Patch: printing java `char' values
Tom Tromey
tromey@redhat.com
Mon May 6 10:11:00 GMT 2002
Compile the appended java program with `gcj -g'. Run gdb on it, and
run it with the argument "abc". Put a breakpoint on main and step
past the assignment. Then do `p c'.
I get:
(gdb) p c
$1 = 97
This is wrong. Debugging gdb a little, I found that in java_val_print
we are seeint a TYPE_CODE_INT and not a TYPE_CODE_CHAR.
The appended hack fixes the problem for me. I'm sure there is some
better way to handle this, but I don't know what. Why would I end up
with a TYPE_CODE_INT here?
Tom
public class x
{
public static void main (String[] args)
{
char c = args[0].charAt(0);
System.out.println(c);
}
}
Index: ChangeLog
from Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* jv-valprint.c (java_val_print): Add special case for Java char.
Index: jv-valprint.c
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/src/src/gdb/jv-valprint.c,v
retrieving revision 1.9
diff -u -r1.9 jv-valprint.c
--- jv-valprint.c 21 Oct 2001 01:57:42 -0000 1.9
+++ jv-valprint.c 6 May 2002 17:08:19 -0000
@@ -451,9 +452,18 @@
register unsigned int i = 0; /* Number of characters printed */
struct type *target_type;
CORE_ADDR addr;
+ enum type_code code;
CHECK_TYPEDEF (type);
- switch (TYPE_CODE (type))
+
+ /* Sometimes a Java `char' shows up as an `int'. So here we make a
+ special case for that. */
+ code = TYPE_CODE (type);
+ if (code == TYPE_CODE_INT && TYPE_LENGTH (type) == 2
+ && ! strcmp (TYPE_NAME (type), "char"))
+ code = TYPE_CODE_CHAR;
+
+ switch (code)
{
case TYPE_CODE_PTR:
if (format && format != 's')
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