1 2=head1 NAME 3 4perl5db.pl - the perl debugger 5 6=head1 SYNOPSIS 7 8 perl -d your_Perl_script 9 10=head1 DESCRIPTION 11 12C<perl5db.pl> is the perl debugger. It is loaded automatically by Perl when 13you invoke a script with C<perl -d>. This documentation tries to outline the 14structure and services provided by C<perl5db.pl>, and to describe how you 15can use them. 16 17=head1 GENERAL NOTES 18 19The debugger can look pretty forbidding to many Perl programmers. There are 20a number of reasons for this, many stemming out of the debugger's history. 21 22When the debugger was first written, Perl didn't have a lot of its nicer 23features - no references, no lexical variables, no closures, no object-oriented 24programming. So a lot of the things one would normally have done using such 25features was done using global variables, globs and the C<local()> operator 26in creative ways. 27 28Some of these have survived into the current debugger; a few of the more 29interesting and still-useful idioms are noted in this section, along with notes 30on the comments themselves. 31 32=head2 Why not use more lexicals? 33 34Experienced Perl programmers will note that the debugger code tends to use 35mostly package globals rather than lexically-scoped variables. This is done 36to allow a significant amount of control of the debugger from outside the 37debugger itself. 38 39Unfortunately, though the variables are accessible, they're not well 40documented, so it's generally been a decision that hasn't made a lot of 41difference to most users. Where appropriate, comments have been added to 42make variables more accessible and usable, with the understanding that these 43I<are> debugger internals, and are therefore subject to change. Future 44development should probably attempt to replace the globals with a well-defined 45API, but for now, the variables are what we've got. 46 47=head2 Automated variable stacking via C<local()> 48 49As you may recall from reading C<perlfunc>, the C<local()> operator makes a 50temporary copy of a variable in the current scope. When the scope ends, the 51old copy is restored. This is often used in the debugger to handle the 52automatic stacking of variables during recursive calls: 53 54 sub foo { 55 local $some_global++; 56 57 # Do some stuff, then ... 58 return; 59 } 60 61What happens is that on entry to the subroutine, C<$some_global> is localized, 62then altered. When the subroutine returns, Perl automatically undoes the 63localization, restoring the previous value. Voila, automatic stack management. 64 65The debugger uses this trick a I<lot>. Of particular note is C<DB::eval>, 66which lets the debugger get control inside of C<eval>'ed code. The debugger 67localizes a saved copy of C<$@> inside the subroutine, which allows it to 68keep C<$@> safe until it C<DB::eval> returns, at which point the previous 69value of C<$@> is restored. This makes it simple (well, I<simpler>) to keep 70track of C<$@> inside C<eval>s which C<eval> other C<eval's>. 71 72In any case, watch for this pattern. It occurs fairly often. 73 74=head2 The C<^> trick 75 76This is used to cleverly reverse the sense of a logical test depending on 77the value of an auxiliary variable. For instance, the debugger's C<S> 78(search for subroutines by pattern) allows you to negate the pattern 79like this: 80 81 # Find all non-'foo' subs: 82 S !/foo/ 83 84Boolean algebra states that the truth table for XOR looks like this: 85 86=over 4 87 88=item * 0 ^ 0 = 0 89 90(! not present and no match) --> false, don't print 91 92=item * 0 ^ 1 = 1 93 94(! not present and matches) --> true, print 95 96=item * 1 ^ 0 = 1 97 98(! present and no match) --> true, print 99 100=item * 1 ^ 1 = 0 101 102(! present and matches) --> false, don't print 103 104=back 105 106As you can see, the first pair applies when C<!> isn't supplied, and 107the second pair applies when it is. The XOR simply allows us to 108compact a more complicated if-then-elseif-else into a more elegant 109(but perhaps overly clever) single test. After all, it needed this 110explanation... 111 112=head2 FLAGS, FLAGS, FLAGS 113 114There is a certain C programming legacy in the debugger. Some variables, 115such as C<$single>, C<$trace>, and C<$frame>, have I<magical> values composed 116of 1, 2, 4, etc. (powers of 2) OR'ed together. This allows several pieces 117of state to be stored independently in a single scalar. 118 119A test like 120 121 if ($scalar & 4) ... 122 123is checking to see if the appropriate bit is on. Since each bit can be 124"addressed" independently in this way, C<$scalar> is acting sort of like 125an array of bits. Obviously, since the contents of C<$scalar> are just a 126bit-pattern, we can save and restore it easily (it will just look like 127a number). 128 129The problem, is of course, that this tends to leave magic numbers scattered 130all over your program whenever a bit is set, cleared, or checked. So why do 131it? 132 133=over 4 134 135=item * 136 137First, doing an arithmetical or bitwise operation on a scalar is 138just about the fastest thing you can do in Perl: C<use constant> actually 139creates a subroutine call, and array and hash lookups are much slower. Is 140this over-optimization at the expense of readability? Possibly, but the 141debugger accesses these variables a I<lot>. Any rewrite of the code will 142probably have to benchmark alternate implementations and see which is the 143best balance of readability and speed, and then document how it actually 144works. 145 146=item * 147 148Second, it's very easy to serialize a scalar number. This is done in 149the restart code; the debugger state variables are saved in C<%ENV> and then 150restored when the debugger is restarted. Having them be just numbers makes 151this trivial. 152 153=item * 154 155Third, some of these variables are being shared with the Perl core 156smack in the middle of the interpreter's execution loop. It's much faster for 157a C program (like the interpreter) to check a bit in a scalar than to access 158several different variables (or a Perl array). 159 160=back 161 162=head2 What are those C<XXX> comments for? 163 164Any comment containing C<XXX> means that the comment is either somewhat 165speculative - it's not exactly clear what a given variable or chunk of 166code is doing, or that it is incomplete - the basics may be clear, but the 167subtleties are not completely documented. 168 169Send in a patch if you can clear up, fill out, or clarify an C<XXX>. 170 171=head1 DATA STRUCTURES MAINTAINED BY CORE 172 173There are a number of special data structures provided to the debugger by 174the Perl interpreter. 175 176The array C<@{$main::{'_<'.$filename}}> (aliased locally to C<@dbline> 177via glob assignment) contains the text from C<$filename>, with each 178element corresponding to a single line of C<$filename>. Additionally, 179breakable lines will be dualvars with the numeric component being the 180memory address of a COP node. Non-breakable lines are dualvar to 0. 181 182The hash C<%{'_<'.$filename}> (aliased locally to C<%dbline> via glob 183assignment) contains breakpoints and actions. The keys are line numbers; 184you can set individual values, but not the whole hash. The Perl interpreter 185uses this hash to determine where breakpoints have been set. Any true value is 186considered to be a breakpoint; C<perl5db.pl> uses C<$break_condition\0$action>. 187Values are magical in numeric context: 1 if the line is breakable, 0 if not. 188 189The scalar C<${"_<$filename"}> simply contains the string C<$filename>. 190This is also the case for evaluated strings that contain subroutines, or 191which are currently being executed. The $filename for C<eval>ed strings looks 192like C<(eval 34)>. 193 194=head1 DEBUGGER STARTUP 195 196When C<perl5db.pl> starts, it reads an rcfile (C<perl5db.ini> for 197non-interactive sessions, C<.perldb> for interactive ones) that can set a number 198of options. In addition, this file may define a subroutine C<&afterinit> 199that will be executed (in the debugger's context) after the debugger has 200initialized itself. 201 202Next, it checks the C<PERLDB_OPTS> environment variable and treats its 203contents as the argument of a C<o> command in the debugger. 204 205=head2 STARTUP-ONLY OPTIONS 206 207The following options can only be specified at startup. 208To set them in your rcfile, add a call to 209C<&parse_options("optionName=new_value")>. 210 211=over 4 212 213=item * TTY 214 215the TTY to use for debugging i/o. 216 217=item * noTTY 218 219if set, goes in NonStop mode. On interrupt, if TTY is not set, 220uses the value of noTTY or F<$HOME/.perldbtty$$> to find TTY using 221Term::Rendezvous. Current variant is to have the name of TTY in this 222file. 223 224=item * ReadLine 225 226if false, a dummy ReadLine is used, so you can debug 227ReadLine applications. 228 229=item * NonStop 230 231if true, no i/o is performed until interrupt. 232 233=item * LineInfo 234 235file or pipe to print line number info to. If it is a 236pipe, a short "emacs like" message is used. 237 238=item * RemotePort 239 240host:port to connect to on remote host for remote debugging. 241 242=item * HistFile 243 244file to store session history to. There is no default and so no 245history file is written unless this variable is explicitly set. 246 247=item * HistSize 248 249number of commands to store to the file specified in C<HistFile>. 250Default is 100. 251 252=back 253 254=head3 SAMPLE RCFILE 255 256 &parse_options("NonStop=1 LineInfo=db.out"); 257 sub afterinit { $trace = 1; } 258 259The script will run without human intervention, putting trace 260information into C<db.out>. (If you interrupt it, you had better 261reset C<LineInfo> to something I<interactive>!) 262 263=head1 INTERNALS DESCRIPTION 264 265=head2 DEBUGGER INTERFACE VARIABLES 266 267Perl supplies the values for C<%sub>. It effectively inserts 268a C<&DB::DB();> in front of each place that can have a 269breakpoint. At each subroutine call, it calls C<&DB::sub> with 270C<$DB::sub> set to the called subroutine. It also inserts a C<BEGIN 271{require 'perl5db.pl'}> before the first line. 272 273After each C<require>d file is compiled, but before it is executed, a 274call to C<&DB::postponed($main::{'_<'.$filename})> is done. C<$filename> 275is the expanded name of the C<require>d file (as found via C<%INC>). 276 277=head3 IMPORTANT INTERNAL VARIABLES 278 279=head4 C<$CreateTTY> 280 281Used to control when the debugger will attempt to acquire another TTY to be 282used for input. 283 284=over 285 286=item * 1 - on C<fork()> 287 288=item * 2 - debugger is started inside debugger 289 290=item * 4 - on startup 291 292=back 293 294=head4 C<$doret> 295 296The value -2 indicates that no return value should be printed. 297Any other positive value causes C<DB::sub> to print return values. 298 299=head4 C<$evalarg> 300 301The item to be eval'ed by C<DB::eval>. Used to prevent messing with the current 302contents of C<@_> when C<DB::eval> is called. 303 304=head4 C<$frame> 305 306Determines what messages (if any) will get printed when a subroutine (or eval) 307is entered or exited. 308 309=over 4 310 311=item * 0 - No enter/exit messages 312 313=item * 1 - Print I<entering> messages on subroutine entry 314 315=item * 2 - Adds exit messages on subroutine exit. If no other flag is on, acts like 1+2. 316 317=item * 4 - Extended messages: C<< <in|out> I<context>=I<fully-qualified sub name> from I<file>:I<line> >>. If no other flag is on, acts like 1+4. 318 319=item * 8 - Adds parameter information to messages, and overloaded stringify and tied FETCH is enabled on the printed arguments. Ignored if C<4> is not on. 320 321=item * 16 - Adds C<I<context> return from I<subname>: I<value>> messages on subroutine/eval exit. Ignored if C<4> is not on. 322 323=back 324 325To get everything, use C<$frame=30> (or C<o f=30> as a debugger command). 326The debugger internally juggles the value of C<$frame> during execution to 327protect external modules that the debugger uses from getting traced. 328 329=head4 C<$level> 330 331Tracks current debugger nesting level. Used to figure out how many 332C<E<lt>E<gt>> pairs to surround the line number with when the debugger 333outputs a prompt. Also used to help determine if the program has finished 334during command parsing. 335 336=head4 C<$onetimeDump> 337 338Controls what (if anything) C<DB::eval()> will print after evaluating an 339expression. 340 341=over 4 342 343=item * C<undef> - don't print anything 344 345=item * C<dump> - use C<dumpvar.pl> to display the value returned 346 347=item * C<methods> - print the methods callable on the first item returned 348 349=back 350 351=head4 C<$onetimeDumpDepth> 352 353Controls how far down C<dumpvar.pl> will go before printing C<...> while 354dumping a structure. Numeric. If C<undef>, print all levels. 355 356=head4 C<$signal> 357 358Used to track whether or not an C<INT> signal has been detected. C<DB::DB()>, 359which is called before every statement, checks this and puts the user into 360command mode if it finds C<$signal> set to a true value. 361 362=head4 C<$single> 363 364Controls behavior during single-stepping. Stacked in C<@stack> on entry to 365each subroutine; popped again at the end of each subroutine. 366 367=over 4 368 369=item * 0 - run continuously. 370 371=item * 1 - single-step, go into subs. The C<s> command. 372 373=item * 2 - single-step, don't go into subs. The C<n> command. 374 375=item * 4 - print current sub depth (turned on to force this when C<too much 376recursion> occurs. 377 378=back 379 380=head4 C<$trace> 381 382Controls the output of trace information. 383 384=over 4 385 386=item * 1 - The C<t> command was entered to turn on tracing (every line executed is printed) 387 388=item * 2 - watch expressions are active 389 390=item * 4 - user defined a C<watchfunction()> in C<afterinit()> 391 392=back 393 394=head4 C<$slave_editor> 395 3961 if C<LINEINFO> was directed to a pipe; 0 otherwise. 397 398=head4 C<@cmdfhs> 399 400Stack of filehandles that C<DB::readline()> will read commands from. 401Manipulated by the debugger's C<source> command and C<DB::readline()> itself. 402 403=head4 C<@dbline> 404 405Local alias to the magical line array, C<@{$main::{'_<'.$filename}}> , 406supplied by the Perl interpreter to the debugger. Contains the source. 407 408=head4 C<@old_watch> 409 410Previous values of watch expressions. First set when the expression is 411entered; reset whenever the watch expression changes. 412 413=head4 C<@saved> 414 415Saves important globals (C<$@>, C<$!>, C<$^E>, C<$,>, C<$/>, C<$\>, C<$^W>) 416so that the debugger can substitute safe values while it's running, and 417restore them when it returns control. 418 419=head4 C<@stack> 420 421Saves the current value of C<$single> on entry to a subroutine. 422Manipulated by the C<c> command to turn off tracing in all subs above the 423current one. 424 425=head4 C<@to_watch> 426 427The 'watch' expressions: to be evaluated before each line is executed. 428 429=head4 C<@typeahead> 430 431The typeahead buffer, used by C<DB::readline>. 432 433=head4 C<%alias> 434 435Command aliases. Stored as character strings to be substituted for a command 436entered. 437 438=head4 C<%break_on_load> 439 440Keys are file names, values are 1 (break when this file is loaded) or undef 441(don't break when it is loaded). 442 443=head4 C<%dbline> 444 445Keys are line numbers, values are C<condition\0action>. If used in numeric 446context, values are 0 if not breakable, 1 if breakable, no matter what is 447in the actual hash entry. 448 449=head4 C<%had_breakpoints> 450 451Keys are file names; values are bitfields: 452 453=over 4 454 455=item * 1 - file has a breakpoint in it. 456 457=item * 2 - file has an action in it. 458 459=back 460 461A zero or undefined value means this file has neither. 462 463=head4 C<%option> 464 465Stores the debugger options. These are character string values. 466 467=head4 C<%postponed> 468 469Saves breakpoints for code that hasn't been compiled yet. 470Keys are subroutine names, values are: 471 472=over 4 473 474=item * C<compile> - break when this sub is compiled 475 476=item * C<< break +0 if <condition> >> - break (conditionally) at the start of this routine. The condition will be '1' if no condition was specified. 477 478=back 479 480=head4 C<%postponed_file> 481 482This hash keeps track of breakpoints that need to be set for files that have 483not yet been compiled. Keys are filenames; values are references to hashes. 484Each of these hashes is keyed by line number, and its values are breakpoint 485definitions (C<condition\0action>). 486 487=head1 DEBUGGER INITIALIZATION 488 489The debugger's initialization actually jumps all over the place inside this 490package. This is because there are several BEGIN blocks (which of course 491execute immediately) spread through the code. Why is that? 492 493The debugger needs to be able to change some things and set some things up 494before the debugger code is compiled; most notably, the C<$deep> variable that 495C<DB::sub> uses to tell when a program has recursed deeply. In addition, the 496debugger has to turn off warnings while the debugger code is compiled, but then 497restore them to their original setting before the program being debugged begins 498executing. 499 500The first C<BEGIN> block simply turns off warnings by saving the current 501setting of C<$^W> and then setting it to zero. The second one initializes 502the debugger variables that are needed before the debugger begins executing. 503The third one puts C<$^X> back to its former value. 504 505We'll detail the second C<BEGIN> block later; just remember that if you need 506to initialize something before the debugger starts really executing, that's 507where it has to go. 508 509=cut 510 511package DB; 512 513use strict; 514 515use Cwd (); 516 517my $_initial_cwd; 518 519BEGIN {eval 'use IO::Handle'}; # Needed for flush only? breaks under miniperl 520 521BEGIN { 522 require feature; 523 $^V =~ /^v(\d+\.\d+)/; 524 feature->import(":$1"); 525 $_initial_cwd = Cwd::getcwd(); 526} 527 528# Debugger for Perl 5.00x; perl5db.pl patch level: 529use vars qw($VERSION $header); 530 531# bump to X.XX in blead, only use X.XX_XX in maint 532$VERSION = '1.55'; 533 534$header = "perl5db.pl version $VERSION"; 535 536=head1 DEBUGGER ROUTINES 537 538=head2 C<DB::eval()> 539 540This function replaces straight C<eval()> inside the debugger; it simplifies 541the process of evaluating code in the user's context. 542 543The code to be evaluated is passed via the package global variable 544C<$DB::evalarg>; this is done to avoid fiddling with the contents of C<@_>. 545 546Before we do the C<eval()>, we preserve the current settings of C<$trace>, 547C<$single>, C<$^D> and C<$usercontext>. The latter contains the 548preserved values of C<$@>, C<$!>, C<$^E>, C<$,>, C<$/>, C<$\>, C<$^W> and the 549user's current package, grabbed when C<DB::DB> got control. This causes the 550proper context to be used when the eval is actually done. Afterward, we 551restore C<$trace>, C<$single>, and C<$^D>. 552 553Next we need to handle C<$@> without getting confused. We save C<$@> in a 554local lexical, localize C<$saved[0]> (which is where C<save()> will put 555C<$@>), and then call C<save()> to capture C<$@>, C<$!>, C<$^E>, C<$,>, 556C<$/>, C<$\>, and C<$^W>) and set C<$,>, C<$/>, C<$\>, and C<$^W> to values 557considered sane by the debugger. If there was an C<eval()> error, we print 558it on the debugger's output. If C<$onetimedump> is defined, we call 559C<dumpit> if it's set to 'dump', or C<methods> if it's set to 560'methods'. Setting it to something else causes the debugger to do the eval 561but not print the result - handy if you want to do something else with it 562(the "watch expressions" code does this to get the value of the watch 563expression but not show it unless it matters). 564 565In any case, we then return the list of output from C<eval> to the caller, 566and unwinding restores the former version of C<$@> in C<@saved> as well 567(the localization of C<$saved[0]> goes away at the end of this scope). 568 569=head3 Parameters and variables influencing execution of DB::eval() 570 571C<DB::eval> isn't parameterized in the standard way; this is to keep the 572debugger's calls to C<DB::eval()> from mucking with C<@_>, among other things. 573The variables listed below influence C<DB::eval()>'s execution directly. 