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/* Copyright (C) 1986-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

   This file is part of GDB.

   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
   the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
   (at your option) any later version.

   This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
   but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
   MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
   GNU General Public License for more details.

   You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
   along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.  */

#ifndef INFRUN_H
#define INFRUN_H 1

#include "symtab.h"

struct target_waitstatus;
struct frame_info;
struct address_space;

/* True if we are debugging run control.  */
extern unsigned int debug_infrun;

/* True if we are debugging displaced stepping.  */
extern int debug_displaced;

/* Nonzero if we want to give control to the user when we're notified
   of shared library events by the dynamic linker.  */
extern int stop_on_solib_events;

/* Are we simulating synchronous execution? This is used in async gdb
   to implement the 'run', 'continue' etc commands, which will not
   redisplay the prompt until the execution is actually over.  */
extern int sync_execution;

/* True if execution commands resume all threads of all processes by
   default; otherwise, resume only threads of the current inferior
   process.  */
extern int sched_multi;

/* When set, stop the 'step' command if we enter a function which has
   no line number information.  The normal behavior is that we step
   over such function.  */
extern int step_stop_if_no_debug;

/* If set, the inferior should be controlled in non-stop mode.  In
   this mode, each thread is controlled independently.  Execution
   commands apply only to the selected thread by default, and stop
   events stop only the thread that had the event -- the other threads
   are kept running freely.  */
extern int non_stop;

/* When set (default), the target should attempt to disable the
   operating system's address space randomization feature when
   starting an inferior.  */
extern int disable_randomization;

/* Reverse execution.  */
enum exec_direction_kind
  {
    EXEC_FORWARD,
    EXEC_REVERSE
  };

/* The current execution direction.  This should only be set to enum
   exec_direction_kind values.  It is only an int to make it
   compatible with make_cleanup_restore_integer.  */
extern int execution_direction;

extern void start_remote (int from_tty);

/* Clear out all variables saying what to do when inferior is
   continued or stepped.  First do this, then set the ones you want,
   then call `proceed'.  STEP indicates whether we're preparing for a
   step/stepi command.  */
extern void clear_proceed_status (int step);

extern void proceed (CORE_ADDR, enum gdb_signal);

/* The `resume' routine should only be called in special circumstances.
   Normally, use `proceed', which handles a lot of bookkeeping.  */
extern void resume (enum gdb_signal);

/* Return a ptid representing the set of threads that we will proceed,
   in the perspective of the user/frontend.  We may actually resume
   fewer threads at first, e.g., if a thread is stopped at a
   breakpoint that needs stepping-off, but that should not be visible
   to the user/frontend, and neither should the frontend/user be
   allowed to proceed any of the threads that happen to be stopped for
   internal run control handling, if a previous command wanted them
   resumed.  */
extern ptid_t user_visible_resume_ptid (int step);

extern void wait_for_inferior (void);

extern void normal_stop (void);

extern void get_last_target_status (ptid_t *ptid,
				    struct target_waitstatus *status);

extern void prepare_for_detach (void);

extern void fetch_inferior_event (void *);

extern void init_wait_for_inferior (void);

extern void insert_step_resume_breakpoint_at_sal (struct gdbarch *,
						  struct symtab_and_line ,
						  struct frame_id);

/* Returns true if we're trying to step past the instruction at
   ADDRESS in ASPACE.  */
extern int stepping_past_instruction_at (struct address_space *aspace,
					 CORE_ADDR address);

/* Returns true if we're trying to step past an instruction that
   triggers a non-steppable watchpoint.  */
extern int stepping_past_nonsteppable_watchpoint (void);

extern void set_step_info (struct frame_info *frame,
			   struct symtab_and_line sal);

/* Several print_*_reason helper functions to print why the inferior
   has stopped to the passed in UIOUT.  */

/* Signal received, print why the inferior has stopped.  */
extern void print_signal_received_reason (struct ui_out *uiout,
					  enum gdb_signal siggnal);

/* Print why the inferior has stopped.  We are done with a
   step/next/si/ni command, print why the inferior has stopped.  */
extern void print_end_stepping_range_reason (struct ui_out *uiout);

/* The inferior was terminated by a signal, print why it stopped.  */
extern void print_signal_exited_reason (struct ui_out *uiout,
					enum gdb_signal siggnal);

/* The inferior program is finished, print why it stopped.  */
extern void print_exited_reason (struct ui_out *uiout, int exitstatus);

/* Reverse execution: target ran out of history info, print why the
   inferior has stopped.  */
extern void print_no_history_reason (struct ui_out *uiout);

extern void print_stop_event (struct target_waitstatus *ws);

/* Pretty print the results of target_wait, for debugging purposes.  */

extern void print_target_wait_results (ptid_t waiton_ptid, ptid_t result_ptid,
				       const struct target_waitstatus *ws);

extern int signal_stop_state (int);

extern int signal_print_state (int);

extern int signal_pass_state (int);

extern int signal_stop_update (int, int);

extern int signal_print_update (int, int);

extern int signal_pass_update (int, int);

extern void update_signals_program_target (void);

/* Clear the convenience variables associated with the exit of the
   inferior.  Currently, those variables are $_exitcode and
   $_exitsignal.  */
extern void clear_exit_convenience_vars (void);

/* Dump LEN bytes at BUF in hex to FILE, followed by a newline.  */
extern void displaced_step_dump_bytes (struct ui_file *file,
				       const gdb_byte *buf, size_t len);

extern struct displaced_step_closure *get_displaced_step_closure_by_addr
    (CORE_ADDR addr);

extern void update_observer_mode (void);

extern void signal_catch_update (const unsigned int *);

/* In some circumstances we allow a command to specify a numeric
   signal.  The idea is to keep these circumstances limited so that
   users (and scripts) develop portable habits.  For comparison,
   POSIX.2 `kill' requires that 1,2,3,6,9,14, and 15 work (and using a
   numeric signal at all is obsolescent.  We are slightly more lenient
   and allow 1-15 which should match host signal numbers on most
   systems.  Use of symbolic signal names is strongly encouraged.  */
enum gdb_signal gdb_signal_from_command (int num);

/* Enables/disables infrun's async event source in the event loop.  */
extern void infrun_async (int enable);

/* Call infrun's event handler the next time through the event
   loop.  */
extern void mark_infrun_async_event_handler (void);

/* The global queue of threads that need to do a step-over operation
   to get past e.g., a breakpoint.  */
extern struct thread_info *step_over_queue_head;

#endif /* INFRUN_H */