From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: Received: (qmail 2398 invoked by alias); 29 Sep 2004 03:00:02 -0000 Mailing-List: contact gdb-help@sources.redhat.com; run by ezmlm Precedence: bulk List-Subscribe: List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: , Sender: gdb-owner@sources.redhat.com Received: (qmail 2375 invoked from network); 29 Sep 2004 03:00:00 -0000 Received: from unknown (HELO lakermmtao01.cox.net) (68.230.240.38) by sourceware.org with SMTP; 29 Sep 2004 03:00:00 -0000 Received: from white ([68.9.64.121]) by lakermmtao01.cox.net (InterMail vM.6.01.03.04 201-2131-111-106-20040729) with ESMTP id <20040929025959.GSIH5119.lakermmtao01.cox.net@white>; Tue, 28 Sep 2004 22:59:59 -0400 Received: from bob by white with local (Exim 3.35 #1 (Debian)) id 1CCUhD-000071-00; Tue, 28 Sep 2004 22:59:59 -0400 Date: Wed, 29 Sep 2004 03:00:00 -0000 From: Bob Rossi To: Jim Ingham Cc: gdb@sources.redhat.com, cagney@redhat.com, ezannoni@redhat.com, fnasser@redhat.com Subject: Re: MI rules Message-ID: <20040929025959.GA357@white> Mail-Followup-To: Jim Ingham , gdb@sources.redhat.com, cagney@redhat.com, ezannoni@redhat.com, fnasser@redhat.com References: <1095954341.19418.ezmlm@sources.redhat.com> <20040925010519.GB3379@white> <4E6C7AD8-0F25-11D9-AD7A-000D932CB92C@apple.com> <20040925201242.GA4133@white> <1AB1A5F6-10AC-11D9-8F3A-000A958F4C44@apple.com> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Disposition: inline In-Reply-To: <1AB1A5F6-10AC-11D9-8F3A-000A958F4C44@apple.com> User-Agent: Mutt/1.3.28i X-SW-Source: 2004-09/txt/msg00250.txt.bz2 I have one quick note. I would prefer to get some cooperation with the MI maintainers. I seriously need this cooperation in order to get anything done with CGDB. Also, I consider the work I am doing necessary for any front end developer to be able to write a reasonable front end without having to heavily patch a version of GDB they distribute with. If you consider my goal worthy, please at least respond with some reasonable criticism so that these issues can be resolved. I feel that in many ways my views on the MI are mostly ignored by the MI maintainers. I would like to improve GDB in the areas that seem relevant to front end developers and am assuming that you all have the same goal. So hopefully these issues and the ones in the future can be resolved within a reasonable amount of time. On Mon, Sep 27, 2004 at 10:38:55AM -0700, Jim Ingham wrote: > > On Sep 25, 2004, at 1:12 PM, Bob Rossi wrote: > > >On Sat, Sep 25, 2004 at 12:01:28PM -0700, Jim Ingham wrote: > >>I have no strong opposition to this, I just don't see the point. > >> > > > >Jim, I appreciate the time you have spent thinking about this issue for > >me. I value the input from someone who has been working with MI for > >quite some time. I have several questions for you, > > > > 1. How do you figure out what type of asynchronous MI output command > > you just received is? > > There are two things here - there is asynchronous output from an MI > command, like stopped, running, etc. We added "running breakpoint > command message so you can tell that it might start up again..." This > sort of thing - usually from running. They are always linked to the > original command by preserving the command token. So that's easy. > > Then there is true asynchronous communications from the inferior - > unsolicited messages like shared library notification, or the fact that > a user command ("interpreter-exec") caused a breakpoint to be set, the > thread or the frame to be changed, etc... These are all dealt with > just as you suggest for commands - they have a tag at the beginning > specifying the kind of event. So for instance, when a shared library > gets loaded, we get: > > =shlibs-added,shlib-info= > [num="6",name="PBGDBIntrospectionSupport.A.dylib",kind="-",dyld- > addr="0x83d50000",reason="dyld",requested- > state="?",state="N",path="",description="/Developer/Applications/ > Xcode.app/Contents/PlugIns/GDBMIDebugging.xcplugin/Contents/Resources/ > PBGDBIntrospectionSupport.A.dylib",slide="",addr="",prefix=""] OK, so this is exactly what I'm talking about. There needs to be a label for asynchronous commands. I guess it's not necessary for synchronous commands but I think it could be useful to have there anyways and it would be trivial to add. > Again, the truely unsolicited stuff (in this case the breakpoint > creation notification) is all tagged so the UI can figure out what is > going on. I think this also needs to be done in the mainline GDB and I would prefer the synchronous commands to get a tag also. Do you agree with the asynchronous part at least? > > 2. How do you deal with your MI front end dealing with snapshots of > > GDB? For example, it has new asynchronous commands, but the MI > >version > > hasn't been bumped yet. > > There are two kinds of additions, right? Command return fields, and > async notifications. In Xcode, > the parser parses everything, and then any command return fields or > async notifications that it doesn't understand, it ignores. That's > pretty much how the MI was designed, so that the MI can freely ADD > notifications & command return fields, and the UI can just ignore them. > The fields are identified by field name, and the notifications by > their notification name. OK, so understood. Commands that add a field will definatly work because the front end ignores them. Commands that loose a field will probably cause a major problem and will be incompatible with the front end. What about when a command changes completly because of a version bump? What about when the commands changes (like N:M breakpoints) and the version is not bumped yet because you have a snapshot of GDB? I need these case's to work because I am not bundled with GDB. So again, I'm asking everyone, 1. Can the mainline version get tagged asyncronous commands at the least? I would prefer every command to have a tag. 2. Can there be a discussion about backwards compatibility with MI output commands. This involves several issues I can think of. 1. removing fields from an MI output command 2. changing the output of an MI output command 3. Making the commands themselves be backwards compatible even between major releases. This essentially makes the MI output version useless. Thanks, Bob Rossi