574 575=over 4 576 577=item C<$evalarg> - the thing to actually be eval'ed 578 579=item C<$trace> - Current state of execution tracing 580 581=item C<$single> - Current state of single-stepping 582 583=item C<$onetimeDump> - what is to be displayed after the evaluation 584 585=item C<$onetimeDumpDepth> - how deep C<dumpit()> should go when dumping results 586 587=back 588 589The following variables are altered by C<DB::eval()> during its execution. They 590are "stacked" via C<local()>, enabling recursive calls to C<DB::eval()>. 591 592=over 4 593 594=item C<@res> - used to capture output from actual C<eval>. 595 596=item C<$otrace> - saved value of C<$trace>. 597 598=item C<$osingle> - saved value of C<$single>. 599 600=item C<$od> - saved value of C<$^D>. 601 602=item C<$saved[0]> - saved value of C<$@>. 603 604=item $\ - for output of C<$@> if there is an evaluation error. 605 606=back 607 608=head3 The problem of lexicals 609 610The context of C<DB::eval()> presents us with some problems. Obviously, 611we want to be 'sandboxed' away from the debugger's internals when we do 612the eval, but we need some way to control how punctuation variables and 613debugger globals are used. 614 615We can't use local, because the code inside C<DB::eval> can see localized 616variables; and we can't use C<my> either for the same reason. The code 617in this routine compromises and uses C<my>. 618 619After this routine is over, we don't have user code executing in the debugger's 620context, so we can use C<my> freely. 621 622=cut 623 624############################################## Begin lexical danger zone 625 626# 'my' variables used here could leak into (that is, be visible in) 627# the context that the code being evaluated is executing in. This means that 628# the code could modify the debugger's variables. 629# 630# Fiddling with the debugger's context could be Bad. We insulate things as 631# much as we can. 632 633use vars qw( 634 @args 635 %break_on_load 636 $CommandSet 637 $CreateTTY 638 $DBGR 639 @dbline 640 $dbline 641 %dbline 642 $dieLevel 643 $filename 644 $histfile 645 $histsize 646 $IN 647 $inhibit_exit 648 @ini_INC 649 $ini_warn 650 $maxtrace 651 $od 652 @options 653 $osingle 654 $otrace 655 $pager 656 $post 657 %postponed 658 $prc 659 $pre 660 $pretype 661 $psh 662 @RememberOnROptions 663 $remoteport 664 @res 665 $rl 666 @saved 667 $signalLevel 668 $sub 669 $term 670 $usercontext 671 $warnLevel 672); 673 674our ( 675 @cmdfhs, 676 $evalarg, 677 $frame, 678 $hist, 679 $ImmediateStop, 680 $line, 681 $onetimeDump, 682 $onetimedumpDepth, 683 %option, 684 $OUT, 685 $packname, 686 $signal, 687 $single, 688 $start, 689 %sub, 690 $subname, 691 $trace, 692 $window, 693); 694 695# Used to save @ARGV and extract any debugger-related flags. 696use vars qw(@ARGS); 697 698# Used to prevent multiple entries to diesignal() 699# (if for instance diesignal() itself dies) 700use vars qw($panic); 701 702# Used to prevent the debugger from running nonstop 703# after a restart 704our ($second_time); 705 706sub _calc_usercontext { 707 my ($package) = @_; 708 709 # Cancel strict completely for the evaluated code, so the code 710 # the user evaluates won't be affected by it. (Shlomi Fish) 711 return 'no strict; ($@, $!, $^E, $,, $/, $\, $^W) = @DB::saved;' 712 . "package $package;"; # this won't let them modify, alas 713} 714 715sub eval { 716 717 # 'my' would make it visible from user code 718 # but so does local! --tchrist 719 # Remember: this localizes @DB::res, not @main::res. 720 local @res; 721 { 722 723 # Try to keep the user code from messing with us. Save these so that 724 # even if the eval'ed code changes them, we can put them back again. 725 # Needed because the user could refer directly to the debugger's 726 # package globals (and any 'my' variables in this containing scope) 727 # inside the eval(), and we want to try to stay safe. 728 local $otrace = $trace; 729 local $osingle = $single; 730 local $od = $^D; 731 732 # Untaint the incoming eval() argument. 733 { ($evalarg) = $evalarg =~ /(.*)/s; } 734 735 # $usercontext built in DB::DB near the comment 736 # "set up the context for DB::eval ..." 737 # Evaluate and save any results. 738 @res = eval "$usercontext $evalarg;\n"; # '\n' for nice recursive debug 739 740 # Restore those old values. 741 $trace = $otrace; 742 $single = $osingle; 743 $^D = $od; 744 } 745 746 # Save the current value of $@, and preserve it in the debugger's copy 747 # of the saved precious globals. 748 my $at = $@; 749 750 # Since we're only saving $@, we only have to localize the array element 751 # that it will be stored in. 752 local $saved[0]; # Preserve the old value of $@ 753 eval { &DB::save }; 754 755 # Now see whether we need to report an error back to the user. 756 if ($at) { 757 local $\ = ''; 758 print $OUT $at; 759 } 760 761 # Display as required by the caller. $onetimeDump and $onetimedumpDepth 762 # are package globals. 763 elsif ($onetimeDump) { 764 if ( $onetimeDump eq 'dump' ) { 765 local $option{dumpDepth} = $onetimedumpDepth 766 if defined $onetimedumpDepth; 767 dumpit( $OUT, \@res ); 768 } 769 elsif ( $onetimeDump eq 'methods' ) { 770 methods( $res[0] ); 771 } 772 } ## end elsif ($onetimeDump) 773 @res; 774} ## end sub eval 775 776############################################## End lexical danger zone 777 778# After this point it is safe to introduce lexicals. 779# The code being debugged will be executing in its own context, and 780# can't see the inside of the debugger. 781# 782# However, one should not overdo it: leave as much control from outside as 783# possible. If you make something a lexical, it's not going to be addressable 784# from outside the debugger even if you know its name. 785 786# This file is automatically included if you do perl -d. 787# It's probably not useful to include this yourself. 788# 789# Before venturing further into these twisty passages, it is 790# wise to read the perldebguts man page or risk the ire of dragons. 791# 792# (It should be noted that perldebguts will tell you a lot about 793# the underlying mechanics of how the debugger interfaces into the 794# Perl interpreter, but not a lot about the debugger itself. The new 795# comments in this code try to address this problem.) 796 797# Note that no subroutine call is possible until &DB::sub is defined 798# (for subroutines defined outside of the package DB). In fact the same is 799# true if $deep is not defined. 800 801# Enhanced by ilya@math.ohio-state.edu (Ilya Zakharevich) 802 803# modified Perl debugger, to be run from Emacs in perldb-mode 804# Ray Lischner (uunet!mntgfx!lisch) as of 5 Nov 1990 805# Johan Vromans -- upgrade to 4.0 pl 10 806# Ilya Zakharevich -- patches after 5.001 (and some before ;-) 807######################################################################## 808 809=head1 DEBUGGER INITIALIZATION 810 811The debugger starts up in phases. 812 813=head2 BASIC SETUP 814 815First, it initializes the environment it wants to run in: turning off 816warnings during its own compilation, defining variables which it will need 817to avoid warnings later, setting itself up to not exit when the program 818terminates, and defaulting to printing return values for the C<r> command. 819 820=cut 821 822# Needed for the statement after exec(): 823# 824# This BEGIN block is simply used to switch off warnings during debugger 825# compilation. Probably it would be better practice to fix the warnings, 826# but this is how it's done at the moment. 827 828BEGIN { 829 $ini_warn = $^W; 830 $^W = 0; 831} # Switch compilation warnings off until another BEGIN. 832 833local ($^W) = 0; # Switch run-time warnings off during init. 834 835=head2 THREADS SUPPORT 836 837If we are running under a threaded Perl, we require threads and threads::shared 838if the environment variable C<PERL5DB_THREADED> is set, to enable proper 839threaded debugger control. C<-dt> can also be used to set this. 840 841Each new thread will be announced and the debugger prompt will always inform 842you of each new thread created. It will also indicate the thread id in which 843we are currently running within the prompt like this: 844 845 [tid] DB<$i> 846 847Where C<[tid]> is an integer thread id and C<$i> is the familiar debugger 848command prompt. The prompt will show: C<[0]> when running under threads, but 849not actually in a thread. C<[tid]> is consistent with C<gdb> usage. 850 851While running under threads, when you set or delete a breakpoint (etc.), this 852will apply to all threads, not just the currently running one. When you are 853in a currently executing thread, you will stay there until it completes. With 854the current implementation it is not currently possible to hop from one thread 855to another. 856 857The C<e> and C<E> commands are currently fairly minimal - see C<h e> and C<h E>. 858 859Note that threading support was built into the debugger as of Perl version 860C<5.8.6> and debugger version C<1.2.8>. 861 862=cut 863 864BEGIN { 865 # ensure we can share our non-threaded variables or no-op 866 if ($ENV{PERL5DB_THREADED}) { 867 require threads; 868 require threads::shared; 869 import threads::shared qw(share); 870 $DBGR; 871 share(\$DBGR); 872 lock($DBGR); 873 print "Threads support enabled\n"; 874 } else { 875 *lock = sub(*) {}; 876 *share = sub(\[$@%]) {}; 877 } 878} 879 880# These variables control the execution of 'dumpvar.pl'. 881{ 882 package dumpvar; 883 use vars qw( 884 $hashDepth 885 $arrayDepth 886 $dumpDBFiles 887 $dumpPackages 888 $quoteHighBit 889 $printUndef 890 $globPrint 891 $usageOnly 892 ); 893} 894 895# used to control die() reporting in diesignal() 896{ 897 package Carp; 898 use vars qw($CarpLevel); 899} 900 901# without threads, $filename is not defined until DB::DB is called 902share($main::{'_<'.$filename}) if defined $filename; 903 904# Command-line + PERLLIB: 905# Save the contents of @INC before they are modified elsewhere. 906@ini_INC = @INC; 907 908# This was an attempt to clear out the previous values of various 909# trapped errors. Apparently it didn't help. XXX More info needed! 910# $prevwarn = $prevdie = $prevbus = $prevsegv = ''; # Does not help?! 911 912# We set these variables to safe values. We don't want to blindly turn 913# off warnings, because other packages may still want them. 914$trace = $signal = $single = 0; # Uninitialized warning suppression 915 # (local $^W cannot help - other packages!). 916 917# Default to not exiting when program finishes; print the return 918# value when the 'r' command is used to return from a subroutine. 919$inhibit_exit = $option{PrintRet} = 1; 920 921use vars qw($trace_to_depth); 922 923# Default to 1E9 so it won't be limited to a certain recursion depth. 924$trace_to_depth = 1E9; 925 926=head1 OPTION PROCESSING 927 928The debugger's options are actually spread out over the debugger itself and 929C<dumpvar.pl>; some of these are variables to be set, while others are 930subs to be called with a value. To try to make this a little easier to 931manage, the debugger uses a few data structures to define what options 932are legal and how they are to be processed. 933 934First, the C<@options> array defines the I<names> of all the options that 935are to be accepted. 936 937=cut 938 939@options = qw( 940 CommandSet HistFile HistSize 941 hashDepth arrayDepth dumpDepth 942 DumpDBFiles DumpPackages DumpReused 943 compactDump veryCompact quote 944 HighBit undefPrint globPrint 945 PrintRet UsageOnly frame 946 AutoTrace TTY noTTY 947 ReadLine NonStop LineInfo 948 maxTraceLen recallCommand ShellBang 949 pager tkRunning ornaments 950 signalLevel warnLevel dieLevel 951 inhibit_exit ImmediateStop bareStringify 952 CreateTTY RemotePort windowSize 953 DollarCaretP 954); 955 956@RememberOnROptions = qw(DollarCaretP); 957 958=pod 959 960Second, C<optionVars> lists the variables that each option uses to save its 961state. 962 963=cut 964 965use vars qw(%optionVars); 966 967%optionVars = ( 968 hashDepth => \$dumpvar::hashDepth, 969 arrayDepth => \$dumpvar::arrayDepth, 970 CommandSet => \$CommandSet, 971 DumpDBFiles => \$dumpvar::dumpDBFiles, 972 DumpPackages => \$dumpvar::dumpPackages, 973 DumpReused => \$dumpvar::dumpReused, 974 HighBit => \$dumpvar::quoteHighBit, 975 undefPrint => \$dumpvar::printUndef, 976 globPrint => \$dumpvar::globPrint, 977 UsageOnly => \$dumpvar::usageOnly, 978 CreateTTY => \$CreateTTY, 979 bareStringify => \$dumpvar::bareStringify, 980 frame => \$frame, 981 AutoTrace => \$trace, 982 inhibit_exit => \$inhibit_exit, 983 maxTraceLen => \$maxtrace, 984 ImmediateStop => \$ImmediateStop, 985 RemotePort => \$remoteport, 986 windowSize => \$window, 987 HistFile => \$histfile, 988 HistSize => \$histsize, 989); 990 991=pod 992 993Third, C<%optionAction> defines the subroutine to be called to process each 994option. 995 996=cut 997 998use vars qw(%optionAction); 999 1000%optionAction = ( 1001 compactDump => \&dumpvar::compactDump, 1002 veryCompact => \&dumpvar::veryCompact, 1003 quote => \&dumpvar::quote, 1004 TTY => \&TTY, 1005 noTTY => \&noTTY, 1006 ReadLine => \&ReadLine, 1007 NonStop => \&NonStop, 1008 LineInfo => \&LineInfo, 1009 recallCommand => \&recallCommand, 1010 ShellBang => \&shellBang, 1011 pager => \&pager, 1012 signalLevel => \&signalLevel, 1013 warnLevel => \&warnLevel, 1014 dieLevel => \&dieLevel, 1015 tkRunning => \&tkRunning, 1016 ornaments => \&ornaments, 1017 RemotePort => \&RemotePort, 1018 DollarCaretP => \&DollarCaretP, 1019); 1020 1021=pod 1022 1023Last, the C<%optionRequire> notes modules that must be C<require>d if an 1024option is used. 1025 1026=cut 1027 1028# Note that this list is not complete: several options not listed here 1029# actually require that dumpvar.pl be loaded for them to work, but are 1030# not in the table. A subsequent patch will correct this problem; for 1031# the moment, we're just recommenting, and we are NOT going to change 1032# function. 1033use vars qw(%optionRequire); 1034 1035%optionRequire = ( 1036 compactDump => 'dumpvar.pl', 1037 veryCompact => 'dumpvar.pl', 1038 quote => 'dumpvar.pl', 1039); 1040 1041=pod 1042 1043There are a number of initialization-related variables which can be set 1044by putting code to set them in a BEGIN block in the C<PERL5DB> environment 1045variable. These are: 1046 1047=over 4 1048 1049=item C<$rl> - readline control XXX needs more explanation 1050 1051=item C<$warnLevel> - whether or not debugger takes over warning handling 1052 1053=item C<$dieLevel> - whether or not debugger takes over die handling 1054 1055=item C<$signalLevel> - whether or not debugger takes over signal handling 1056 1057=item C<$pre> - preprompt actions (array reference) 1058 1059=item C<$post> - postprompt actions (array reference) 1060 1061=item C<$pretype> 1062 1063=item C<$CreateTTY> - whether or not to create a new TTY for this debugger 1064 1065=item C<$CommandSet> - which command set to use (defaults to new, documented set) 1066 1067=back 1068 1069=cut 1070 1071# These guys may be defined in $ENV{PERL5DB} : 1072$rl = 1 unless defined $rl; 1073$warnLevel = 1 unless defined $warnLevel; 1074$dieLevel = 1 unless defined $dieLevel; 1075$signalLevel = 1 unless defined $signalLevel; 1076$pre = [] unless defined $pre; 1077$post = [] unless defined $post; 1078$pretype = [] unless defined $pretype; 1079$CreateTTY = 3 unless defined $CreateTTY; 1080$CommandSet = '580' unless defined $CommandSet; 1081 1082share($rl); 1083share($warnLevel); 1084share($dieLevel); 1085share($signalLevel); 1086share($pre); 1087share($post); 1088share($pretype); 1089share($rl); 1090share($CreateTTY); 1091share($CommandSet); 1092 1093=pod 1094 1095The default C<die>, C<warn>, and C<signal> handlers are set up. 1096 1097=cut 1098 1099warnLevel($warnLevel); 1100dieLevel($dieLevel); 1101signalLevel($signalLevel); 1102 1103=pod 1104 1105The pager to be used is needed next. We try to get it from the 1106environment first. If it's not defined there, we try to find it in 1107the Perl C<Config.pm>. If it's not there, we default to C<more>. We 1108then call the C<pager()> function to save the pager name. 1109 1110=cut 1111 1112# This routine makes sure $pager is set up so that '|' can use it. 1113pager( 1114 1115 # If PAGER is defined in the environment, use it. 1116 defined $ENV{PAGER} 1117 ? $ENV{PAGER} 1118 1119 # If not, see if Config.pm defines it. 1120 : eval { require Config } 1121 && defined $Config::Config{pager} 1122 ? $Config::Config{pager} 1123 1124 # If not, fall back to 'more'. 1125 : 'more' 1126 ) 1127 unless defined $pager; 1128 1129=pod 1130 1131We set up the command to be used to access the man pages, the command 1132recall character (C<!> unless otherwise defined) and the shell escape 1133character (C<!> unless otherwise defined). Yes, these do conflict, and 1134neither works in the debugger at the moment. 1135 1136=cut 1137 1138setman(); 1139 1140# Set up defaults for command recall and shell escape (note: 1141# these currently don't work in linemode debugging). 1142recallCommand("!") unless defined $prc; 1143shellBang("!") unless defined $psh; 1144 1145=pod 1146 1147We then set up the gigantic string containing the debugger help. 1148We also set the limit on the number of arguments we'll display during a 1149trace. 1150 1151=cut 1152 1153sethelp(); 1154 1155# If we didn't get a default for the length of eval/stack trace args, 1156# set it here. 1157$maxtrace = 400 unless defined $maxtrace; 1158 1159=head2 SETTING UP THE DEBUGGER GREETING 1160 1161The debugger I<greeting> helps to inform the user how many debuggers are 1162running, and whether the current debugger is the primary or a child. 1163 1164If we are the primary, we just hang onto our pid so we'll have it when 1165or if we start a child debugger. If we are a child, we'll set things up 1166so we'll have a unique greeting and so the parent will give us our own 1167TTY later. 1168 1169We save the current contents of the C<PERLDB_PIDS> environment variable 1170because we mess around with it. We'll also need to hang onto it because 1171we'll need it if we restart. 1172 1173Child debuggers make a label out of the current PID structure recorded in 1174PERLDB_PIDS plus the new PID. They also mark themselves as not having a TTY 1175yet so the parent will give them one later via C<resetterm()>. 1176 1177=cut 1178 1179# Save the current contents of the environment; we're about to 1180# much with it. We'll need this if we have to restart. 1181use vars qw($ini_pids); 1182$ini_pids = $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS}; 1183 1184use vars qw ($pids $term_pid); 1185 1186if ( defined $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} ) { 1187 1188 # We're a child. Make us a label out of the current PID structure 1189 # recorded in PERLDB_PIDS plus our (new) PID. Mark us as not having 1190 # a term yet so the parent will give us one later via resetterm(). 1191 1192 my $env_pids = $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS}; 1193 $pids = "[$env_pids]"; 1194 1195 # Unless we are on OpenVMS, all programs under the DCL shell run under 1196 # the same PID. 1197 1198 if (($^O eq 'VMS') && ($env_pids =~ /\b$$\b/)) { 1199 $term_pid = $$; 1200 } 1201 else { 1202 $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} .= "->$$"; 1203 $term_pid = -1; 1204 } 1205 1206} ## end if (defined $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS... 1207else { 1208 1209 # We're the parent PID. Initialize PERLDB_PID in case we end up with a 1210 # child debugger, and mark us as the parent, so we'll know to set up 1211 # more TTY's is we have to. 1212 $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} = "$$"; 1213 $pids = "[pid=$$]"; 1214 $term_pid = $$; 1215} 1216 1217use vars qw($pidprompt); 1218$pidprompt = ''; 1219 1220# Sets up $emacs as a synonym for $slave_editor. 1221our ($slave_editor); 1222*emacs = $slave_editor if $slave_editor; # May be used in afterinit()... 1223 1224=head2 READING THE RC FILE 1225 1226The debugger will read a file of initialization options if supplied. If 1227running interactively, this is C<.perldb>; if not, it's C<perldb.ini>. 1228 1229=cut 1230 1231# As noted, this test really doesn't check accurately that the debugger 1232# is running at a terminal or not. 1233 1234use vars qw($rcfile); 1235{ 1236 my $dev_tty = (($^O eq 'VMS') ? 'TT:' : '/dev/tty'); 1237 # this is the wrong metric! 1238 $rcfile = ((-e $dev_tty) ? ".perldb" : "perldb.ini"); 1239} 1240 1241=pod 1242 1243The debugger does a safety test of the file to be read. It must be owned 1244either by the current user or root, and must only be writable by the owner. 1245 1246=cut 1247 1248# This wraps a safety test around "do" to read and evaluate the init file. 1249# 1250# This isn't really safe, because there's a race 1251# between checking and opening. The solution is to 1252# open and fstat the handle, but then you have to read and 1253# eval the contents. But then the silly thing gets 1254# your lexical scope, which is unfortunate at best. 1255sub safe_do { 1256 my $file = shift; 1257 1258 # Just exactly what part of the word "CORE::" don't you understand? 