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Re: MIPS Linux signals
On 05/22/2012 07:14 PM, Michael Eager wrote:
> On 05/22/2012 09:01 AM, Pedro Alves wrote:
>
>>>> target_signal_from_host => gdb_signal_from_host (or gdb_signal_from_host_signal)
>>>> target_signal_to_host => gdb_signal_to_host (or gdb_signal_to_host_signal)
>>>>
>>>> gdbarch_target_signal_from_host => gdbarch_gdb_signal_from_target (or gdbarch_gdb_signal_from_target_signal)
>>>> gdbarch_target_signal_to_host => gdbarch_gdb_signal_to_target (or gdbarch_gdb_signal_to_target_signal)
>>>
>>> OK, but I'd recommend
>>> target_signal_from_host => gdb_signal_from_target
>>> target_signal_to_host => gdb_signal_to_target
>>>
>>> This is symmetric with the gdbarch_ functions and clear that the function
>>> translates to/from target system values, not the host system.
>>
>>
>> But it's not what the functions do... They really convert from the host
>> system signals, not the target's. I think the symmetry will only lead to
>> people getting confused (which one to call in common/target-independent code?).
>
> If you are running GDB on a Windows host, for example, what host
> system signals are you translating?
There's only be one such call -- the one from within corelow.c, if there's no
gdbarch_target_signal_from_host callback installed. (The Windows ports don't call
target_signal_from_host anywhere (windows-nat.c and friends). And in that case, if
you e.g., load a cygwin core, the target_signal_from_host fallback will try to
convert the signal number as if it was a host signal number. If you're running g
b on a cygwin host, you'll happen to get the right values. If you're debugging
a core (that same core or of some other non-native arch) with a cross debugger, with
a mingw hosted gdb, then target_signal_from_host will _still_ translate the signal
numbers found in mingw's signal.h header. For reference, those are:
#define SIGINT 2 /* Interactive attention */
#define SIGILL 4 /* Illegal instruction */
#define SIGFPE 8 /* Floating point error */
#define SIGSEGV 11 /* Segmentation violation */
#define SIGTERM 15 /* Termination request */
#define SIGBREAK 21 /* Control-break */
#define SIGABRT 22 /* Abnormal termination (abort) */
All other signal numbers you pass to target_signal_from_host will end up
as TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN, due to the bunch of #ifdef SIGFOO bits in
common/signals. Obviously, in most cases, this translation will
be wrong. But the point to be taken is, target_signal_from_host _always_
translates the signal number passed as argument as if it was a host
signal number, no matter what the target really is.
--
Pedro Alves