); |
69893cff RGS |
1602 | } ## end if (defined $remoteport) |
1603 | ||
1604 | =pod | |
1605 | ||
1606 | If no C<RemotePort> was defined, and we want to create a TTY on startup, | |
1607 | this is probably a situation where multiple debuggers are running (for example, | |
1608 | a backticked command that starts up another debugger). We create a new IN and | |
1609 | OUT filehandle, and do the necessary mojo to create a new TTY if we know how | |
1610 | and if we can. | |
1611 | ||
1612 | =cut | |
1613 | ||
1614 | # Non-socket. | |
1615 | else { | |
e22ea7cc | 1616 | |
69893cff RGS |
1617 | # Two debuggers running (probably a system or a backtick that invokes |
1618 | # the debugger itself under the running one). create a new IN and OUT | |
e22ea7cc | 1619 | # filehandle, and do the necessary mojo to create a new tty if we |
69893cff | 1620 | # know how, and we can. |
e22ea7cc RF |
1621 | create_IN_OUT(4) if $CreateTTY & 4; |
1622 | if ($console) { | |
1623 | ||
69893cff | 1624 | # If we have a console, check to see if there are separate ins and |
cd1191f1 | 1625 | # outs to open. (They are assumed identical if not.) |
69893cff | 1626 | |
e22ea7cc RF |
1627 | my ( $i, $o ) = split /,/, $console; |
1628 | $o = $i unless defined $o; | |
69893cff | 1629 | |
69893cff | 1630 | # read/write on in, or just read, or read on STDIN. |
e22ea7cc RF |
1631 | open( IN, "+<$i" ) |
1632 | || open( IN, "<$i" ) | |
1633 | || open( IN, "<&STDIN" ); | |
1634 | ||
69893cff RGS |
1635 | # read/write/create/clobber out, or write/create/clobber out, |
1636 | # or merge with STDERR, or merge with STDOUT. | |
e22ea7cc RF |
1637 | open( OUT, "+>$o" ) |
1638 | || open( OUT, ">$o" ) | |
1639 | || open( OUT, ">&STDERR" ) | |
1640 | || open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" ); # so we don't dongle stdout | |
1641 | ||
1642 | } ## end if ($console) | |
1643 | elsif ( not defined $console ) { | |
1644 | ||
1645 | # No console. Open STDIN. | |
1646 | open( IN, "<&STDIN" ); | |
1647 | ||
1648 | # merge with STDERR, or with STDOUT. | |
1649 | open( OUT, ">&STDERR" ) | |
1650 | || open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" ); # so we don't dongle stdout | |
1651 | $console = 'STDIN/OUT'; | |
69893cff RGS |
1652 | } ## end elsif (not defined $console) |
1653 | ||
1654 | # Keep copies of the filehandles so that when the pager runs, it | |
1655 | # can close standard input without clobbering ours. | |
2b0b9dd1 SF |
1656 | if ($console or (not defined($console))) { |
1657 | $IN = \*IN; | |
1658 | $OUT = \*OUT; | |
1659 | } | |
e22ea7cc RF |
1660 | } ## end elsif (from if(defined $remoteport)) |
1661 | ||
1662 | # Unbuffer DB::OUT. We need to see responses right away. | |
70c9432b | 1663 | $OUT->autoflush(1); |
e22ea7cc RF |
1664 | |
1665 | # Line info goes to debugger output unless pointed elsewhere. | |
1666 | # Pointing elsewhere makes it possible for slave editors to | |
1667 | # keep track of file and position. We have both a filehandle | |
1668 | # and a I/O description to keep track of. | |
1669 | $LINEINFO = $OUT unless defined $LINEINFO; | |
1670 | $lineinfo = $console unless defined $lineinfo; | |
2dbd01ad SF |
1671 | # share($LINEINFO); # <- unable to share globs |
1672 | share($lineinfo); # | |
e22ea7cc | 1673 | |
69893cff RGS |
1674 | =pod |
1675 | ||
1676 | To finish initialization, we show the debugger greeting, | |
1677 | and then call the C<afterinit()> subroutine if there is one. | |
1678 | ||
1679 | =cut | |
d12a4851 | 1680 | |
e22ea7cc RF |
1681 | # Show the debugger greeting. |
1682 | $header =~ s/.Header: ([^,]+),v(\s+\S+\s+\S+).*$/$1$2/; | |
1683 | unless ($runnonstop) { | |
1684 | local $\ = ''; | |
1685 | local $, = ''; | |
1686 | if ( $term_pid eq '-1' ) { | |
1687 | print $OUT "\nDaughter DB session started...\n"; | |
1688 | } | |
1689 | else { | |
1690 | print $OUT "\nLoading DB routines from $header\n"; | |
1691 | print $OUT ( | |
1692 | "Editor support ", | |
1693 | $slave_editor ? "enabled" : "available", ".\n" | |
1694 | ); | |
1695 | print $OUT | |
1f874cb6 | 1696 | "\nEnter h or 'h h' for help, or '$doccmd perldebug' for more help.\n\n"; |
69893cff RGS |
1697 | } ## end else [ if ($term_pid eq '-1') |
1698 | } ## end unless ($runnonstop) | |
1699 | } ## end else [ if ($notty) | |
1700 | ||
1701 | # XXX This looks like a bug to me. | |
1702 | # Why copy to @ARGS and then futz with @args? | |
d338d6fe | 1703 | @ARGS = @ARGV; |
6b24a4b7 | 1704 | # for (@args) { |
69893cff RGS |
1705 | # Make sure backslashes before single quotes are stripped out, and |
1706 | # keep args unless they are numeric (XXX why?) | |
e22ea7cc RF |
1707 | # s/\'/\\\'/g; # removed while not justified understandably |
1708 | # s/(.*)/'$1'/ unless /^-?[\d.]+$/; # ditto | |
6b24a4b7 | 1709 | # } |
d338d6fe | 1710 | |
e22ea7cc | 1711 | # If there was an afterinit() sub defined, call it. It will get |
69893cff | 1712 | # executed in our scope, so it can fiddle with debugger globals. |
e22ea7cc | 1713 | if ( defined &afterinit ) { # May be defined in $rcfile |
2b0b9dd1 | 1714 | afterinit(); |
d338d6fe | 1715 | } |
e22ea7cc | 1716 | |
69893cff | 1717 | # Inform us about "Stack dump during die enabled ..." in dieLevel(). |
6b24a4b7 SF |
1718 | use vars qw($I_m_init); |
1719 | ||
43aed9ee IZ |
1720 | $I_m_init = 1; |
1721 | ||
d338d6fe | 1722 | ############################################################ Subroutines |
1723 | ||
69893cff RGS |
1724 | =head1 SUBROUTINES |
1725 | ||
1726 | =head2 DB | |
1727 | ||
1728 | This gigantic subroutine is the heart of the debugger. Called before every | |
1729 | statement, its job is to determine if a breakpoint has been reached, and | |
1730 | stop if so; read commands from the user, parse them, and execute | |
b468dcb6 | 1731 | them, and then send execution off to the next statement. |
69893cff RGS |
1732 | |
1733 | Note that the order in which the commands are processed is very important; | |
1734 | some commands earlier in the loop will actually alter the C<$cmd> variable | |
be9a9b1d | 1735 | to create other commands to be executed later. This is all highly I<optimized> |
69893cff RGS |
1736 | but can be confusing. Check the comments for each C<$cmd ... && do {}> to |
1737 | see what's happening in any given command. | |
1738 | ||
1739 | =cut | |
1740 | ||
136ae23d SF |
1741 | # $cmd cannot be an our() variable unfortunately (possible perl bug?). |
1742 | ||
6b24a4b7 SF |
1743 | use vars qw( |
1744 | $action | |
6b24a4b7 | 1745 | $cmd |
6b24a4b7 SF |
1746 | $fall_off_end |
1747 | $file | |
1748 | $filename_ini | |
1749 | $finished | |
1750 | %had_breakpoints | |
6b24a4b7 SF |
1751 | $level |
1752 | $max | |
6b24a4b7 | 1753 | $package |
6b24a4b7 SF |
1754 | $try |
1755 | ); | |
1756 | ||
1ce985d2 | 1757 | our ( |
bdb3f37d | 1758 | %alias, |
1ce985d2 | 1759 | $doret, |
0664c09a | 1760 | $end, |
d1450c23 | 1761 | $incr, |
73c5e526 | 1762 | $laststep, |
14f38b27 | 1763 | $rc, |
ddf4cf26 | 1764 | $sh, |
1ce985d2 SF |
1765 | $stack_depth, |
1766 | @stack, | |
1767 | @to_watch, | |
1768 | @old_watch, | |
1769 | ); | |
8ad70697 | 1770 | |
6791e41b SF |
1771 | sub _DB__determine_if_we_should_break |
1772 | { | |
1773 | # if we have something here, see if we should break. | |
1774 | # $stop is lexical and local to this block - $action on the other hand | |
1775 | # is global. | |
1776 | my $stop; | |
1777 | ||
1778 | if ( $dbline{$line} | |
1779 | && _is_breakpoint_enabled($filename, $line) | |
1780 | && (( $stop, $action ) = split( /\0/, $dbline{$line} ) ) ) | |
1781 | { | |
1782 | ||
1783 | # Stop if the stop criterion says to just stop. | |
1784 | if ( $stop eq '1' ) { | |
1785 | $signal |= 1; | |
1786 | } | |
1787 | ||
1788 | # It's a conditional stop; eval it in the user's context and | |
1789 | # see if we should stop. If so, remove the one-time sigil. | |
1790 | elsif ($stop) { | |
1791 | $evalarg = "\$DB::signal |= 1 if do {$stop}"; | |
6cff0f90 | 1792 | DB::eval(); |
6791e41b SF |
1793 | # If the breakpoint is temporary, then delete its enabled status. |
1794 | if ($dbline{$line} =~ s/;9($|\0)/$1/) { | |
1795 | _cancel_breakpoint_temp_enabled_status($filename, $line); | |
1796 | } | |
1797 | } | |
1798 | } ## end if ($dbline{$line} && ... | |
1799 | } | |
1800 | ||
8481f647 SF |
1801 | sub _DB__is_finished { |
1802 | if ($finished and $level <= 1) { | |
1803 | end_report(); | |
1804 | return 1; | |
1805 | } | |
1806 | else { | |
1807 | return; | |
1808 | } | |
1809 | } | |
1810 | ||
32bbadc6 SF |
1811 | sub _DB__read_next_cmd |
1812 | { | |
1813 | my ($tid) = @_; | |
1814 | ||
1815 | # We have a terminal, or can get one ... | |
1816 | if (!$term) { | |
1817 | setterm(); | |
1818 | } | |
1819 | ||
1820 | # ... and it belogs to this PID or we get one for this PID ... | |
1821 | if ($term_pid != $$) { | |
1822 | resetterm(1); | |
1823 | } | |
1824 | ||
1825 | # ... and we got a line of command input ... | |
1826 | $cmd = DB::readline( | |
1827 | "$pidprompt $tid DB" | |
1828 | . ( '<' x $level ) | |
1829 | . ( $#hist + 1 ) | |
1830 | . ( '>' x $level ) . " " | |
1831 | ); | |
1832 | ||
1833 | return defined($cmd); | |
1834 | } | |
1835 | ||
7013f40c SF |
1836 | sub _DB__trim_command_and_return_first_component { |
1837 | $cmd =~ s/\A\s+//s; # trim annoying leading whitespace | |
1838 | $cmd =~ s/\s+\z//s; # trim annoying trailing whitespace | |
1839 | ||
1840 | $cmd =~ m{\A(\S*)}; | |
1841 | return $1; | |
1842 | } | |
1843 | ||
2a802473 SF |
1844 | sub _DB__handle_f_command { |
1845 | if (($file) = $cmd =~ /\Af\b\s*(.*)/) { | |
1846 | $file =~ s/\s+$//; | |
1847 | ||
1848 | # help for no arguments (old-style was return from sub). | |
1849 | if ( !$file ) { | |
1850 | print $OUT | |
1851 | "The old f command is now the r command.\n"; # hint | |
1852 | print $OUT "The new f command switches filenames.\n"; | |
1853 | next CMD; | |
1854 | } ## end if (!$file) | |
1855 | ||
1856 | # if not in magic file list, try a close match. | |
1857 | if ( !defined $main::{ '_<' . $file } ) { | |
1858 | if ( ($try) = grep( m#^_<.*$file#, keys %main:: ) ) { | |
1859 | { | |
1860 | $try = substr( $try, 2 ); | |
1861 | print $OUT "Choosing $try matching '$file':\n"; | |
1862 | $file = $try; | |
1863 | } | |