1259 local $SIG{__WARN__}; 1260 local $SIG{__DIE__}; 1261 1262 unless ( is_safe_file($file) ) { 1263 CORE::warn <<EO_GRIPE; 1264perldb: Must not source insecure rcfile $file. 1265 You or the superuser must be the owner, and it must not 1266 be writable by anyone but its owner. 1267EO_GRIPE 1268 return; 1269 } ## end unless (is_safe_file($file... 1270 1271 do $file; 1272 CORE::warn("perldb: couldn't parse $file: $@") if $@; 1273} ## end sub safe_do 1274 1275# This is the safety test itself. 1276# 1277# Verifies that owner is either real user or superuser and that no 1278# one but owner may write to it. This function is of limited use 1279# when called on a path instead of upon a handle, because there are 1280# no guarantees that filename (by dirent) whose file (by ino) is 1281# eventually accessed is the same as the one tested. 1282# Assumes that the file's existence is not in doubt. 1283sub is_safe_file { 1284 my $path = shift; 1285 stat($path) || return; # mysteriously vaporized 1286 my ( $dev, $ino, $mode, $nlink, $uid, $gid ) = stat(_); 1287 1288 return 0 if $uid != 0 && $uid != $<; 1289 return 0 if $mode & 022; 1290 return 1; 1291} ## end sub is_safe_file 1292 1293# If the rcfile (whichever one we decided was the right one to read) 1294# exists, we safely do it. 1295if ( -f $rcfile ) { 1296 safe_do("./$rcfile"); 1297} 1298 1299# If there isn't one here, try the user's home directory. 1300elsif ( defined $ENV{HOME} && -f "$ENV{HOME}/$rcfile" ) { 1301 safe_do("$ENV{HOME}/$rcfile"); 1302} 1303 1304# Else try the login directory. 1305elsif ( defined $ENV{LOGDIR} && -f "$ENV{LOGDIR}/$rcfile" ) { 1306 safe_do("$ENV{LOGDIR}/$rcfile"); 1307} 1308 1309# If the PERLDB_OPTS variable has options in it, parse those out next. 1310if ( defined $ENV{PERLDB_OPTS} ) { 1311 parse_options( $ENV{PERLDB_OPTS} ); 1312} 1313 1314=pod 1315 1316The last thing we do during initialization is determine which subroutine is 1317to be used to obtain a new terminal when a new debugger is started. Right now, 1318the debugger only handles TCP sockets, X11, OS/2, amd Mac OS X 1319(darwin). 1320 1321=cut 1322 1323# Set up the get_fork_TTY subroutine to be aliased to the proper routine. 1324# Works if you're running an xterm or xterm-like window, or you're on 1325# OS/2, or on Mac OS X. This may need some expansion. 1326 1327if (not defined &get_fork_TTY) # only if no routine exists 1328{ 1329 if ( defined $remoteport ) { 1330 # Expect an inetd-like server 1331 *get_fork_TTY = \&socket_get_fork_TTY; # to listen to us 1332 } 1333 elsif (defined $ENV{TERM} # If we know what kind 1334 # of terminal this is, 1335 and $ENV{TERM} eq 'xterm' # and it's an xterm, 1336 and defined $ENV{DISPLAY} # and what display it's on, 1337 ) 1338 { 1339 *get_fork_TTY = \&xterm_get_fork_TTY; # use the xterm version 1340 } 1341 elsif ( $ENV{TMUX} ) { 1342 *get_fork_TTY = \&tmux_get_fork_TTY; 1343 } 1344 elsif ( $^O eq 'os2' ) { # If this is OS/2, 1345 *get_fork_TTY = \&os2_get_fork_TTY; # use the OS/2 version 1346 } 1347 elsif ( $^O eq 'darwin' # If this is Mac OS X 1348 and defined $ENV{TERM_PROGRAM} # and we're running inside 1349 and $ENV{TERM_PROGRAM} 1350 eq 'Apple_Terminal' # Terminal.app 1351 ) 1352 { 1353 *get_fork_TTY = \&macosx_get_fork_TTY; # use the Mac OS X version 1354 } 1355} ## end if (not defined &get_fork_TTY... 1356 1357# untaint $^O, which may have been tainted by the last statement. 1358# see bug [perl #24674] 1359$^O =~ m/^(.*)\z/; 1360$^O = $1; 1361 1362# Here begin the unreadable code. It needs fixing. 1363 1364=head2 RESTART PROCESSING 1365 1366This section handles the restart command. When the C<R> command is invoked, it 1367tries to capture all of the state it can into environment variables, and 1368then sets C<PERLDB_RESTART>. When we start executing again, we check to see 1369if C<PERLDB_RESTART> is there; if so, we reload all the information that 1370the R command stuffed into the environment variables. 1371 1372 PERLDB_RESTART - flag only, contains no restart data itself. 1373 PERLDB_HIST - command history, if it's available 1374 PERLDB_ON_LOAD - breakpoints set by the rc file 1375 PERLDB_POSTPONE - subs that have been loaded/not executed, 1376 and have actions 1377 PERLDB_VISITED - files that had breakpoints 1378 PERLDB_FILE_... - breakpoints for a file 1379 PERLDB_OPT - active options 1380 PERLDB_INC - the original @INC 1381 PERLDB_PRETYPE - preprompt debugger actions 1382 PERLDB_PRE - preprompt Perl code 1383 PERLDB_POST - post-prompt Perl code 1384 PERLDB_TYPEAHEAD - typeahead captured by readline() 1385 1386We chug through all these variables and plug the values saved in them 1387back into the appropriate spots in the debugger. 1388 1389=cut 1390 1391use vars qw(%postponed_file @typeahead); 1392 1393our (@hist, @truehist); 1394 1395sub _restore_shared_globals_after_restart 1396{ 1397 @hist = get_list('PERLDB_HIST'); 1398 %break_on_load = get_list("PERLDB_ON_LOAD"); 1399 %postponed = get_list("PERLDB_POSTPONE"); 1400 1401 share(@hist); 1402 share(@truehist); 1403 share(%break_on_load); 1404 share(%postponed); 1405} 1406 1407sub _restore_breakpoints_and_actions { 1408 1409 my @had_breakpoints = get_list("PERLDB_VISITED"); 1410 1411 for my $file_idx ( 0 .. $#had_breakpoints ) { 1412 my $filename = $had_breakpoints[$file_idx]; 1413 my %pf = get_list("PERLDB_FILE_$file_idx"); 1414 $postponed_file{ $filename } = \%pf if %pf; 1415 my @lines = sort {$a <=> $b} keys(%pf); 1416 my @enabled_statuses = get_list("PERLDB_FILE_ENABLED_$file_idx"); 1417 for my $line_idx (0 .. $#lines) { 1418 _set_breakpoint_enabled_status( 1419 $filename, 1420 $lines[$line_idx], 1421 ($enabled_statuses[$line_idx] ? 1 : ''), 1422 ); 1423 } 1424 } 1425 1426 return; 1427} 1428 1429sub _restore_options_after_restart 1430{ 1431 my %options_map = get_list("PERLDB_OPT"); 1432 1433 while ( my ( $opt, $val ) = each %options_map ) { 1434 $val =~ s/[\\\']/\\$1/g; 1435 parse_options("$opt'$val'"); 1436 } 1437 1438 return; 1439} 1440 1441sub _restore_globals_after_restart 1442{ 1443 # restore original @INC 1444 @INC = get_list("PERLDB_INC"); 1445 @ini_INC = @INC; 1446 1447 # return pre/postprompt actions and typeahead buffer 1448 $pretype = [ get_list("PERLDB_PRETYPE") ]; 1449 $pre = [ get_list("PERLDB_PRE") ]; 1450 $post = [ get_list("PERLDB_POST") ]; 1451 @typeahead = get_list( "PERLDB_TYPEAHEAD", @typeahead ); 1452 1453 return; 1454} 1455 1456 1457if ( exists $ENV{PERLDB_RESTART} ) { 1458 1459 # We're restarting, so we don't need the flag that says to restart anymore. 1460 delete $ENV{PERLDB_RESTART}; 1461 1462 # $restart = 1; 1463 _restore_shared_globals_after_restart(); 1464 1465 _restore_breakpoints_and_actions(); 1466 1467 # restore options 1468 _restore_options_after_restart(); 1469 1470 _restore_globals_after_restart(); 1471} ## end if (exists $ENV{PERLDB_RESTART... 1472 1473=head2 SETTING UP THE TERMINAL 1474 1475Now, we'll decide how the debugger is going to interact with the user. 1476If there's no TTY, we set the debugger to run non-stop; there's not going 1477to be anyone there to enter commands. 1478 1479=cut 1480 1481use vars qw($notty $console $tty $LINEINFO); 1482use vars qw($lineinfo $doccmd); 1483 1484our ($runnonstop); 1485 1486# Local autoflush to avoid rt#116769, 1487# as calling IO::File methods causes an unresolvable loop 1488# that results in debugger failure. 1489sub _autoflush { 1490 my $o = select($_[0]); 1491 $|++; 1492 select($o); 1493} 1494 1495if ($notty) { 1496 $runnonstop = 1; 1497 share($runnonstop); 1498} 1499 1500=pod 1501 1502If there is a TTY, we have to determine who it belongs to before we can 1503proceed. If this is a slave editor or graphical debugger (denoted by 1504the first command-line switch being '-emacs'), we shift this off and 1505set C<$rl> to 0 (XXX ostensibly to do straight reads). 1506 1507=cut 1508 1509else { 1510 1511 # Is Perl being run from a slave editor or graphical debugger? 1512 # If so, don't use readline, and set $slave_editor = 1. 1513 if ($slave_editor = ( @main::ARGV && ( $main::ARGV[0] eq '-emacs' ) )) { 1514 $rl = 0; 1515 shift(@main::ARGV); 1516 } 1517 1518 #require Term::ReadLine; 1519 1520=pod 1521 1522We then determine what the console should be on various systems: 1523 1524=over 4 1525 1526=item * Cygwin - We use C<stdin> instead of a separate device. 1527 1528=cut 1529 1530 if ( $^O eq 'cygwin' ) { 1531 1532 # /dev/tty is binary. use stdin for textmode 1533 undef $console; 1534 } 1535 1536=item * Windows or MSDOS - use C<con>. 1537 1538=cut 1539 1540 elsif ( $^O eq 'dos' or -e "con" or $^O eq 'MSWin32' ) { 1541 $console = "con"; 1542 } 1543 1544=item * AmigaOS - use C<CONSOLE:>. 1545 1546=cut 1547 1548 elsif ( $^O eq 'amigaos' ) { 1549 $console = "CONSOLE:"; 1550 } 1551 1552=item * VMS - use C<sys$command>. 1553 1554=cut 1555 1556 elsif ($^O eq 'VMS') { 1557 $console = 'sys$command'; 1558 } 1559 1560# Keep this penultimate, on the grounds that it satisfies a wide variety of 1561# Unix-like systems that would otherwise need to be identified individually. 1562 1563=item * Unix - use F</dev/tty>. 1564 1565=cut 1566 1567 elsif ( -e "/dev/tty" ) { 1568 $console = "/dev/tty"; 1569 } 1570 1571# Keep this last. 1572 1573 else { 1574 _db_warn("Can't figure out your console, using stdin"); 1575 undef $console; 1576 } 1577 1578=pod 1579 1580=back 1581 1582Several other systems don't use a specific console. We C<undef $console> 1583for those (Windows using a slave editor/graphical debugger, NetWare, OS/2 1584with a slave editor). 1585 1586=cut 1587 1588 if ( ( $^O eq 'MSWin32' ) and ( $slave_editor or defined $ENV{EMACS} ) ) { 1589 1590 # /dev/tty is binary. use stdin for textmode 1591 $console = undef; 1592 } 1593 1594 if ( $^O eq 'NetWare' ) { 1595 1596 # /dev/tty is binary. use stdin for textmode 1597 $console = undef; 1598 } 1599 1600 # In OS/2, we need to use STDIN to get textmode too, even though 1601 # it pretty much looks like Unix otherwise. 1602 if ( defined $ENV{OS2_SHELL} and ( $slave_editor or $ENV{WINDOWID} ) ) 1603 { # In OS/2 1604 $console = undef; 1605 } 1606 1607=pod 1608 1609If there is a TTY hanging around from a parent, we use that as the console. 1610 1611=cut 1612 1613 $console = $tty if defined $tty; 1614 1615=head2 SOCKET HANDLING 1616 1617The debugger is capable of opening a socket and carrying out a debugging 1618session over the socket. 1619 1620If C<RemotePort> was defined in the options, the debugger assumes that it 1621should try to start a debugging session on that port. It builds the socket 1622and then tries to connect the input and output filehandles to it. 1623 1624=cut 1625 1626 # Handle socket stuff. 1627 1628 if ( defined $remoteport ) { 1629 1630 # If RemotePort was defined in the options, connect input and output 1631 # to the socket. 1632 $IN = $OUT = connect_remoteport(); 1633 } ## end if (defined $remoteport) 1634 1635=pod 1636 1637If no C<RemotePort> was defined, and we want to create a TTY on startup, 1638this is probably a situation where multiple debuggers are running (for example, 1639a backticked command that starts up another debugger). We create a new IN and 1640OUT filehandle, and do the necessary mojo to create a new TTY if we know how 1641and if we can. 1642 1643=cut 1644 1645 # Non-socket. 1646 else { 1647 1648 # Two debuggers running (probably a system or a backtick that invokes 1649 # the debugger itself under the running one). create a new IN and OUT 1650 # filehandle, and do the necessary mojo to create a new tty if we 1651 # know how, and we can. 1652 create_IN_OUT(4) if $CreateTTY & 4; 1653 if ($console) { 1654 1655 # If we have a console, check to see if there are separate ins and 1656 # outs to open. (They are assumed identical if not.) 1657 1658 my ( $i, $o ) = split /,/, $console; 1659 $o = $i unless defined $o; 1660 1661 # read/write on in, or just read, or read on STDIN. 1662 open( IN, '+<', $i ) 1663 || open( IN, '<', $i ) 1664 || open( IN, "<&STDIN" ); 1665 1666 # read/write/create/clobber out, or write/create/clobber out, 1667 # or merge with STDERR, or merge with STDOUT. 1668 open( OUT, '+>', $o ) 1669 || open( OUT, '>', $o ) 1670 || open( OUT, ">&STDERR" ) 1671 || open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" ); # so we don't dongle stdout 1672 1673 } ## end if ($console) 1674 elsif ( not defined $console ) { 1675 1676 # No console. Open STDIN. 1677 open( IN, "<&STDIN" ); 1678 1679 # merge with STDERR, or with STDOUT. 1680 open( OUT, ">&STDERR" ) 1681 || open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" ); # so we don't dongle stdout 1682 $console = 'STDIN/OUT'; 1683 } ## end elsif (not defined $console) 1684 1685 # Keep copies of the filehandles so that when the pager runs, it 1686 # can close standard input without clobbering ours. 1687 if ($console or (not defined($console))) { 1688 $IN = \*IN; 1689 $OUT = \*OUT; 1690 } 1691 } ## end elsif (from if(defined $remoteport)) 1692 1693 # Unbuffer DB::OUT. We need to see responses right away. 1694 _autoflush($OUT); 1695 1696 # Line info goes to debugger output unless pointed elsewhere. 1697 # Pointing elsewhere makes it possible for slave editors to 1698 # keep track of file and position. We have both a filehandle 1699 # and a I/O description to keep track of. 1700 $LINEINFO = $OUT unless defined $LINEINFO; 1701 $lineinfo = $console unless defined $lineinfo; 1702 # share($LINEINFO); # <- unable to share globs 1703 share($lineinfo); # 1704 1705=pod 1706 1707To finish initialization, we show the debugger greeting, 1708and then call the C<afterinit()> subroutine if there is one. 1709 1710=cut 1711 1712 # Show the debugger greeting. 1713 $header =~ s/.Header: ([^,]+),v(\s+\S+\s+\S+).*$/$1$2/; 1714 unless ($runnonstop) { 1715 local $\ = ''; 1716 local $, = ''; 1717 if ( $term_pid eq '-1' ) { 1718 print $OUT "\nDaughter DB session started...\n"; 1719 } 1720 else { 1721 print $OUT "\nLoading DB routines from $header\n"; 1722 print $OUT ( 1723 "Editor support ", 1724 $slave_editor ? "enabled" : "available", ".\n" 1725 ); 1726 print $OUT 1727"\nEnter h or 'h h' for help, or '$doccmd perldebug' for more help.\n\n"; 1728 } ## end else [ if ($term_pid eq '-1') 1729 } ## end unless ($runnonstop) 1730} ## end else [ if ($notty) 1731 1732# XXX This looks like a bug to me. 1733# Why copy to @ARGS and then futz with @args? 1734@ARGS = @ARGV; 1735# for (@args) { 1736 # Make sure backslashes before single quotes are stripped out, and 1737 # keep args unless they are numeric (XXX why?) 1738 # s/\'/\\\'/g; # removed while not justified understandably 1739 # s/(.*)/'$1'/ unless /^-?[\d.]+$/; # ditto 1740# } 1741 1742# If there was an afterinit() sub defined, call it. It will get 1743# executed in our scope, so it can fiddle with debugger globals. 1744if ( defined &afterinit ) { # May be defined in $rcfile 1745 afterinit(); 1746} 1747 1748# Inform us about "Stack dump during die enabled ..." in dieLevel(). 1749use vars qw($I_m_init); 1750 1751$I_m_init = 1; 1752 1753############################################################ Subroutines 1754 1755=head1 SUBROUTINES 1756 1757=head2 DB 1758 1759This gigantic subroutine is the heart of the debugger. Called before every 1760statement, its job is to determine if a breakpoint has been reached, and 1761stop if so; read commands from the user, parse them, and execute 1762them, and then send execution off to the next statement. 1763 1764Note that the order in which the commands are processed is very important; 1765some commands earlier in the loop will actually alter the C<$cmd> variable 1766to create other commands to be executed later. This is all highly I<optimized> 1767but can be confusing. Check the comments for each C<$cmd ... && do {}> to 1768see what's happening in any given command. 1769 1770=cut 1771 1772# $cmd cannot be an our() variable unfortunately (possible perl bug?). 1773 1774use vars qw( 1775 $action 1776 $cmd 1777 $file 1778 $filename_ini 1779 $finished 1780 %had_breakpoints 1781 $level 1782 $max 1783 $package 1784 $try 1785); 1786 1787our ( 1788 %alias, 1789 $doret, 1790 $end, 1791 $fall_off_end, 1792 $incr, 1793 $laststep, 1794 $rc, 1795 $sh, 1796 $stack_depth, 1797 @stack, 1798 @to_watch, 1799 @old_watch, 1800); 1801 1802sub _DB__determine_if_we_should_break 1803{ 1804 # if we have something here, see if we should break. 1805 # $stop is lexical and local to this block - $action on the other hand 1806 # is global. 1807 my $stop; 1808 1809 if ( $dbline{$line} 1810 && _is_breakpoint_enabled($filename, $line) 1811 && (( $stop, $action ) = split( /\0/, $dbline{$line} ) ) ) 1812 { 1813 1814 # Stop if the stop criterion says to just stop. 1815 if ( $stop eq '1' ) { 1816 $signal |= 1; 1817 } 1818 1819 # It's a conditional stop; eval it in the user's context and 1820 # see if we should stop. If so, remove the one-time sigil. 1821 elsif ($stop) { 1822 $evalarg = "\$DB::signal |= 1 if do {$stop}"; 1823 # The &-call is here to ascertain the mutability of @_. 1824 &DB::eval; 1825 # If the breakpoint is temporary, then delete its enabled status. 1826 if ($dbline{$line} =~ s/;9($|\0)/$1/) { 1827 _cancel_breakpoint_temp_enabled_status($filename, $line); 1828 } 1829 } 1830 } ## end if ($dbline{$line} && ... 1831} 1832 1833sub _DB__is_finished { 1834 if ($finished and $level <= 1) { 1835 end_report(); 1836 return 1; 1837 } 1838 else { 1839 return; 1840 } 1841} 1842 1843sub _DB__read_next_cmd 1844{ 1845 my ($tid) = @_; 1846 1847 # We have a terminal, or can get one ... 1848 if (!$term) { 1849 setterm(); 1850 } 1851 1852 # ... and it belongs to this PID or we get one for this PID ... 1853 if ($term_pid != $$) { 1854 resetterm(1); 1855 } 1856 1857 # ... and we got a line of command input ... 1858 $cmd = DB::readline( 1859 "$pidprompt $tid DB" 1860 . ( '<' x $level ) 1861 . ( $#hist + 1 ) 1862 . ( '>' x $level ) . " " 1863 ); 1864 1865 return defined($cmd); 1866} 1867 1868sub _DB__trim_command_and_return_first_component { 1869 my ($obj) = @_; 1870 1871 $cmd =~ s/\A\s+//s; # trim annoying leading whitespace 1872 $cmd =~ s/\s+\z//s; # trim annoying trailing whitespace 1873 1874 # A single-character debugger command can be immediately followed by its 1875 # argument if they aren't both alphanumeric; otherwise require space 1876 # between commands and arguments: 1877 my ($verb, $args) = $cmd =~ m{\A(.\b|\S*)\s*(.*)}s; 1878 1879 $obj->cmd_verb($verb); 1880 $obj->cmd_args($args); 1881 1882 return; 1883} 1884 1885sub _DB__handle_f_command { 1886 my ($obj) = @_; 1887 1888 if ($file = $obj->cmd_args) { 1889 # help for no arguments (old-style was return from sub). 1890 if ( !$file ) { 1891 print $OUT 1892 "The old f command is now the r command.\n"; # hint 1893 print $OUT "The new f command switches filenames.\n"; 1894 next CMD; 1895 } ## end if (!$file) 1896 1897 # if not in magic file list, try a close match. 1898 if ( !defined $main::{ '_<' . $file } ) { 1899 if ( ($try) = grep( m#^_<.*$file#, keys %main:: ) ) { 1900 { 1901 $try = substr( $try, 2 ); 1902 print $OUT "Choosing $try matching '$file':\n"; 1903 $file = $try; 1904 } 1905 } ## end if (($try) = grep(m#^_<.*$file#... 1906 } ## end if (!defined $main::{ ... 1907 1908 # If not successfully switched now, we failed. 1909 if ( !defined $main::{ '_<' . $file } ) { 1910 print $OUT "No file matching '$file' is loaded.\n"; 1911 next CMD; 1912 } 1913 1914 # We switched, so switch the debugger internals around. 1915 elsif ( $file ne $filename ) { 1916 *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $file }; 1917 $max = $#dbline; 1918 $filename = $file; 1919 $start = 1; 1920 $cmd = "l"; 1921 } ## end elsif ($file ne $filename) 1922 1923 # We didn't switch; say we didn't. 1924 else { 1925 print $OUT "Already in $file.\n"; 1926 next CMD; 1927 } 1928 } 1929 1930 return; 1931} 1932 1933sub _DB__handle_dot_command { 1934 my ($obj) = @_; 1935 1936 # . command. 1937 if ($obj->_is_full('.')) { 1938 $incr = -1; # stay at current line 1939 1940 # Reset everything to the old location. 1941 $start = $line; 1942 $filename = $filename_ini; 1943 *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $filename }; 1944 $max = $#dbline; 1945 1946 # Now where are we? 1947 print_lineinfo($obj->position()); 1948 next CMD; 1949 } 1950 1951 return; 1952} 1953 1954sub _DB__handle_y_command { 1955 my ($obj) = @_; 1956 1957 if (my ($match_level, $match_vars) 1958 = $obj->cmd_args =~ /\A(?:(\d*)\s*(.*))?\z/) { 1959 1960 # See if we've got the necessary support. 