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Re: MI: event notification
- From: Daniel Jacobowitz <drow at false dot org>
- To: Nick Roberts <nickrob at snap dot net dot nz>
- Cc: gdb at sourceware dot org
- Date: Tue, 20 Jun 2006 21:34:37 -0400
- Subject: Re: MI: event notification
- References: <17560.40409.61785.698765@kahikatea.snap.net.nz>
On Wed, Jun 21, 2006 at 01:16:09PM +1200, Nick Roberts wrote:
> In the past there have been discussions about the performance of certain
> MI commands. To reduce the overhead, I would like to add some event
> notification where GDB informs that front end when something has changed
>
> I think this has always been the intention but that nothing has so far
> been implemented. As a start, and by way of an example, I attach a patch
> that tries to say when the stack has changed so that MI command(s)
> -stack-list-frames, -stack-list-arguments need not be issued while stepping
> within the same frame, for example.
>
> From the manual:
>
> `NOTIFY-ASYNC-OUTPUT ==>'
> `[ TOKEN ] "=" ASYNC-OUTPUT'
>
>
> Using the patch, "=stack-changed\n" gets printed every time the stack changes
> e.g
Good idea in general, bad choice of example. This is not a valid
optimization, at least not where you put it.
- Stepping within a frame can change the values displayed by
-stack-list-arguments. On most targets + compilers they
are sometimes corrupt at the beginning of a function. On
many targets the "incoming" value of the argument changes
when that variable is assigned to.
- You can encounter the same frame ID for two consecutive stops
but have a different backtrace, e.g. if you continued and then
hit a breakpoint near the same function.
A good place to start might be asking the Xcode folks where they put
events. I know they put a bunch of them, e.g. shlib related. I don't
know if they're all suitable for GDB/MI, but I bet most of them are.
(And I think I talked with Jim about this particular one at some point,
and they either didn't have one, or didn't use it for much).
--
Daniel Jacobowitz
CodeSourcery