4de283e4b5
Andreas Schwab and John Baldwin pointed out some bugs in the header sorting patch; and I noticed that the output was not correct when limited to a subset of files (a bug in my script). So, I'm reverting the patch. I may try again after fixing the issues pointed out. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-04-05 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> Revert the header-sorting patch. * ft32-tdep.c: Revert. * frv-tdep.c: Revert. * frv-linux-tdep.c: Revert. * frame.c: Revert. * frame-unwind.c: Revert. * frame-base.c: Revert. * fork-child.c: Revert. * findvar.c: Revert. * findcmd.c: Revert. * filesystem.c: Revert. * filename-seen-cache.h: Revert. * filename-seen-cache.c: Revert. * fbsd-tdep.c: Revert. * fbsd-nat.h: Revert. * fbsd-nat.c: Revert. * f-valprint.c: Revert. * f-typeprint.c: Revert. * f-lang.c: Revert. * extension.h: Revert. * extension.c: Revert. * extension-priv.h: Revert. * expprint.c: Revert. * exec.h: Revert. * exec.c: Revert. * exceptions.c: Revert. * event-top.c: Revert. * event-loop.c: Revert. * eval.c: Revert. * elfread.c: Revert. * dwarf2read.h: Revert. * dwarf2read.c: Revert. * dwarf2loc.c: Revert. * dwarf2expr.h: Revert. * dwarf2expr.c: Revert. * dwarf2-frame.c: Revert. * dwarf2-frame-tailcall.c: Revert. * dwarf-index-write.h: Revert. * dwarf-index-write.c: Revert. * dwarf-index-common.c: Revert. * dwarf-index-cache.h: Revert. * dwarf-index-cache.c: Revert. * dummy-frame.c: Revert. * dtrace-probe.c: Revert. * disasm.h: Revert. * disasm.c: Revert. * disasm-selftests.c: Revert. * dictionary.c: Revert. * dicos-tdep.c: Revert. * demangle.c: Revert. * dcache.h: Revert. * dcache.c: Revert. * darwin-nat.h: Revert. * darwin-nat.c: Revert. * darwin-nat-info.c: Revert. * d-valprint.c: Revert. * d-namespace.c: Revert. * d-lang.c: Revert. * ctf.c: Revert. * csky-tdep.c: Revert. * csky-linux-tdep.c: Revert. * cris-tdep.c: Revert. * cris-linux-tdep.c: Revert. * cp-valprint.c: Revert. * cp-support.c: Revert. * cp-namespace.c: Revert. * cp-abi.c: Revert. * corelow.c: Revert. * corefile.c: Revert. * continuations.c: Revert. * completer.h: Revert. * completer.c: Revert. * complaints.c: Revert. * coffread.c: Revert. * coff-pe-read.c: Revert. * cli-out.h: Revert. * cli-out.c: Revert. * charset.c: Revert. * c-varobj.c: Revert. * c-valprint.c: Revert. * c-typeprint.c: Revert. * c-lang.c: Revert. * buildsym.c: Revert. * buildsym-legacy.c: Revert. * build-id.h: Revert. * build-id.c: Revert. * btrace.c: Revert. * bsd-uthread.c: Revert. * breakpoint.h: Revert. * breakpoint.c: Revert. * break-catch-throw.c: Revert. * break-catch-syscall.c: Revert. * break-catch-sig.c: Revert. * blockframe.c: Revert. * block.c: Revert. * bfin-tdep.c: Revert. * bfin-linux-tdep.c: Revert. * bfd-target.c: Revert. * bcache.c: Revert. * ax-general.c: Revert. * ax-gdb.h: Revert. * ax-gdb.c: Revert. * avr-tdep.c: Revert. * auxv.c: Revert. * auto-load.c: Revert. * arm-wince-tdep.c: Revert. * arm-tdep.c: Revert. * arm-symbian-tdep.c: Revert. * arm-pikeos-tdep.c: Revert. * arm-obsd-tdep.c: Revert. * arm-nbsd-tdep.c: Revert. * arm-nbsd-nat.c: Revert. * arm-linux-tdep.c: Revert. * arm-linux-nat.c: Revert. * arm-fbsd-tdep.c: Revert. * arm-fbsd-nat.c: Revert. * arm-bsd-tdep.c: Revert. * arch-utils.c: Revert. * arc-tdep.c: Revert. * arc-newlib-tdep.c: Revert. * annotate.h: Revert. * annotate.c: Revert. * amd64-windows-tdep.c: Revert. * amd64-windows-nat.c: Revert. * amd64-tdep.c: Revert. * amd64-sol2-tdep.c: Revert. * amd64-obsd-tdep.c: Revert. * amd64-obsd-nat.c: Revert. * amd64-nbsd-tdep.c: Revert. * amd64-nbsd-nat.c: Revert. * amd64-nat.c: Revert. * amd64-linux-tdep.c: Revert. * amd64-linux-nat.c: Revert. * amd64-fbsd-tdep.c: Revert. * amd64-fbsd-nat.c: Revert. * amd64-dicos-tdep.c: Revert. * amd64-darwin-tdep.c: Revert. * amd64-bsd-nat.c: Revert. * alpha-tdep.c: Revert. * alpha-obsd-tdep.c: Revert. * alpha-nbsd-tdep.c: Revert. * alpha-mdebug-tdep.c: Revert. * alpha-linux-tdep.c: Revert. * alpha-linux-nat.c: Revert. * alpha-bsd-tdep.c: Revert. * alpha-bsd-nat.c: Revert. * aix-thread.c: Revert. * agent.c: Revert. * addrmap.c: Revert. * ada-varobj.c: Revert. * ada-valprint.c: Revert. * ada-typeprint.c: Revert. * ada-tasks.c: Revert. * ada-lang.c: Revert. * aarch64-tdep.c: Revert. * aarch64-ravenscar-thread.c: Revert. * aarch64-newlib-tdep.c: Revert. * aarch64-linux-tdep.c: Revert. * aarch64-linux-nat.c: Revert. * aarch64-fbsd-tdep.c: Revert. * aarch64-fbsd-nat.c: Revert. * aarch32-linux-nat.c: Revert.
614 lines
23 KiB
C++
614 lines
23 KiB
C++
/* Header for GDB line completion.
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Copyright (C) 2000-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
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(at your option) any later version.
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This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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GNU General Public License for more details.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
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#if !defined (COMPLETER_H)
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#define COMPLETER_H 1
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#include "common/gdb_vecs.h"
