230 lines
9.2 KiB
Plaintext
230 lines
9.2 KiB
Plaintext
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README for gdb/guile
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====================
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This file contains important notes for gdb/guile developers.
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["gdb/guile" refers to the directory you found this file in]
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Nomenclature:
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In the implementation we use "Scheme" or "Guile" depending on context.
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And sometimes it doesn't matter.
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Guile is Scheme, and for the most part this is what we present to the user
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as well. However, to highlight the fact that it is Guile, the GDB commands
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that invoke Scheme functions are named "guile" and "guile-repl",
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abbreviated "gu" and "gr" respectively.
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Co-existence with Python:
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Keep the user interfaces reasonably consistent, but don't shy away from
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providing a clearer (or more Scheme-friendly/consistent) user interface
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where appropriate.
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Additions to Python support or Scheme support don't require corresponding
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changes in the other scripting language.
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Scheme-wrapped breakpoints are created lazily so that if the user
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doesn't use Scheme s/he doesn't pay any cost.
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Importing the gdb module into Scheme:
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To import the gdb module:
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(gdb) guile (use-modules (gdb))
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If you want to add a prefix to gdb module symbols:
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(gdb) guile (use-modules ((gdb) #:renamer (symbol-prefix-proc 'gdb:)))
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This gives every symbol a "gdb:" prefix which is a common convention.
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OTOH it's more to type.
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Implementation/Hacking notes:
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Don't use scm_is_false.
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For this C function, () == #f (a la Lisp) and it's not clear how treating
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them as equivalent for truth values will affect the GDB interface.
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Until the effect is clear avoid them.
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Instead use gdbscm_is_false, gdbscm_is_true, gdbscm_is_bool.
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There are macros in guile-internal.h to enforce this.
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Use gdbscm_foo as the name of functions that implement Scheme procedures
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to provide consistent naming in error messages. The user can see "gdbscm"
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in the name and immediately know where the function came from.
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All smobs contain gdb_smob or chained_gdb_smob as the first member.
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This provides a mechanism for extending them in the Scheme side without
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tying GDB to the details.
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The lifetime of a smob, AIUI, is decided by the containing SCM.
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When there is no longer a reference to the containing SCM then the
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smob can be GC'd. Objects that have references from outside of Scheme,
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e.g., breakpoints, need to be protected from GC.
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Don't do something that can cause a Scheme exception inside a TRY_CATCH,
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and, in code that can be called from Scheme, don't do something that can
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cause a GDB exception outside a TRY_CATCH.
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This makes the code a little tricky to write sometimes, but it is a
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rule imposed by the programming environment. Bugs often happen because
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this rule is broken. Learn it, follow it.
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Coding style notes:
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- If you find violations to these rules, let's fix the code.
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Some attempt has been made to be consistent, but it's early.
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Over time we want things to be more consistent, not less.
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- None of this really needs to be read. Instead, do not be creative:
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Monkey-See-Monkey-Do hacking should generally Just Work.
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- Absence of the word "typically" means the rule is reasonably strict.
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- The gdbscm_initialize_foo function (e.g., gdbscm_initialize_values)
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is the last thing to appear in the file, immediately preceded by any
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tables of exported variables and functions.
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- In addition to these of course, follow GDB coding conventions.
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General naming rules:
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- The word "object" absent any modifier (like "GOOPS object") means a
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Scheme object (of any type), and is never used otherwise.
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If you want to refer to, e.g., a GOOPS object, say "GOOPS object".
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- Do not begin any function, global variable, etc. name with scm_.
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That's what the Guile implementation uses.
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(kinda obvious, just being complete).
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- The word "invalid" carries a specific connotation. Try not to use it
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in a different way. It means the underlying GDB object has disappeared.
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For example, a <gdb:objfile> smob becomes "invalid" when the underlying
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objfile is removed from GDB.
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- We typically use the word "exception" to mean Scheme exceptions,
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and we typically use the word "error" to mean GDB errors.
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Comments:
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- function comments for functions implementing Scheme procedures begin with
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a description of the Scheme usage. Example:
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/* (gsmob-aux gsmob) -> object */
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- the following comment appears after the copyright header:
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/* See README file in this directory for implementation notes, coding
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conventions, et.al. */
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Smob naming:
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- gdb smobs are named, internally, "gdb:foo"
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- in Guile they become <gdb:foo>, that is the convention for naming classes
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and smobs have rudimentary GOOPS support (they can't be inherited from,
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but generics can work with them)
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- in comments use the Guile naming for smobs,
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i.e., <gdb:foo> instead of gdb:foo.