1864 | } ## end if (($try) = grep(m#^_<.*$file#... | |
1865 | } ## end if (!defined $main::{ ... | |
1866 | ||
1867 | # If not successfully switched now, we failed. | |
1868 | if ( !defined $main::{ '_<' . $file } ) { | |
1869 | print $OUT "No file matching '$file' is loaded.\n"; | |
1870 | next CMD; | |
1871 | } | |
1872 | ||
1873 | # We switched, so switch the debugger internals around. | |
1874 | elsif ( $file ne $filename ) { | |
1875 | *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $file }; | |
1876 | $max = $#dbline; | |
1877 | $filename = $file; | |
1878 | $start = 1; | |
1879 | $cmd = "l"; | |
1880 | } ## end elsif ($file ne $filename) | |
1881 | ||
1882 | # We didn't switch; say we didn't. | |
1883 | else { | |
1884 | print $OUT "Already in $file.\n"; | |
1885 | next CMD; | |
1886 | } | |
1887 | } | |
1888 | ||
1889 | return; | |
1890 | } | |
1891 | ||
6115a173 SF |
1892 | sub _DB__handle_dot_command { |
1893 | my ($obj) = @_; | |
1894 | ||
1895 | # . command. | |
1896 | if ($cmd eq '.') { | |
1897 | $incr = -1; # stay at current line | |
1898 | ||
1899 | # Reset everything to the old location. | |
1900 | $start = $line; | |
1901 | $filename = $filename_ini; | |
1902 | *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $filename }; | |
1903 | $max = $#dbline; | |
1904 | ||
1905 | # Now where are we? | |
1906 | print_lineinfo($obj->position()); | |
1907 | next CMD; | |
1908 | } | |
1909 | ||
1910 | return; | |
1911 | } | |
1912 | ||
5c2b78e7 SF |
1913 | sub _DB__handle_y_command { |
1914 | my ($obj) = @_; | |
1915 | ||
1916 | if (my ($match_level, $match_vars) | |
1917 | = $cmd =~ /^y(?:\s+(\d*)\s*(.*))?$/) { | |
1918 | ||
1919 | # See if we've got the necessary support. | |
84e7f475 SF |
1920 | if (!eval { require PadWalker; PadWalker->VERSION(0.08) }) { |
1921 | my $Err = $@; | |
1922 | DB::warn( | |
1923 | $Err =~ /locate/ | |
1924 | ? "PadWalker module not found - please install\n" | |
1925 | : $Err | |
1926 | ); | |
1927 | next CMD; | |
1928 | } | |
5c2b78e7 SF |
1929 | |
1930 | # Load up dumpvar if we don't have it. If we can, that is. | |
1931 | do 'dumpvar.pl' || die $@ unless defined &main::dumpvar; | |
1932 | defined &main::dumpvar | |
1933 | or print $OUT "dumpvar.pl not available.\n" | |
1934 | and next CMD; | |
1935 | ||
1936 | # Got all the modules we need. Find them and print them. | |
1937 | my @vars = split( ' ', $match_vars || '' ); | |
1938 | ||
1939 | # Find the pad. | |
1940 | my $h = eval { PadWalker::peek_my( ( $match_level || 0 ) + 1 ) }; | |
1941 | ||
1942 | # Oops. Can't find it. | |
84e7f475 SF |
1943 | if (my $Err = $@) { |
1944 | $Err =~ s/ at .*//; | |
1945 | DB::warn($Err); | |
1946 | next CMD; | |
1947 | } | |
5c2b78e7 SF |
1948 | |
1949 | # Show the desired vars with dumplex(). | |
1950 | my $savout = select($OUT); | |
1951 | ||
1952 | # Have dumplex dump the lexicals. | |
84e7f475 SF |
1953 | foreach my $key (sort keys %$h) { |
1954 | dumpvar::dumplex( $key, $h->{$key}, | |
1955 | defined $option{dumpDepth} ? $option{dumpDepth} : -1, | |
1956 | @vars ); | |
1957 | } | |
5c2b78e7 SF |
1958 | select($savout); |
1959 | next CMD; | |
1960 | } | |
1961 | } | |
1962 | ||
35cd713a SF |
1963 | sub _DB__handle_c_command { |
1964 | my ($obj) = @_; | |
1965 | ||
1966 | if (my ($new_i) = $cmd =~ m#\Ac\b\s*([\w:]*)\s*\z#) { | |
1967 | ||
1968 | $obj->i_cmd($new_i); | |
1969 | ||
1970 | # Hey, show's over. The debugged program finished | |
1971 | # executing already. | |
1972 | next CMD if _DB__is_finished(); | |
1973 | ||
1974 | # Capture the place to put a one-time break. | |
1975 | $subname = $obj->i_cmd; | |
1976 | ||
1977 | # Probably not needed, since we finish an interactive | |
1978 | # sub-session anyway... | |
1979 | # local $filename = $filename; | |
1980 | # local *dbline = *dbline; # XXX Would this work?! | |
1981 | # | |
1982 | # The above question wonders if localizing the alias | |
1983 | # to the magic array works or not. Since it's commented | |
1984 | # out, we'll just leave that to speculation for now. | |
1985 | ||
1986 | # If the "subname" isn't all digits, we'll assume it | |
1987 | # is a subroutine name, and try to find it. | |
1988 | if ( $subname =~ /\D/ ) { # subroutine name | |
1989 | # Qualify it to the current package unless it's | |
1990 | # already qualified. | |
1991 | $subname = $package . "::" . $subname | |
1992 | unless $subname =~ /::/; | |
1993 | ||
1994 | # find_sub will return "file:line_number" corresponding | |
1995 | # to where the subroutine is defined; we call find_sub, | |
1996 | # break up the return value, and assign it in one | |
1997 | # operation. | |
1998 | ( $file, $new_i ) = ( find_sub($subname) =~ /^(.*):(.*)$/ ); | |
1999 | ||
2000 | # Force the line number to be numeric. | |
2001 | $obj->i_cmd($new_i + 0); | |
2002 | ||
2003 | # If we got a line number, we found the sub. | |
2004 | if ($obj->i_cmd) { | |
2005 | ||
2006 | # Switch all the debugger's internals around so | |
2007 | # we're actually working with that file. | |
2008 | $filename = $file; | |
2009 | *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $filename }; | |
2010 | ||
2011 | # Mark that there's a breakpoint in this file. | |
2012 | $had_breakpoints{$filename} |= 1; | |
2013 | ||
2014 | # Scan forward to the first executable line | |
2015 | # after the 'sub whatever' line. | |
2016 | $max = $#dbline; | |
2017 | my $ii = $obj->i_cmd; | |
2018 | ++$ii while $dbline[$ii] == 0 && $ii < $max; | |
2019 | $obj->i_cmd($ii); | |
2020 | } ## end if ($i) | |
2021 | ||
2022 | # We didn't find a sub by that name. | |
2023 | else { | |
2024 | print $OUT "Subroutine $subname not found.\n"; | |
2025 | next CMD; | |
2026 | } | |
2027 | } ## end if ($subname =~ /\D/) | |
2028 | ||
2029 | # At this point, either the subname was all digits (an | |
2030 | # absolute line-break request) or we've scanned through | |
2031 | # the code following the definition of the sub, looking | |
2032 | # for an executable, which we may or may not have found. | |
2033 | # | |
2034 | # If $i (which we set $subname from) is non-zero, we | |
2035 | # got a request to break at some line somewhere. On | |
2036 | # one hand, if there wasn't any real subroutine name | |
2037 | # involved, this will be a request to break in the current | |
2038 | # file at the specified line, so we have to check to make | |
2039 | # sure that the line specified really is breakable. | |
2040 | # | |
2041 | # On the other hand, if there was a subname supplied, the | |
2042 | # preceding block has moved us to the proper file and | |
2043 | # location within that file, and then scanned forward | |
2044 | # looking for the next executable line. We have to make | |
2045 | # sure that one was found. | |
2046 | # | |
2047 | # On the gripping hand, we can't do anything unless the | |
2048 | # current value of $i points to a valid breakable line. | |
2049 | # Check that. | |
2050 | if ($obj->i_cmd) { | |
2051 | ||
2052 | # Breakable? | |
2053 | if ( $dbline[$obj->i_cmd] == 0 ) { | |
2054 | print $OUT "Line " . $obj->i_cmd . " not breakable.\n"; | |
2055 | next CMD; | |
2056 | } | |
2057 | ||
2058 | # Yes. Set up the one-time-break sigil. | |
2059 | $dbline{$obj->i_cmd} =~ s/($|\0)/;9$1/; # add one-time-only b.p. | |
2060 | _enable_breakpoint_temp_enabled_status($filename, $obj->i_cmd); | |
2061 | } ## end if ($i) | |
2062 | ||
2063 | # Turn off stack tracing from here up. | |
2064 | for my $i (0 .. $stack_depth) { | |
2065 | $stack[ $i ] &= ~1; | |
2066 | } | |
2067 | last CMD; | |
2068 | } | |
2069 | ||
2070 | return; | |
2071 | } | |
2072 | ||
a4d311a3 SF |
2073 | sub _DB__handle_forward_slash_command { |
2074 | my ($obj) = @_; | |
2075 | ||
2076 | # The pattern as a string. | |
2077 | use vars qw($inpat); | |
2078 | ||
2079 | if (($inpat) = $cmd =~ m#\A/(.*)\z#) { | |
2080 | ||
2081 | # Remove the final slash. | |
2082 | $inpat =~ s:([^\\])/$:$1:; | |
2083 | ||
2084 | # If the pattern isn't null ... | |
2085 | if ( $inpat ne "" ) { | |
2086 | ||
2087 | # Turn of warn and die procesing for a bit. | |
2088 | local $SIG{__DIE__}; | |
2089 | local $SIG{__WARN__}; | |
2090 | ||
2091 | # Create the pattern. | |
2092 | eval 'no strict q/vars/; $inpat =~ m' . "\a$inpat\a"; | |
2093 | if ( $@ ne "" ) { | |
2094 | ||
2095 | # Oops. Bad pattern. No biscuit. | |
2096 | # Print the eval error and go back for more | |
2097 | # commands. | |
2098 | print $OUT "$@"; | |
2099 | next CMD; | |
2100 | } | |
2101 | $obj->pat($inpat); | |
2102 | } ## end if ($inpat ne "") | |
2103 | ||
2104 | # Set up to stop on wrap-around. | |
2105 | $end = $start; | |
2106 | ||
2107 | # Don't move off the current line. | |
2108 | $incr = -1; | |
2109 | ||
2110 | my $pat = $obj->pat; | |
2111 | ||
2112 | # Done in eval so nothing breaks if the pattern | |
2113 | # does something weird. | |
2114 | eval | |
2115 | { | |
2116 | no strict q/vars/; | |
2117 | for (;;) { | |
2118 | # Move ahead one line. | |
2119 | ++$start; | |
2120 | ||
2121 | # Wrap if we pass the last line. | |
2122 | $start = 1 if ($start > $max); | |
2123 | ||
2124 | # Stop if we have gotten back to this line again, | |
2125 | last if ($start == $end); | |
2126 | ||
2127 | # A hit! (Note, though, that we are doing | |
2128 | # case-insensitive matching. Maybe a qr// | |
2129 | # expression would be better, so the user could | |
2130 | # do case-sensitive matching if desired. | |
2131 | if ($dbline[$start] =~ m/$pat/i) { | |
2132 | if ($slave_editor) { | |
2133 | # Handle proper escaping in the slave. | |
2134 | print $OUT "\032\032$filename:$start:0\n"; | |
2135 | } | |
2136 | else { | |
2137 | # Just print the line normally. | |
2138 | print $OUT "$start:\t",$dbline[$start],"\n"; | |
2139 | } | |
2140 | # And quit since we found something. | |
2141 | last; | |
2142 | } | |
2143 | } | |
2144 | }; | |
2145 | ||
2146 | if ($@) { | |
2147 | warn $@; | |
2148 | } | |
2149 | ||
2150 | # If we wrapped, there never was a match. | |
2151 | if ( $start == $end ) { | |
2152 | print {$OUT} "/$pat/: not found\n"; | |
2153 | } | |
2154 | next CMD; | |
2155 | } | |
2156 | ||
2157 | return; | |
2158 | } | |
2159 | ||
11f0f050 SF |
2160 | sub _DB__handle_question_mark_command { |
2161 | my ($obj) = @_; | |
2162 | ||