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#include "command.h"
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/* Types of functions in struct match_list_displayer. */
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struct match_list_displayer;
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typedef void mld_crlf_ftype (const struct match_list_displayer *);
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typedef void mld_putch_ftype (const struct match_list_displayer *, int);
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typedef void mld_puts_ftype (const struct match_list_displayer *,
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const char *);
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typedef void mld_flush_ftype (const struct match_list_displayer *);
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typedef void mld_erase_entire_line_ftype (const struct match_list_displayer *);
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typedef void mld_beep_ftype (const struct match_list_displayer *);
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typedef int mld_read_key_ftype (const struct match_list_displayer *);
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/* Interface between CLI/TUI and gdb_match_list_displayer. */
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struct match_list_displayer
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{
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/* The screen dimensions to work with when displaying matches. */
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int height, width;
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/* Print cr,lf. */
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mld_crlf_ftype *crlf;
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/* Not "putc" to avoid issues where it is a stdio macro. Sigh. */
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mld_putch_ftype *putch;
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/* Print a string. */
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mld_puts_ftype *puts;
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/* Flush all accumulated output. */
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mld_flush_ftype *flush;
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/* Erase the currently line on the terminal (but don't discard any text the
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user has entered, readline may shortly re-print it). */
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mld_erase_entire_line_ftype *erase_entire_line;
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/* Ring the bell. */
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mld_beep_ftype *beep;
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/* Read one key. */
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mld_read_key_ftype *read_key;
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};
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/* A list of completion candidates. Each element is a malloc string,
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because ownership of the strings is transferred to readline, which
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calls free on each element. */
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typedef std::vector<gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char>> completion_list;
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/* The result of a successful completion match. When doing symbol
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comparison, we use the symbol search name for the symbol name match
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check, but the matched name that is shown to the user may be
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different. For example, Ada uses encoded names for lookup, but
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then wants to decode the symbol name to show to the user, and also
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in some cases wrap the matched name in "<sym>" (meaning we can't
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always use the symbol's print name). */
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class completion_match
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{
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public:
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/* Get the completion match result. See m_match/m_storage's
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descriptions. */
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const char *match ()
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{ return m_match; }
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/* Set the completion match result. See m_match/m_storage's
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descriptions. */
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void set_match (const char *match)
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{ m_match = match; }
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/* Get temporary storage for generating a match result, dynamically.
