Next: Lazy Strings In Guile, Previous: Symbol Tables In Guile, Up: Guile API
Breakpoints in Guile are represented by objects of type
<gdb:breakpoint>
. New breakpoints can be created with the
make-breakpoint
Guile function, and then added to gdb with the
register-breakpoint!
Guile function.
This two-step approach is taken to separate out the side-effect of adding
the breakpoint to gdb from make-breakpoint
.
Support is also provided to view and manipulate breakpoints created outside of Guile.
The following breakpoint-related procedures are provided by the
(gdb)
module:
Create a new breakpoint at location, a string naming the location of the breakpoint, or an expression that defines a watchpoint. The contents can be any location recognized by the
break
command, or in the case of a watchpoint, by thewatch
command.The breakpoint is initially marked as ‘invalid’. The breakpoint is not usable until it has been registered with gdb with
register-breakpoint!
, at which point it becomes ‘valid’. The result is the<gdb:breakpoint>
object representing the breakpoint.The optional type denotes the breakpoint to create. This argument can be either
BP_BREAKPOINT
orBP_WATCHPOINT
, and defaults toBP_BREAKPOINT
.The optional wp-class argument defines the class of watchpoint to create, if type is
BP_WATCHPOINT
. If a watchpoint class is not provided, it is assumed to be aWP_WRITE
class.The optional internal argument allows the breakpoint to become invisible to the user. The breakpoint will neither be reported when registered, nor will it be listed in the output from
info breakpoints
(but will be listed with themaint info breakpoints
command). If an internal flag is not provided, the breakpoint is visible (non-internal).When a watchpoint is created, gdb will try to create a hardware assisted watchpoint. If successful, the type of the watchpoint is changed from
BP_WATCHPOINT
toBP_HARDWARE_WATCHPOINT
forWP_WRITE
,BP_READ_WATCHPOINT
forWP_READ
, andBP_ACCESS_WATCHPOINT
forWP_ACCESS
. If not successful, the type of the watchpoint is left asWP_WATCHPOINT
.The available types are represented by constants defined in the
gdb
module:
BP_BREAKPOINT
- Normal code breakpoint.
BP_WATCHPOINT
- Watchpoint breakpoint.
BP_HARDWARE_WATCHPOINT
- Hardware assisted watchpoint. This value cannot be specified when creating the breakpoint.
BP_READ_WATCHPOINT
- Hardware assisted read watchpoint. This value cannot be specified when creating the breakpoint.
BP_ACCESS_WATCHPOINT
- Hardware assisted access watchpoint. This value cannot be specified when creating the breakpoint.
The available watchpoint types represented by constants are defined in the
(gdb)
module:
Add breakpoint, a
<gdb:breakpoint>
object, to gdb's list of breakpoints. The breakpoint must have been created withmake-breakpoint
. One cannot register breakpoints that have been created outside of Guile. Once a breakpoint is registered it becomes ‘valid’. It is an error to register an already registered breakpoint. The result is unspecified.
Remove breakpoint from gdb's list of breakpoints. This also invalidates the Guile breakpoint object. Any further attempt to access the object will throw an exception.
If breakpoint was created from Guile with
make-breakpoint
it may be re-registered with gdb, in which case the breakpoint becomes valid again.
Return a list of all breakpoints. Each element of the list is a
<gdb:breakpoint>
object.
Return
#t
if object is a<gdb:breakpoint>
object, and#f
otherwise.
Return
#t
if breakpoint is valid,#f
otherwise. Breakpoints created withmake-breakpoint
are marked as invalid until they are registered with gdb withregister-breakpoint!
. A<gdb:breakpoint>
object can become invalid if the user deletes the breakpoint. In this case, the object still exists, but the underlying breakpoint does not. In the cases of watchpoint scope, the watchpoint remains valid even if execution of the inferior leaves the scope of that watchpoint.
Return the breakpoint's number — the identifier used by the user to manipulate the breakpoint.
Return the breakpoint's type — the identifier used to determine the actual breakpoint type or use-case.
Return
#t
if the breakpoint is visible to the user when hit, or when the ‘info breakpoints’ command is run. Otherwise return#f
.
Return the location of the breakpoint, as specified by the user. It is a string. If the breakpoint does not have a location (that is, it is a watchpoint) return
#f
.
Return the breakpoint expression, as specified by the user. It is a string. If the breakpoint does not have an expression (the breakpoint is not a watchpoint) return
#f
.
Return
#t
if the breakpoint is enabled, and#f
otherwise.
Set the enabled state of breakpoint to flag. If flag is
#f
it is disabled, otherwise it is enabled.
Return
#t
if the breakpoint is silent, and#f
otherwise.Note that a breakpoint can also be silent if it has commands and the first command is
silent
. This is not reported by thesilent
attribute.
Set the silent state of breakpoint to flag. If flag is
#f
the breakpoint is made silent, otherwise it is made non-silent (or noisy).
Set the ignore count for breakpoint to count.
Set the hit count of breakpoint to count. At present, count must be zero.
Return the thread-id for thread-specific breakpoint breakpoint. Return #f if breakpoint is not thread-specific.
Set the thread-id for breakpoint to thread-id. If set to
#f
, the breakpoint is no longer thread-specific.
If the breakpoint is Ada task-specific, return the Ada task id. If the breakpoint is not task-specific (or the underlying language is not Ada), return
#f
.
Set the Ada task of breakpoint to task. If set to
#f
, the breakpoint is no longer task-specific.
Return the condition of breakpoint, as specified by the user. It is a string. If there is no condition, return
#f
.
Set the condition of breakpoint to condition, which must be a string. If set to
#f
then the breakpoint becomes unconditional.
Return the stop predicate of breakpoint. See
set-breakpoint-stop!
below in this section.
Set the stop predicate of breakpoint. The predicate procedure takes one argument: the <gdb:breakpoint> object. If this predicate is set to a procedure then it is invoked whenever the inferior reaches this breakpoint. If it returns
#t
, or any non-#f
value, then the inferior is stopped, otherwise the inferior will continue.If there are multiple breakpoints at the same location with a
stop
predicate, each one will be called regardless of the return status of the previous. This ensures that allstop
predicates have a chance to execute at that location. In this scenario if one of the methods returns#t
but the others return#f
, the inferior will still be stopped.You should not alter the execution state of the inferior (i.e., step, next, etc.), alter the current frame context (i.e., change the current active frame), or alter, add or delete any breakpoint. As a general rule, you should not alter any data within gdb or the inferior at this time.
Example
stop
implementation:(define (my-stop? bkpt) (let ((int-val (parse-and-eval "foo"))) (value=? int-val 3))) (define bkpt (make-breakpoint "main.c:42")) (register-breakpoint! bkpt) (set-breakpoint-stop! bkpt my-stop?)