2163 | # ? - backward pattern search. | |
2164 | if (my ($inpat) = $cmd =~ m#\A\?(.*)\z#) { | |
2165 | ||
2166 | # Get the pattern, remove trailing question mark. | |
2167 | $inpat =~ s:([^\\])\?$:$1:; | |
2168 | ||
2169 | # If we've got one ... | |
2170 | if ( $inpat ne "" ) { | |
2171 | ||
2172 | # Turn off die & warn handlers. | |
2173 | local $SIG{__DIE__}; | |
2174 | local $SIG{__WARN__}; | |
2175 | eval '$inpat =~ m' . "\a$inpat\a"; | |
2176 | ||
2177 | if ( $@ ne "" ) { | |
2178 | ||
2179 | # Ouch. Not good. Print the error. | |
2180 | print $OUT $@; | |
2181 | next CMD; | |
2182 | } | |
2183 | $obj->pat($inpat); | |
2184 | } ## end if ($inpat ne "") | |
2185 | ||
2186 | # Where we are now is where to stop after wraparound. | |
2187 | $end = $start; | |
2188 | ||
2189 | # Don't move away from this line. | |
2190 | $incr = -1; | |
2191 | ||
2192 | my $pat = $obj->pat; | |
2193 | # Search inside the eval to prevent pattern badness | |
2194 | # from killing us. | |
2195 | eval { | |
2196 | no strict q/vars/; | |
2197 | for (;;) { | |
2198 | # Back up a line. | |
2199 | --$start; | |
2200 | ||
2201 | # Wrap if we pass the first line. | |
2202 | ||
2203 | $start = $max if ($start <= 0); | |
2204 | ||
2205 | # Quit if we get back where we started, | |
2206 | last if ($start == $end); | |
2207 | ||
2208 | # Match? | |
2209 | if ($dbline[$start] =~ m/$pat/i) { | |
2210 | if ($slave_editor) { | |
2211 | # Yep, follow slave editor requirements. | |
2212 | print $OUT "\032\032$filename:$start:0\n"; | |
2213 | } | |
2214 | else { | |
2215 | # Yep, just print normally. | |
2216 | print $OUT "$start:\t",$dbline[$start],"\n"; | |
2217 | } | |
2218 | ||
2219 | # Found, so done. | |
2220 | last; | |
2221 | } | |
2222 | } | |
2223 | }; | |
2224 | ||
2225 | # Say we failed if the loop never found anything, | |
2226 | if ( $start == $end ) { | |
2227 | print {$OUT} "?$pat?: not found\n"; | |
2228 | } | |
2229 | next CMD; | |
2230 | } | |
2231 | ||
2232 | return; | |
2233 | } | |
2234 | ||
5f166812 SF |
2235 | sub _DB__handle_restart_and_rerun_commands { |
2236 | my ($obj) = @_; | |
2237 | ||
2238 | # R - restart execution. | |
2239 | # rerun - controlled restart execution. | |
2240 | if (my ($cmd_cmd, $cmd_params) = | |
2241 | $cmd =~ /\A((?:R)|(?:rerun\s*(.*)))\z/) { | |
2242 | my @args = ($cmd_cmd eq 'R' ? restart() : rerun($cmd_params)); | |
2243 | ||
2244 | # Close all non-system fds for a clean restart. A more | |
2245 | # correct method would be to close all fds that were not | |
2246 | # open when the process started, but this seems to be | |
2247 | # hard. See "debugger 'R'estart and open database | |
2248 | # connections" on p5p. | |
2249 | ||
2250 | my $max_fd = 1024; # default if POSIX can't be loaded | |
2251 | if (eval { require POSIX }) { | |
2252 | eval { $max_fd = POSIX::sysconf(POSIX::_SC_OPEN_MAX()) }; | |
2253 | } | |
2254 | ||
2255 | if (defined $max_fd) { | |
2256 | foreach ($^F+1 .. $max_fd-1) { | |
2257 | next unless open FD_TO_CLOSE, "<&=$_"; | |
2258 | close(FD_TO_CLOSE); | |
2259 | } | |
2260 | } | |
2261 | ||
2262 | # And run Perl again. We use exec() to keep the | |
2263 | # PID stable (and that way $ini_pids is still valid). | |
2264 | exec(@args) or print {$OUT} "exec failed: $!\n"; | |
2265 | ||
2266 | last CMD; | |
2267 | } | |
2268 | ||
2269 | return; | |
2270 | } | |
2271 | ||
33f361f5 SF |
2272 | sub _DB__handle_run_command_in_pager_command { |
2273 | my ($obj) = @_; | |
2274 | ||
2275 | if ($cmd =~ m#\A\|\|?\s*[^|]#) { | |
2276 | if ( $pager =~ /^\|/ ) { | |
2277 | ||
2278 | # Default pager is into a pipe. Redirect I/O. | |
2279 | open( SAVEOUT, ">&STDOUT" ) | |
2280 | || DB::warn("Can't save STDOUT"); | |
2281 | open( STDOUT, ">&OUT" ) | |
2282 | || DB::warn("Can't redirect STDOUT"); | |
2283 | } ## end if ($pager =~ /^\|/) | |
2284 | else { | |
2285 | ||
2286 | # Not into a pipe. STDOUT is safe. | |
2287 | open( SAVEOUT, ">&OUT" ) || &warn("Can't save DB::OUT"); | |
2288 | } | |
2289 | ||
2290 | # Fix up environment to record we have less if so. | |
2291 | fix_less(); | |
2292 | ||
2293 | unless ( $obj->piped(scalar ( open( OUT, $pager ) ) ) ) { | |
2294 | ||
2295 | # Couldn't open pipe to pager. | |
2296 | DB::warn("Can't pipe output to '$pager'"); | |
2297 | if ( $pager =~ /^\|/ ) { | |
2298 | ||
2299 | # Redirect I/O back again. | |
2300 | open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" ) # XXX: lost message | |
2301 | || DB::warn("Can't restore DB::OUT"); | |
2302 | open( STDOUT, ">&SAVEOUT" ) | |
2303 | || DB::warn("Can't restore STDOUT"); | |
2304 | close(SAVEOUT); | |
2305 | } ## end if ($pager =~ /^\|/) | |
2306 | else { | |
2307 | ||
2308 | # Redirect I/O. STDOUT already safe. | |
2309 | open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" ) # XXX: lost message | |
2310 | || DB::warn("Can't restore DB::OUT"); | |
2311 | } | |
2312 | next CMD; | |
2313 | } ## end unless ($piped = open(OUT,... | |
2314 | ||
2315 | # Set up broken-pipe handler if necessary. | |
2316 | $SIG{PIPE} = \&DB::catch | |
2317 | if $pager =~ /^\|/ | |
2318 | && ( "" eq $SIG{PIPE} || "DEFAULT" eq $SIG{PIPE} ); | |
2319 | ||
2320 | OUT->autoflush(1); | |
2321 | # Save current filehandle, and put it back. | |
2322 | $obj->selected(scalar( select(OUT) )); | |
2323 | # Don't put it back if pager was a pipe. | |
2324 | if ($cmd !~ /\A\|\|/) | |
2325 | { | |
2326 | select($obj->selected()); | |
2327 | $obj->selected(""); | |
2328 | } | |
2329 | ||
2330 | # Trim off the pipe symbols and run the command now. | |
2331 | $cmd =~ s#\A\|+\s*##; | |
2332 | redo PIPE; | |
2333 | } | |
2334 | ||
2335 | return; | |
2336 | } | |
2337 | ||
321095c5 SF |
2338 | sub _DB__handle_m_command { |
2339 | my ($obj) = @_; | |
2340 | ||
2341 | if ($cmd =~ s#\Am\s+([\w:]+)\s*\z# #) { | |
2342 | methods($1); | |
2343 | next CMD; | |
2344 | } | |
2345 | ||
2346 | # m expr - set up DB::eval to do the work | |
2347 | if ($cmd =~ s#\Am\b# #) { # Rest gets done by DB::eval() | |
2348 | $onetimeDump = 'methods'; # method output gets used there | |
2349 | } | |
2350 | ||
2351 | return; | |
2352 | } | |
33f361f5 | 2353 | |
2b0b9dd1 SF |
2354 | sub DB { |
2355 | ||
2356 | # lock the debugger and get the thread id for the prompt | |
2357 | lock($DBGR); | |
2358 | my $tid; | |
2359 | my $position; | |
2360 | my ($prefix, $after, $infix); | |
2361 | my $pat; | |
22fc883d | 2362 | my $explicit_stop; |
33f361f5 SF |
2363 | my $piped; |
2364 | my $selected; | |
2b0b9dd1 SF |
2365 | |
2366 | if ($ENV{PERL5DB_THREADED}) { | |
2367 | $tid = eval { "[".threads->tid."]" }; | |
2368 | } | |
2369 | ||
35cd713a SF |
2370 | my $i; |
2371 | ||
22fc883d SF |
2372 | my $obj = DB::Obj->new( |
2373 | { | |
2374 | position => \$position, | |
2375 | prefix => \$prefix, | |
2376 | after => \$after, | |
2377 | explicit_stop => \$explicit_stop, | |
2378 | infix => \$infix, | |
35cd713a | 2379 | i_cmd => \$i, |
a4d311a3 | 2380 | pat => \$pat, |
33f361f5 SF |
2381 | piped => \$piped, |
2382 | selected => \$selected, | |
22fc883d SF |
2383 | }, |
2384 | ); | |
2385 | ||
2386 | $obj->_DB_on_init__initialize_globals(@_); | |
2b0b9dd1 | 2387 | |
69893cff RGS |
2388 | # Preserve current values of $@, $!, $^E, $,, $/, $\, $^W. |
2389 | # The code being debugged may have altered them. | |
d338d6fe | 2390 | &save; |
69893cff RGS |
2391 | |
2392 | # Since DB::DB gets called after every line, we can use caller() to | |
2393 | # figure out where we last were executing. Sneaky, eh? This works because | |
e22ea7cc | 2394 | # caller is returning all the extra information when called from the |
69893cff | 2395 | # debugger. |
e22ea7cc | 2396 | local ( $package, $filename, $line ) = caller; |
6b24a4b7 | 2397 | $filename_ini = $filename; |
69893cff RGS |
2398 | |
2399 | # set up the context for DB::eval, so it can properly execute | |
2400 | # code on behalf of the user. We add the package in so that the | |
2401 | # code is eval'ed in the proper package (not in the debugger!). | |
6b24a4b7 | 2402 | local $usercontext = _calc_usercontext($package); |
69893cff RGS |
2403 | |
2404 | # Create an alias to the active file magical array to simplify | |
2405 | # the code here. | |
e22ea7cc | 2406 | local (*dbline) = $main::{ '_<' . $filename }; |
aa057b67 | 2407 | |
69893cff | 2408 | # Last line in the program. |
55783941 | 2409 | $max = $#dbline; |
69893cff | 2410 | |
22fc883d | 2411 | _DB__determine_if_we_should_break(@_); |
69893cff RGS |
2412 | |
2413 | # Preserve the current stop-or-not, and see if any of the W | |
2414 | # (watch expressions) has changed. | |
36477c24 | 2415 | my $was_signal = $signal; |
69893cff RGS |
2416 | |
2417 | # If we have any watch expressions ... | |
22fc883d | 2418 | $obj->_DB__handle_watch_expressions(@_); |
69893cff RGS |
2419 | |
2420 | =head2 C<watchfunction()> | |
2421 | ||
2422 | C<watchfunction()> is a function that can be defined by the user; it is a | |
b570d64b | 2423 | function which will be run on each entry to C<DB::DB>; it gets the |
69893cff RGS |
2424 | current package, filename, and line as its parameters. |
2425 | ||
b570d64b | 2426 | The watchfunction can do anything it likes; it is executing in the |
69893cff RGS |
2427 | debugger's context, so it has access to all of the debugger's internal |
2428 | data structures and functions. | |
2429 | ||
2430 | C<watchfunction()> can control the debugger's actions. Any of the following | |
2431 | will cause the debugger to return control to the user's program after | |
2432 | C<watchfunction()> executes: | |
2433 | ||
b570d64b | 2434 | =over 4 |
69893cff | 2435 | |
be9a9b1d AT |
2436 | =item * |
2437 | ||
2438 | Returning a false value from the C<watchfunction()> itself. | |
2439 | ||
2440 | =item * | |
2441 | ||
2442 | Altering C<$single> to a false value. | |
2443 | ||
2444 | =item * | |
69893cff | 2445 | |
be9a9b1d | 2446 | Altering C<$signal> to a false value. |
69893cff | 2447 | |
be9a9b1d | 2448 | =item * |
69893cff | 2449 | |
be9a9b1d | 2450 | Turning off the C<4> bit in C<$trace> (this also disables the |
69893cff RGS |
2451 | check for C<watchfunction()>. This can be done with |
2452 | ||
2453 | $trace &= ~4; | |
2454 | ||
2455 | =back | |
2456 | ||
2457 | =cut | |
2458 | ||