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The built string is only good until the next clear() call. I.e.,
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good until the next symbol comparison. */
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std::string &storage ()
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{ return m_storage; }
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/* Prepare for another completion matching sequence. */
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void clear ()
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{
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m_match = NULL;
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m_storage.clear ();
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}
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private:
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/* The completion match result. This can either be a pointer into
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M_STORAGE string, or it can be a pointer into the some other
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string that outlives the completion matching sequence (usually, a
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pointer to a symbol's name). */
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const char *m_match;
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/* Storage a symbol comparison routine can use for generating a
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match result, dynamically. The built string is only good until
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the next clear() call. I.e., good until the next symbol
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comparison. */
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std::string m_storage;
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};
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/* The result of a successful completion match, but for least common
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denominator (LCD) computation. Some completers provide matches
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that don't start with the completion "word". E.g., completing on
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"b push_ba" on a C++ program usually completes to
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std::vector<...>::push_back, std::string::push_back etc. In such
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case, the symbol comparison routine will set the LCD match to point
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into the "push_back" substring within the symbol's name string.
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Also, in some cases, the symbol comparison routine will want to
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ignore parts of the symbol name for LCD purposes, such as for
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example symbols with abi tags in C++. In such cases, the symbol
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comparison routine will set MARK_IGNORED_RANGE to mark the ignored
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substrings of the matched string. The resulting LCD string with
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the ignored parts stripped out is computed at the end of a
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completion match sequence iff we had a positive match. */
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class completion_match_for_lcd
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{
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public:
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/* Get the resulting LCD, after a successful match. */
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const char *match ()
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{ return m_match; }
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/* Set the match for LCD. See m_match's description. */
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void set_match (const char *match)
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{ m_match = match; }
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/* Mark the range between [BEGIN, END) as ignored. */
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void mark_ignored_range (const char *begin, const char *end)
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{ m_ignored_ranges.emplace_back (begin, end); }
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/* Get the resulting LCD, after a successful match. If there are
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ignored ranges, then this builds a new string with the ignored
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parts removed (and stores it internally). As such, the result of
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this call is only good for the current completion match
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sequence. */
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const char *finish ()
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{
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if (m_ignored_ranges.empty ())
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return m_match;
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else
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{
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m_finished_storage.clear ();
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const char *prev = m_match;
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for (const auto &range : m_ignored_ranges)
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{
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m_finished_storage.append (prev, range.first);
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prev = range.second;
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}
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m_finished_storage.append (prev);
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return m_finished_storage.c_str ();
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}
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}
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/* Prepare for another completion matching sequence. */
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void clear ()
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{
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m_match = NULL;
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m_ignored_ranges.clear ();
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}
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private:
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/* The completion match result for LCD. This is usually either a
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pointer into to a substring within a symbol's name, or to the
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storage of the pairing completion_match object. */
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const char *m_match;
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/* The ignored substring ranges within M_MATCH. E.g., if we were
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looking for completion matches for C++ functions starting with
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"functio"
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and successfully match:
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"function[abi:cxx11](int)"
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the ignored ranges vector will contain an entry that delimits the
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"[abi:cxx11]" substring, such that calling finish() results in:
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"function(int)"
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*/
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std::vector<std::pair<const char *, const char *>> m_ignored_ranges;
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/* Storage used by the finish() method, if it has to compute a new
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string. */
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std::string m_finished_storage;
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};