1961 if (!eval { 1962 local @INC = @INC; 1963 pop @INC if $INC[-1] eq '.'; 1964 require PadWalker; PadWalker->VERSION(0.08) }) { 1965 my $Err = $@; 1966 _db_warn( 1967 $Err =~ /locate/ 1968 ? "PadWalker module not found - please install\n" 1969 : $Err 1970 ); 1971 next CMD; 1972 } 1973 1974 # Load up dumpvar if we don't have it. If we can, that is. 1975 do 'dumpvar.pl' || die $@ unless defined &main::dumpvar; 1976 defined &main::dumpvar 1977 or print $OUT "dumpvar.pl not available.\n" 1978 and next CMD; 1979 1980 # Got all the modules we need. Find them and print them. 1981 my @vars = split( ' ', $match_vars || '' ); 1982 1983 # Find the pad. 1984 my $h = eval { PadWalker::peek_my( ( $match_level || 0 ) + 2 ) }; 1985 1986 # Oops. Can't find it. 1987 if (my $Err = $@) { 1988 $Err =~ s/ at .*//; 1989 _db_warn($Err); 1990 next CMD; 1991 } 1992 1993 # Show the desired vars with dumplex(). 1994 my $savout = select($OUT); 1995 1996 # Have dumplex dump the lexicals. 1997 foreach my $key (sort keys %$h) { 1998 dumpvar::dumplex( $key, $h->{$key}, 1999 defined $option{dumpDepth} ? $option{dumpDepth} : -1, 2000 @vars ); 2001 } 2002 select($savout); 2003 next CMD; 2004 } 2005} 2006 2007sub _DB__handle_c_command { 2008 my ($obj) = @_; 2009 2010 my $i = $obj->cmd_args; 2011 2012 if ($i =~ m#\A[\w:]*\z#) { 2013 2014 # Hey, show's over. The debugged program finished 2015 # executing already. 2016 next CMD if _DB__is_finished(); 2017 2018 # Capture the place to put a one-time break. 2019 $subname = $i; 2020 2021 # Probably not needed, since we finish an interactive 2022 # sub-session anyway... 2023 # local $filename = $filename; 2024 # local *dbline = *dbline; # XXX Would this work?! 2025 # 2026 # The above question wonders if localizing the alias 2027 # to the magic array works or not. Since it's commented 2028 # out, we'll just leave that to speculation for now. 2029 2030 # If the "subname" isn't all digits, we'll assume it 2031 # is a subroutine name, and try to find it. 2032 if ( $subname =~ /\D/ ) { # subroutine name 2033 # Qualify it to the current package unless it's 2034 # already qualified. 2035 $subname = $package . "::" . $subname 2036 unless $subname =~ /::/; 2037 2038 # find_sub will return "file:line_number" corresponding 2039 # to where the subroutine is defined; we call find_sub, 2040 # break up the return value, and assign it in one 2041 # operation. 2042 ( $file, $i ) = ( find_sub($subname) =~ /^(.*):(.*)$/ ); 2043 2044 # Force the line number to be numeric. 2045 $i = $i + 0; 2046 2047 # If we got a line number, we found the sub. 2048 if ($i) { 2049 2050 # Switch all the debugger's internals around so 2051 # we're actually working with that file. 2052 $filename = $file; 2053 *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $filename }; 2054 2055 # Mark that there's a breakpoint in this file. 2056 $had_breakpoints{$filename} |= 1; 2057 2058 # Scan forward to the first executable line 2059 # after the 'sub whatever' line. 2060 $max = $#dbline; 2061 my $_line_num = $i; 2062 while ($dbline[$_line_num] == 0 && $_line_num< $max) 2063 { 2064 $_line_num++; 2065 } 2066 $i = $_line_num; 2067 } ## end if ($i) 2068 2069 # We didn't find a sub by that name. 2070 else { 2071 print $OUT "Subroutine $subname not found.\n"; 2072 next CMD; 2073 } 2074 } ## end if ($subname =~ /\D/) 2075 2076 # At this point, either the subname was all digits (an 2077 # absolute line-break request) or we've scanned through 2078 # the code following the definition of the sub, looking 2079 # for an executable, which we may or may not have found. 2080 # 2081 # If $i (which we set $subname from) is non-zero, we 2082 # got a request to break at some line somewhere. On 2083 # one hand, if there wasn't any real subroutine name 2084 # involved, this will be a request to break in the current 2085 # file at the specified line, so we have to check to make 2086 # sure that the line specified really is breakable. 2087 # 2088 # On the other hand, if there was a subname supplied, the 2089 # preceding block has moved us to the proper file and 2090 # location within that file, and then scanned forward 2091 # looking for the next executable line. We have to make 2092 # sure that one was found. 2093 # 2094 # On the gripping hand, we can't do anything unless the 2095 # current value of $i points to a valid breakable line. 2096 # Check that. 2097 if ($i) { 2098 2099 # Breakable? 2100 if ( $dbline[$i] == 0 ) { 2101 print $OUT "Line $i not breakable.\n"; 2102 next CMD; 2103 } 2104 2105 # Yes. Set up the one-time-break sigil. 2106 $dbline{$i} =~ s/($|\0)/;9$1/; # add one-time-only b.p. 2107 _enable_breakpoint_temp_enabled_status($filename, $i); 2108 } ## end if ($i) 2109 2110 # Turn off stack tracing from here up. 2111 for my $j (0 .. $stack_depth) { 2112 $stack[ $j ] &= ~1; 2113 } 2114 last CMD; 2115 } 2116 2117 return; 2118} 2119 2120sub _DB__handle_forward_slash_command { 2121 my ($obj) = @_; 2122 2123 # The pattern as a string. 2124 use vars qw($inpat); 2125 2126 if (($inpat) = $cmd =~ m#\A/(.*)\z#) { 2127 2128 # Remove the final slash. 2129 $inpat =~ s:([^\\])/$:$1:; 2130 2131 # If the pattern isn't null ... 2132 if ( $inpat ne "" ) { 2133 2134 # Turn off warn and die processing for a bit. 2135 local $SIG{__DIE__}; 2136 local $SIG{__WARN__}; 2137 2138 # Create the pattern. 2139 eval 'no strict q/vars/; $inpat =~ m' . "\a$inpat\a"; 2140 if ( $@ ne "" ) { 2141 2142 # Oops. Bad pattern. No biscuit. 2143 # Print the eval error and go back for more 2144 # commands. 2145 print {$OUT} "$@"; 2146 next CMD; 2147 } 2148 $obj->pat($inpat); 2149 } ## end if ($inpat ne "") 2150 2151 # Set up to stop on wrap-around. 2152 $end = $start; 2153 2154 # Don't move off the current line. 2155 $incr = -1; 2156 2157 my $pat = $obj->pat; 2158 2159 # Done in eval so nothing breaks if the pattern 2160 # does something weird. 2161 eval 2162 { 2163 no strict q/vars/; 2164 for (;;) { 2165 # Move ahead one line. 2166 ++$start; 2167 2168 # Wrap if we pass the last line. 2169 if ($start > $max) { 2170 $start = 1; 2171 } 2172 2173 # Stop if we have gotten back to this line again, 2174 last if ($start == $end); 2175 2176 # A hit! (Note, though, that we are doing 2177 # case-insensitive matching. Maybe a qr// 2178 # expression would be better, so the user could 2179 # do case-sensitive matching if desired. 2180 if ($dbline[$start] =~ m/$pat/i) { 2181 if ($slave_editor) { 2182 # Handle proper escaping in the slave. 2183 print {$OUT} "\032\032$filename:$start:0\n"; 2184 } 2185 else { 2186 # Just print the line normally. 2187 print {$OUT} "$start:\t",$dbline[$start],"\n"; 2188 } 2189 # And quit since we found something. 2190 last; 2191 } 2192 } 2193 }; 2194 2195 if ($@) { 2196 warn $@; 2197 } 2198 2199 # If we wrapped, there never was a match. 2200 if ( $start == $end ) { 2201 print {$OUT} "/$pat/: not found\n"; 2202 } 2203 next CMD; 2204 } 2205 2206 return; 2207} 2208 2209sub _DB__handle_question_mark_command { 2210 my ($obj) = @_; 2211 2212 # ? - backward pattern search. 2213 if (my ($inpat) = $cmd =~ m#\A\?(.*)\z#) { 2214 2215 # Get the pattern, remove trailing question mark. 2216 $inpat =~ s:([^\\])\?$:$1:; 2217 2218 # If we've got one ... 2219 if ( $inpat ne "" ) { 2220 2221 # Turn off die & warn handlers. 2222 local $SIG{__DIE__}; 2223 local $SIG{__WARN__}; 2224 eval '$inpat =~ m' . "\a$inpat\a"; 2225 2226 if ( $@ ne "" ) { 2227 2228 # Ouch. Not good. Print the error. 2229 print $OUT $@; 2230 next CMD; 2231 } 2232 $obj->pat($inpat); 2233 } ## end if ($inpat ne "") 2234 2235 # Where we are now is where to stop after wraparound. 2236 $end = $start; 2237 2238 # Don't move away from this line. 2239 $incr = -1; 2240 2241 my $pat = $obj->pat; 2242 # Search inside the eval to prevent pattern badness 2243 # from killing us. 2244 eval { 2245 no strict q/vars/; 2246 for (;;) { 2247 # Back up a line. 2248 --$start; 2249 2250 # Wrap if we pass the first line. 2251 2252 $start = $max if ($start <= 0); 2253 2254 # Quit if we get back where we started, 2255 last if ($start == $end); 2256 2257 # Match? 2258 if ($dbline[$start] =~ m/$pat/i) { 2259 if ($slave_editor) { 2260 # Yep, follow slave editor requirements. 2261 print $OUT "\032\032$filename:$start:0\n"; 2262 } 2263 else { 2264 # Yep, just print normally. 2265 print $OUT "$start:\t",$dbline[$start],"\n"; 2266 } 2267 2268 # Found, so done. 2269 last; 2270 } 2271 } 2272 }; 2273 2274 # Say we failed if the loop never found anything, 2275 if ( $start == $end ) { 2276 print {$OUT} "?$pat?: not found\n"; 2277 } 2278 next CMD; 2279 } 2280 2281 return; 2282} 2283 2284sub _DB__handle_restart_and_rerun_commands { 2285 my ($obj) = @_; 2286 2287 my $cmd_cmd = $obj->cmd_verb; 2288 my $cmd_params = $obj->cmd_args; 2289 # R - restart execution. 2290 # rerun - controlled restart execution. 2291 if ($cmd_cmd eq 'rerun' or $cmd_params eq '') { 2292 2293 # Change directory to the initial current working directory on 2294 # the script startup, so if the debugged program changed the 2295 # directory, then we will still be able to find the path to the 2296 # the program. (perl 5 RT #121509 ). 2297 chdir ($_initial_cwd); 2298 2299 my @args = ($cmd_cmd eq 'R' ? restart() : rerun($cmd_params)); 2300 2301 # Close all non-system fds for a clean restart. A more 2302 # correct method would be to close all fds that were not 2303 # open when the process started, but this seems to be 2304 # hard. See "debugger 'R'estart and open database 2305 # connections" on p5p. 2306 2307 my $max_fd = 1024; # default if POSIX can't be loaded 2308 if (eval { require POSIX }) { 2309 eval { $max_fd = POSIX::sysconf(POSIX::_SC_OPEN_MAX()) }; 2310 } 2311 2312 if (defined $max_fd) { 2313 foreach ($^F+1 .. $max_fd-1) { 2314 next unless open FD_TO_CLOSE, "<&=$_"; 2315 close(FD_TO_CLOSE); 2316 } 2317 } 2318 2319 # And run Perl again. We use exec() to keep the 2320 # PID stable (and that way $ini_pids is still valid). 2321 exec(@args) or print {$OUT} "exec failed: $!\n"; 2322 2323 last CMD; 2324 } 2325 2326 return; 2327} 2328 2329sub _DB__handle_run_command_in_pager_command { 2330 my ($obj) = @_; 2331 2332 if ($cmd =~ m#\A\|\|?\s*[^|]#) { 2333 if ( $pager =~ /^\|/ ) { 2334 2335 # Default pager is into a pipe. Redirect I/O. 2336 open( SAVEOUT, ">&STDOUT" ) 2337 || _db_warn("Can't save STDOUT"); 2338 open( STDOUT, ">&OUT" ) 2339 || _db_warn("Can't redirect STDOUT"); 2340 } ## end if ($pager =~ /^\|/) 2341 else { 2342 2343 # Not into a pipe. STDOUT is safe. 2344 open( SAVEOUT, ">&OUT" ) || _db_warn("Can't save DB::OUT"); 2345 } 2346 2347 # Fix up environment to record we have less if so. 2348 fix_less(); 2349 2350 unless ( $obj->piped(scalar ( open( OUT, $pager ) ) ) ) { 2351 2352 # Couldn't open pipe to pager. 2353 _db_warn("Can't pipe output to '$pager'"); 2354 if ( $pager =~ /^\|/ ) { 2355 2356 # Redirect I/O back again. 2357 open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" ) # XXX: lost message 2358 || _db_warn("Can't restore DB::OUT"); 2359 open( STDOUT, ">&SAVEOUT" ) 2360 || _db_warn("Can't restore STDOUT"); 2361 close(SAVEOUT); 2362 } ## end if ($pager =~ /^\|/) 2363 else { 2364 2365 # Redirect I/O. STDOUT already safe. 2366 open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" ) # XXX: lost message 2367 || _db_warn("Can't restore DB::OUT"); 2368 } 2369 next CMD; 2370 } ## end unless ($piped = open(OUT,... 2371 2372 # Set up broken-pipe handler if necessary. 2373 $SIG{PIPE} = \&DB::catch 2374 if $pager =~ /^\|/ 2375 && ( "" eq $SIG{PIPE} || "DEFAULT" eq $SIG{PIPE} ); 2376 2377 _autoflush(\*OUT); 2378 # Save current filehandle, and put it back. 2379 $obj->selected(scalar( select(OUT) )); 2380 # Don't put it back if pager was a pipe. 2381 if ($cmd !~ /\A\|\|/) 2382 { 2383 select($obj->selected()); 2384 $obj->selected(""); 2385 } 2386 2387 # Trim off the pipe symbols and run the command now. 2388 $cmd =~ s#\A\|+\s*##; 2389 redo PIPE; 2390 } 2391 2392 return; 2393} 2394 2395sub _DB__handle_m_command { 2396 my ($obj) = @_; 2397 2398 if ($cmd =~ s#\Am\s+([\w:]+)\s*\z# #) { 2399 methods($1); 2400 next CMD; 2401 } 2402 2403 # m expr - set up DB::eval to do the work 2404 if ($cmd =~ s#\Am\b# #) { # Rest gets done by DB::eval() 2405 $onetimeDump = 'methods'; # method output gets used there 2406 } 2407 2408 return; 2409} 2410 2411sub _DB__at_end_of_every_command { 2412 my ($obj) = @_; 2413 2414 # At the end of every command: 2415 if ($obj->piped) { 2416 2417 # Unhook the pipe mechanism now. 2418 if ( $pager =~ /^\|/ ) { 2419 2420 # No error from the child. 2421 $? = 0; 2422 2423 # we cannot warn here: the handle is missing --tchrist 2424 close(OUT) || print SAVEOUT "\nCan't close DB::OUT\n"; 2425 2426 # most of the $? crud was coping with broken cshisms 2427 # $? is explicitly set to 0, so this never runs. 2428 if ($?) { 2429 print SAVEOUT "Pager '$pager' failed: "; 2430 if ( $? == -1 ) { 2431 print SAVEOUT "shell returned -1\n"; 2432 } 2433 elsif ( $? >> 8 ) { 2434 print SAVEOUT ( $? & 127 ) 2435 ? " (SIG#" . ( $? & 127 ) . ")" 2436 : "", ( $? & 128 ) ? " -- core dumped" : "", "\n"; 2437 } 2438 else { 2439 print SAVEOUT "status ", ( $? >> 8 ), "\n"; 2440 } 2441 } ## end if ($?) 2442 2443 # Reopen filehandle for our output (if we can) and 2444 # restore STDOUT (if we can). 2445 open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" ) || _db_warn("Can't restore DB::OUT"); 2446 open( STDOUT, ">&SAVEOUT" ) 2447 || _db_warn("Can't restore STDOUT"); 2448 2449 # Turn off pipe exception handler if necessary. 2450 $SIG{PIPE} = "DEFAULT" if $SIG{PIPE} eq \&DB::catch; 2451 2452 # Will stop ignoring SIGPIPE if done like nohup(1) 2453 # does SIGINT but Perl doesn't give us a choice. 2454 } ## end if ($pager =~ /^\|/) 2455 else { 2456 2457 # Non-piped "pager". Just restore STDOUT. 2458 open( OUT, ">&SAVEOUT" ) || _db_warn("Can't restore DB::OUT"); 2459 } 2460 2461 # Let Readline know about the new filehandles. 2462 reset_IN_OUT( \*IN, \*OUT ); 2463 2464 # Close filehandle pager was using, restore the normal one 2465 # if necessary, 2466 close(SAVEOUT); 2467 2468 if ($obj->selected() ne "") { 2469 select($obj->selected); 2470 $obj->selected(""); 2471 } 2472 2473 # No pipes now. 2474 $obj->piped(""); 2475 } ## end if ($piped) 2476 2477 return; 2478} 2479 2480sub _DB__handle_watch_expressions 2481{ 2482 my $self = shift; 2483 2484 if ( $DB::trace & 2 ) { 2485 for my $n (0 .. $#DB::to_watch) { 2486 $DB::evalarg = $DB::to_watch[$n]; 2487 local $DB::onetimeDump; # Tell DB::eval() to not output results 2488 2489 # Fix context DB::eval() wants to return an array, but 2490 # we need a scalar here. 2491 my ($val) = join( "', '", DB::eval(@_) ); 2492 $val = ( ( defined $val ) ? "'$val'" : 'undef' ); 2493 2494 # Did it change? 2495 if ( $val ne $DB::old_watch[$n] ) { 2496 2497 # Yep! Show the difference, and fake an interrupt. 2498 $DB::signal = 1; 2499 print {$DB::OUT} <<EOP; 2500Watchpoint $n:\t$DB::to_watch[$n] changed: 2501 old value:\t$DB::old_watch[$n] 2502 new value:\t$val 2503EOP 2504 $DB::old_watch[$n] = $val; 2505 } ## end if ($val ne $old_watch... 2506 } ## end for my $n (0 .. 2507 } ## end if ($trace & 2) 2508 2509 return; 2510} 2511 2512# 't' is type. 2513# 'm' is method. 2514# 'v' is the value (i.e: method name or subroutine ref). 2515# 's' is subroutine. 2516my %cmd_lookup; 2517 2518BEGIN 2519{ 2520 %cmd_lookup = 2521( 2522 '-' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_dash_command', }, 2523 '.' => { t => 's', v => \&_DB__handle_dot_command, }, 2524 '=' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_equal_sign_command', }, 2525 'H' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_H_command', }, 2526 'S' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_S_command', }, 2527 'T' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_T_command', }, 2528 'W' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_W_command', }, 2529 'c' => { t => 's', v => \&_DB__handle_c_command, }, 2530 'f' => { t => 's', v => \&_DB__handle_f_command, }, 2531 'm' => { t => 's', v => \&_DB__handle_m_command, }, 2532 'n' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_n_command', }, 2533 'p' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_p_command', }, 2534 'q' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_q_command', }, 2535 'r' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_r_command', }, 2536 's' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_s_command', }, 2537 'save' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_save_command', }, 2538 'source' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_source_command', }, 2539 't' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_t_command', }, 2540 'w' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_w_command', }, 2541 'x' => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_x_command', }, 2542 'y' => { t => 's', v => \&_DB__handle_y_command, }, 2543 (map { $_ => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_V_command_and_X_command', }, } 2544 ('X', 'V')), 2545 (map { $_ => { t => 'm', v => '_handle_enable_disable_commands', }, } 2546 qw(enable disable)), 2547 (map { $_ => 2548 { t => 's', v => \&_DB__handle_restart_and_rerun_commands, }, 2549 } qw(R rerun)), 2550 (map { $_ => {t => 'm', v => '_handle_cmd_wrapper_commands' }, } 2551 qw(a A b B e E h i l L M o O v w W)), 2552); 2553}; 2554 2555sub DB { 2556 2557 # lock the debugger and get the thread id for the prompt 2558 lock($DBGR); 2559 my $tid; 2560 my $position; 2561 my ($prefix, $after, $infix); 2562 my $pat; 2563 my $explicit_stop; 2564 my $piped; 2565 my $selected; 2566 2567 if ($ENV{PERL5DB_THREADED}) { 2568 $tid = eval { "[".threads->tid."]" }; 2569 } 2570 2571 my $cmd_verb; 2572 my $cmd_args; 2573 2574 my $obj = DB::Obj->new( 2575 { 2576 position => \$position, 2577 prefix => \$prefix, 2578 after => \$after, 2579 explicit_stop => \$explicit_stop, 2580 infix => \$infix, 2581 cmd_args => \$cmd_args, 2582 cmd_verb => \$cmd_verb, 2583 pat => \$pat, 2584 piped => \$piped, 2585 selected => \$selected, 2586 }, 2587 ); 2588 2589 $obj->_DB_on_init__initialize_globals(@_); 2590 2591 # Preserve current values of $@, $!, $^E, $,, $/, $\, $^W. 2592 # The code being debugged may have altered them. 2593 DB::save(); 2594 2595 # Since DB::DB gets called after every line, we can use caller() to 2596 # figure out where we last were executing. Sneaky, eh? This works because 2597 # caller is returning all the extra information when called from the 2598 # debugger. 2599 local ( $package, $filename, $line ) = caller; 2600 $filename_ini = $filename; 2601 2602 # set up the context for DB::eval, so it can properly execute 2603 # code on behalf of the user. We add the package in so that the 2604 # code is eval'ed in the proper package (not in the debugger!). 2605 local $usercontext = _calc_usercontext($package); 2606 2607 # Create an alias to the active file magical array to simplify 2608 # the code here. 2609 local (*dbline) = $main::{ '_<' . $filename }; 2610 2611 # Last line in the program. 2612 $max = $#dbline; 2613 2614 # The &-call is here to ascertain the mutability of @_. 2615 &_DB__determine_if_we_should_break; 2616 2617 # Preserve the current stop-or-not, and see if any of the W 2618 # (watch expressions) has changed. 2619 my $was_signal = $signal; 2620 2621 # If we have any watch expressions ... 2622 _DB__handle_watch_expressions($obj); 2623 2624=head2 C<watchfunction()> 2625 2626C<watchfunction()> is a function that can be defined by the user; it is a 2627function which will be run on each entry to C<DB::DB>; it gets the 2628current package, filename, and line as its parameters. 2629 2630The watchfunction can do anything it likes; it is executing in the 2631debugger's context, so it has access to all of the debugger's internal 2632data structures and functions. 2633 2634C<watchfunction()> can control the debugger's actions. Any of the following 2635will cause the debugger to return control to the user's program after 2636C<watchfunction()> executes: 2637 2638=over 4 2639 2640=item * 2641 2642Returning a false value from the C<watchfunction()> itself. 2643 2644=item * 2645 2646Altering C<$single> to a false value. 2647 2648=item * 2649 2650Altering C<$signal> to a false value. 2651 2652=item * 2653 2654Turning off the C<4> bit in C<$trace> (this also disables the 2655check for C<watchfunction()>. This can be done with 2656 2657 $trace &= ~4; 2658 2659=back 2660 2661=cut 2662 2663 # If there's a user-defined DB::watchfunction, call it with the 2664 # current package, filename, and line. The function executes in 2665 # the DB:: package. 