e22ea7cc | 2459 | # If there's a user-defined DB::watchfunction, call it with the |
69893cff RGS |
2460 | # current package, filename, and line. The function executes in |
2461 | # the DB:: package. | |
e22ea7cc RF |
2462 | if ( $trace & 4 ) { # User-installed watch |
2463 | return | |
2464 | if watchfunction( $package, $filename, $line ) | |
2465 | and not $single | |
2466 | and not $was_signal | |
2467 | and not( $trace & ~4 ); | |
69893cff RGS |
2468 | } ## end if ($trace & 4) |
2469 | ||
e22ea7cc | 2470 | # Pick up any alteration to $signal in the watchfunction, and |
69893cff | 2471 | # turn off the signal now. |
6027b9a3 | 2472 | $was_signal = $signal; |
69893cff RGS |
2473 | $signal = 0; |
2474 | ||
2475 | =head2 GETTING READY TO EXECUTE COMMANDS | |
2476 | ||
2477 | The debugger decides to take control if single-step mode is on, the | |
2478 | C<t> command was entered, or the user generated a signal. If the program | |
2479 | has fallen off the end, we set things up so that entering further commands | |
2480 | won't cause trouble, and we say that the program is over. | |
2481 | ||
2482 | =cut | |
2483 | ||
8dc67a69 SF |
2484 | # Make sure that we always print if asked for explicitly regardless |
2485 | # of $trace_to_depth . | |
22fc883d | 2486 | $explicit_stop = ($single || $was_signal); |
8dc67a69 | 2487 | |
69893cff RGS |
2488 | # Check to see if we should grab control ($single true, |
2489 | # trace set appropriately, or we got a signal). | |
8dc67a69 | 2490 | if ( $explicit_stop || ( $trace & 1 ) ) { |
22fc883d | 2491 | $obj->_DB__grab_control(@_); |
69893cff RGS |
2492 | } ## end if ($single || ($trace... |
2493 | ||
2494 | =pod | |
2495 | ||
2496 | If there's an action to be executed for the line we stopped at, execute it. | |
b570d64b | 2497 | If there are any preprompt actions, execute those as well. |
e219e2fb RF |
2498 | |
2499 | =cut | |
2500 | ||
69893cff | 2501 | # If there's an action, do it now. |
05da04df SF |
2502 | if ($action) { |
2503 | $evalarg = $action; | |
2504 | DB::eval(); | |
2505 | } | |
e219e2fb | 2506 | |
69893cff RGS |
2507 | # Are we nested another level (e.g., did we evaluate a function |
2508 | # that had a breakpoint in it at the debugger prompt)? | |
e22ea7cc RF |
2509 | if ( $single || $was_signal ) { |
2510 | ||
69893cff | 2511 | # Yes, go down a level. |
e22ea7cc | 2512 | local $level = $level + 1; |
69893cff RGS |
2513 | |
2514 | # Do any pre-prompt actions. | |
e22ea7cc | 2515 | foreach $evalarg (@$pre) { |
7c54f46a | 2516 | DB::eval(); |
e22ea7cc | 2517 | } |
69893cff RGS |
2518 | |
2519 | # Complain about too much recursion if we passed the limit. | |
05da04df SF |
2520 | if ($single & 4) { |
2521 | print $OUT $stack_depth . " levels deep in subroutine calls!\n"; | |
2522 | } | |
69893cff RGS |
2523 | |
2524 | # The line we're currently on. Set $incr to -1 to stay here | |
2525 | # until we get a command that tells us to advance. | |
e22ea7cc RF |
2526 | $start = $line; |
2527 | $incr = -1; # for backward motion. | |
69893cff RGS |
2528 | |
2529 | # Tack preprompt debugger actions ahead of any actual input. | |
e22ea7cc | 2530 | @typeahead = ( @$pretype, @typeahead ); |
69893cff RGS |
2531 | |
2532 | =head2 WHERE ARE WE? | |
2533 | ||
2534 | XXX Relocate this section? | |
2535 | ||
2536 | The debugger normally shows the line corresponding to the current line of | |
2537 | execution. Sometimes, though, we want to see the next line, or to move elsewhere | |
2538 | in the file. This is done via the C<$incr>, C<$start>, and C<$max> variables. | |
2539 | ||
be9a9b1d AT |
2540 | C<$incr> controls by how many lines the I<current> line should move forward |
2541 | after a command is executed. If set to -1, this indicates that the I<current> | |
69893cff RGS |
2542 | line shouldn't change. |
2543 | ||
be9a9b1d | 2544 | C<$start> is the I<current> line. It is used for things like knowing where to |
69893cff RGS |
2545 | move forwards or backwards from when doing an C<L> or C<-> command. |
2546 | ||
2547 | C<$max> tells the debugger where the last line of the current file is. It's | |
2548 | used to terminate loops most often. | |
2549 | ||
2550 | =head2 THE COMMAND LOOP | |
2551 | ||
2552 | Most of C<DB::DB> is actually a command parsing and dispatch loop. It comes | |
2553 | in two parts: | |
2554 | ||
2555 | =over 4 | |
2556 | ||
be9a9b1d AT |
2557 | =item * |
2558 | ||
2559 | The outer part of the loop, starting at the C<CMD> label. This loop | |
69893cff RGS |
2560 | reads a command and then executes it. |
2561 | ||
be9a9b1d AT |
2562 | =item * |
2563 | ||
2564 | The inner part of the loop, starting at the C<PIPE> label. This part | |
69893cff RGS |
2565 | is wholly contained inside the C<CMD> block and only executes a command. |
2566 | Used to handle commands running inside a pager. | |
2567 | ||
2568 | =back | |
2569 | ||
2570 | So why have two labels to restart the loop? Because sometimes, it's easier to | |
2571 | have a command I<generate> another command and then re-execute the loop to do | |
2572 | the new command. This is faster, but perhaps a bit more convoluted. | |
2573 | ||
2574 | =cut | |
2575 | ||
2576 | # The big command dispatch loop. It keeps running until the | |
2577 | # user yields up control again. | |
2578 | # | |
2579 | # If we have a terminal for input, and we get something back | |
2580 | # from readline(), keep on processing. | |
6b24a4b7 | 2581 | |
e22ea7cc | 2582 | CMD: |
32bbadc6 | 2583 | while (_DB__read_next_cmd($tid)) |
69893cff | 2584 | { |
e22ea7cc | 2585 | |
8380a245 | 2586 | share($cmd); |
69893cff RGS |
2587 | # ... try to execute the input as debugger commands. |
2588 | ||
2589 | # Don't stop running. | |
2590 | $single = 0; | |
2591 | ||
2592 | # No signal is active. | |
2593 | $signal = 0; | |
2594 | ||
2595 | # Handle continued commands (ending with \): | |
3d7a2a93 | 2596 | if ($cmd =~ s/\\\z/\n/) { |
eeb7da96 | 2597 | $cmd .= DB::readline(" cont: "); |
e22ea7cc | 2598 | redo CMD; |
3d7a2a93 | 2599 | } |
69893cff RGS |
2600 | |
2601 | =head4 The null command | |
2602 | ||
be9a9b1d | 2603 | A newline entered by itself means I<re-execute the last command>. We grab the |
69893cff RGS |
2604 | command out of C<$laststep> (where it was recorded previously), and copy it |
2605 | back into C<$cmd> to be executed below. If there wasn't any previous command, | |
2606 | we'll do nothing below (no command will match). If there was, we also save it | |
2607 | in the command history and fall through to allow the command parsing to pick | |
2608 | it up. | |
2609 | ||
2610 | =cut | |
2611 | ||
2612 | # Empty input means repeat the last command. | |
eeb7da96 SF |
2613 | if ($cmd eq '') { |
2614 | $cmd = $laststep; | |
2615 | } | |
e22ea7cc | 2616 | chomp($cmd); # get rid of the annoying extra newline |
eeb7da96 SF |
2617 | if (length($cmd) >= 2) { |
2618 | push( @hist, $cmd ); | |
2619 | } | |
e22ea7cc | 2620 | push( @truehist, $cmd ); |
2dbd01ad SF |
2621 | share(@hist); |
2622 | share(@truehist); | |
e22ea7cc RF |
2623 | |
2624 | # This is a restart point for commands that didn't arrive | |
2625 | # via direct user input. It allows us to 'redo PIPE' to | |
2626 | # re-execute command processing without reading a new command. | |
69893cff | 2627 | PIPE: { |
35cd713a | 2628 | $i = _DB__trim_command_and_return_first_component(); |
69893cff RGS |
2629 | |
2630 | =head3 COMMAND ALIASES | |
2631 | ||
2632 | The debugger can create aliases for commands (these are stored in the | |
2633 | C<%alias> hash). Before a command is executed, the command loop looks it up | |
2634 | in the alias hash and substitutes the contents of the alias for the command, | |
2635 | completely replacing it. | |
2636 | ||
2637 | =cut | |
2638 | ||
2639 | # See if there's an alias for the command, and set it up if so. | |
e22ea7cc RF |
2640 | if ( $alias{$i} ) { |
2641 | ||
69893cff RGS |
2642 | # Squelch signal handling; we want to keep control here |
2643 | # if something goes loco during the alias eval. | |
2644 | local $SIG{__DIE__}; | |
2645 | local $SIG{__WARN__}; | |
2646 | ||
2647 | # This is a command, so we eval it in the DEBUGGER's | |
2648 | # scope! Otherwise, we can't see the special debugger | |
2649 | # variables, or get to the debugger's subs. (Well, we | |
2650 | # _could_, but why make it even more complicated?) | |
2651 | eval "\$cmd =~ $alias{$i}"; | |
2652 | if ($@) { | |
2653 | local $\ = ''; | |
1f874cb6 | 2654 | print $OUT "Couldn't evaluate '$i' alias: $@"; |
69893cff RGS |
2655 | next CMD; |
2656 | } | |
2657 | } ## end if ($alias{$i}) | |
2658 | ||
2659 | =head3 MAIN-LINE COMMANDS | |
2660 | ||
2661 | All of these commands work up to and after the program being debugged has | |
b570d64b | 2662 | terminated. |
69893cff RGS |
2663 | |
2664 | =head4 C<q> - quit | |
2665 | ||
b570d64b | 2666 | Quit the debugger. This entails setting the C<$fall_off_end> flag, so we don't |
69893cff RGS |
2667 | try to execute further, cleaning any restart-related stuff out of the |
2668 | environment, and executing with the last value of C<$?>. | |
2669 | ||
2670 | =cut | |
2671 | ||
3d7a2a93 | 2672 | if ($cmd eq 'q') { |
69893cff RGS |
2673 | $fall_off_end = 1; |
2674 | clean_ENV(); | |
2675 | exit $?; | |
3d7a2a93 | 2676 | } |
69893cff | 2677 | |
611272bb | 2678 | =head4 C<t> - trace [n] |
69893cff RGS |
2679 | |
2680 | Turn tracing on or off. Inverts the appropriate bit in C<$trace> (q.v.). | |
611272bb | 2681 | If level is specified, set C<$trace_to_depth>. |
69893cff RGS |
2682 | |
2683 | =cut | |
2684 | ||
9d0b71b3 | 2685 | $obj->_handle_t_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2686 | |
2687 | =head4 C<S> - list subroutines matching/not matching a pattern | |
2688 | ||
2689 | Walks through C<%sub>, checking to see whether or not to print the name. | |
2690 | ||
2691 | =cut | |
2692 | ||
9d0b71b3 | 2693 | $obj->_handle_S_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2694 | |
2695 | =head4 C<X> - list variables in current package | |
2696 | ||
b570d64b | 2697 | Since the C<V> command actually processes this, just change this to the |
69893cff RGS |
2698 | appropriate C<V> command and fall through. |
2699 | ||
69893cff RGS |
2700 | =head4 C<V> - list variables |
2701 | ||