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/* Convenience aggregate holding info returned by the symbol name
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matching routines (see symbol_name_matcher_ftype). */
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struct completion_match_result
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{
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/* The completion match candidate. */
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completion_match match;
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/* The completion match, for LCD computation purposes. */
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completion_match_for_lcd match_for_lcd;
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/* Convenience that sets both MATCH and MATCH_FOR_LCD. M_FOR_LCD is
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optional. If not specified, defaults to M. */
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void set_match (const char *m, const char *m_for_lcd = NULL)
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{
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match.set_match (m);
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if (m_for_lcd == NULL)
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match_for_lcd.set_match (m);
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else
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match_for_lcd.set_match (m_for_lcd);
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}
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};
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/* The final result of a completion that is handed over to either
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readline or the "completion" command (which pretends to be
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readline). Mainly a wrapper for a readline-style match list array,
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though other bits of info are included too. */
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struct completion_result
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{
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/* Create an empty result. */
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completion_result ();
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/* Create a result. */
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completion_result (char **match_list, size_t number_matches,
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bool completion_suppress_append);
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/* Destroy a result. */
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~completion_result ();
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DISABLE_COPY_AND_ASSIGN (completion_result);
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/* Move a result. */
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completion_result (completion_result &&rhs);
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/* Release ownership of the match list array. */
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char **release_match_list ();
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/* Sort the match list. */
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void sort_match_list ();
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private:
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/* Destroy the match list array and its contents. */
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void reset_match_list ();
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public:
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/* (There's no point in making these fields private, since the whole
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point of this wrapper is to build data in the layout expected by
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readline. Making them private would require adding getters for
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the "complete" command, which would expose the same
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implementation details anyway.) */
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/* The match list array, in the format that readline expects.
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match_list[0] contains the common prefix. The real match list
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starts at index 1. The list is NULL terminated. If there's only
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one match, then match_list[1] is NULL. If there are no matches,
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then this is NULL. */
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char **match_list;
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/* The number of matched completions in MATCH_LIST. Does not
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include the NULL terminator or the common prefix. */
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size_t number_matches;
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/* Whether readline should suppress appending a whitespace, when
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there's only one possible completion. */
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bool completion_suppress_append;
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};
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/* Object used by completers to build a completion match list to hand
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over to readline. It tracks:
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- How many unique completions have been generated, to terminate
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completion list generation early if the list has grown to a size
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so large as to be useless. This helps avoid GDB seeming to lock
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up in the event the user requests to complete on something vague
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that necessitates the time consuming expansion of many symbol
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tables.
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- The completer's idea of least common denominator (aka the common
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prefix) between all completion matches to hand over to readline.
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Some completers provide matches that don't start with the
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completion "word". E.g., completing on "b push_ba" on a C++
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program usually completes to std::vector<...>::push_back,
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std::string::push_back etc. If all matches happen to start with
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"std::", then readline would figure out that the lowest common
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denominator is "std::", and thus would do a partial completion
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with that. I.e., it would replace "push_ba" in the input buffer
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with "std::", losing the original "push_ba", which is obviously
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undesirable. To avoid that, such completers pass the substring
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of the match that matters for common denominator computation as
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MATCH_FOR_LCD argument to add_completion. The end result is
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passed to readline in gdb_rl_attempted_completion_function.
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- The custom word point to hand over to readline, for completers
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that parse the input string in order to dynamically adjust
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themselves depending on exactly what they're completing. E.g.,
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the linespec completer needs to bypass readline's too-simple word
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breaking algorithm.