2666 if ( $trace & 4 ) { # User-installed watch 2667 return 2668 if watchfunction( $package, $filename, $line ) 2669 and not $single 2670 and not $was_signal 2671 and not( $trace & ~4 ); 2672 } ## end if ($trace & 4) 2673 2674 # Pick up any alteration to $signal in the watchfunction, and 2675 # turn off the signal now. 2676 $was_signal = $signal; 2677 $signal = 0; 2678 2679=head2 GETTING READY TO EXECUTE COMMANDS 2680 2681The debugger decides to take control if single-step mode is on, the 2682C<t> command was entered, or the user generated a signal. If the program 2683has fallen off the end, we set things up so that entering further commands 2684won't cause trouble, and we say that the program is over. 2685 2686=cut 2687 2688 # Make sure that we always print if asked for explicitly regardless 2689 # of $trace_to_depth . 2690 $explicit_stop = ($single || $was_signal); 2691 2692 # Check to see if we should grab control ($single true, 2693 # trace set appropriately, or we got a signal). 2694 if ( $explicit_stop || ( $trace & 1 ) ) { 2695 $obj->_DB__grab_control(@_); 2696 } ## end if ($single || ($trace... 2697 2698=pod 2699 2700If there's an action to be executed for the line we stopped at, execute it. 2701If there are any preprompt actions, execute those as well. 2702 2703=cut 2704 2705 # If there's an action, do it now. 2706 if ($action) { 2707 $evalarg = $action; 2708 # The &-call is here to ascertain the mutability of @_. 2709 &DB::eval; 2710 } 2711 2712 # Are we nested another level (e.g., did we evaluate a function 2713 # that had a breakpoint in it at the debugger prompt)? 2714 if ( $single || $was_signal ) { 2715 2716 # Yes, go down a level. 2717 local $level = $level + 1; 2718 2719 # Do any pre-prompt actions. 2720 foreach $evalarg (@$pre) { 2721 # The &-call is here to ascertain the mutability of @_. 2722 &DB::eval; 2723 } 2724 2725 # Complain about too much recursion if we passed the limit. 2726 if ($single & 4) { 2727 print $OUT $stack_depth . " levels deep in subroutine calls!\n"; 2728 } 2729 2730 # The line we're currently on. Set $incr to -1 to stay here 2731 # until we get a command that tells us to advance. 2732 $start = $line; 2733 $incr = -1; # for backward motion. 2734 2735 # Tack preprompt debugger actions ahead of any actual input. 2736 @typeahead = ( @$pretype, @typeahead ); 2737 2738=head2 WHERE ARE WE? 2739 2740XXX Relocate this section? 2741 2742The debugger normally shows the line corresponding to the current line of 2743execution. Sometimes, though, we want to see the next line, or to move elsewhere 2744in the file. This is done via the C<$incr>, C<$start>, and C<$max> variables. 2745 2746C<$incr> controls by how many lines the I<current> line should move forward 2747after a command is executed. If set to -1, this indicates that the I<current> 2748line shouldn't change. 2749 2750C<$start> is the I<current> line. It is used for things like knowing where to 2751move forwards or backwards from when doing an C<L> or C<-> command. 2752 2753C<$max> tells the debugger where the last line of the current file is. It's 2754used to terminate loops most often. 2755 2756=head2 THE COMMAND LOOP 2757 2758Most of C<DB::DB> is actually a command parsing and dispatch loop. It comes 2759in two parts: 2760 2761=over 4 2762 2763=item * 2764 2765The outer part of the loop, starting at the C<CMD> label. This loop 2766reads a command and then executes it. 2767 2768=item * 2769 2770The inner part of the loop, starting at the C<PIPE> label. This part 2771is wholly contained inside the C<CMD> block and only executes a command. 2772Used to handle commands running inside a pager. 2773 2774=back 2775 2776So why have two labels to restart the loop? Because sometimes, it's easier to 2777have a command I<generate> another command and then re-execute the loop to do 2778the new command. This is faster, but perhaps a bit more convoluted. 2779 2780=cut 2781 2782 # The big command dispatch loop. It keeps running until the 2783 # user yields up control again. 2784 # 2785 # If we have a terminal for input, and we get something back 2786 # from readline(), keep on processing. 2787 2788 CMD: 2789 while (_DB__read_next_cmd($tid)) 2790 { 2791 2792 share($cmd); 2793 # ... try to execute the input as debugger commands. 2794 2795 # Don't stop running. 2796 $single = 0; 2797 2798 # No signal is active. 2799 $signal = 0; 2800 2801 # Handle continued commands (ending with \): 2802 if ($cmd =~ s/\\\z/\n/) { 2803 $cmd .= DB::readline(" cont: "); 2804 redo CMD; 2805 } 2806 2807=head4 The null command 2808 2809A newline entered by itself means I<re-execute the last command>. We grab the 2810command out of C<$laststep> (where it was recorded previously), and copy it 2811back into C<$cmd> to be executed below. If there wasn't any previous command, 2812we'll do nothing below (no command will match). If there was, we also save it 2813in the command history and fall through to allow the command parsing to pick 2814it up. 2815 2816=cut 2817 2818 # Empty input means repeat the last command. 2819 if ($cmd eq '') { 2820 $cmd = $laststep; 2821 } 2822 chomp($cmd); # get rid of the annoying extra newline 2823 if (length($cmd) >= 2) { 2824 push( @hist, $cmd ); 2825 } 2826 push( @truehist, $cmd ); 2827 share(@hist); 2828 share(@truehist); 2829 2830 # This is a restart point for commands that didn't arrive 2831 # via direct user input. It allows us to 'redo PIPE' to 2832 # re-execute command processing without reading a new command. 2833 PIPE: { 2834 _DB__trim_command_and_return_first_component($obj); 2835 2836=head3 COMMAND ALIASES 2837 2838The debugger can create aliases for commands (these are stored in the 2839C<%alias> hash). Before a command is executed, the command loop looks it up 2840in the alias hash and substitutes the contents of the alias for the command, 2841completely replacing it. 2842 2843=cut 2844 2845 # See if there's an alias for the command, and set it up if so. 2846 if ( $alias{$cmd_verb} ) { 2847 2848 # Squelch signal handling; we want to keep control here 2849 # if something goes loco during the alias eval. 2850 local $SIG{__DIE__}; 2851 local $SIG{__WARN__}; 2852 2853 # This is a command, so we eval it in the DEBUGGER's 2854 # scope! Otherwise, we can't see the special debugger 2855 # variables, or get to the debugger's subs. (Well, we 2856 # _could_, but why make it even more complicated?) 2857 eval "\$cmd =~ $alias{$cmd_verb}"; 2858 if ($@) { 2859 local $\ = ''; 2860 print $OUT "Couldn't evaluate '$cmd_verb' alias: $@"; 2861 next CMD; 2862 } 2863 _DB__trim_command_and_return_first_component($obj); 2864 } ## end if ($alias{$cmd_verb}) 2865 2866=head3 MAIN-LINE COMMANDS 2867 2868All of these commands work up to and after the program being debugged has 2869terminated. 2870 2871=head4 C<q> - quit 2872 2873Quit the debugger. This entails setting the C<$fall_off_end> flag, so we don't 2874try to execute further, cleaning any restart-related stuff out of the 2875environment, and executing with the last value of C<$?>. 2876 2877=cut 2878 2879 # All of these commands were remapped in perl 5.8.0; 2880 # we send them off to the secondary dispatcher (see below). 2881 $obj->_handle_special_char_cmd_wrapper_commands; 2882 _DB__trim_command_and_return_first_component($obj); 2883 2884 if (my $cmd_rec = $cmd_lookup{$cmd_verb}) { 2885 my $type = $cmd_rec->{t}; 2886 my $val = $cmd_rec->{v}; 2887 if ($type eq 'm') { 2888 $obj->$val(); 2889 } 2890 elsif ($type eq 's') { 2891 $val->($obj); 2892 } 2893 } 2894 2895=head4 C<t> - trace [n] 2896 2897Turn tracing on or off. Inverts the appropriate bit in C<$trace> (q.v.). 2898If level is specified, set C<$trace_to_depth>. 2899 2900=head4 C<S> - list subroutines matching/not matching a pattern 2901 2902Walks through C<%sub>, checking to see whether or not to print the name. 2903 2904=head4 C<X> - list variables in current package 2905 2906Since the C<V> command actually processes this, just change this to the 2907appropriate C<V> command and fall through. 2908 2909=head4 C<V> - list variables 2910 2911Uses C<dumpvar.pl> to dump out the current values for selected variables. 2912 2913=head4 C<x> - evaluate and print an expression 2914 2915Hands the expression off to C<DB::eval>, setting it up to print the value 2916via C<dumpvar.pl> instead of just printing it directly. 2917 2918=head4 C<m> - print methods 2919 2920Just uses C<DB::methods> to determine what methods are available. 2921 2922=head4 C<f> - switch files 2923 2924Switch to a different filename. 2925 2926=head4 C<.> - return to last-executed line. 2927 2928We set C<$incr> to -1 to indicate that the debugger shouldn't move ahead, 2929and then we look up the line in the magical C<%dbline> hash. 2930 2931=head4 C<-> - back one window 2932 2933We change C<$start> to be one window back; if we go back past the first line, 2934we set it to be the first line. We set C<$incr> to put us back at the 2935currently-executing line, and then put a C<l $start +> (list one window from 2936C<$start>) in C<$cmd> to be executed later. 2937 2938=head3 PRE-580 COMMANDS VS. NEW COMMANDS: C<a, A, b, B, h, l, L, M, o, O, P, v, w, W, E<lt>, E<lt>E<lt>, E<0x7B>, E<0x7B>E<0x7B>> 2939 2940In Perl 5.8.0, a realignment of the commands was done to fix up a number of 2941problems, most notably that the default case of several commands destroying 2942the user's work in setting watchpoints, actions, etc. We wanted, however, to 2943retain the old commands for those who were used to using them or who preferred 2944them. At this point, we check for the new commands and call C<cmd_wrapper> to 2945deal with them instead of processing them in-line. 2946 2947=head4 C<y> - List lexicals in higher scope 2948 2949Uses C<PadWalker> to find the lexicals supplied as arguments in a scope 2950above the current one and then displays then using C<dumpvar.pl>. 2951 2952=head3 COMMANDS NOT WORKING AFTER PROGRAM ENDS 2953 2954All of the commands below this point don't work after the program being 2955debugged has ended. All of them check to see if the program has ended; this 2956allows the commands to be relocated without worrying about a 'line of 2957demarcation' above which commands can be entered anytime, and below which 2958they can't. 2959 2960=head4 C<n> - single step, but don't trace down into subs 2961 2962Done by setting C<$single> to 2, which forces subs to execute straight through 2963when entered (see C<DB::sub>). We also save the C<n> command in C<$laststep>, 2964so a null command knows what to re-execute. 2965 2966=head4 C<s> - single-step, entering subs 2967 2968Sets C<$single> to 1, which causes C<DB::sub> to continue tracing inside 2969subs. Also saves C<s> as C<$lastcmd>. 2970 2971=head4 C<c> - run continuously, setting an optional breakpoint 2972 2973Most of the code for this command is taken up with locating the optional 2974breakpoint, which is either a subroutine name or a line number. We set 2975the appropriate one-time-break in C<@dbline> and then turn off single-stepping 2976in this and all call levels above this one. 2977 2978=head4 C<r> - return from a subroutine 2979 2980For C<r> to work properly, the debugger has to stop execution again 2981immediately after the return is executed. This is done by forcing 2982single-stepping to be on in the call level above the current one. If 2983we are printing return values when a C<r> is executed, set C<$doret> 2984appropriately, and force us out of the command loop. 2985 2986=head4 C<T> - stack trace 2987 2988Just calls C<DB::print_trace>. 2989 2990=head4 C<w> - List window around current line. 2991 2992Just calls C<DB::cmd_w>. 2993 2994=head4 C<W> - watch-expression processing. 2995 2996Just calls C<DB::cmd_W>. 2997 2998=head4 C</> - search forward for a string in the source 2999 3000We take the argument and treat it as a pattern. If it turns out to be a 3001bad one, we return the error we got from trying to C<eval> it and exit. 3002If not, we create some code to do the search and C<eval> it so it can't 3003mess us up. 3004 3005=cut 3006 3007 _DB__handle_forward_slash_command($obj); 3008 3009=head4 C<?> - search backward for a string in the source 3010 3011Same as for C</>, except the loop runs backwards. 3012 3013=cut 3014 3015 _DB__handle_question_mark_command($obj); 3016 3017=head4 C<$rc> - Recall command 3018 3019Manages the commands in C<@hist> (which is created if C<Term::ReadLine> reports 3020that the terminal supports history). It finds the command required, puts it 3021into C<$cmd>, and redoes the loop to execute it. 3022 3023=cut 3024 3025 # $rc - recall command. 3026 $obj->_handle_rc_recall_command; 3027 3028=head4 C<$sh$sh> - C<system()> command 3029 3030Calls the C<_db_system()> to handle the command. This keeps the C<STDIN> and 3031C<STDOUT> from getting messed up. 3032 3033=cut 3034 3035 $obj->_handle_sh_command; 3036 3037=head4 C<$rc I<pattern> $rc> - Search command history 3038 3039Another command to manipulate C<@hist>: this one searches it with a pattern. 3040If a command is found, it is placed in C<$cmd> and executed via C<redo>. 3041 3042=cut 3043 3044 $obj->_handle_rc_search_history_command; 3045 3046=head4 C<$sh> - Invoke a shell 3047 3048Uses C<_db_system()> to invoke a shell. 3049 3050=cut 3051 3052=head4 C<$sh I<command>> - Force execution of a command in a shell 3053 3054Like the above, but the command is passed to the shell. Again, we use 3055C<_db_system()> to avoid problems with C<STDIN> and C<STDOUT>. 3056 3057=head4 C<H> - display commands in history 3058 3059Prints the contents of C<@hist> (if any). 3060 3061=head4 C<man, doc, perldoc> - look up documentation 3062 3063Just calls C<runman()> to print the appropriate document. 3064 3065=cut 3066 3067 $obj->_handle_doc_command; 3068 3069=head4 C<p> - print 3070 3071Builds a C<print EXPR> expression in the C<$cmd>; this will get executed at 3072the bottom of the loop. 3073 3074=head4 C<=> - define command alias 3075 3076Manipulates C<%alias> to add or list command aliases. 3077 3078=head4 C<source> - read commands from a file. 3079 3080Opens a lexical filehandle and stacks it on C<@cmdfhs>; C<DB::readline> will 3081pick it up. 3082 3083=head4 C<enable> C<disable> - enable or disable breakpoints 3084 3085This enables or disables breakpoints. 3086 3087=head4 C<save> - send current history to a file 3088 3089Takes the complete history, (not the shrunken version you see with C<H>), 3090and saves it to the given filename, so it can be replayed using C<source>. 3091 3092Note that all C<^(save|source)>'s are commented out with a view to minimise recursion. 3093 3094=head4 C<R> - restart 3095 3096Restart the debugger session. 3097 3098=head4 C<rerun> - rerun the current session 3099 3100Return to any given position in the B<true>-history list 3101 3102=head4 C<|, ||> - pipe output through the pager. 3103 3104For C<|>, we save C<OUT> (the debugger's output filehandle) and C<STDOUT> 3105(the program's standard output). For C<||>, we only save C<OUT>. We open a 3106pipe to the pager (restoring the output filehandles if this fails). If this 3107is the C<|> command, we also set up a C<SIGPIPE> handler which will simply 3108set C<$signal>, sending us back into the debugger. 3109 3110We then trim off the pipe symbols and C<redo> the command loop at the 3111C<PIPE> label, causing us to evaluate the command in C<$cmd> without 3112reading another. 3113 3114=cut 3115 3116 # || - run command in the pager, with output to DB::OUT. 3117 _DB__handle_run_command_in_pager_command($obj); 3118 3119=head3 END OF COMMAND PARSING 3120 3121Anything left in C<$cmd> at this point is a Perl expression that we want to 3122evaluate. We'll always evaluate in the user's context, and fully qualify 3123any variables we might want to address in the C<DB> package. 3124 3125=cut 3126 3127 } # PIPE: 3128 3129 # trace an expression 3130 $cmd =~ s/^t\s/\$DB::trace |= 1;\n/; 3131 3132 # Make sure the flag that says "the debugger's running" is 3133 # still on, to make sure we get control again. 3134 $evalarg = "\$^D = \$^D | \$DB::db_stop;\n$cmd"; 3135 3136 # Run *our* eval that executes in the caller's context. 3137 # The &-call is here to ascertain the mutability of @_. 3138 &DB::eval; 3139 3140 # Turn off the one-time-dump stuff now. 3141 if ($onetimeDump) { 3142 $onetimeDump = undef; 3143 $onetimedumpDepth = undef; 3144 } 3145 elsif ( $term_pid == $$ ) { 3146 eval { # May run under miniperl, when not available... 3147 STDOUT->flush(); 3148 STDERR->flush(); 3149 }; 3150 3151 # XXX If this is the master pid, print a newline. 3152 print {$OUT} "\n"; 3153 } 3154 } ## end while (($term || &setterm... 3155 3156=head3 POST-COMMAND PROCESSING 3157 3158After each command, we check to see if the command output was piped anywhere. 3159If so, we go through the necessary code to unhook the pipe and go back to 3160our standard filehandles for input and output. 3161 3162=cut 3163 3164 continue { # CMD: 3165 _DB__at_end_of_every_command($obj); 3166 } # CMD: 3167 3168=head3 COMMAND LOOP TERMINATION 3169 3170When commands have finished executing, we come here. If the user closed the 3171input filehandle, we turn on C<$fall_off_end> to emulate a C<q> command. We 3172evaluate any post-prompt items. We restore C<$@>, C<$!>, C<$^E>, C<$,>, C<$/>, 3173C<$\>, and C<$^W>, and return a null list as expected by the Perl interpreter. 3174The interpreter will then execute the next line and then return control to us 3175again. 3176 3177=cut 3178 3179 # No more commands? Quit. 3180 $fall_off_end = 1 unless defined $cmd; # Emulate 'q' on EOF 3181 3182 # Evaluate post-prompt commands. 3183 foreach $evalarg (@$post) { 3184 # The &-call is here to ascertain the mutability of @_. 3185 &DB::eval; 3186 } 3187 } # if ($single || $signal) 3188 3189 # Put the user's globals back where you found them. 3190 ( $@, $!, $^E, $,, $/, $\, $^W ) = @saved; 3191 (); 3192} ## end sub DB 3193 3194# Because DB::Obj is used above, 3195# 3196# my $obj = DB::Obj->new( 3197# 3198# The following package declaration must come before that, 3199# or else runtime errors will occur with 3200# 3201# PERLDB_OPTS="autotrace nonstop" 3202# 3203# ( rt#116771 ) 3204BEGIN { 3205 3206package DB::Obj; 3207 3208sub new { 3209 my $class = shift; 3210 3211 my $self = bless {}, $class; 3212 3213 $self->_init(@_); 3214 3215 return $self; 3216} 3217 3218sub _init { 3219 my ($self, $args) = @_; 3220 3221 %{$self} = (%$self, %$args); 3222 3223 return; 3224} 3225 3226{ 3227 no strict 'refs'; 3228 foreach my $slot_name (qw( 3229 after explicit_stop infix pat piped position prefix selected cmd_verb 3230 cmd_args 3231 )) { 3232 my $slot = $slot_name; 3233 *{$slot} = sub { 3234 my $self = shift; 3235 3236 if (@_) { 3237 ${ $self->{$slot} } = shift; 3238 } 3239 3240 return ${ $self->{$slot} }; 3241 }; 3242 3243 *{"append_to_$slot"} = sub { 3244 my $self = shift; 3245 my $s = shift; 3246 3247 return $self->$slot($self->$slot . $s); 3248 }; 3249 } 3250} 3251 3252sub _DB_on_init__initialize_globals 3253{ 3254 my $self = shift; 3255 3256 # Check for whether we should be running continuously or not. 3257 # _After_ the perl program is compiled, $single is set to 1: 3258 if ( $single and not $second_time++ ) { 3259 3260 # Options say run non-stop. Run until we get an interrupt. 3261 if ($runnonstop) { # Disable until signal 3262 # If there's any call stack in place, turn off single 3263 # stepping into subs throughout the stack. 3264 for my $i (0 .. $stack_depth) { 3265 $stack[ $i ] &= ~1; 3266 } 3267 3268 # And we are now no longer in single-step mode. 3269 $single = 0; 3270 3271 # If we simply returned at this point, we wouldn't get 3272 # the trace info. Fall on through. 3273 # return; 3274 } ## end if ($runnonstop) 3275 3276 elsif ($ImmediateStop) { 3277 3278 # We are supposed to stop here; XXX probably a break. 3279 $ImmediateStop = 0; # We've processed it; turn it off 3280 $signal = 1; # Simulate an interrupt to force 3281 # us into the command loop 3282 } 3283 } ## end if ($single and not $second_time... 3284 3285 # If we're in single-step mode, or an interrupt (real or fake) 3286 # has occurred, turn off non-stop mode. 3287 $runnonstop = 0 if $single or $signal; 3288 3289 return; 3290} 3291 3292sub _my_print_lineinfo 3293{ 3294 my ($self, $i, $incr_pos) = @_; 3295 3296 if ($frame) { 3297 # Print it indented if tracing is on. 3298 DB::print_lineinfo( ' ' x $stack_depth, 3299 "$i:\t$DB::dbline[$i]" . $self->after ); 3300 } 3301 else { 3302 DB::depth_print_lineinfo($self->explicit_stop, $incr_pos); 3303 } 3304} 3305 3306sub _curr_line { 3307 return $DB::dbline[$line]; 3308} 3309 3310sub _is_full { 3311 my ($self, $letter) = @_; 3312 3313 return ($DB::cmd eq $letter); 3314} 3315 3316sub _DB__grab_control 3317{ 3318 my $self = shift; 3319 3320 # Yes, grab control. 3321 if ($slave_editor) { 3322 3323 # Tell the editor to update its position. 