b570d64b | 2702 | Uses C<dumpvar.pl> to dump out the current values for selected variables. |
69893cff RGS |
2703 | |
2704 | =cut | |
2705 | ||
1ce985d2 | 2706 | $obj->_handle_V_command_and_X_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2707 | |
2708 | =head4 C<x> - evaluate and print an expression | |
2709 | ||
2710 | Hands the expression off to C<DB::eval>, setting it up to print the value | |
2711 | via C<dumpvar.pl> instead of just printing it directly. | |
2712 | ||
2713 | =cut | |
2714 | ||
b8d11fe0 | 2715 | $obj->_handle_x_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2716 | |
2717 | =head4 C<m> - print methods | |
2718 | ||
2719 | Just uses C<DB::methods> to determine what methods are available. | |
2720 | ||
2721 | =cut | |
2722 | ||
321095c5 | 2723 | _DB__handle_m_command($obj); |
69893cff RGS |
2724 | |
2725 | =head4 C<f> - switch files | |
2726 | ||
2727 | =cut | |
2728 | ||
2a802473 | 2729 | _DB__handle_f_command(); |
69893cff RGS |
2730 | |
2731 | =head4 C<.> - return to last-executed line. | |
2732 | ||
2733 | We set C<$incr> to -1 to indicate that the debugger shouldn't move ahead, | |
2734 | and then we look up the line in the magical C<%dbline> hash. | |
2735 | ||
2736 | =cut | |
2737 | ||
3302c52a | 2738 | _DB__handle_dot_command($obj); |
69893cff RGS |
2739 | |
2740 | =head4 C<-> - back one window | |
2741 | ||
2742 | We change C<$start> to be one window back; if we go back past the first line, | |
2743 | we set it to be the first line. We ser C<$incr> to put us back at the | |
2744 | currently-executing line, and then put a C<l $start +> (list one window from | |
2745 | C<$start>) in C<$cmd> to be executed later. | |
2746 | ||
2747 | =cut | |
2748 | ||
2749 | # - - back a window. | |
d1450c23 | 2750 | $obj->_handle_dash_command; |
69893cff | 2751 | |
8481f647 | 2752 | =head3 PRE-580 COMMANDS VS. NEW COMMANDS: C<a, A, b, B, h, l, L, M, o, O, P, v, w, W, E<lt>, E<lt>E<lt>, E<0x7B>, E<0x7B>E<0x7B>> |
69893cff RGS |
2753 | |
2754 | In Perl 5.8.0, a realignment of the commands was done to fix up a number of | |
2755 | problems, most notably that the default case of several commands destroying | |
2756 | the user's work in setting watchpoints, actions, etc. We wanted, however, to | |
2757 | retain the old commands for those who were used to using them or who preferred | |
2758 | them. At this point, we check for the new commands and call C<cmd_wrapper> to | |
2759 | deal with them instead of processing them in-line. | |
2760 | ||
2761 | =cut | |
2762 | ||
2763 | # All of these commands were remapped in perl 5.8.0; | |
e22ea7cc | 2764 | # we send them off to the secondary dispatcher (see below). |
826b9a2e | 2765 | if (my ($cmd_letter, $my_arg) = $cmd =~ /\A([aAbBeEhilLMoOPvwW]\b|[<>\{]{1,2})\s*(.*)/so) { |
37a23b71 | 2766 | cmd_wrapper( $cmd_letter, $my_arg, $line ); |
e22ea7cc | 2767 | next CMD; |
826b9a2e | 2768 | } |
69893cff RGS |
2769 | |
2770 | =head4 C<y> - List lexicals in higher scope | |
2771 | ||
826b9a2e | 2772 | Uses C<PadWalker> to find the lexicals supplied as arguments in a scope |
69893cff RGS |
2773 | above the current one and then displays then using C<dumpvar.pl>. |
2774 | ||
2775 | =cut | |
2776 | ||
5c2b78e7 | 2777 | _DB__handle_y_command($obj); |
69893cff RGS |
2778 | |
2779 | =head3 COMMANDS NOT WORKING AFTER PROGRAM ENDS | |
2780 | ||
2781 | All of the commands below this point don't work after the program being | |
2782 | debugged has ended. All of them check to see if the program has ended; this | |
2783 | allows the commands to be relocated without worrying about a 'line of | |
2784 | demarcation' above which commands can be entered anytime, and below which | |
2785 | they can't. | |
2786 | ||
2787 | =head4 C<n> - single step, but don't trace down into subs | |
2788 | ||
2789 | Done by setting C<$single> to 2, which forces subs to execute straight through | |
be9a9b1d | 2790 | when entered (see C<DB::sub>). We also save the C<n> command in C<$laststep>, |
826b9a2e | 2791 | so a null command knows what to re-execute. |
69893cff RGS |
2792 | |
2793 | =cut | |
2794 | ||
e22ea7cc | 2795 | # n - next |
73c5e526 | 2796 | $obj->_handle_n_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2797 | |
2798 | =head4 C<s> - single-step, entering subs | |
2799 | ||
826b9a2e | 2800 | Sets C<$single> to 1, which causes C<DB::sub> to continue tracing inside |
69893cff RGS |
2801 | subs. Also saves C<s> as C<$lastcmd>. |
2802 | ||
2803 | =cut | |
2804 | ||
cb9d1513 | 2805 | $obj->_handle_s_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2806 | |
2807 | =head4 C<c> - run continuously, setting an optional breakpoint | |
2808 | ||
2809 | Most of the code for this command is taken up with locating the optional | |
2810 | breakpoint, which is either a subroutine name or a line number. We set | |
2811 | the appropriate one-time-break in C<@dbline> and then turn off single-stepping | |
2812 | in this and all call levels above this one. | |
2813 | ||
2814 | =cut | |
2815 | ||
2816 | # c - start continuous execution. | |
35cd713a | 2817 | _DB__handle_c_command($obj); |
69893cff RGS |
2818 | |
2819 | =head4 C<r> - return from a subroutine | |
2820 | ||
2821 | For C<r> to work properly, the debugger has to stop execution again | |
2822 | immediately after the return is executed. This is done by forcing | |
2823 | single-stepping to be on in the call level above the current one. If | |
2824 | we are printing return values when a C<r> is executed, set C<$doret> | |
2825 | appropriately, and force us out of the command loop. | |
2826 | ||
2827 | =cut | |
2828 | ||
2829 | # r - return from the current subroutine. | |
573b5003 | 2830 | $obj->_handle_r_command; |
69893cff | 2831 | |
69893cff RGS |
2832 | =head4 C<T> - stack trace |
2833 | ||
2834 | Just calls C<DB::print_trace>. | |
2835 | ||
2836 | =cut | |
2837 | ||
d4038e14 | 2838 | $obj->_handle_T_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2839 | |
2840 | =head4 C<w> - List window around current line. | |
2841 | ||
2842 | Just calls C<DB::cmd_w>. | |
2843 | ||
2844 | =cut | |
2845 | ||
b6e88520 | 2846 | $obj->_handle_w_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2847 | |
2848 | =head4 C<W> - watch-expression processing. | |
2849 | ||
b570d64b | 2850 | Just calls C<DB::cmd_W>. |
69893cff RGS |
2851 | |
2852 | =cut | |
2853 | ||
25953301 | 2854 | $obj->_handle_W_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2855 | |
2856 | =head4 C</> - search forward for a string in the source | |
2857 | ||
ef18ae63 | 2858 | We take the argument and treat it as a pattern. If it turns out to be a |
69893cff | 2859 | bad one, we return the error we got from trying to C<eval> it and exit. |
ef18ae63 | 2860 | If not, we create some code to do the search and C<eval> it so it can't |
69893cff RGS |
2861 | mess us up. |
2862 | ||
2863 | =cut | |
2864 | ||
a4d311a3 | 2865 | _DB__handle_forward_slash_command($obj); |
69893cff RGS |
2866 | |
2867 | =head4 C<?> - search backward for a string in the source | |
2868 | ||
2869 | Same as for C</>, except the loop runs backwards. | |
2870 | ||
2871 | =cut | |
2872 | ||
11f0f050 | 2873 | _DB__handle_question_mark_command($obj); |
69893cff RGS |
2874 | |
2875 | =head4 C<$rc> - Recall command | |
2876 | ||
2877 | Manages the commands in C<@hist> (which is created if C<Term::ReadLine> reports | |
2878 | that the terminal supports history). It find the the command required, puts it | |
2879 | into C<$cmd>, and redoes the loop to execute it. | |
2880 | ||
2881 | =cut | |
2882 | ||
e22ea7cc | 2883 | # $rc - recall command. |
14f38b27 | 2884 | $obj->_handle_rc_recall_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2885 | |
2886 | =head4 C<$sh$sh> - C<system()> command | |
2887 | ||
2888 | Calls the C<DB::system()> to handle the command. This keeps the C<STDIN> and | |
2889 | C<STDOUT> from getting messed up. | |
2890 | ||
2891 | =cut | |
2892 | ||
466f24c7 | 2893 | $obj->_handle_sh_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2894 | |
2895 | =head4 C<$rc I<pattern> $rc> - Search command history | |
2896 | ||
2897 | Another command to manipulate C<@hist>: this one searches it with a pattern. | |
be9a9b1d | 2898 | If a command is found, it is placed in C<$cmd> and executed via C<redo>. |
69893cff RGS |
2899 | |
2900 | =cut | |
2901 | ||
0d2c714c | 2902 | $obj->_handle_rc_search_history_command; |
69893cff | 2903 | |
ef18ae63 | 2904 | =head4 C<$sh> - Invoke a shell |
69893cff RGS |
2905 | |
2906 | Uses C<DB::system> to invoke a shell. | |
2907 | ||
2908 | =cut | |
2909 | ||
69893cff RGS |
2910 | =head4 C<$sh I<command>> - Force execution of a command in a shell |
2911 | ||
2912 | Like the above, but the command is passed to the shell. Again, we use | |
2913 | C<DB::system> to avoid problems with C<STDIN> and C<STDOUT>. | |
2914 | ||
69893cff RGS |
2915 | =head4 C<H> - display commands in history |
2916 | ||
2917 | Prints the contents of C<@hist> (if any). | |
2918 | ||
2919 | =cut | |
2920 | ||
0664c09a | 2921 | $obj->_handle_H_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2922 | |
2923 | =head4 C<man, doc, perldoc> - look up documentation | |
2924 | ||
2925 | Just calls C<runman()> to print the appropriate document. | |
2926 | ||
2927 | =cut | |
2928 | ||
c7b0c61d | 2929 | $obj->_handle_doc_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2930 | |
2931 | =head4 C<p> - print | |
2932 | ||
2933 | Builds a C<print EXPR> expression in the C<$cmd>; this will get executed at | |
2934 | the bottom of the loop. | |
2935 | ||
2936 | =cut | |
2937 | ||
b6aeebb8 | 2938 | $obj->_handle_p_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2939 | |
2940 | =head4 C<=> - define command alias | |
2941 | ||
2942 | Manipulates C<%alias> to add or list command aliases. | |
2943 | ||
2944 | =cut | |
2945 | ||
e22ea7cc | 2946 | # = - set up a command alias. |
bdb3f37d | 2947 | $obj->_handle_equal_sign_command; |
69893cff RGS |
2948 | |
2949 | =head4 C<source> - read commands from a file. | |
2950 | ||
2951 | Opens a lexical filehandle and stacks it on C<@cmdfhs>; C<DB::readline> will | |
2952 | pick it up. | |
2953 | ||
2954 | =cut | |
2955 | ||
2ef1dcdb | 2956 | $obj->_handle_source_command; |
69893cff | 2957 | |