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*/
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class completion_tracker
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{
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public:
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completion_tracker ();
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~completion_tracker ();
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DISABLE_COPY_AND_ASSIGN (completion_tracker);
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/* Add the completion NAME to the list of generated completions if
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it is not there already. If too many completions were already
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found, this throws an error. */
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void add_completion (gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> name,
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completion_match_for_lcd *match_for_lcd = NULL,
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const char *text = NULL, const char *word = NULL);
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/* Add all completions matches in LIST. Elements are moved out of
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LIST. */
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void add_completions (completion_list &&list);
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/* Set the quote char to be appended after a unique completion is
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added to the input line. Set to '\0' to clear. See
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m_quote_char's description. */
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void set_quote_char (int quote_char)
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{ m_quote_char = quote_char; }
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/* The quote char to be appended after a unique completion is added
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to the input line. Returns '\0' if no quote char has been set.
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See m_quote_char's description. */
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int quote_char () { return m_quote_char; }
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/* Tell the tracker that the current completer wants to provide a
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custom word point instead of a list of a break chars, in the
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handle_brkchars phase. Such completers must also compute their
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completions then. */
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void set_use_custom_word_point (bool enable)
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{ m_use_custom_word_point = enable; }
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/* Whether the current completer computes a custom word point. */
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bool use_custom_word_point () const
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{ return m_use_custom_word_point; }
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/* The custom word point. */
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int custom_word_point () const
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{ return m_custom_word_point; }
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/* Set the custom word point to POINT. */
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void set_custom_word_point (int point)
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{ m_custom_word_point = point; }
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/* Advance the custom word point by LEN. */
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void advance_custom_word_point_by (size_t len);
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/* Whether to tell readline to skip appending a whitespace after the
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completion. See m_suppress_append_ws. */
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bool suppress_append_ws () const
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{ return m_suppress_append_ws; }
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/* Set whether to tell readline to skip appending a whitespace after
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the completion. See m_suppress_append_ws. */
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void set_suppress_append_ws (bool suppress)
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{ m_suppress_append_ws = suppress; }
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/* Return true if we only have one completion, and it matches
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exactly the completion word. I.e., completing results in what we
|
|
already have. */
|
|
bool completes_to_completion_word (const char *word);
|
|
|
|
/* Get a reference to the shared (between all the multiple symbol
|
|
name comparison calls) completion_match_result object, ready for
|
|
another symbol name match sequence. */
|
|
completion_match_result &reset_completion_match_result ()
|
|
{
|
|
completion_match_result &res = m_completion_match_result;
|
|
|
|
/* Clear any previous match. */
|
|
res.match.clear ();
|
|
res.match_for_lcd.clear ();
|
|
return m_completion_match_result;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/* True if we have any completion match recorded. */
|
|
bool have_completions () const
|
|
{ return !m_entries_vec.empty (); }
|
|
|
|
/* Discard the current completion match list and the current
|
|
LCD. */
|
|
void discard_completions ();
|
|
|
|
/* Build a completion_result containing the list of completion
|
|
matches to hand over to readline. The parameters are as in
|
|
rl_attempted_completion_function. */
|
|
completion_result build_completion_result (const char *text,
|
|
int start, int end);
|
|
|
|
private:
|
|
|
|
/* Add the completion NAME to the list of generated completions if
|
|
it is not there already. If false is returned, too many
|
|
completions were found. */
|
|
bool maybe_add_completion (gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> name,
|
|
completion_match_for_lcd *match_for_lcd,
|
|
const char *text, const char *word);
|
|
|
|
/* Given a new match, recompute the lowest common denominator (LCD)
|
|
to hand over to readline. Normally readline computes this itself
|
|
based on the whole set of completion matches. However, some
|
|
completers want to override readline, in order to be able to
|
|
provide a LCD that is not really a prefix of the matches, but the
|
|
lowest common denominator of some relevant substring of each
|
|
match. E.g., "b push_ba" completes to
|
|
"std::vector<..>::push_back", "std::string::push_back", etc., and
|
|
in this case we want the lowest common denominator to be
|
|
"push_back" instead of "std::". */
|
|
void recompute_lowest_common_denominator
|
|
(gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> &&new_match);
|
|
|
|
/* Completion match outputs returned by the symbol name matching
|
|
routines (see symbol_name_matcher_ftype). These results are only
|
|
valid for a single match call. This is here in order to be able
|
|
to conveniently share the same storage among all the calls to the
|
|
symbol name matching routines. */
|
|
completion_match_result m_completion_match_result;
|
|
|
|
/* The completion matches found so far, in a vector. */
|
|
completion_list m_entries_vec;
|
|
|
|
/* The completion matches found so far, in a hash table, for
|
|
duplicate elimination as entries are added. Otherwise the user
|
|
is left scratching his/her head: readline and complete_command
|
|
will remove duplicates, and if removal of duplicates there brings
|
|
the total under max_completions the user may think gdb quit
|
|
searching too early. */
|
|
htab_t m_entries_hash;
|
|
|
|
/* If non-zero, then this is the quote char that needs to be
|
|
appended after completion (iff we have a unique completion). We
|
|
don't rely on readline appending the quote char as delimiter as
|
|
then readline wouldn't append the ' ' after the completion.