3324 $self->position("\032\032${DB::filename}:$line:0\n"); 3325 DB::print_lineinfo($self->position()); 3326 } 3327 3328=pod 3329 3330Special check: if we're in package C<DB::fake>, we've gone through the 3331C<END> block at least once. We set up everything so that we can continue 3332to enter commands and have a valid context to be in. 3333 3334=cut 3335 3336 elsif ( $DB::package eq 'DB::fake' ) { 3337 3338 # Fallen off the end already. 3339 if (!$DB::term) { 3340 DB::setterm(); 3341 } 3342 3343 DB::print_help(<<EOP); 3344Debugged program terminated. Use B<q> to quit or B<R> to restart, 3345use B<o> I<inhibit_exit> to avoid stopping after program termination, 3346B<h q>, B<h R> or B<h o> to get additional info. 3347EOP 3348 3349 # Set the DB::eval context appropriately. 3350 # At program termination disable any user actions. 3351 $DB::action = undef; 3352 3353 $DB::package = 'main'; 3354 $DB::usercontext = DB::_calc_usercontext($DB::package); 3355 } ## end elsif ($package eq 'DB::fake') 3356 3357=pod 3358 3359If the program hasn't finished executing, we scan forward to the 3360next executable line, print that out, build the prompt from the file and line 3361number information, and print that. 3362 3363=cut 3364 3365 else { 3366 3367 3368 # Still somewhere in the midst of execution. Set up the 3369 # debugger prompt. 3370 $DB::sub =~ s/\'/::/; # Swap Perl 4 package separators (') to 3371 # Perl 5 ones (sorry, we don't print Klingon 3372 #module names) 3373 3374 $self->prefix($DB::sub =~ /::/ ? "" : ($DB::package . '::')); 3375 $self->append_to_prefix( "$DB::sub(${DB::filename}:" ); 3376 $self->after( $self->_curr_line =~ /\n$/ ? '' : "\n" ); 3377 3378 # Break up the prompt if it's really long. 3379 if ( length($self->prefix()) > 30 ) { 3380 $self->position($self->prefix . "$line):\n$line:\t" . $self->_curr_line . $self->after); 3381 $self->prefix(""); 3382 $self->infix(":\t"); 3383 } 3384 else { 3385 $self->infix("):\t"); 3386 $self->position( 3387 $self->prefix . $line. $self->infix 3388 . $self->_curr_line . $self->after 3389 ); 3390 } 3391 3392 # Print current line info, indenting if necessary. 3393 $self->_my_print_lineinfo($line, $self->position); 3394 3395 my $i; 3396 my $line_i = sub { return $DB::dbline[$i]; }; 3397 3398 # Scan forward, stopping at either the end or the next 3399 # unbreakable line. 3400 for ( $i = $line + 1 ; $i <= $DB::max && $line_i->() == 0 ; ++$i ) 3401 { #{ vi 3402 3403 # Drop out on null statements, block closers, and comments. 3404 last if $line_i->() =~ /^\s*[\;\}\#\n]/; 3405 3406 # Drop out if the user interrupted us. 3407 last if $signal; 3408 3409 # Append a newline if the line doesn't have one. Can happen 3410 # in eval'ed text, for instance. 3411 $self->after( $line_i->() =~ /\n$/ ? '' : "\n" ); 3412 3413 # Next executable line. 3414 my $incr_pos = $self->prefix . $i . $self->infix . $line_i->() 3415 . $self->after; 3416 $self->append_to_position($incr_pos); 3417 $self->_my_print_lineinfo($i, $incr_pos); 3418 } ## end for ($i = $line + 1 ; $i... 3419 } ## end else [ if ($slave_editor) 3420 3421 return; 3422} 3423 3424sub _handle_t_command { 3425 my $self = shift; 3426 3427 my $levels = $self->cmd_args(); 3428 3429 if ((!length($levels)) or ($levels !~ /\D/)) { 3430 $trace ^= 1; 3431 local $\ = ''; 3432 $DB::trace_to_depth = $levels ? $stack_depth + $levels : 1E9; 3433 print {$OUT} "Trace = " 3434 . ( ( $trace & 1 ) 3435 ? ( $levels ? "on (to level $DB::trace_to_depth)" : "on" ) 3436 : "off" ) . "\n"; 3437 next CMD; 3438 } 3439 3440 return; 3441} 3442 3443 3444sub _handle_S_command { 3445 my $self = shift; 3446 3447 if (my ($print_all_subs, $should_reverse, $Spatt) 3448 = $self->cmd_args =~ /\A((!)?(.+))?\z/) { 3449 # $Spatt is the pattern (if any) to use. 3450 # Reverse scan? 3451 my $Srev = defined $should_reverse; 3452 # No args - print all subs. 3453 my $Snocheck = !defined $print_all_subs; 3454 3455 # Need to make these sane here. 3456 local $\ = ''; 3457 local $, = ''; 3458 3459 # Search through the debugger's magical hash of subs. 3460 # If $nocheck is true, just print the sub name. 3461 # Otherwise, check it against the pattern. We then use 3462 # the XOR trick to reverse the condition as required. 3463 foreach $subname ( sort( keys %sub ) ) { 3464 if ( $Snocheck or $Srev ^ ( $subname =~ /$Spatt/ ) ) { 3465 print $OUT $subname, "\n"; 3466 } 3467 } 3468 next CMD; 3469 } 3470 3471 return; 3472} 3473 3474sub _handle_V_command_and_X_command { 3475 my $self = shift; 3476 3477 $DB::cmd =~ s/^X\b/V $DB::package/; 3478 3479 # Bare V commands get the currently-being-debugged package 3480 # added. 3481 if ($self->_is_full('V')) { 3482 $DB::cmd = "V $DB::package"; 3483 } 3484 3485 # V - show variables in package. 3486 if (my ($new_packname, $new_vars_str) = 3487 $DB::cmd =~ /\AV\b\s*(\S+)\s*(.*)/) { 3488 3489 # Save the currently selected filehandle and 3490 # force output to debugger's filehandle (dumpvar 3491 # just does "print" for output). 3492 my $savout = select($OUT); 3493 3494 # Grab package name and variables to dump. 3495 $packname = $new_packname; 3496 my @vars = split( ' ', $new_vars_str ); 3497 3498 # If main::dumpvar isn't here, get it. 3499 do 'dumpvar.pl' || die $@ unless defined &main::dumpvar; 3500 if ( defined &main::dumpvar ) { 3501 3502 # We got it. Turn off subroutine entry/exit messages 3503 # for the moment, along with return values. 3504 local $frame = 0; 3505 local $doret = -2; 3506 3507 # must detect sigpipe failures - not catching 3508 # then will cause the debugger to die. 3509 eval { 3510 main::dumpvar( 3511 $packname, 3512 defined $option{dumpDepth} 3513 ? $option{dumpDepth} 3514 : -1, # assume -1 unless specified 3515 @vars 3516 ); 3517 }; 3518 3519 # The die doesn't need to include the $@, because 3520 # it will automatically get propagated for us. 3521 if ($@) { 3522 die unless $@ =~ /dumpvar print failed/; 3523 } 3524 } ## end if (defined &main::dumpvar) 3525 else { 3526 3527 # Couldn't load dumpvar. 3528 print $OUT "dumpvar.pl not available.\n"; 3529 } 3530 3531 # Restore the output filehandle, and go round again. 3532 select($savout); 3533 next CMD; 3534 } 3535 3536 return; 3537} 3538 3539sub _handle_dash_command { 3540 my $self = shift; 3541 3542 if ($self->_is_full('-')) { 3543 3544 # back up by a window; go to 1 if back too far. 3545 $start -= $incr + $window + 1; 3546 $start = 1 if $start <= 0; 3547 $incr = $window - 1; 3548 3549 # Generate and execute a "l +" command (handled below). 3550 $DB::cmd = 'l ' . ($start) . '+'; 3551 redo CMD; 3552 } 3553 return; 3554} 3555 3556sub _n_or_s_commands_generic { 3557 my ($self, $new_val) = @_; 3558 # n - next 3559 next CMD if DB::_DB__is_finished(); 3560 3561 # Single step, but don't enter subs. 3562 $single = $new_val; 3563 3564 # Save for empty command (repeat last). 3565 $laststep = $DB::cmd; 3566 last CMD; 3567} 3568 3569sub _n_or_s { 3570 my ($self, $letter, $new_val) = @_; 3571 3572 if ($self->_is_full($letter)) { 3573 $self->_n_or_s_commands_generic($new_val); 3574 } 3575 else { 3576 $self->_n_or_s_and_arg_commands_generic($letter, $new_val); 3577 } 3578 3579 return; 3580} 3581 3582sub _handle_n_command { 3583 my $self = shift; 3584 3585 return $self->_n_or_s('n', 2); 3586} 3587 3588sub _handle_s_command { 3589 my $self = shift; 3590 3591 return $self->_n_or_s('s', 1); 3592} 3593 3594sub _handle_r_command { 3595 my $self = shift; 3596 3597 # r - return from the current subroutine. 3598 if ($self->_is_full('r')) { 3599 3600 # Can't do anything if the program's over. 3601 next CMD if DB::_DB__is_finished(); 3602 3603 # Turn on stack trace. 3604 $stack[$stack_depth] |= 1; 3605 3606 # Print return value unless the stack is empty. 3607 $doret = $option{PrintRet} ? $stack_depth - 1 : -2; 3608 last CMD; 3609 } 3610 3611 return; 3612} 3613 3614sub _handle_T_command { 3615 my $self = shift; 3616 3617 if ($self->_is_full('T')) { 3618 DB::print_trace( $OUT, 1 ); # skip DB 3619 next CMD; 3620 } 3621 3622 return; 3623} 3624 3625sub _handle_w_command { 3626 my $self = shift; 3627 3628 DB::cmd_w( 'w', $self->cmd_args() ); 3629 next CMD; 3630 3631 return; 3632} 3633 3634sub _handle_W_command { 3635 my $self = shift; 3636 3637 if (my $arg = $self->cmd_args) { 3638 DB::cmd_W( 'W', $arg ); 3639 next CMD; 3640 } 3641 3642 return; 3643} 3644 3645sub _handle_rc_recall_command { 3646 my $self = shift; 3647 3648 # $rc - recall command. 3649 if (my ($minus, $arg) = $DB::cmd =~ m#\A$rc+\s*(-)?(\d+)?\z#) { 3650 3651 # No arguments, take one thing off history. 3652 pop(@hist) if length($DB::cmd) > 1; 3653 3654 # Relative (- found)? 3655 # Y - index back from most recent (by 1 if bare minus) 3656 # N - go to that particular command slot or the last 3657 # thing if nothing following. 3658 3659 $self->cmd_verb( 3660 scalar($minus ? ( $#hist - ( $arg || 1 ) ) : ( $arg || $#hist )) 3661 ); 3662 3663 # Pick out the command desired. 3664 $DB::cmd = $hist[$self->cmd_verb]; 3665 3666 # Print the command to be executed and restart the loop 3667 # with that command in the buffer. 3668 print {$OUT} $DB::cmd, "\n"; 3669 redo CMD; 3670 } 3671 3672 return; 3673} 3674 3675sub _handle_rc_search_history_command { 3676 my $self = shift; 3677 3678 # $rc pattern $rc - find a command in the history. 3679 if (my ($arg) = $DB::cmd =~ /\A$rc([^$rc].*)\z/) { 3680 3681 # Create the pattern to use. 3682 my $pat = "^$arg"; 3683 $self->pat($pat); 3684 3685 # Toss off last entry if length is >1 (and it always is). 3686 pop(@hist) if length($DB::cmd) > 1; 3687 3688 my $i; 3689 3690 # Look backward through the history. 3691 SEARCH_HIST: 3692 for ( $i = $#hist ; $i ; --$i ) { 3693 # Stop if we find it. 3694 last SEARCH_HIST if $hist[$i] =~ /$pat/; 3695 } 3696 3697 if ( !$i ) { 3698 3699 # Never found it. 3700 print $OUT "No such command!\n\n"; 3701 next CMD; 3702 } 3703 3704 # Found it. Put it in the buffer, print it, and process it. 3705 $DB::cmd = $hist[$i]; 3706 print $OUT $DB::cmd, "\n"; 3707 redo CMD; 3708 } 3709 3710 return; 3711} 3712 3713sub _handle_H_command { 3714 my $self = shift; 3715 3716 if ($self->cmd_args =~ m#\A\*#) { 3717 @hist = @truehist = (); 3718 print $OUT "History cleansed\n"; 3719 next CMD; 3720 } 3721 3722 if (my ($num) = $self->cmd_args =~ /\A(?:-(\d+))?/) { 3723 3724 # Anything other than negative numbers is ignored by 3725 # the (incorrect) pattern, so this test does nothing. 3726 $end = $num ? ( $#hist - $num ) : 0; 3727 3728 # Set to the minimum if less than zero. 3729 $hist = 0 if $hist < 0; 3730 3731 # Start at the end of the array. 3732 # Stay in while we're still above the ending value. 3733 # Tick back by one each time around the loop. 3734 my $i; 3735 3736 for ( $i = $#hist ; $i > $end ; $i-- ) { 3737 3738 # Print the command unless it has no arguments. 3739 print $OUT "$i: ", $hist[$i], "\n" 3740 unless $hist[$i] =~ /^.?$/; 3741 } 3742 3743 next CMD; 3744 } 3745 3746 return; 3747} 3748 3749sub _handle_doc_command { 3750 my $self = shift; 3751 3752 # man, perldoc, doc - show manual pages. 3753 if (my ($man_page) 3754 = $DB::cmd =~ /\A(?:man|(?:perl)?doc)\b(?:\s+([^(]*))?\z/) { 3755 DB::runman($man_page); 3756 next CMD; 3757 } 3758 3759 return; 3760} 3761 3762sub _handle_p_command { 3763 my $self = shift; 3764 3765 my $print_cmd = 'print {$DB::OUT} '; 3766 # p - print (no args): print $_. 3767 if ($self->_is_full('p')) { 3768 $DB::cmd = $print_cmd . '$_'; 3769 } 3770 else { 3771 # p - print the given expression. 3772 $DB::cmd =~ s/\Ap\b/$print_cmd /; 3773 } 3774 3775 return; 3776} 3777 3778sub _handle_equal_sign_command { 3779 my $self = shift; 3780 3781 if ($DB::cmd =~ s/\A=\s*//) { 3782 my @keys; 3783 if ( length $DB::cmd == 0 ) { 3784 3785 # No args, get current aliases. 3786 @keys = sort keys %alias; 3787 } 3788 elsif ( my ( $k, $v ) = ( $DB::cmd =~ /^(\S+)\s+(\S.*)/ ) ) { 3789 3790 # Creating a new alias. $k is alias name, $v is 3791 # alias value. 3792 3793 # can't use $_ or kill //g state 3794 for my $x ( $k, $v ) { 3795 3796 # Escape "alarm" characters. 3797 $x =~ s/\a/\\a/g; 3798 } 3799 3800 # Substitute key for value, using alarm chars 3801 # as separators (which is why we escaped them in 3802 # the command). 3803 $alias{$k} = "s\a$k\a$v\a"; 3804 3805 # Turn off standard warn and die behavior. 3806 local $SIG{__DIE__}; 3807 local $SIG{__WARN__}; 3808 3809 # Is it valid Perl? 3810 unless ( eval "sub { s\a$k\a$v\a }; 1" ) { 3811 3812 # Nope. Bad alias. Say so and get out. 3813 print $OUT "Can't alias $k to $v: $@\n"; 3814 delete $alias{$k}; 3815 next CMD; 3816 } 3817 3818 # We'll only list the new one. 3819 @keys = ($k); 3820 } ## end elsif (my ($k, $v) = ($DB::cmd... 3821 3822 # The argument is the alias to list. 3823 else { 3824 @keys = ($DB::cmd); 3825 } 3826 3827 # List aliases. 3828 for my $k (@keys) { 3829 3830 # Messy metaquoting: Trim the substitution code off. 3831 # We use control-G as the delimiter because it's not 3832 # likely to appear in the alias. 3833 if ( ( my $v = $alias{$k} ) =~ ss\a$k\a(.*)\a$1 ) { 3834 3835 # Print the alias. 3836 print $OUT "$k\t= $1\n"; 3837 } 3838 elsif ( defined $alias{$k} ) { 3839 3840 # Couldn't trim it off; just print the alias code. 3841 print $OUT "$k\t$alias{$k}\n"; 3842 } 3843 else { 3844 3845 # No such, dude. 3846 print "No alias for $k\n"; 3847 } 3848 } ## end for my $k (@keys) 3849 next CMD; 3850 } 3851 3852 return; 3853} 3854 3855sub _handle_source_command { 3856 my $self = shift; 3857 3858 # source - read commands from a file (or pipe!) and execute. 3859 if (my $sourced_fn = $self->cmd_args) { 3860 if ( open my $fh, $sourced_fn ) { 3861 3862 # Opened OK; stick it in the list of file handles. 3863 push @cmdfhs, $fh; 3864 } 3865 else { 3866 3867 # Couldn't open it. 3868 DB::_db_warn("Can't execute '$sourced_fn': $!\n"); 3869 } 3870 next CMD; 3871 } 3872 3873 return; 3874} 3875 3876sub _handle_enable_disable_commands { 3877 my $self = shift; 3878 3879 my $which_cmd = $self->cmd_verb; 3880 my $position = $self->cmd_args; 3881 3882 if ($position !~ /\s/) { 3883 my ($fn, $line_num); 3884 if ($position =~ m{\A\d+\z}) 3885 { 3886 $fn = $DB::filename; 3887 $line_num = $position; 3888 } 3889 elsif (my ($new_fn, $new_line_num) 3890 = $position =~ m{\A(.*):(\d+)\z}) { 3891 ($fn, $line_num) = ($new_fn, $new_line_num); 3892 } 3893 else 3894 { 3895 DB::_db_warn("Wrong spec for enable/disable argument.\n"); 3896 } 3897 3898 if (defined($fn)) { 3899 if (DB::_has_breakpoint_data_ref($fn, $line_num)) { 3900 DB::_set_breakpoint_enabled_status($fn, $line_num, 3901 ($which_cmd eq 'enable' ? 1 : '') 3902 ); 3903 } 3904 else { 3905 DB::_db_warn("No breakpoint set at ${fn}:${line_num}\n"); 3906 } 3907 } 3908 3909 next CMD; 3910 } 3911 3912 return; 3913} 3914 3915sub _handle_save_command { 3916 my $self = shift; 3917 3918 if (my $new_fn = $self->cmd_args) { 3919 my $filename = $new_fn || '.perl5dbrc'; # default? 3920 if ( open my $fh, '>', $filename ) { 3921 3922 # chomp to remove extraneous newlines from source'd files 3923 chomp( my @truelist = 3924 map { m/\A\s*(save|source)/ ? "#$_" : $_ } 3925 @truehist ); 3926 print {$fh} join( "\n", @truelist ); 3927 print "commands saved in $filename\n"; 3928 } 3929 else { 3930 DB::_db_warn("Can't save debugger commands in '$new_fn': $!\n"); 3931 } 3932 next CMD; 3933 } 3934 3935 return; 3936} 3937 3938sub _n_or_s_and_arg_commands_generic { 3939 my ($self, $letter, $new_val) = @_; 3940 3941 # s - single-step. Remember the last command was 's'. 3942 if ($DB::cmd =~ s#\A\Q$letter\E\s#\$DB::single = $new_val;\n#) { 3943 $laststep = $letter; 3944 } 3945 3946 return; 3947} 3948 3949sub _handle_sh_command { 3950 my $self = shift; 3951 3952 # $sh$sh - run a shell command (if it's all ASCII). 3953 # Can't run shell commands with Unicode in the debugger, hmm. 3954 my $my_cmd = $DB::cmd; 3955 if ($my_cmd =~ m#\A$sh#gms) { 3956 3957 if ($my_cmd =~ m#\G\z#cgms) { 3958 # Run the user's shell. If none defined, run Bourne. 3959 # We resume execution when the shell terminates. 3960 DB::_db_system( $ENV{SHELL} || "/bin/sh" ); 3961 next CMD; 3962 } 3963 elsif ($my_cmd =~ m#\G$sh\s*(.*)#cgms) { 3964 # System it. 3965 DB::_db_system($1); 3966 next CMD; 3967 } 3968 elsif ($my_cmd =~ m#\G\s*(.*)#cgms) { 3969 DB::_db_system( $ENV{SHELL} || "/bin/sh", "-c", $1 ); 3970 next CMD; 3971 } 3972 } 3973} 3974 3975sub _handle_x_command { 3976 my $self = shift; 3977 3978 if ($DB::cmd =~ s#\Ax\b# #) { # Remainder gets done by DB::eval() 3979 $onetimeDump = 'dump'; # main::dumpvar shows the output 3980 3981 # handle special "x 3 blah" syntax XXX propagate 3982 # doc back to special variables. 3983 if ( $DB::cmd =~ s#\A\s*(\d+)(?=\s)# #) { 3984 $onetimedumpDepth = $1; 3985 } 3986 } 3987 3988 return; 3989} 3990 3991sub _handle_q_command { 3992 my $self = shift; 3993 3994 if ($self->_is_full('q')) { 3995 $fall_off_end = 1; 3996 DB::clean_ENV(); 3997 exit $?; 3998 } 3999 4000 return; 4001} 4002 4003sub _handle_cmd_wrapper_commands { 4004 my $self = shift; 4005 4006 DB::cmd_wrapper( $self->cmd_verb, $self->cmd_args, $line ); 4007 next CMD; 4008} 4009 4010sub _handle_special_char_cmd_wrapper_commands { 4011 my $self = shift; 4012 4013 # All of these commands were remapped in perl 5.8.0; 4014 # we send them off to the secondary dispatcher (see below). 4015 if (my ($cmd_letter, $my_arg) = $DB::cmd =~ /\A([<>\{]{1,2})\s*(.*)/so) { 4016 DB::cmd_wrapper( $cmd_letter, $my_arg, $line ); 4017 next CMD; 4018 } 4019 4020 return; 4021} 4022 4023} ## end DB::Obj 4024 4025package DB; 4026 4027# The following code may be executed now: 4028# BEGIN {warn 4} 4029 4030=head2 sub 4031 4032C<sub> is called whenever a subroutine call happens in the program being 4033debugged. The variable C<$DB::sub> contains the name of the subroutine 4034being called. 4035 4036The core function of this subroutine is to actually call the sub in the proper 4037context, capturing its output. This of course causes C<DB::DB> to get called 4038again, repeating until the subroutine ends and returns control to C<DB::sub> 4039again. Once control returns, C<DB::sub> figures out whether or not to dump the 4040return value, and returns its captured copy of the return value as its own 4041return value. The value then feeds back into the program being debugged as if 4042C<DB::sub> hadn't been there at all. 4043 4044C<sub> does all the work of printing the subroutine entry and exit messages 4045enabled by setting C<$frame>. It notes what sub the autoloader got called for, 4046and also prints the return value if needed (for the C<r> command and if 4047the 16 bit is set in C<$frame>). 4048 4049It also tracks the subroutine call depth by saving the current setting of 4050C<$single> in the C<@stack> package global; if this exceeds the value in 4051C<$deep>, C<sub> automatically turns on printing of the current depth by 4052setting the C<4> bit in C<$single>. In any case, it keeps the current setting 4053of stop/don't stop on entry to subs set as it currently is set. 4054 4055=head3 C<caller()> support 4056 4057If C<caller()> is called from the package C<DB>, it provides some 4058additional data, in the following order: 4059 4060=over 4 4061 4062=item * C<$package> 4063 4064The package name the sub was in 4065 4066=item * C<$filename> 4067 4068The filename it was defined in 4069 4070=item * C<$line> 4071 4072The line number it was defined on 4073 4074=item * C<$subroutine> 4075 4076The subroutine name; C<(eval)> if an C<eval>(). 4077 4078=item * C<$hasargs> 4079 40801 if it has arguments, 0 if not 4081 4082=item * C<$wantarray> 4083 40841 if array context, 0 if scalar context 4085 4086=item * C<$evaltext> 4087 4088The C<eval>() text, if any (undefined for C<eval BLOCK>) 4089 4090=item * C<$is_require> 4091 4092frame was created by a C<use> or C<require> statement 4093 4094=item * C<$hints> 4095 4096pragma information; subject to change between versions 4097 4098=item * C<$bitmask> 4099 4100pragma information; subject to change between versions 4101 4102=item * C<@DB::args> 4103 4104arguments with which the subroutine was invoked 4105 4106=back 4107 4108=cut 4109 4110use vars qw($deep); 4111 4112# We need to fully qualify the name ("DB::sub") to make "use strict;" 4113# happy. -- Shlomi Fish 4114 4115sub _indent_print_line_info { 4116 my ($offset, $str) = @_; 4117 4118 print_lineinfo( ' ' x ($stack_depth - $offset), $str); 4119 4120 return; 4121} 4122 4123sub _print_frame_message { 4124 my ($al) = @_; 4125 4126 if ($frame) { 4127 if ($frame & 4) { # Extended frame entry message 4128 _indent_print_line_info(-1, "in "); 4129 4130 # Why -1? But it works! :-( 4131 # Because print_trace will call add 1 to it and then call 4132 # dump_trace; this results in our skipping -1+1 = 0 stack frames 4133 # in dump_trace. 4134 # 4135 # Now it's 0 because we extracted a function. 