d0ecd4f3 | 2958 | =head4 C<enable> C<disable> - enable or disable breakpoints |
e09195af | 2959 | |
d0ecd4f3 | 2960 | This enables or disables breakpoints. |
e09195af | 2961 | |
d0ecd4f3 SF |
2962 | =cut |
2963 | ||
2964 | $obj->_handle_enable_disable_commands; | |
e09195af | 2965 | |
69893cff RGS |
2966 | =head4 C<save> - send current history to a file |
2967 | ||
2968 | Takes the complete history, (not the shrunken version you see with C<H>), | |
2969 | and saves it to the given filename, so it can be replayed using C<source>. | |
2970 | ||
2971 | Note that all C<^(save|source)>'s are commented out with a view to minimise recursion. | |
2972 | ||
2973 | =cut | |
2974 | ||
2975 | # save source - write commands to a file for later use | |
8baafc8b | 2976 | $obj->_handle_save_command; |
69893cff | 2977 | |
7fddc82f RF |
2978 | =head4 C<R> - restart |
2979 | ||
ef18ae63 | 2980 | Restart the debugger session. |
7fddc82f RF |
2981 | |
2982 | =head4 C<rerun> - rerun the current session | |
2983 | ||
2984 | Return to any given position in the B<true>-history list | |
2985 | ||
2986 | =cut | |
2987 | ||
2988 | # R - restart execution. | |
2989 | # rerun - controlled restart execution. | |
5f166812 | 2990 | _DB__handle_restart_and_rerun_commands($obj); |
7fddc82f | 2991 | |
69893cff RGS |
2992 | =head4 C<|, ||> - pipe output through the pager. |
2993 | ||
be9a9b1d | 2994 | For C<|>, we save C<OUT> (the debugger's output filehandle) and C<STDOUT> |
69893cff RGS |
2995 | (the program's standard output). For C<||>, we only save C<OUT>. We open a |
2996 | pipe to the pager (restoring the output filehandles if this fails). If this | |
b570d64b | 2997 | is the C<|> command, we also set up a C<SIGPIPE> handler which will simply |
69893cff RGS |
2998 | set C<$signal>, sending us back into the debugger. |
2999 | ||
3000 | We then trim off the pipe symbols and C<redo> the command loop at the | |
3001 | C<PIPE> label, causing us to evaluate the command in C<$cmd> without | |
3002 | reading another. | |
3003 | ||
3004 | =cut | |
3005 | ||
3006 | # || - run command in the pager, with output to DB::OUT. | |
33f361f5 | 3007 | _DB__handle_run_command_in_pager_command($obj); |
69893cff RGS |
3008 | |
3009 | =head3 END OF COMMAND PARSING | |
3010 | ||
ff41e38d SF |
3011 | Anything left in C<$cmd> at this point is a Perl expression that we want to |
3012 | evaluate. We'll always evaluate in the user's context, and fully qualify | |
69893cff RGS |
3013 | any variables we might want to address in the C<DB> package. |
3014 | ||
3015 | =cut | |
3016 | ||
e22ea7cc | 3017 | } # PIPE: |
69893cff | 3018 | |
e22ea7cc | 3019 | # Make sure the flag that says "the debugger's running" is |
69893cff | 3020 | # still on, to make sure we get control again. |
e22ea7cc | 3021 | $evalarg = "\$^D = \$^D | \$DB::db_stop;\n$cmd"; |
69893cff RGS |
3022 | |
3023 | # Run *our* eval that executes in the caller's context. | |
7c54f46a | 3024 | DB::eval(); |
69893cff RGS |
3025 | |
3026 | # Turn off the one-time-dump stuff now. | |
e22ea7cc RF |
3027 | if ($onetimeDump) { |
3028 | $onetimeDump = undef; | |
69893cff | 3029 | $onetimedumpDepth = undef; |
e22ea7cc RF |
3030 | } |
3031 | elsif ( $term_pid == $$ ) { | |
8380a245 | 3032 | eval { # May run under miniperl, when not available... |
c7e68384 IZ |
3033 | STDOUT->flush(); |
3034 | STDERR->flush(); | |
8380a245 | 3035 | }; |
e22ea7cc | 3036 | |
69893cff | 3037 | # XXX If this is the master pid, print a newline. |
8380a245 | 3038 | print {$OUT} "\n"; |
e22ea7cc RF |
3039 | } |
3040 | } ## end while (($term || &setterm... | |
69893cff RGS |
3041 | |
3042 | =head3 POST-COMMAND PROCESSING | |
3043 | ||
3044 | After each command, we check to see if the command output was piped anywhere. | |
3045 | If so, we go through the necessary code to unhook the pipe and go back to | |
3046 | our standard filehandles for input and output. | |
3047 | ||
3048 | =cut | |
3049 | ||
e22ea7cc | 3050 | continue { # CMD: |
69893cff RGS |
3051 | |
3052 | # At the end of every command: | |
e22ea7cc RF |
3053 | if ($piped) { |
3054 | ||
69893cff | 3055 | # Unhook the pipe mechanism now. |
e22ea7cc RF |
3056 | if ( $pager =~ /^\|/ ) { |
3057 | ||
69893cff | 3058 | # No error from the child. |
e22ea7cc | 3059 | $? = 0; |
69893cff | 3060 | |
e22ea7cc RF |
3061 | # we cannot warn here: the handle is missing --tchrist |
3062 | close(OUT) || print SAVEOUT "\nCan't close DB::OUT\n"; | |
69893cff | 3063 | |
e22ea7cc | 3064 | # most of the $? crud was coping with broken cshisms |
69893cff | 3065 | # $? is explicitly set to 0, so this never runs. |
e22ea7cc | 3066 | if ($?) { |
1f874cb6 | 3067 | print SAVEOUT "Pager '$pager' failed: "; |
e22ea7cc RF |
3068 | if ( $? == -1 ) { |
3069 | print SAVEOUT "shell returned -1\n"; | |
3070 | } | |
3071 | elsif ( $? >> 8 ) { | |
3072 | print SAVEOUT ( $? & 127 ) | |
3073 | ? " (SIG#" . ( $? & 127 ) . ")" | |
3074 | : "", ( $? & 128 ) ? " -- core dumped" : "", "\n"; | |
3075 | } | |
3076 | else { | |
3077 | print SAVEOUT "status ", ( $? >> 8 ), "\n"; | |
3078 | } | |
69893cff RGS |
3079 | } ## end if ($?) |
3080 | ||
e22ea7cc | 3081 | # Reopen filehandle for our output (if we can) and |
69893cff | 3082 | # restore STDOUT (if we can). |
e22ea7cc RF |
3083 | open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" ) || &warn("Can't restore DB::OUT"); |
3084 | open( STDOUT, ">&SAVEOUT" ) | |
3085 | || &warn("Can't restore STDOUT"); | |
69893cff RGS |
3086 | |
3087 | # Turn off pipe exception handler if necessary. | |
e22ea7cc | 3088 | $SIG{PIPE} = "DEFAULT" if $SIG{PIPE} eq \&DB::catch; |
69893cff | 3089 | |
e22ea7cc RF |
3090 | # Will stop ignoring SIGPIPE if done like nohup(1) |
3091 | # does SIGINT but Perl doesn't give us a choice. | |
69893cff | 3092 | } ## end if ($pager =~ /^\|/) |
e22ea7cc RF |
3093 | else { |
3094 | ||
69893cff | 3095 | # Non-piped "pager". Just restore STDOUT. |
e22ea7cc RF |
3096 | open( OUT, ">&SAVEOUT" ) || &warn("Can't restore DB::OUT"); |
3097 | } | |
69893cff RGS |
3098 | |
3099 | # Close filehandle pager was using, restore the normal one | |
3100 | # if necessary, | |
3101 | close(SAVEOUT); | |
e22ea7cc | 3102 | select($selected), $selected = "" unless $selected eq ""; |
69893cff RGS |
3103 | |
3104 | # No pipes now. | |
e22ea7cc | 3105 | $piped = ""; |
69893cff | 3106 | } ## end if ($piped) |
e22ea7cc | 3107 | } # CMD: |
69893cff RGS |
3108 | |
3109 | =head3 COMMAND LOOP TERMINATION | |
3110 | ||
3111 | When commands have finished executing, we come here. If the user closed the | |
3112 | input filehandle, we turn on C<$fall_off_end> to emulate a C<q> command. We | |
3113 | evaluate any post-prompt items. We restore C<$@>, C<$!>, C<$^E>, C<$,>, C<$/>, | |
3114 | C<$\>, and C<$^W>, and return a null list as expected by the Perl interpreter. | |
3115 | The interpreter will then execute the next line and then return control to us | |
3116 | again. | |
3117 | ||
3118 | =cut | |
3119 | ||
3120 | # No more commands? Quit. | |
1f874cb6 | 3121 | $fall_off_end = 1 unless defined $cmd; # Emulate 'q' on EOF |
69893cff RGS |
3122 | |
3123 | # Evaluate post-prompt commands. | |
e22ea7cc | 3124 | foreach $evalarg (@$post) { |
7c54f46a | 3125 | DB::eval(); |
e22ea7cc RF |
3126 | } |
3127 | } # if ($single || $signal) | |
69893cff RGS |
3128 | |
3129 | # Put the user's globals back where you found them. | |
e22ea7cc | 3130 | ( $@, $!, $^E, $,, $/, $\, $^W ) = @saved; |
69893cff RGS |
3131 | (); |
3132 | } ## end sub DB | |
3133 | ||
22fc883d SF |
3134 | package DB::Obj; |
3135 | ||
3136 | sub new { | |
3137 | my $class = shift; | |
3138 | ||
3139 | my $self = bless {}, $class; | |
3140 | ||
3141 | $self->_init(@_); | |
3142 | ||
3143 | return $self; | |
3144 | } | |
3145 | ||
3146 | sub _init { | |
3147 | my ($self, $args) = @_; | |
3148 | ||
3149 | %{$self} = (%$self, %$args); | |
3150 | ||
3151 | return; | |
3152 | } | |
3153 | ||
3154 | { | |
3155 | no strict 'refs'; | |
a4d311a3 | 3156 | foreach my $slot_name (qw( |
33f361f5 | 3157 | after explicit_stop infix pat piped position prefix selected i_cmd |
a4d311a3 | 3158 | )) { |
22fc883d SF |
3159 | my $slot = $slot_name; |
3160 | *{$slot} = sub { | |
3161 | my $self = shift; | |
3162 | ||
3163 | if (@_) { | |
3164 | ${ $self->{$slot} } = shift; | |
3165 | } | |
3166 | ||
3167 | return ${ $self->{$slot} }; | |
3168 | }; | |
8def6eff SF |
3169 | |
3170 | *{"append_to_$slot"} = sub { | |
3171 | my $self = shift; | |
3172 | my $s = shift; | |
3173 | ||
3174 | return $self->$slot($self->$slot . $s); | |
3175 | }; | |
22fc883d SF |
3176 | } |
3177 | } | |
3178 | ||
3179 | sub _DB_on_init__initialize_globals | |
3180 | { | |
3181 | my $self = shift; | |
3182 | ||
3183 | # Check for whether we should be running continuously or not. | |
3184 | # _After_ the perl program is compiled, $single is set to 1: | |
ebd0282e | 3185 | if ( $single and not $second_time++ ) { |
22fc883d SF |
3186 | |
3187 | # Options say run non-stop. Run until we get an interrupt. | |
ebd0282e | 3188 | if ($runnonstop) { # Disable until signal |
22fc883d SF |
3189 | # If there's any call stack in place, turn off single |
3190 | # stepping into subs throughout the stack. | |
8ad70697 SF |
3191 | for my $i (0 .. $stack_depth) { |
3192 | $stack[ $i ] &= ~1; | |
22fc883d SF |
3193 | } |
3194 | ||
3195 | # And we are now no longer in single-step mode. | |
ebd0282e | 3196 | $single = 0; |
22fc883d SF |
3197 | |
3198 | # If we simply returned at this point, we wouldn't get | |
3199 | # the trace info. Fall on through. | |
3200 | # return; | |
3201 | } ## end if ($runnonstop) | |
3202 | ||
8ad70697 | 3203 | elsif ($ImmediateStop) { |
22fc883d SF |
3204 | |
3205 | # We are supposed to stop here; XXX probably a break. | |
8ad70697 | 3206 | $ImmediateStop = 0; # We've processed it; turn it off |
ebd0282e | 3207 | $signal = 1; # Simulate an interrupt to force |
22fc883d SF |
3208 | # us into the command loop |
3209 | } | |
3210 | } ## end if ($single and not $second_time... | |
3211 | ||
3212 | # If we're in single-step mode, or an interrupt (real or fake) | |
3213 | # has occurred, turn off non-stop mode. | |
ebd0282e | 3214 | $runnonstop = 0 if $single or $signal; |
22fc883d SF |
3215 | |
3216 | return; | |