|
|
I.e., we want this:
|
|
|
|
before tab: "b 'function("
|
|
after tab: "b 'function()' "
|
|
*/
|
|
int m_quote_char = '\0';
|
|
|
|
/* If true, the completer has its own idea of "word" point, and
|
|
doesn't want to rely on readline computing it based on brkchars.
|
|
Set in the handle_brkchars phase. */
|
|
bool m_use_custom_word_point = false;
|
|
|
|
/* The completer's idea of where the "word" we were looking at is
|
|
relative to RL_LINE_BUFFER. This is advanced in the
|
|
handle_brkchars phase as the completer discovers potential
|
|
completable words. */
|
|
int m_custom_word_point = 0;
|
|
|
|
/* If true, tell readline to skip appending a whitespace after the
|
|
completion. Automatically set if we have a unique completion
|
|
that already has a space at the end. A completer may also
|
|
explicitly set this. E.g., the linespec completer sets this when
|
|
the completion ends with the ":" separator between filename and
|
|
function name. */
|
|
bool m_suppress_append_ws = false;
|
|
|
|
/* Our idea of lowest common denominator to hand over to readline.
|
|
See intro. */
|
|
char *m_lowest_common_denominator = NULL;
|
|
|
|
/* If true, the LCD is unique. I.e., all completions had the same
|
|
MATCH_FOR_LCD substring, even if the completions were different.
|
|
For example, if "break function<tab>" found "a::function()" and
|
|
"b::function()", the LCD will be "function()" in both cases and
|
|
so we want to tell readline to complete the line with
|
|
"function()", instead of showing all the possible
|
|
completions. */
|
|
bool m_lowest_common_denominator_unique = false;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
/* Return a string to hand off to readline as a completion match
|
|
candidate, potentially composed of parts of MATCH_NAME and of
|
|
TEXT/WORD. For a description of TEXT/WORD see completer_ftype. */
|
|
|
|
extern gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char>
|
|
make_completion_match_str (const char *match_name,
|
|
const char *text, const char *word);
|
|
|
|
/* Like above, but takes ownership of MATCH_NAME (i.e., can
|
|
reuse/return it). */
|
|
|
|
extern gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char>
|
|
make_completion_match_str (gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> &&match_name,
|
|
const char *text, const char *word);
|
|
|
|
extern void gdb_display_match_list (char **matches, int len, int max,
|
|
const struct match_list_displayer *);
|
|
|
|
extern const char *get_max_completions_reached_message (void);
|
|
|
|
extern void complete_line (completion_tracker &tracker,
|
|
const char *text,
|
|
const char *line_buffer,
|
|
int point);
|
|
|
|
/* Find the bounds of the word in TEXT for completion purposes, and
|
|
return a pointer to the end of the word. Calls the completion
|
|
machinery for a handle_brkchars phase (using TRACKER) to figure out
|
|
the right work break characters for the command in TEXT.