4136 print_trace( $LINEINFO, 0, 1, 1, "$sub$al" ); 4137 } 4138 else { 4139 _indent_print_line_info(-1, "entering $sub$al\n" ); 4140 } 4141 } 4142 4143 return; 4144} 4145 4146sub DB::sub { 4147 my ( $al, $ret, @ret ) = ""; 4148 4149 # We stack the stack pointer and then increment it to protect us 4150 # from a situation that might unwind a whole bunch of call frames 4151 # at once. Localizing the stack pointer means that it will automatically 4152 # unwind the same amount when multiple stack frames are unwound. 4153 local $stack_depth = $stack_depth + 1; # Protect from non-local exits 4154 4155 { 4156 # lock ourselves under threads 4157 # While lock() permits recursive locks, there's two cases where it's bad 4158 # that we keep a hold on the lock while we call the sub: 4159 # - during cloning, Package::CLONE might be called in the context of the new 4160 # thread, which will deadlock if we hold the lock across the threads::new call 4161 # - for any function that waits any significant time 4162 # This also deadlocks if the parent thread joins(), since holding the lock 4163 # will prevent any child threads passing this point. 4164 # So release the lock for the function call. 4165 lock($DBGR); 4166 4167 # Whether or not the autoloader was running, a scalar to put the 4168 # sub's return value in (if needed), and an array to put the sub's 4169 # return value in (if needed). 4170 if ($sub eq 'threads::new' && $ENV{PERL5DB_THREADED}) { 4171 print "creating new thread\n"; 4172 } 4173 4174 # If the last ten characters are '::AUTOLOAD', note we've traced 4175 # into AUTOLOAD for $sub. 4176 if ( length($sub) > 10 && substr( $sub, -10, 10 ) eq '::AUTOLOAD' ) { 4177 no strict 'refs'; 4178 $al = " for $$sub" if defined $$sub; 4179 } 4180 4181 # Expand @stack. 4182 $#stack = $stack_depth; 4183 4184 # Save current single-step setting. 4185 $stack[-1] = $single; 4186 4187 # Turn off all flags except single-stepping. 4188 $single &= 1; 4189 4190 # If we've gotten really deeply recursed, turn on the flag that will 4191 # make us stop with the 'deep recursion' message. 4192 $single |= 4 if $stack_depth == $deep; 4193 4194 # If frame messages are on ... 4195 4196 _print_frame_message($al); 4197 } 4198 4199 # Determine the sub's return type, and capture appropriately. 4200 if (wantarray) { 4201 4202 # Called in array context. call sub and capture output. 4203 # DB::DB will recursively get control again if appropriate; we'll come 4204 # back here when the sub is finished. 4205 no strict 'refs'; 4206 @ret = &$sub; 4207 } 4208 elsif ( defined wantarray ) { 4209 no strict 'refs'; 4210 # Save the value if it's wanted at all. 4211 $ret = &$sub; 4212 } 4213 else { 4214 no strict 'refs'; 4215 # Void return, explicitly. 4216 &$sub; 4217 undef $ret; 4218 } 4219 4220 { 4221 lock($DBGR); 4222 4223 # Pop the single-step value back off the stack. 4224 $single |= $stack[ $stack_depth-- ]; 4225 4226 if ($frame & 2) { 4227 if ($frame & 4) { # Extended exit message 4228 _indent_print_line_info(0, "out "); 4229 print_trace( $LINEINFO, -1, 1, 1, "$sub$al" ); 4230 } 4231 else { 4232 _indent_print_line_info(0, "exited $sub$al\n" ); 4233 } 4234 } 4235 4236 if (wantarray) { 4237 # Print the return info if we need to. 4238 if ( $doret eq $stack_depth or $frame & 16 ) { 4239 4240 # Turn off output record separator. 4241 local $\ = ''; 4242 my $fh = ( $doret eq $stack_depth ? $OUT : $LINEINFO ); 4243 4244 # Indent if we're printing because of $frame tracing. 4245 if ($frame & 16) 4246 { 4247 print {$fh} ' ' x $stack_depth; 4248 } 4249 4250 # Print the return value. 4251 print {$fh} "list context return from $sub:\n"; 4252 dumpit( $fh, \@ret ); 4253 4254 # And don't print it again. 4255 $doret = -2; 4256 } ## end if ($doret eq $stack_depth... 4257 # And we have to return the return value now. 4258 @ret; 4259 } ## end if (wantarray) 4260 # Scalar context. 4261 else { 4262 # If we are supposed to show the return value... same as before. 4263 if ( $doret eq $stack_depth or $frame & 16 and defined wantarray ) { 4264 local $\ = ''; 4265 my $fh = ( $doret eq $stack_depth ? $OUT : $LINEINFO ); 4266 print $fh ( ' ' x $stack_depth ) if $frame & 16; 4267 print $fh ( 4268 defined wantarray 4269 ? "scalar context return from $sub: " 4270 : "void context return from $sub\n" 4271 ); 4272 dumpit( $fh, $ret ) if defined wantarray; 4273 $doret = -2; 4274 } ## end if ($doret eq $stack_depth... 4275 4276 # Return the appropriate scalar value. 4277 $ret; 4278 } ## end else [ if (wantarray) 4279 } 4280} ## end sub _sub 4281 4282sub lsub : lvalue { 4283 4284 # We stack the stack pointer and then increment it to protect us 4285 # from a situation that might unwind a whole bunch of call frames 4286 # at once. Localizing the stack pointer means that it will automatically 4287 # unwind the same amount when multiple stack frames are unwound. 4288 local $stack_depth = $stack_depth + 1; # Protect from non-local exits 4289 4290 # Expand @stack. 4291 $#stack = $stack_depth; 4292 4293 # Save current single-step setting. 4294 $stack[-1] = $single; 4295 4296 # Turn off all flags except single-stepping. 4297 # Use local so the single-step value is popped back off the 4298 # stack for us. 4299 local $single = $single & 1; 4300 4301 no strict 'refs'; 4302 { 4303 # lock ourselves under threads 4304 lock($DBGR); 4305 4306 # Whether or not the autoloader was running, a scalar to put the 4307 # sub's return value in (if needed), and an array to put the sub's 4308 # return value in (if needed). 4309 my ( $al, $ret, @ret ) = ""; 4310 if ($sub =~ /^threads::new$/ && $ENV{PERL5DB_THREADED}) { 4311 print "creating new thread\n"; 4312 } 4313 4314 # If the last ten characters are C'::AUTOLOAD', note we've traced 4315 # into AUTOLOAD for $sub. 4316 if ( length($sub) > 10 && substr( $sub, -10, 10 ) eq '::AUTOLOAD' ) { 4317 $al = " for $$sub"; 4318 } 4319 4320 # If we've gotten really deeply recursed, turn on the flag that will 4321 # make us stop with the 'deep recursion' message. 4322 $single |= 4 if $stack_depth == $deep; 4323 4324 # If frame messages are on ... 4325 _print_frame_message($al); 4326 } 4327 4328 # call the original lvalue sub. 4329 &$sub; 4330} 4331 4332# Abstracting common code from multiple places elsewhere: 4333sub depth_print_lineinfo { 4334 my $always_print = shift; 4335 4336 print_lineinfo( @_ ) if ($always_print or $stack_depth < $trace_to_depth); 4337} 4338 4339=head1 EXTENDED COMMAND HANDLING AND THE COMMAND API 4340 4341In Perl 5.8.0, there was a major realignment of the commands and what they did, 4342Most of the changes were to systematize the command structure and to eliminate 4343commands that threw away user input without checking. 4344 4345The following sections describe the code added to make it easy to support 4346multiple command sets with conflicting command names. This section is a start 4347at unifying all command processing to make it simpler to develop commands. 4348 4349Note that all the cmd_[a-zA-Z] subroutines require the command name, a line 4350number, and C<$dbline> (the current line) as arguments. 4351 4352Support functions in this section which have multiple modes of failure C<die> 4353on error; the rest simply return a false value. 4354 4355The user-interface functions (all of the C<cmd_*> functions) just output 4356error messages. 4357 4358=head2 C<%set> 4359 4360The C<%set> hash defines the mapping from command letter to subroutine 4361name suffix. 4362 4363C<%set> is a two-level hash, indexed by set name and then by command name. 4364Note that trying to set the CommandSet to C<foobar> simply results in the 43655.8.0 command set being used, since there's no top-level entry for C<foobar>. 4366 4367=cut 4368 4369### The API section 4370 4371my %set = ( # 4372 'pre580' => { 4373 'a' => 'pre580_a', 4374 'A' => 'pre580_null', 4375 'b' => 'pre580_b', 4376 'B' => 'pre580_null', 4377 'd' => 'pre580_null', 4378 'D' => 'pre580_D', 4379 'h' => 'pre580_h', 4380 'M' => 'pre580_null', 4381 'O' => 'o', 4382 'o' => 'pre580_null', 4383 'v' => 'M', 4384 'w' => 'v', 4385 'W' => 'pre580_W', 4386 }, 4387 'pre590' => { 4388 '<' => 'pre590_prepost', 4389 '<<' => 'pre590_prepost', 4390 '>' => 'pre590_prepost', 4391 '>>' => 'pre590_prepost', 4392 '{' => 'pre590_prepost', 4393 '{{' => 'pre590_prepost', 4394 }, 4395); 4396 4397my %breakpoints_data; 4398 4399sub _has_breakpoint_data_ref { 4400 my ($filename, $line) = @_; 4401 4402 return ( 4403 exists( $breakpoints_data{$filename} ) 4404 and 4405 exists( $breakpoints_data{$filename}{$line} ) 4406 ); 4407} 4408 4409sub _get_breakpoint_data_ref { 4410 my ($filename, $line) = @_; 4411 4412 return ($breakpoints_data{$filename}{$line} ||= +{}); 4413} 4414 4415sub _delete_breakpoint_data_ref { 4416 my ($filename, $line) = @_; 4417 4418 delete($breakpoints_data{$filename}{$line}); 4419 if (! scalar(keys( %{$breakpoints_data{$filename}} )) ) { 4420 delete($breakpoints_data{$filename}); 4421 } 4422 4423 return; 4424} 4425 4426sub _set_breakpoint_enabled_status { 4427 my ($filename, $line, $status) = @_; 4428 4429 _get_breakpoint_data_ref($filename, $line)->{'enabled'} = 4430 ($status ? 1 : '') 4431 ; 4432 4433 return; 4434} 4435 4436sub _enable_breakpoint_temp_enabled_status { 4437 my ($filename, $line) = @_; 4438 4439 _get_breakpoint_data_ref($filename, $line)->{'temp_enabled'} = 1; 4440 4441 return; 4442} 4443 4444sub _cancel_breakpoint_temp_enabled_status { 4445 my ($filename, $line) = @_; 4446 4447 my $ref = _get_breakpoint_data_ref($filename, $line); 4448 4449 delete ($ref->{'temp_enabled'}); 4450 4451 if (! %$ref) { 4452 _delete_breakpoint_data_ref($filename, $line); 4453 } 4454 4455 return; 4456} 4457 4458sub _is_breakpoint_enabled { 4459 my ($filename, $line) = @_; 4460 4461 my $data_ref = _get_breakpoint_data_ref($filename, $line); 4462 return ($data_ref->{'enabled'} || $data_ref->{'temp_enabled'}); 4463} 4464 4465=head2 C<cmd_wrapper()> (API) 4466 4467C<cmd_wrapper()> allows the debugger to switch command sets 4468depending on the value of the C<CommandSet> option. 4469 4470It tries to look up the command in the C<%set> package-level I<lexical> 4471(which means external entities can't fiddle with it) and create the name of 4472the sub to call based on the value found in the hash (if it's there). I<All> 4473of the commands to be handled in a set have to be added to C<%set>; if they 4474aren't found, the 5.8.0 equivalent is called (if there is one). 4475 4476This code uses symbolic references. 4477 4478=cut 4479 4480sub cmd_wrapper { 4481 my $cmd = shift; 4482 my $line = shift; 4483 my $dblineno = shift; 4484 4485 # Assemble the command subroutine's name by looking up the 4486 # command set and command name in %set. If we can't find it, 4487 # default to the older version of the command. 4488 my $call = 'cmd_' 4489 . ( $set{$CommandSet}{$cmd} 4490 || ( $cmd =~ /\A[<>{]+/o ? 'prepost' : $cmd ) ); 4491 4492 # Call the command subroutine, call it by name. 4493 return __PACKAGE__->can($call)->( $cmd, $line, $dblineno ); 4494} ## end sub cmd_wrapper 4495 4496=head3 C<cmd_a> (command) 4497 4498The C<a> command handles pre-execution actions. These are associated with a 4499particular line, so they're stored in C<%dbline>. We default to the current 4500line if none is specified. 4501 4502=cut 4503 4504sub cmd_a { 4505 my $cmd = shift; 4506 my $line = shift || ''; # [.|line] expr 4507 my $dbline = shift; 4508 4509 # If it's dot (here), or not all digits, use the current line. 4510 $line =~ s/\A\./$dbline/; 4511 4512 # Should be a line number followed by an expression. 4513 if ( my ($lineno, $expr) = $line =~ /^\s*(\d*)\s*(\S.+)/ ) { 4514 4515 if (! length($lineno)) { 4516 $lineno = $dbline; 4517 } 4518 4519 # If we have an expression ... 4520 if ( length $expr ) { 4521 4522 # ... but the line isn't breakable, complain. 4523 if ( $dbline[$lineno] == 0 ) { 4524 print $OUT 4525 "Line $lineno($dbline[$lineno]) does not have an action?\n"; 4526 } 4527 else { 4528 4529 # It's executable. Record that the line has an action. 4530 $had_breakpoints{$filename} |= 2; 4531 4532 # Remove any action, temp breakpoint, etc. 4533 $dbline{$lineno} =~ s/\0[^\0]*//; 4534 4535 # Add the action to the line. 4536 $dbline{$lineno} .= "\0" . action($expr); 4537 4538 _set_breakpoint_enabled_status($filename, $lineno, 1); 4539 } 4540 } ## end if (length $expr) 4541 } ## end if ($line =~ /^\s*(\d*)\s*(\S.+)/) 4542 else { 4543 4544 # Syntax wrong. 4545 print $OUT 4546 "Adding an action requires an optional lineno and an expression\n" 4547 ; # hint 4548 } 4549} ## end sub cmd_a 4550 4551=head3 C<cmd_A> (command) 4552 4553Delete actions. Similar to above, except the delete code is in a separate 4554subroutine, C<delete_action>. 4555 4556=cut 4557 4558sub cmd_A { 4559 my $cmd = shift; 4560 my $line = shift || ''; 4561 my $dbline = shift; 4562 4563 # Dot is this line. 4564 $line =~ s/^\./$dbline/; 4565 4566 # Call delete_action with a null param to delete them all. 4567 # The '1' forces the eval to be true. It'll be false only 4568 # if delete_action blows up for some reason, in which case 4569 # we print $@ and get out. 4570 if ( $line eq '*' ) { 4571 if (! eval { _delete_all_actions(); 1 }) { 4572 print {$OUT} $@; 4573 return; 4574 } 4575 } 4576 4577 # There's a real line number. Pass it to delete_action. 4578 # Error trapping is as above. 4579 elsif ( $line =~ /^(\S.*)/ ) { 4580 if (! eval { delete_action($1); 1 }) { 4581 print {$OUT} $@; 4582 return; 4583 } 4584 } 4585 4586 # Swing and a miss. Bad syntax. 4587 else { 4588 print $OUT 4589 "Deleting an action requires a line number, or '*' for all\n" ; # hint 4590 } 4591} ## end sub cmd_A 4592 4593=head3 C<delete_action> (API) 4594 4595C<delete_action> accepts either a line number or C<undef>. If a line number 4596is specified, we check for the line being executable (if it's not, it 4597couldn't have had an action). If it is, we just take the action off (this 4598will get any kind of an action, including breakpoints). 4599 4600=cut 4601 4602sub _remove_action_from_dbline { 4603 my $i = shift; 4604 4605 $dbline{$i} =~ s/\0[^\0]*//; # \^a 4606 delete $dbline{$i} if $dbline{$i} eq ''; 4607 4608 return; 4609} 4610 4611sub _delete_all_actions { 4612 print {$OUT} "Deleting all actions...\n"; 4613 4614 for my $file ( keys %had_breakpoints ) { 4615 local *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $file }; 4616 $max = $#dbline; 4617 my $was; 4618 for my $i (1 .. $max) { 4619 if ( defined $dbline{$i} ) { 4620 _remove_action_from_dbline($i); 4621 } 4622 } 4623 4624 unless ( $had_breakpoints{$file} &= ~2 ) { 4625 delete $had_breakpoints{$file}; 4626 } 4627 } 4628 4629 return; 4630} 4631 4632sub delete_action { 4633 my $i = shift; 4634 4635 if ( defined($i) ) { 4636 # Can there be one? 4637 die "Line $i has no action .\n" if $dbline[$i] == 0; 4638 4639 # Nuke whatever's there. 4640 _remove_action_from_dbline($i); 4641 } 4642 else { 4643 _delete_all_actions(); 4644 } 4645} 4646 4647=head3 C<cmd_b> (command) 4648 4649Set breakpoints. Since breakpoints can be set in so many places, in so many 4650ways, conditionally or not, the breakpoint code is kind of complex. Mostly, 4651we try to parse the command type, and then shuttle it off to an appropriate 4652subroutine to actually do the work of setting the breakpoint in the right 4653place. 4654 4655=cut 4656 4657sub cmd_b { 4658 my $cmd = shift; 4659 my $line = shift; # [.|line] [cond] 4660 my $dbline = shift; 4661 4662 my $default_cond = sub { 4663 my $cond = shift; 4664 return length($cond) ? $cond : '1'; 4665 }; 4666 4667 # Make . the current line number if it's there.. 4668 $line =~ s/^\.(\s|\z)/$dbline$1/; 4669 4670 # No line number, no condition. Simple break on current line. 4671 if ( $line =~ /^\s*$/ ) { 4672 cmd_b_line( $dbline, 1 ); 4673 } 4674 4675 # Break on load for a file. 4676 elsif ( my ($file) = $line =~ /^load\b\s*(.*)/ ) { 4677 $file =~ s/\s+\z//; 4678 cmd_b_load($file); 4679 } 4680 4681 # b compile|postpone <some sub> [<condition>] 4682 # The interpreter actually traps this one for us; we just put the 4683 # necessary condition in the %postponed hash. 4684 elsif ( my ($action, $subname, $cond) 4685 = $line =~ /^(postpone|compile)\b\s*([':A-Za-z_][':\w]*)\s*(.*)/ ) { 4686 4687 # De-Perl4-ify the name - ' separators to ::. 4688 $subname =~ s/'/::/g; 4689 4690 # Qualify it into the current package unless it's already qualified. 4691 $subname = "${package}::" . $subname unless $subname =~ /::/; 4692 4693 # Add main if it starts with ::. 4694 $subname = "main" . $subname if substr( $subname, 0, 2 ) eq "::"; 4695 4696 # Save the break type for this sub. 4697 $postponed{$subname} = (($action eq 'postpone') 4698 ? ( "break +0 if " . $default_cond->($cond) ) 4699 : "compile"); 4700 } ## end elsif ($line =~ ... 4701 # b <filename>:<line> [<condition>] 4702 elsif (my ($filename, $line_num, $cond) 4703 = $line =~ /\A(\S+[^:]):(\d+)\s*(.*)/ms) { 4704 cmd_b_filename_line( 4705 $filename, 4706 $line_num, 4707 (length($cond) ? $cond : '1'), 4708 ); 4709 } 4710 # b <sub name> [<condition>] 4711 elsif ( my ($new_subname, $new_cond) = 4712 $line =~ /^([':A-Za-z_][':\w]*(?:\[.*\])?)\s*(.*)/ ) { 4713 4714 # 4715 $subname = $new_subname; 4716 cmd_b_sub( $subname, $default_cond->($new_cond) ); 4717 } 4718 4719 # b <line> [<condition>]. 4720 elsif ( my ($line_n, $cond) = $line =~ /^(\d*)\s*(.*)/ ) { 4721 4722 # Capture the line. If none, it's the current line. 4723 $line = $line_n || $dbline; 4724 4725 # Break on line. 4726 cmd_b_line( $line, $default_cond->($cond) ); 4727 } 4728 4729 # Line didn't make sense. 4730 else { 4731 print "confused by line($line)?\n"; 4732 } 4733 4734 return; 4735} ## end sub cmd_b 4736 4737=head3 C<break_on_load> (API) 4738 4739We want to break when this file is loaded. Mark this file in the 4740C<%break_on_load> hash, and note that it has a breakpoint in 4741C<%had_breakpoints>. 4742 4743=cut 4744 4745sub break_on_load { 4746 my $file = shift; 4747 $break_on_load{$file} = 1; 4748 $had_breakpoints{$file} |= 1; 4749} 4750 4751=head3 C<report_break_on_load> (API) 4752 4753Gives us an array of filenames that are set to break on load. Note that 4754only files with break-on-load are in here, so simply showing the keys 4755suffices. 4756 4757=cut 4758 4759sub report_break_on_load { 4760 sort keys %break_on_load; 4761} 4762 4763=head3 C<cmd_b_load> (command) 4764 4765We take the file passed in and try to find it in C<%INC> (which maps modules 4766to files they came from). We mark those files for break-on-load via 4767C<break_on_load> and then report that it was done. 4768 4769=cut 4770 4771sub cmd_b_load { 4772 my $file = shift; 4773 my @files; 4774 4775 # This is a block because that way we can use a redo inside it 4776 # even without there being any looping structure at all outside it. 4777 { 4778 4779 # Save short name and full path if found. 4780 push @files, $file; 4781 push @files, $::INC{$file} if $::INC{$file}; 4782 4783 # Tack on .pm and do it again unless there was a '.' in the name 4784 # already. 4785 $file .= '.pm', redo unless $file =~ /\./; 4786 } 4787 4788 # Do the real work here. 4789 break_on_load($_) for @files; 4790 4791 # All the files that have break-on-load breakpoints. 4792 @files = report_break_on_load; 4793 4794 # Normalize for the purposes of our printing this. 4795 local $\ = ''; 4796 local $" = ' '; 4797 print $OUT "Will stop on load of '@files'.\n"; 4798} ## end sub cmd_b_load 4799 4800=head3 C<$filename_error> (API package global) 4801 4802Several of the functions we need to implement in the API need to work both 4803on the current file and on other files. We don't want to duplicate code, so 4804C<$filename_error> is used to contain the name of the file that's being 4805worked on (if it's not the current one). 4806 4807We can now build functions in pairs: the basic function works on the current 4808file, and uses C<$filename_error> as part of its error message. Since this is 4809initialized to C<"">, no filename will appear when we are working on the 4810current file. 4811 4812The second function is a wrapper which does the following: 4813 4814=over 4 4815 4816=item * 4817 4818Localizes C<$filename_error> and sets it to the name of the file to be processed. 4819 4820=item * 4821 4822Localizes the C<*dbline> glob and reassigns it to point to the file we want to process. 4823 4824=item * 4825 4826Calls the first function. 4827 4828The first function works on the I<current> file (i.e., the one we changed to), 4829and prints C<$filename_error> in the error message (the name of the other file) 4830if it needs to. When the functions return, C<*dbline> is restored to point 4831to the actual current file (the one we're executing in) and 4832C<$filename_error> is restored to C<"">. This restores everything to 4833the way it was before the second function was called at all. 4834 4835See the comments in C<breakable_line> and C<breakable_line_in_file> for more 4836details. 