diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'gdb/command.h')
-rw-r--r-- | gdb/command.h | 168 |
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 162 deletions
diff --git a/gdb/command.h b/gdb/command.h index 5f7284e4dfe..db7a7402584 100644 --- a/gdb/command.h +++ b/gdb/command.h @@ -1,13 +1,7 @@ -/* ***DEPRECATED*** The gdblib files must not be calling/using things in any - of the possible command languages. If necessary, a hook (that may be - present or not) must be used and set to the appropriate routine by any - command language that cares about it. If you are having to include this - file you are possibly doing things the old way. This file will disapear. - 2000-12-01 fnasser@redhat.com */ - /* Header file for command-reading library command.c. - Copyright 1986, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1999, 2000 - Free Software Foundation, Inc. + + Copyright 1986, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1999, + 2000, 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by @@ -44,6 +38,8 @@ enum command_class class_pseudo, class_tui, class_xdb }; +/* FIXME: cagney/2002-03-17: Once cmd_type() has been removed, ``enum + cmd_types'' can be moved from "command.h" to "cli-decode.h". */ /* Not a set/show command. Note that some commands which begin with "set" or "show" might be in this category, if their syntax does not fall into one of the following categories. */ @@ -105,159 +101,7 @@ typedef enum var_types var_types; /* This structure records one command'd definition. */ - - -/* This flag is used by the code executing commands to warn the user - the first time a deprecated command is used, see the 'flags' field in - the following struct. -*/ -#define CMD_DEPRECATED 0x1 -#define DEPRECATED_WARN_USER 0x2 -#define MALLOCED_REPLACEMENT 0x4 - -struct cmd_list_element - { - /* Points to next command in this list. */ - struct cmd_list_element *next; - - /* Name of this command. */ - char *name; - - /* Command class; class values are chosen by application program. */ - enum command_class class; - - /* Function definition of this command. NULL for command class - names and for help topics that are not really commands. NOTE: - cagney/2002-02-02: This function signature is evolving. For - the moment suggest sticking with either set_cmd_cfunc() or - set_cmd_sfunc(). */ - void (*func) (struct cmd_list_element *c, char *args, int from_tty); - /* The command's real callback. At present func() bounces through - to one of the below. */ - union - { - /* If type is not_set_cmd, call it like this: */ - void (*cfunc) (char *args, int from_tty); - - /* If type is set_cmd or show_cmd, first set the variables, and - then call this. */ - void (*sfunc) (char *args, int from_tty, struct cmd_list_element * c); - } - function; - - /* Local state (context) for this command. This can be anything. */ - void *context; - - /* Documentation of this command (or help topic). - First line is brief documentation; remaining lines form, with it, - the full documentation. First line should end with a period. - Entire string should also end with a period, not a newline. */ - char *doc; - - /* flags : a bitfield - - bit 0: (LSB) CMD_DEPRECATED, when 1 indicated that this command - is deprecated. It may be removed from gdb's command set in the - future. - - bit 1: DEPRECATED_WARN_USER, the user needs to be warned that - this is a deprecated command. The user should only be warned - the first time a command is used. - - bit 2: MALLOCED_REPLACEMENT, when functions are deprecated at - compile time (this is the way it should, in general, be done) - the memory containing the replacement string is statically - allocated. In some cases it makes sense to deprecate commands - at runtime (the testsuite is one example). In this case the - memory for replacement is malloc'ed. When a command is - undeprecated or re-deprecated at runtime we don't want to risk - calling free on statically allocated memory, so we check this - flag. - */ - int flags; - - /* if this command is deprecated, this is the replacement name */ - char *replacement; - - /* If this command represents a show command, then this function - is called before the variable's value is examined. */ - void (*pre_show_hook) (struct cmd_list_element *c); - - /* Hook for another command to be executed before this command. */ - struct cmd_list_element *hook_pre; - - /* Hook for another command to be executed after this command. */ - struct cmd_list_element *hook_post; - - /* Flag that specifies if this command is already running it's hook. */ - /* Prevents the possibility of hook recursion. */ - int hook_in; - - /* Nonzero identifies a prefix command. For them, the address - of the variable containing the list of subcommands. */ - struct cmd_list_element **prefixlist; - - /* For prefix commands only: - String containing prefix commands to get here: this one - plus any others needed to get to it. Should end in a space. - It is used before the word "command" in describing the - commands reached through this prefix. */ - char *prefixname; - - /* For prefix commands only: - nonzero means do not get an error if subcommand is not - recognized; call the prefix's own function in that case. */ - char allow_unknown; - - /* Nonzero says this is an abbreviation, and should not - be mentioned in lists of commands. - This allows "br<tab>" to complete to "break", which it - otherwise wouldn't. */ - char abbrev_flag; - - /* Completion routine for this command. TEXT is the text beyond - what was matched for the command itself (leading whitespace is - skipped). It stops where we are supposed to stop completing - (rl_point) and is '\0' terminated. - - Return value is a malloc'd vector of pointers to possible completions - terminated with NULL. If there are no completions, returning a pointer - to a NULL would work but returning NULL itself is also valid. - WORD points in the same buffer as TEXT, and completions should be - returned relative to this position. For example, suppose TEXT is "foo" - and we want to complete to "foobar". If WORD is "oo", return - "oobar"; if WORD is "baz/foo", return "baz/foobar". */ - char **(*completer) (char *text, char *word); - - /* Type of "set" or "show" command (or SET_NOT_SET if not "set" - or "show"). */ - cmd_types type; - - /* Pointer to variable affected by "set" and "show". Doesn't matter - if type is not_set. */ - void *var; - - /* What kind of variable is *VAR? */ - var_types var_type; - - /* Pointer to NULL terminated list of enumerated values (like argv). */ - const char **enums; - - /* Pointer to command strings of user-defined commands */ - struct command_line *user_commands; - - /* Pointer to command that is hooked by this one, (by hook_pre) - so the hook can be removed when this one is deleted. */ - struct cmd_list_element *hookee_pre; - - /* Pointer to command that is hooked by this one, (by hook_post) - so the hook can be removed when this one is deleted. */ - struct cmd_list_element *hookee_post; - - /* Pointer to command that is aliased by this one, so the - aliased command can be located in case it has been hooked. */ - struct cmd_list_element *cmd_pointer; - }; +struct cmd_list_element; /* Forward-declarations of the entry-points of cli/cli-decode.c. */ |