|
|
QUOTE_CHAR, if non-null, is set to the opening quote character if
|
|
we found an unclosed quoted substring, '\0' otherwise. */
|
|
extern const char *completion_find_completion_word (completion_tracker &tracker,
|
|
const char *text,
|
|
int *quote_char);
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Assuming TEXT is an expression in the current language, find the
|
|
completion word point for TEXT, emulating the algorithm readline
|
|
uses to find the word point, using the current language's word
|
|
break characters. */
|
|
|
|
const char *advance_to_expression_complete_word_point
|
|
(completion_tracker &tracker, const char *text);
|
|
|
|
extern char **gdb_rl_attempted_completion_function (const char *text,
|
|
int start, int end);
|
|
|
|
extern void noop_completer (struct cmd_list_element *,
|
|
completion_tracker &tracker,
|
|
const char *, const char *);
|
|
|
|
extern void filename_completer (struct cmd_list_element *,
|
|
completion_tracker &tracker,
|
|
const char *, const char *);
|
|
|
|
extern void expression_completer (struct cmd_list_element *,
|
|
completion_tracker &tracker,
|
|
const char *, const char *);
|
|
|
|
extern void location_completer (struct cmd_list_element *,
|
|
completion_tracker &tracker,
|
|
const char *, const char *);
|
|
|
|
extern void symbol_completer (struct cmd_list_element *,
|
|
completion_tracker &tracker,
|
|
const char *, const char *);
|
|
|
|
extern void command_completer (struct cmd_list_element *,
|
|
completion_tracker &tracker,
|
|
const char *, const char *);
|
|
|
|
extern void signal_completer (struct cmd_list_element *,
|
|
completion_tracker &tracker,
|
|
const char *, const char *);
|
|
|
|
extern void reg_or_group_completer (struct cmd_list_element *,
|
|
completion_tracker &tracker,
|
|
const char *, const char *);
|
|
|
|
extern void reggroup_completer (struct cmd_list_element *,
|
|
completion_tracker &tracker,
|
|
const char *, const char *);
|
|
|
|
extern const char *get_gdb_completer_quote_characters (void);
|
|
|
|
extern char *gdb_completion_word_break_characters (void);
|
|
|
|
/* Set the word break characters array to BREAK_CHARS. This function
|
|
is useful as const-correct alternative to direct assignment to
|
|
rl_completer_word_break_characters, which is "char *",
|
|
not "const char *". */
|
|
extern void set_rl_completer_word_break_characters (const char *break_chars);
|
|
|
|
/* Get the matching completer_handle_brkchars_ftype function for FN.
|
|
FN is one of the core completer functions above (filename,
|
|
location, symbol, etc.). This function is useful for cases when
|
|
the completer doesn't know the type of the completion until some
|
|
calculation is done (e.g., for Python functions). */
|
|
|
|
extern completer_handle_brkchars_ftype *
|
|
completer_handle_brkchars_func_for_completer (completer_ftype *fn);
|
|
|
|
/* Exported to linespec.c */
|
|
|
|
/* Return a list of all source files whose names begin with matching
|
|
TEXT. */
|
|
extern completion_list complete_source_filenames (const char *text);
|
|
|
|
/* Complete on expressions. Often this means completing on symbol
|
|
names, but some language parsers also have support for completing
|
|
field names. */
|
|
extern void complete_expression (completion_tracker &tracker,
|
|
const char *text, const char *word);
|
|
|
|
extern const char *skip_quoted_chars (const char *, const char *,
|
|
const char *);
|
|
|
|
extern const char *skip_quoted (const char *);
|
|
|
|
/* Maximum number of candidates to consider before the completer
|
|
bails by throwing MAX_COMPLETIONS_REACHED_ERROR. Negative values
|
|
disable limiting. */
|
|
|
|
extern int max_completions;
|
|
|
|
#endif /* defined (COMPLETER_H) */
|