3217 | } | |
3218 | ||
3219 | sub _DB__handle_watch_expressions | |
3220 | { | |
3221 | my $self = shift; | |
3222 | ||
931ac036 | 3223 | if ( $trace & 2 ) { |
8ad70697 SF |
3224 | for my $n (0 .. $#to_watch) { |
3225 | $evalarg = $to_watch[$n]; | |
3226 | local $onetimeDump; # Tell DB::eval() to not output results | |
22fc883d SF |
3227 | |
3228 | # Fix context DB::eval() wants to return an array, but | |
3229 | # we need a scalar here. | |
7c54f46a | 3230 | my ($val) = join( "', '", DB::eval() ); |
22fc883d SF |
3231 | $val = ( ( defined $val ) ? "'$val'" : 'undef' ); |
3232 | ||
3233 | # Did it change? | |
8ad70697 | 3234 | if ( $val ne $old_watch[$n] ) { |
22fc883d SF |
3235 | |
3236 | # Yep! Show the difference, and fake an interrupt. | |
ebd0282e | 3237 | $signal = 1; |
8ad70697 SF |
3238 | print {$OUT} <<EOP; |
3239 | Watchpoint $n:\t$to_watch[$n] changed: | |
3240 | old value:\t$old_watch[$n] | |
22fc883d SF |
3241 | new value:\t$val |
3242 | EOP | |
8ad70697 | 3243 | $old_watch[$n] = $val; |
22fc883d SF |
3244 | } ## end if ($val ne $old_watch... |
3245 | } ## end for my $n (0 .. | |
3246 | } ## end if ($trace & 2) | |
3247 | ||
3248 | return; | |
3249 | } | |
3250 | ||
ad46ac70 SF |
3251 | sub _my_print_lineinfo |
3252 | { | |
3253 | my ($self, $i, $incr_pos) = @_; | |
3254 | ||
18b5b545 | 3255 | if ($frame) { |
ad46ac70 | 3256 | # Print it indented if tracing is on. |
8ad70697 | 3257 | DB::print_lineinfo( ' ' x $stack_depth, |
ad46ac70 SF |
3258 | "$i:\t$DB::dbline[$i]" . $self->after ); |
3259 | } | |
3260 | else { | |
3261 | DB::depth_print_lineinfo($self->explicit_stop, $incr_pos); | |
3262 | } | |
3263 | } | |
3264 | ||
44a07e3e | 3265 | sub _curr_line { |
18b5b545 | 3266 | return $DB::dbline[$line]; |
44a07e3e SF |
3267 | } |
3268 | ||
22fc883d SF |
3269 | sub _DB__grab_control |
3270 | { | |
3271 | my $self = shift; | |
3272 | ||
3273 | # Yes, grab control. | |
7793e5c2 | 3274 | if ($slave_editor) { |
22fc883d SF |
3275 | |
3276 | # Tell the editor to update its position. | |
18b5b545 | 3277 | $self->position("\032\032${DB::filename}:$line:0\n"); |
22fc883d SF |
3278 | DB::print_lineinfo($self->position()); |
3279 | } | |
3280 | ||
3281 | =pod | |
3282 | ||
3283 | Special check: if we're in package C<DB::fake>, we've gone through the | |
3284 | C<END> block at least once. We set up everything so that we can continue | |
3285 | to enter commands and have a valid context to be in. | |
3286 | ||
3287 | =cut | |
3288 | ||
3289 | elsif ( $DB::package eq 'DB::fake' ) { | |
3290 | ||
3291 | # Fallen off the end already. | |
3292 | if (!$DB::term) { | |
3293 | DB::setterm(); | |
3294 | } | |
3295 | ||
3296 | DB::print_help(<<EOP); | |
3297 | Debugged program terminated. Use B<q> to quit or B<R> to restart, | |
3298 | use B<o> I<inhibit_exit> to avoid stopping after program termination, | |
3299 | B<h q>, B<h R> or B<h o> to get additional info. | |
3300 | EOP | |
3301 | ||
3302 | # Set the DB::eval context appropriately. | |
3303 | $DB::package = 'main'; | |
3304 | $DB::usercontext = DB::_calc_usercontext($DB::package); | |
3305 | } ## end elsif ($package eq 'DB::fake') | |
3306 | ||
3307 | =pod | |
3308 | ||
3309 | If the program hasn't finished executing, we scan forward to the | |
3310 | next executable line, print that out, build the prompt from the file and line | |
3311 | number information, and print that. | |
3312 | ||
3313 | =cut | |
3314 | ||
3315 | else { | |
3316 | ||
3317 | ||
3318 | # Still somewhere in the midst of execution. Set up the | |
3319 | # debugger prompt. | |
3320 | $DB::sub =~ s/\'/::/; # Swap Perl 4 package separators (') to | |
3321 | # Perl 5 ones (sorry, we don't print Klingon | |
3322 | #module names) | |
3323 | ||
3324 | $self->prefix($DB::sub =~ /::/ ? "" : ($DB::package . '::')); | |
8def6eff | 3325 | $self->append_to_prefix( "$DB::sub(${DB::filename}:" ); |
44a07e3e | 3326 | $self->after( $self->_curr_line =~ /\n$/ ? '' : "\n" ); |
22fc883d SF |
3327 | |
3328 | # Break up the prompt if it's really long. | |
3329 | if ( length($self->prefix()) > 30 ) { | |
18b5b545 | 3330 | $self->position($self->prefix . "$line):\n$line:\t" . $self->_curr_line . $self->after); |
22fc883d SF |
3331 | $self->prefix(""); |
3332 | $self->infix(":\t"); | |
3333 | } | |
3334 | else { | |
3335 | $self->infix("):\t"); | |
3336 | $self->position( | |
18b5b545 | 3337 | $self->prefix . $line. $self->infix |
44a07e3e | 3338 | . $self->_curr_line . $self->after |
22fc883d SF |
3339 | ); |
3340 | } | |
3341 | ||
3342 | # Print current line info, indenting if necessary. | |
18b5b545 | 3343 | $self->_my_print_lineinfo($line, $self->position); |
22fc883d | 3344 | |
44a07e3e SF |
3345 | my $i; |
3346 | my $line_i = sub { return $DB::dbline[$i]; }; | |
3347 | ||
22fc883d SF |
3348 | # Scan forward, stopping at either the end or the next |
3349 | # unbreakable line. | |
18b5b545 | 3350 | for ( $i = $line + 1 ; $i <= $DB::max && $line_i->() == 0 ; ++$i ) |
22fc883d SF |
3351 | { #{ vi |
3352 | ||
3353 | # Drop out on null statements, block closers, and comments. | |
44a07e3e | 3354 | last if $line_i->() =~ /^\s*[\;\}\#\n]/; |
22fc883d SF |
3355 | |
3356 | # Drop out if the user interrupted us. | |
ebd0282e | 3357 | last if $signal; |
22fc883d SF |
3358 | |
3359 | # Append a newline if the line doesn't have one. Can happen | |
3360 | # in eval'ed text, for instance. | |
44a07e3e | 3361 | $self->after( $line_i->() =~ /\n$/ ? '' : "\n" ); |
22fc883d SF |
3362 | |
3363 | # Next executable line. | |
44a07e3e | 3364 | my $incr_pos = $self->prefix . $i . $self->infix . $line_i->() |
22fc883d | 3365 | . $self->after; |
8def6eff | 3366 | $self->append_to_position($incr_pos); |
ad46ac70 | 3367 | $self->_my_print_lineinfo($i, $incr_pos); |
22fc883d SF |
3368 | } ## end for ($i = $line + 1 ; $i... |
3369 | } ## end else [ if ($slave_editor) | |
3370 | ||
3371 | return; | |
3372 | } | |
3373 | ||
174f9c5e SF |
3374 | sub _handle_t_command { |
3375 | if (my ($levels) = $DB::cmd =~ /\At(?:\s+(\d+))?\z/) { | |
931ac036 | 3376 | $trace ^= 1; |
174f9c5e | 3377 | local $\ = ''; |
8ad70697 SF |
3378 | $DB::trace_to_depth = $levels ? $stack_depth + $levels : 1E9; |
3379 | print {$OUT} "Trace = " | |
931ac036 | 3380 | . ( ( $trace & 1 ) |
174f9c5e SF |
3381 | ? ( $levels ? "on (to level $DB::trace_to_depth)" : "on" ) |
3382 | : "off" ) . "\n"; | |
3383 | next CMD; | |
3384 | } | |
3385 | ||
3386 | return; | |
3387 | } | |
3388 | ||
9d0b71b3 SF |
3389 | |
3390 | sub _handle_S_command { | |
3391 | if (my ($print_all_subs, $should_reverse, $Spatt) | |
3392 | = $DB::cmd =~ /\AS(\s+(!)?(.+))?\z/) { | |
3393 | # $Spatt is the pattern (if any) to use. | |
3394 | # Reverse scan? | |
3395 | my $Srev = defined $should_reverse; | |
3396 | # No args - print all subs. | |
3397 | my $Snocheck = !defined $print_all_subs; | |
3398 | ||
3399 | # Need to make these sane here. | |
3400 | local $\ = ''; | |
3401 | local $, = ''; | |
3402 | ||
3403 | # Search through the debugger's magical hash of subs. | |
3404 | # If $nocheck is true, just print the sub name. | |
3405 | # Otherwise, check it against the pattern. We then use | |
3406 | # the XOR trick to reverse the condition as required. | |
3407 | foreach $subname ( sort( keys %sub ) ) { | |
3408 | if ( $Snocheck or $Srev ^ ( $subname =~ /$Spatt/ ) ) { | |
3409 | print $OUT $subname, "\n"; | |
3410 | } | |
3411 | } | |
3412 | next CMD; | |
3413 | } | |
3414 | ||
3415 | return; | |
3416 | } | |
3417 | ||
1ce985d2 SF |
3418 | sub _handle_V_command_and_X_command { |
3419 | ||
3420 | $DB::cmd =~ s/^X\b/V $DB::package/; | |
3421 | ||
3422 | # Bare V commands get the currently-being-debugged package | |
3423 | # added. | |
3424 | if ($DB::cmd eq "V") { | |
3425 | $DB::cmd = "V $DB::package"; | |
3426 | } | |
3427 | ||
3428 | # V - show variables in package. | |
3429 | if (my ($new_packname, $new_vars_str) = | |
3430 | $DB::cmd =~ /\AV\b\s*(\S+)\s*(.*)/) { | |
3431 | ||
3432 | # Save the currently selected filehandle and | |
3433 | # force output to debugger's filehandle (dumpvar | |
3434 | # just does "print" for output). | |
3435 | my $savout = select($OUT); | |
3436 | ||
3437 | # Grab package name and variables to dump. | |
3438 | $packname = $new_packname; | |
3439 | my @vars = split( ' ', $new_vars_str ); | |
3440 | ||
3441 | # If main::dumpvar isn't here, get it. | |
3442 | do 'dumpvar.pl' || die $@ unless defined &main::dumpvar; | |
3443 | if ( defined &main::dumpvar ) { | |
3444 | ||
3445 | # We got it. Turn off subroutine entry/exit messages | |
3446 | # for the moment, along with return values. | |
3447 | local $frame = 0; | |
3448 | local $doret = -2; | |
3449 | ||
3450 | # must detect sigpipe failures - not catching | |
3451 | # then will cause the debugger to die. | |
3452 | eval { | |
3453 | &main::dumpvar( | |
3454 | $packname, | |
3455 | defined $option{dumpDepth} | |
3456 | ? $option{dumpDepth} | |
3457 | : -1, # assume -1 unless specified | |
3458 | @vars | |
3459 | ); | |
3460 | }; | |
3461 | ||
3462 | # The die doesn't need to include the $@, because | |
3463 | # it will automatically get propagated for us. | |
3464 | if ($@) { | |
3465 | die unless $@ =~ /dumpvar print failed/; | |
3466 | } | |
3467 | } ## end if (defined &main::dumpvar) | |
3468 | else { | |
3469 | ||
3470 | # Couldn't load dumpvar. | |
3471 | print $OUT "dumpvar.pl not available.\n"; | |
3472 | } | |
3473 | ||
3474 | # Restore the output filehandle, and go round again. | |
3475 | select($savout); | |
3476 | next CMD; | |
3477 | } | |
3478 | ||
3479 | return; | |
3480 | } | |
3481 | ||
d1450c23 SF |
3482 | sub _handle_dash_command { |
3483 | ||
3484 | if ($DB::cmd eq '-') { | |
3485 | ||
3486 | # back up by a window; go to 1 if back too far. | |
3487 | $start -= $incr + $window + 1; | |
3488 | $start = 1 if $start <= 0; | |
3489 | $incr = $window - 1; | |
3490 | ||
3491 | # Generate and execute a "l +" command (handled below). | |
3492 | $DB::cmd = 'l ' . ($start) . '+'; | |
3493 | } | |
3494 | return; | |
3495 | } | |
3496 | ||
cb9d1513 SF |
3497 | sub _n_or_s_commands_generic { |
3498 | my ($self, $new_val) = @_; | |
73c5e526 | 3499 | # n - next |
cb9d1513 | 3500 | next CMD if DB::_DB__is_finished(); |
73c5e526 | 3501 | |
cb9d1513 SF |
