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Re: [PATCH] Make sure terminal settings are restored before exiting
- From: Pedro Alves <palves at redhat dot com>
- To: Patrick Palka <patrick at parcs dot ath dot cx>, gdb-patches at sourceware dot org
- Date: Wed, 29 Jul 2015 01:09:25 +0100
- Subject: Re: [PATCH] Make sure terminal settings are restored before exiting
- Authentication-results: sourceware.org; auth=none
- References: <1438053504-21507-1-git-send-email-patrick at parcs dot ath dot cx>
On 07/28/2015 04:18 AM, Patrick Palka wrote:
> When exiting GDB -- whether it's via the "quit" command, via a SIGTERM,
> or otherwise -- we should leave the terminal in the state we acquired
> it. To that end, we have to undo any modifications that may have been
> made by the TUI (ncurses) or by the CLI (readline).
>
> [ Note that we already take a snapshot of the original tty state and save
> it to inflow.c:initial_gdb_ttystate. Using this variable we can
> define a new function restore_initial_gdb_ttystate and use it here.
> We can replace the call to rl_deprep_terminal with such a function,
> though it wouldn't hurt to have both around either. Is this a good
> idea?
>
> As far as testing goes, I am having trouble figuring out how to
> retrieve the pid of the GDB subprocess in order to kill it via SIGTERM
> with the subshell/stty approach used in
> batch-preserve-term-settings.exp. Seems non-trivial. Any ideas? ]
A few ideas:
#0 - We're starting it under a shell we control, so make use of that.
Start gdb in the background "gdb &" and follow it with "echo $!" to get
the pid, followed by "fg". Starting the background might be tricky,
so alternatively start it as usual and then send a C-z to background it,
then "echo $!".
#1 - Run "shell ps" in gdb and extract the PID from the first column that has
a line that matches *gdb*.
#2 - Do like gdb.server/server-kill.c, and the test's program store the parent's
process id in a global variable with getppid(). You'll need to disable
"set startup-with-shell", so that the process's direct parent is GDB.
Read the global variable from gdb.
#3 - add a "maint print pid" command ...
#0 seems preferred.
#1 is hacky, but ... i've seen worse.
#2 only works with native testing.
#3 could be the most reliable...
Thanks,
Pedro Alves