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Note: This only applies to smobs. Exceptions are also named gdb:foo,
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but since they are not "classes" they are not wrapped in <>.
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- smob names are stored in a global, and for simplicity we pass this
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global as the "expected type" parameter to SCM_ASSERT_TYPE, thus in
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this instance smob types are printed without the <>.
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[Hmmm, this rule seems dated now. Plus I18N rules in GDB are not always
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clear, sometimes we pass the smob name through _(), however it's not
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clear that's actually a good idea.]
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Type naming:
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- smob structs are typedefs named foo_smob
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Variable naming:
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- "scm" by itself is reserved for arbitrary Scheme objects
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- variables that are pointers to smob structs are named <char>_smob or
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<char><char>_smob, e.g., f_smob for a pointer to a frame smob
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- variables that are gdb smob objects are typically named <char>_scm or
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<char><char>_scm, e.g., f_scm for a <gdb:frame> object
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- the name of the first argument for method-like functions is "self"
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Function naming:
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General:
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- all non-static functions have a prefix,
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either gdbscm_ or <char><char>scm_ [or <char><char><char>scm_]
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- all functions that implement Scheme procedures have a gdbscm_ prefix,
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this is for consistency and readability of Scheme exception text
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- static functions typically have a prefix
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- the prefix is typically <char><char>scm_ where the first two letters
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are unique to the file or class the function works with.
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E.g., the scm-arch.c prefix is arscm_.
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This follows something used in gdb/python in some places,
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we make it formal.
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- if the function is of a general nature, or no other prefix works,
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use gdbscm_
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Conversion functions:
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- the from/to in function names follows from libguile's existing style
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- conversions from/to Scheme objects are named:
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prefix_scm_from_foo: converts from foo to scm
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prefix_scm_to_foo: converts from scm to foo
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Exception handling:
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- functions that may throw a Scheme exception have an _unsafe suffix
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- This does not apply to functions that implement Scheme procedures.
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- This does not apply to functions whose explicit job is to throw
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an exception. Adding _unsafe to gdbscm_throw is kinda superfluous. :-)
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- functions that can throw a GDB error aren't adorned with _unsafe
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- "_safe" in a function name means it will never throw an exception
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- Generally unnecessary, since the convention is to mark the ones that
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*can* throw an exception. But sometimes it's useful to highlight the
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fact that the function is safe to call without worrying about exception
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handling.
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- except for functions that implement Scheme procedures, all functions
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that can throw exceptions (GDB or Scheme) say so in their function comment
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- functions that don't throw an exception, but still need to indicate to
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the caller that one happened (i.e., "safe" functions), either return
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a <gdb:exception> smob as a result or pass it back via a parameter.
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For this reason don't pass back <gdb:exception> smobs for any other
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reason. There are functions that explicitly construct <gdb:exception>
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smobs. They're obviously the, umm, exception.
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Internal functions:
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- internal Scheme functions begin with "%" and are intentionally undocumented
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in the manual
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Standard Guile/Scheme conventions:
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- predicates that return Scheme values have the suffix _p and have suffix "?"
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in the Scheme procedure's name
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- functions that implement Scheme procedures that modify state have the
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suffix _x and have suffix "!" in the Scheme procedure's name
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- object predicates that return a C truth value are named prefix_is_foo
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- functions that set something have "set" at the front (except for a prefix)
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write this: gdbscm_set_gsmob_aux_x implements (set-gsmob-aux! ...)
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not this: gdbscm_gsmob_set_aux_x implements (gsmob-set-aux! ...)
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Doc strings:
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- there are lots of existing examples, they should be pretty consistent,
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use them as boilerplate/examples
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- begin with a one line summary (can be multiple lines if necessary)
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- if the arguments need description:
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- blank line
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- " Arguments: arg1 arg2"
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" arg1: blah ..."
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" arg2: blah ..."
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- if the result requires more description:
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- blank line
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- " Returns:"
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" Blah ..."
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- if it's important to list exceptions that can be thrown:
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- blank line
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- " Throws:"
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" exception-name: blah ..."
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