3502 | # Single step, but don't enter subs. |
3503 | $single = $new_val; | |
3504 | ||
3505 | # Save for empty command (repeat last). | |
3506 | $laststep = $DB::cmd; | |
3507 | last CMD; | |
3508 | } | |
73c5e526 | 3509 | |
cb9d1513 SF |
3510 | sub _n_or_s { |
3511 | my ($self, $letter, $new_val) = @_; | |
3512 | ||
3513 | if ($DB::cmd eq $letter) { | |
3514 | $self->_n_or_s_commands_generic($new_val); | |
73c5e526 | 3515 | } |
50a8a759 SF |
3516 | elsif ($DB::cmd =~ m#\A\Q$letter\E\b#) { |
3517 | $self->_n_or_s_and_arg_commands_generic($letter, $new_val); | |
3518 | } | |
73c5e526 SF |
3519 | |
3520 | return; | |
3521 | } | |
3522 | ||
cb9d1513 SF |
3523 | sub _handle_n_command { |
3524 | my $self = shift; | |
3525 | ||
3526 | return $self->_n_or_s('n', 2); | |
3527 | } | |
3528 | ||
3529 | sub _handle_s_command { | |
3530 | my $self = shift; | |
3531 | ||
3532 | return $self->_n_or_s('s', 1); | |
3533 | } | |
3534 | ||
573b5003 SF |
3535 | sub _handle_r_command { |
3536 | my $self = shift; | |
3537 | # r - return from the current subroutine. | |
3538 | if ($DB::cmd eq 'r') { | |
3539 | ||
3540 | # Can't do anything if the program's over. | |
3541 | next CMD if DB::_DB__is_finished(); | |
3542 | ||
3543 | # Turn on stack trace. | |
3544 | $stack[$stack_depth] |= 1; | |
3545 | ||
3546 | # Print return value unless the stack is empty. | |
3547 | $doret = $option{PrintRet} ? $stack_depth - 1 : -2; | |
3548 | last CMD; | |
3549 | } | |
3550 | ||
3551 | return; | |
3552 | } | |
3553 | ||
d4038e14 SF |
3554 | sub _handle_T_command { |
3555 | if ($DB::cmd eq 'T') { | |
3556 | DB::print_trace( $OUT, 1 ); # skip DB | |
3557 | next CMD; | |
3558 | } | |
3559 | ||
3560 | return; | |
3561 | } | |
3562 | ||
b6e88520 SF |
3563 | sub _handle_w_command { |
3564 | if (my ($arg) = $DB::cmd =~ /\Aw\b\s*(.*)/s) { | |
3565 | DB::cmd_w( 'w', $arg ); | |
3566 | next CMD; | |
3567 | } | |
3568 | ||
3569 | return; | |
3570 | } | |
3571 | ||
25953301 SF |
3572 | sub _handle_W_command { |
3573 | if (my ($arg) = $DB::cmd =~ /\AW\b\s*(.*)/s) { | |
3574 | DB::cmd_W( 'W', $arg ); | |
3575 | next CMD; | |
3576 | } | |
3577 | ||
3578 | return; | |
3579 | } | |
3580 | ||
14f38b27 SF |
3581 | sub _handle_rc_recall_command { |
3582 | my $self = shift; | |
3583 | ||
3584 | # $rc - recall command. | |
3585 | if (my ($minus, $arg) = $DB::cmd =~ m#\A$rc+\s*(-)?(\d+)?\z#) { | |
3586 | ||
3587 | # No arguments, take one thing off history. | |
3588 | pop(@hist) if length($DB::cmd) > 1; | |
3589 | ||
3590 | # Relative (- found)? | |
3591 | # Y - index back from most recent (by 1 if bare minus) | |
3592 | # N - go to that particular command slot or the last | |
3593 | # thing if nothing following. | |
3594 | my $new_i = $minus ? ( $#hist - ( $arg || 1 ) ) : ( $arg || $#hist ); | |
3595 | ||
3596 | $self->i_cmd($new_i); | |
3597 | ||
3598 | # Pick out the command desired. | |
3599 | $DB::cmd = $hist[$self->i_cmd]; | |
3600 | ||
3601 | # Print the command to be executed and restart the loop | |
3602 | # with that command in the buffer. | |
3603 | print {$OUT} $DB::cmd, "\n"; | |
3604 | redo CMD; | |
3605 | } | |
3606 | ||
3607 | return; | |
3608 | } | |
3609 | ||
0d2c714c SF |
3610 | sub _handle_rc_search_history_command { |
3611 | my $self = shift; | |
3612 | ||
3613 | # $rc pattern $rc - find a command in the history. | |
3614 | if (my ($arg) = $DB::cmd =~ /\A$rc([^$rc].*)\z/) { | |
3615 | ||
3616 | # Create the pattern to use. | |
3617 | my $pat = "^$arg"; | |
3618 | $self->pat($pat); | |
3619 | ||
3620 | # Toss off last entry if length is >1 (and it always is). | |
3621 | pop(@hist) if length($DB::cmd) > 1; | |
3622 | ||
3623 | my $i = $self->i_cmd; | |
3624 | ||
3625 | # Look backward through the history. | |
3626 | SEARCH_HIST: | |
3627 | for ( $i = $#hist ; $i ; --$i ) { | |
3628 | # Stop if we find it. | |
3629 | last SEARCH_HIST if $hist[$i] =~ /$pat/; | |
3630 | } | |
3631 | ||
3632 | $self->i_cmd($i); | |
3633 | ||
3634 | if ( !$self->i_cmd ) { | |
3635 | ||
3636 | # Never found it. | |
3637 | print $OUT "No such command!\n\n"; | |
3638 | next CMD; | |
3639 | } | |
3640 | ||
3641 | # Found it. Put it in the buffer, print it, and process it. | |
3642 | $DB::cmd = $hist[$self->i_cmd]; | |
3643 | print $OUT $DB::cmd, "\n"; | |
3644 | redo CMD; | |
3645 | } | |
b6aeebb8 SF |
3646 | |
3647 | return; | |
0d2c714c SF |
3648 | } |
3649 | ||
0664c09a SF |
3650 | sub _handle_H_command { |
3651 | my $self = shift; | |
3652 | ||
3653 | if ($DB::cmd =~ /\AH\b\s*\*/) { | |
3654 | @hist = @truehist = (); | |
3655 | print $OUT "History cleansed\n"; | |
3656 | next CMD; | |
3657 | } | |
3658 | ||
3659 | if (my ($num) | |
3660 | = $DB::cmd =~ /\AH\b\s*(?:-(\d+))?/) { | |
3661 | ||
3662 | # Anything other than negative numbers is ignored by | |
3663 | # the (incorrect) pattern, so this test does nothing. | |
3664 | $end = $num ? ( $#hist - $num ) : 0; | |
3665 | ||
3666 | # Set to the minimum if less than zero. | |
3667 | $hist = 0 if $hist < 0; | |
3668 | ||
3669 | # Start at the end of the array. | |
3670 | # Stay in while we're still above the ending value. | |
3671 | # Tick back by one each time around the loop. | |
3672 | my $i; | |
3673 | ||
3674 | for ( $i = $#hist ; $i > $end ; $i-- ) { | |
3675 | ||
3676 | # Print the command unless it has no arguments. | |
3677 | print $OUT "$i: ", $hist[$i], "\n" | |
3678 | unless $hist[$i] =~ /^.?$/; | |
3679 | } | |
3680 | ||
3681 | $self->i_cmd($i); | |
3682 | ||
3683 | next CMD; | |
3684 | } | |
3685 | ||
3686 | return; | |
3687 | } | |
3688 | ||
c7b0c61d SF |
3689 | sub _handle_doc_command { |
3690 | my $self = shift; | |
3691 | ||
3692 | # man, perldoc, doc - show manual pages. | |
3693 | if (my ($man_page) | |
3694 | = $DB::cmd =~ /\A(?:man|(?:perl)?doc)\b(?:\s+([^(]*))?\z/) { | |
3695 | runman($man_page); | |
3696 | next CMD; | |
3697 | } | |
3698 | ||
3699 | return; | |
3700 | } | |
3701 | ||
b6aeebb8 SF |
3702 | sub _handle_p_command { |
3703 | my $self = shift; | |
3704 | ||
3705 | my $print_cmd = 'print {$DB::OUT} '; | |
3706 | # p - print (no args): print $_. | |
3707 | if ($DB::cmd eq 'p') { | |
3708 | $DB::cmd = $print_cmd . '$_'; | |
3709 | } | |
3710 | ||
3711 | # p - print the given expression. | |
3712 | $DB::cmd =~ s/\Ap\b/$print_cmd /; | |
3713 | ||
3714 | return; | |
3715 | } | |
3716 | ||
bdb3f37d SF |
3717 | sub _handle_equal_sign_command { |
3718 | my $self = shift; | |
3719 | ||
3720 | if ($DB::cmd =~ s/\A=\s*//) { | |
3721 | my @keys; | |
3722 | if ( length $DB::cmd == 0 ) { | |
3723 | ||
3724 | # No args, get current aliases. | |
3725 | @keys = sort keys %alias; | |
3726 | } | |
3727 | elsif ( my ( $k, $v ) = ( $DB::cmd =~ /^(\S+)\s+(\S.*)/ ) ) { | |
3728 | ||
3729 | # Creating a new alias. $k is alias name, $v is | |
3730 | # alias value. | |
3731 | ||
3732 | # can't use $_ or kill //g state | |
3733 | for my $x ( $k, $v ) { | |
3734 | ||
3735 | # Escape "alarm" characters. | |
3736 | $x =~ s/\a/\\a/g; | |
3737 | } | |
3738 | ||
3739 | # Substitute key for value, using alarm chars | |
3740 | # as separators (which is why we escaped them in | |
3741 | # the command). | |
3742 | $alias{$k} = "s\a$k\a$v\a"; | |
3743 | ||
3744 | # Turn off standard warn and die behavior. | |
3745 | local $SIG{__DIE__}; | |
3746 | local $SIG{__WARN__}; | |
3747 | ||
3748 | # Is it valid Perl? | |
3749 | unless ( eval "sub { s\a$k\a$v\a }; 1" ) { | |
3750 | ||
3751 | # Nope. Bad alias. Say so and get out. | |
3752 | print $OUT "Can't alias $k to $v: $@\n"; | |
3753 | delete $alias{$k}; | |
3754 | next CMD; | |
3755 | } | |
3756 | ||
3757 | # We'll only list the new one. | |
3758 | @keys = ($k); | |
3759 | } ## end elsif (my ($k, $v) = ($DB::cmd... | |
3760 | ||
3761 | # The argument is the alias to list. | |
3762 | else { | |
3763 | @keys = ($DB::cmd); | |
3764 | } | |
3765 | ||
3766 | # List aliases. | |
3767 | for my $k (@keys) { | |
3768 | ||
3769 | # Messy metaquoting: Trim the substitution code off. | |
3770 | # We use control-G as the delimiter because it's not | |
3771 | # likely to appear in the alias. | |
3772 | if ( ( my $v = $alias{$k} ) =~ s\as\a$k\a(.*)\a$\a1\a ) { | |
3773 | ||
3774 | # Print the alias. | |
3775 | print $OUT "$k\t= $1\n"; | |
3776 | } | |
3777 | elsif ( defined $alias{$k} ) { | |
3778 | ||
3779 | # Couldn't trim it off; just print the alias code. | |
3780 | print $OUT "$k\t$alias{$k}\n"; | |
3781 | } | |
3782 | else { | |
3783 | ||
3784 | # No such, dude. | |
3785 | print "No alias for $k\n"; | |
3786 | } | |
3787 | } ## end for my $k (@keys) | |
3788 | next CMD; | |
3789 | } | |
3790 | ||
3791 | return; | |
3792 | } | |
3793 | ||
2ef1dcdb SF |
3794 | sub _handle_source_command { |
3795 | my $self = shift; | |
3796 | ||
3797 | # source - read commands from a file (or pipe!) and execute. | |
3798 | if (my ($sourced_fn) = $DB::cmd =~ /\Asource\s+(.*\S)/) { | |
3799 | if ( open my $fh, $sourced_fn ) { | |
3800 | ||
3801 | # Opened OK; stick it in the list of file handles. | |
3802 | push @cmdfhs, $fh; | |
3803 | } | |
3804 | else { | |
3805 | ||
3806 | # Couldn't open it. | |
3807 | DB::warn("Can't execute '$sourced_fn': $!\n"); | |
3808 | } | |
3809 | next CMD; | |
3810 | } | |
3811 | ||
3812 | return; | |
3813 | } | |
3814 | ||
d0ecd4f3 SF |
3815 | sub _handle_enable_disable_commands { |
3816 | my $self = shift; | |
3817 | ||
3818 | if (my ($which_cmd, $position) | |
3819 | = $DB::cmd =~ /\A(enable|disable)\s+(\S+)\s*\z/) { | |
3820 | ||
3821 | my ($fn, $line_num); | |
3822 | if ($position =~ m{\A\d+\z}) | |
3823 | { | |
3824 | $fn = $DB::filename; | |
3825 | $line_num = $position; | |
3826 | } | |
3827 | elsif (my ($new_fn, $new_line_num) | |
3828 | = $position =~ m{\A(.*):(\d+)\z}) { | |
3829 | ($fn, $line_num) = ($new_fn, $new_line_num); | |
3830 | } | |
3831 | else | |
3832 | { | |
3833 | DB::warn("Wrong spec for enable/disable argument.\n"); | |
3834 | } | |
3835 | ||
3836 | if (defined($fn)) { | |
3837 | if (DB::_has_breakpoint_data_ref($fn, $line_num)) { | |
3838 | DB::_set_breakpoint_enabled_status($fn, $line_num, | |
3839 | ($which_cmd eq 'enable' ? 1 : '') | |
3840 | ); | |
3841 | } | |
3842 | else { | |
3843 | DB::warn("No breakpoint set at ${fn}:${line_num}\n"); | |
3844 | } | |
3845 |