4837 4838=back 4839 4840=cut 4841 4842use vars qw($filename_error); 4843$filename_error = ''; 4844 4845=head3 breakable_line(from, to) (API) 4846 4847The subroutine decides whether or not a line in the current file is breakable. 4848It walks through C<@dbline> within the range of lines specified, looking for 4849the first line that is breakable. 4850 4851If C<$to> is greater than C<$from>, the search moves forwards, finding the 4852first line I<after> C<$to> that's breakable, if there is one. 4853 4854If C<$from> is greater than C<$to>, the search goes I<backwards>, finding the 4855first line I<before> C<$to> that's breakable, if there is one. 4856 4857=cut 4858 4859sub breakable_line { 4860 4861 my ( $from, $to ) = @_; 4862 4863 # $i is the start point. (Where are the FORTRAN programs of yesteryear?) 4864 my $i = $from; 4865 4866 # If there are at least 2 arguments, we're trying to search a range. 4867 if ( @_ >= 2 ) { 4868 4869 # $delta is positive for a forward search, negative for a backward one. 4870 my $delta = $from < $to ? +1 : -1; 4871 4872 # Keep us from running off the ends of the file. 4873 my $limit = $delta > 0 ? $#dbline : 1; 4874 4875 # Clever test. If you're a mathematician, it's obvious why this 4876 # test works. If not: 4877 # If $delta is positive (going forward), $limit will be $#dbline. 4878 # If $to is less than $limit, ($limit - $to) will be positive, times 4879 # $delta of 1 (positive), so the result is > 0 and we should use $to 4880 # as the stopping point. 4881 # 4882 # If $to is greater than $limit, ($limit - $to) is negative, 4883 # times $delta of 1 (positive), so the result is < 0 and we should 4884 # use $limit ($#dbline) as the stopping point. 4885 # 4886 # If $delta is negative (going backward), $limit will be 1. 4887 # If $to is zero, ($limit - $to) will be 1, times $delta of -1 4888 # (negative) so the result is > 0, and we use $to as the stopping 4889 # point. 4890 # 4891 # If $to is less than zero, ($limit - $to) will be positive, 4892 # times $delta of -1 (negative), so the result is not > 0, and 4893 # we use $limit (1) as the stopping point. 4894 # 4895 # If $to is 1, ($limit - $to) will zero, times $delta of -1 4896 # (negative), still giving zero; the result is not > 0, and 4897 # we use $limit (1) as the stopping point. 4898 # 4899 # if $to is >1, ($limit - $to) will be negative, times $delta of -1 4900 # (negative), giving a positive (>0) value, so we'll set $limit to 4901 # $to. 4902 4903 $limit = $to if ( $limit - $to ) * $delta > 0; 4904 4905 # The real search loop. 4906 # $i starts at $from (the point we want to start searching from). 4907 # We move through @dbline in the appropriate direction (determined 4908 # by $delta: either -1 (back) or +1 (ahead). 4909 # We stay in as long as we haven't hit an executable line 4910 # ($dbline[$i] == 0 means not executable) and we haven't reached 4911 # the limit yet (test similar to the above). 4912 $i += $delta while $dbline[$i] == 0 and ( $limit - $i ) * $delta > 0; 4913 4914 } ## end if (@_ >= 2) 4915 4916 # If $i points to a line that is executable, return that. 4917 return $i unless $dbline[$i] == 0; 4918 4919 # Format the message and print it: no breakable lines in range. 4920 my ( $pl, $upto ) = ( '', '' ); 4921 ( $pl, $upto ) = ( 's', "..$to" ) if @_ >= 2 and $from != $to; 4922 4923 # If there's a filename in filename_error, we'll see it. 4924 # If not, not. 4925 die "Line$pl $from$upto$filename_error not breakable\n"; 4926} ## end sub breakable_line 4927 4928=head3 breakable_line_in_filename(file, from, to) (API) 4929 4930Like C<breakable_line>, but look in another file. 4931 4932=cut 4933 4934sub breakable_line_in_filename { 4935 4936 # Capture the file name. 4937 my ($f) = shift; 4938 4939 # Swap the magic line array over there temporarily. 4940 local *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $f }; 4941 4942 # If there's an error, it's in this other file. 4943 local $filename_error = " of '$f'"; 4944 4945 # Find the breakable line. 4946 breakable_line(@_); 4947 4948 # *dbline and $filename_error get restored when this block ends. 4949 4950} ## end sub breakable_line_in_filename 4951 4952=head3 break_on_line(lineno, [condition]) (API) 4953 4954Adds a breakpoint with the specified condition (or 1 if no condition was 4955specified) to the specified line. Dies if it can't. 4956 4957=cut 4958 4959sub break_on_line { 4960 my $i = shift; 4961 my $cond = @_ ? shift(@_) : 1; 4962 4963 my $inii = $i; 4964 my $after = ''; 4965 my $pl = ''; 4966 4967 # Woops, not a breakable line. $filename_error allows us to say 4968 # if it was in a different file. 4969 die "Line $i$filename_error not breakable.\n" if $dbline[$i] == 0; 4970 4971 # Mark this file as having breakpoints in it. 4972 $had_breakpoints{$filename} |= 1; 4973 4974 # If there is an action or condition here already ... 4975 if ( $dbline{$i} ) { 4976 4977 # ... swap this condition for the existing one. 4978 $dbline{$i} =~ s/^[^\0]*/$cond/; 4979 } 4980 else { 4981 4982 # Nothing here - just add the condition. 4983 $dbline{$i} = $cond; 4984 4985 _set_breakpoint_enabled_status($filename, $i, 1); 4986 } 4987 4988 return; 4989} ## end sub break_on_line 4990 4991=head3 cmd_b_line(line, [condition]) (command) 4992 4993Wrapper for C<break_on_line>. Prints the failure message if it 4994doesn't work. 4995 4996=cut 4997 4998sub cmd_b_line { 4999 if (not eval { break_on_line(@_); 1 }) { 5000 local $\ = ''; 5001 print $OUT $@ and return; 5002 } 5003 5004 return; 5005} ## end sub cmd_b_line 5006 5007=head3 cmd_b_filename_line(line, [condition]) (command) 5008 5009Wrapper for C<break_on_filename_line>. Prints the failure message if it 5010doesn't work. 5011 5012=cut 5013 5014sub cmd_b_filename_line { 5015 if (not eval { break_on_filename_line(@_); 1 }) { 5016 local $\ = ''; 5017 print $OUT $@ and return; 5018 } 5019 5020 return; 5021} 5022 5023=head3 break_on_filename_line(file, line, [condition]) (API) 5024 5025Switches to the file specified and then calls C<break_on_line> to set 5026the breakpoint. 5027 5028=cut 5029 5030sub break_on_filename_line { 5031 my $f = shift; 5032 my $i = shift; 5033 my $cond = @_ ? shift(@_) : 1; 5034 5035 # Switch the magical hash temporarily. 5036 local *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $f }; 5037 5038 # Localize the variables that break_on_line uses to make its message. 5039 local $filename_error = " of '$f'"; 5040 local $filename = $f; 5041 5042 # Add the breakpoint. 5043 break_on_line( $i, $cond ); 5044 5045 return; 5046} ## end sub break_on_filename_line 5047 5048=head3 break_on_filename_line_range(file, from, to, [condition]) (API) 5049 5050Switch to another file, search the range of lines specified for an 5051executable one, and put a breakpoint on the first one you find. 5052 5053=cut 5054 5055sub break_on_filename_line_range { 5056 my $f = shift; 5057 my $from = shift; 5058 my $to = shift; 5059 my $cond = @_ ? shift(@_) : 1; 5060 5061 # Find a breakable line if there is one. 5062 my $i = breakable_line_in_filename( $f, $from, $to ); 5063 5064 # Add the breakpoint. 5065 break_on_filename_line( $f, $i, $cond ); 5066 5067 return; 5068} ## end sub break_on_filename_line_range 5069 5070=head3 subroutine_filename_lines(subname, [condition]) (API) 5071 5072Search for a subroutine within a given file. The condition is ignored. 5073Uses C<find_sub> to locate the desired subroutine. 5074 5075=cut 5076 5077sub subroutine_filename_lines { 5078 my ( $subname ) = @_; 5079 5080 # Returned value from find_sub() is fullpathname:startline-endline. 5081 # The match creates the list (fullpathname, start, end). 5082 return (find_sub($subname) =~ /^(.*):(\d+)-(\d+)$/); 5083} ## end sub subroutine_filename_lines 5084 5085=head3 break_subroutine(subname) (API) 5086 5087Places a break on the first line possible in the specified subroutine. Uses 5088C<subroutine_filename_lines> to find the subroutine, and 5089C<break_on_filename_line_range> to place the break. 5090 5091=cut 5092 5093sub break_subroutine { 5094 my $subname = shift; 5095 5096 # Get filename, start, and end. 5097 my ( $file, $s, $e ) = subroutine_filename_lines($subname) 5098 or die "Subroutine $subname not found.\n"; 5099 5100 5101 # Null condition changes to '1' (always true). 5102 my $cond = @_ ? shift(@_) : 1; 5103 5104 # Put a break the first place possible in the range of lines 5105 # that make up this subroutine. 5106 break_on_filename_line_range( $file, $s, $e, $cond ); 5107 5108 return; 5109} ## end sub break_subroutine 5110 5111=head3 cmd_b_sub(subname, [condition]) (command) 5112 5113We take the incoming subroutine name and fully-qualify it as best we can. 5114 5115=over 4 5116 5117=item 1. If it's already fully-qualified, leave it alone. 5118 5119=item 2. Try putting it in the current package. 5120 5121=item 3. If it's not there, try putting it in CORE::GLOBAL if it exists there. 5122 5123=item 4. If it starts with '::', put it in 'main::'. 5124 5125=back 5126 5127After all this cleanup, we call C<break_subroutine> to try to set the 5128breakpoint. 5129 5130=cut 5131 5132sub cmd_b_sub { 5133 my $subname = shift; 5134 my $cond = @_ ? shift : 1; 5135 5136 # If the subname isn't a code reference, qualify it so that 5137 # break_subroutine() will work right. 5138 if ( ref($subname) ne 'CODE' ) { 5139 5140 # Not Perl 4. 5141 $subname =~ s/'/::/g; 5142 my $s = $subname; 5143 5144 # Put it in this package unless it's already qualified. 5145 if ($subname !~ /::/) 5146 { 5147 $subname = $package . '::' . $subname; 5148 }; 5149 5150 # Requalify it into CORE::GLOBAL if qualifying it into this 5151 # package resulted in its not being defined, but only do so 5152 # if it really is in CORE::GLOBAL. 5153 my $core_name = "CORE::GLOBAL::$s"; 5154 if ((!defined(&$subname)) 5155 and ($s !~ /::/) 5156 and (defined &{$core_name})) 5157 { 5158 $subname = $core_name; 5159 } 5160 5161 # Put it in package 'main' if it has a leading ::. 5162 if ($subname =~ /\A::/) 5163 { 5164 $subname = "main" . $subname; 5165 } 5166 } ## end if ( ref($subname) ne 'CODE' ) { 5167 5168 # Try to set the breakpoint. 5169 if (not eval { break_subroutine( $subname, $cond ); 1 }) { 5170 local $\ = ''; 5171 print {$OUT} $@; 5172 return; 5173 } 5174 5175 return; 5176} ## end sub cmd_b_sub 5177 5178=head3 C<cmd_B> - delete breakpoint(s) (command) 5179 5180The command mostly parses the command line and tries to turn the argument 5181into a line spec. If it can't, it uses the current line. It then calls 5182C<delete_breakpoint> to actually do the work. 5183 5184If C<*> is specified, C<cmd_B> calls C<delete_breakpoint> with no arguments, 5185thereby deleting all the breakpoints. 5186 5187=cut 5188 5189sub cmd_B { 5190 my $cmd = shift; 5191 5192 # No line spec? Use dbline. 5193 # If there is one, use it if it's non-zero, or wipe it out if it is. 5194 my $line = ( $_[0] =~ /\A\./ ) ? $dbline : (shift || ''); 5195 my $dbline = shift; 5196 5197 # If the line was dot, make the line the current one. 5198 $line =~ s/^\./$dbline/; 5199 5200 # If it's * we're deleting all the breakpoints. 5201 if ( $line eq '*' ) { 5202 if (not eval { delete_breakpoint(); 1 }) { 5203 print {$OUT} $@; 5204 } 5205 } 5206 5207 # If there is a line spec, delete the breakpoint on that line. 5208 elsif ( $line =~ /\A(\S.*)/ ) { 5209 if (not eval { delete_breakpoint( $line || $dbline ); 1 }) { 5210 local $\ = ''; 5211 print {$OUT} $@; 5212 } 5213 } ## end elsif ($line =~ /^(\S.*)/) 5214 5215 # No line spec. 5216 else { 5217 print {$OUT} 5218 "Deleting a breakpoint requires a line number, or '*' for all\n" 5219 ; # hint 5220 } 5221 5222 return; 5223} ## end sub cmd_B 5224 5225=head3 delete_breakpoint([line]) (API) 5226 5227This actually does the work of deleting either a single breakpoint, or all 5228of them. 5229 5230For a single line, we look for it in C<@dbline>. If it's nonbreakable, we 5231just drop out with a message saying so. If it is, we remove the condition 5232part of the 'condition\0action' that says there's a breakpoint here. If, 5233after we've done that, there's nothing left, we delete the corresponding 5234line in C<%dbline> to signal that no action needs to be taken for this line. 5235 5236For all breakpoints, we iterate through the keys of C<%had_breakpoints>, 5237which lists all currently-loaded files which have breakpoints. We then look 5238at each line in each of these files, temporarily switching the C<%dbline> 5239and C<@dbline> structures to point to the files in question, and do what 5240we did in the single line case: delete the condition in C<@dbline>, and 5241delete the key in C<%dbline> if nothing's left. 5242 5243We then wholesale delete C<%postponed>, C<%postponed_file>, and 5244C<%break_on_load>, because these structures contain breakpoints for files 5245and code that haven't been loaded yet. We can just kill these off because there 5246are no magical debugger structures associated with them. 5247 5248=cut 5249 5250sub _remove_breakpoint_entry { 5251 my ($fn, $i) = @_; 5252 5253 delete $dbline{$i}; 5254 _delete_breakpoint_data_ref($fn, $i); 5255 5256 return; 5257} 5258 5259sub _delete_all_breakpoints { 5260 print {$OUT} "Deleting all breakpoints...\n"; 5261 5262 # %had_breakpoints lists every file that had at least one 5263 # breakpoint in it. 5264 for my $fn ( keys %had_breakpoints ) { 5265 5266 # Switch to the desired file temporarily. 5267 local *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $fn }; 5268 5269 $max = $#dbline; 5270 5271 # For all lines in this file ... 5272 for my $i (1 .. $max) { 5273 5274 # If there's a breakpoint or action on this line ... 5275 if ( defined $dbline{$i} ) { 5276 5277 # ... remove the breakpoint. 5278 $dbline{$i} =~ s/\A[^\0]+//; 5279 if ( $dbline{$i} =~ s/\A\0?\z// ) { 5280 # Remove the entry altogether if no action is there. 5281 _remove_breakpoint_entry($fn, $i); 5282 } 5283 } ## end if (defined $dbline{$i... 5284 } ## end for $i (1 .. $max) 5285 5286 # If, after we turn off the "there were breakpoints in this file" 5287 # bit, the entry in %had_breakpoints for this file is zero, 5288 # we should remove this file from the hash. 5289 if ( not $had_breakpoints{$fn} &= (~1) ) { 5290 delete $had_breakpoints{$fn}; 5291 } 5292 } ## end for my $fn (keys %had_breakpoints) 5293 5294 # Kill off all the other breakpoints that are waiting for files that 5295 # haven't been loaded yet. 5296 undef %postponed; 5297 undef %postponed_file; 5298 undef %break_on_load; 5299 5300 return; 5301} 5302 5303sub _delete_breakpoint_from_line { 5304 my ($i) = @_; 5305 5306 # Woops. This line wasn't breakable at all. 5307 die "Line $i not breakable.\n" if $dbline[$i] == 0; 5308 5309 # Kill the condition, but leave any action. 5310 $dbline{$i} =~ s/\A[^\0]*//; 5311 5312 # Remove the entry entirely if there's no action left. 5313 if ($dbline{$i} eq '') { 5314 _remove_breakpoint_entry($filename, $i); 5315 } 5316 5317 return; 5318} 5319 5320sub delete_breakpoint { 5321 my $i = shift; 5322 5323 # If we got a line, delete just that one. 5324 if ( defined($i) ) { 5325 _delete_breakpoint_from_line($i); 5326 } 5327 # No line; delete them all. 5328 else { 5329 _delete_all_breakpoints(); 5330 } 5331 5332 return; 5333} 5334 5335=head3 cmd_stop (command) 5336 5337This is meant to be part of the new command API, but it isn't called or used 5338anywhere else in the debugger. XXX It is probably meant for use in development 5339of new commands. 5340 5341=cut 5342 5343sub cmd_stop { # As on ^C, but not signal-safy. 5344 $signal = 1; 5345} 5346 5347=head3 C<cmd_e> - threads 5348 5349Display the current thread id: 5350 5351 e 5352 5353This could be how (when implemented) to send commands to this thread id (e cmd) 5354or that thread id (e tid cmd). 5355 5356=cut 5357 5358sub cmd_e { 5359 my $cmd = shift; 5360 my $line = shift; 5361 unless (exists($INC{'threads.pm'})) { 5362 print "threads not loaded($ENV{PERL5DB_THREADED}) 5363 please run the debugger with PERL5DB_THREADED=1 set in the environment\n"; 5364 } else { 5365 my $tid = threads->tid; 5366 print "thread id: $tid\n"; 5367 } 5368} ## end sub cmd_e 5369 5370=head3 C<cmd_E> - list of thread ids 5371 5372Display the list of available thread ids: 5373 5374 E 5375 5376This could be used (when implemented) to send commands to all threads (E cmd). 5377 5378=cut 5379 5380sub cmd_E { 5381 my $cmd = shift; 5382 my $line = shift; 5383 unless (exists($INC{'threads.pm'})) { 5384 print "threads not loaded($ENV{PERL5DB_THREADED}) 5385 please run the debugger with PERL5DB_THREADED=1 set in the environment\n"; 5386 } else { 5387 my $tid = threads->tid; 5388 print "thread ids: ".join(', ', 5389 map { ($tid == $_->tid ? '<'.$_->tid.'>' : $_->tid) } threads->list 5390 )."\n"; 5391 } 5392} ## end sub cmd_E 5393 5394=head3 C<cmd_h> - help command (command) 5395 5396Does the work of either 5397 5398=over 4 5399 5400=item * 5401 5402Showing all the debugger help 5403 5404=item * 5405 5406Showing help for a specific command 5407 5408=back 5409 5410=cut 5411 5412use vars qw($help); 5413use vars qw($summary); 5414 5415sub cmd_h { 5416 my $cmd = shift; 5417 5418 # If we have no operand, assume null. 5419 my $line = shift || ''; 5420 5421 # 'h h'. Print the long-format help. 5422 if ( $line =~ /\Ah\s*\z/ ) { 5423 print_help($help); 5424 } 5425 5426 # 'h <something>'. Search for the command and print only its help. 5427 elsif ( my ($asked) = $line =~ /\A(\S.*)\z/ ) { 5428 5429 # support long commands; otherwise bogus errors 5430 # happen when you ask for h on <CR> for example 5431 my $qasked = quotemeta($asked); # for searching; we don't 5432 # want to use it as a pattern. 5433 # XXX: finds CR but not <CR> 5434 5435 # Search the help string for the command. 5436 if ( 5437 $help =~ /^ # Start of a line 5438 <? # Optional '<' 5439 (?:[IB]<) # Optional markup 5440 $qasked # The requested command 5441 /mx 5442 ) 5443 { 5444 5445 # It's there; pull it out and print it. 5446 while ( 5447 $help =~ /^ 5448 (<? # Optional '<' 5449 (?:[IB]<) # Optional markup 5450 $qasked # The command 5451 ([\s\S]*?) # Description line(s) 5452 \n) # End of last description line 5453 (?!\s) # Next line not starting with 5454 # whitespace 5455 /mgx 5456 ) 5457 { 5458 print_help($1); 5459 } 5460 } 5461 5462 # Not found; not a debugger command. 5463 else { 5464 print_help("B<$asked> is not a debugger command.\n"); 5465 } 5466 } ## end elsif ($line =~ /^(\S.*)$/) 5467 5468 # 'h' - print the summary help. 5469 else { 5470 print_help($summary); 5471 } 5472} ## end sub cmd_h 5473 5474=head3 C<cmd_i> - inheritance display 5475 5476Display the (nested) parentage of the module or object given. 5477 5478=cut 5479 5480sub cmd_i { 5481 my $cmd = shift; 5482 my $line = shift; 5483 foreach my $isa ( split( /\s+/, $line ) ) { 5484 $evalarg = $isa; 5485 # The &-call is here to ascertain the mutability of @_. 5486 ($isa) = &DB::eval; 5487 no strict 'refs'; 5488 print join( 5489 ', ', 5490 map { 5491 "$_" 5492 . ( 5493 defined( ${"$_\::VERSION"} ) 5494 ? ' ' . ${"$_\::VERSION"} 5495 : undef ) 5496 } @{mro::get_linear_isa(ref($isa) || $isa)} 5497 ); 5498 print "\n"; 5499 } 5500} ## end sub cmd_i 5501 5502=head3 C<cmd_l> - list lines (command) 5503 5504Most of the command is taken up with transforming all the different line 5505specification syntaxes into 'start-stop'. After that is done, the command 5506runs a loop over C<@dbline> for the specified range of lines. It handles 5507the printing of each line and any markers (C<==E<gt>> for current line, 5508C<b> for break on this line, C<a> for action on this line, C<:> for this 5509line breakable). 5510 5511We save the last line listed in the C<$start> global for further listing 5512later. 5513 5514=cut 5515 5516sub _min { 5517 my $min = shift; 5518 foreach my $v (@_) { 5519 if ($min > $v) { 5520 $min = $v; 5521 } 5522 } 5523 return $min; 5524} 5525 5526sub _max { 5527 my $max = shift; 5528 foreach my $v (@_) { 5529 if ($max < $v) { 5530 $max = $v; 5531 } 5532 } 5533 return $max; 5534} 5535 5536sub _minify_to_max { 5537 my $ref = shift; 5538 5539 $$ref = _min($$ref, $max); 5540 5541 return; 5542} 5543 5544sub _cmd_l_handle_var_name { 5545 my $var_name = shift; 5546 5547 $evalarg = $var_name; 5548 5549 my ($s) = DB::eval(); 5550 5551 # Ooops. Bad scalar. 5552 if ($@) { 5553 print {$OUT} "Error: $@\n"; 5554 next CMD; 5555 } 5556 5557 # Good scalar. If it's a reference, find what it points to. 5558 $s = CvGV_name($s); 5559 print {$OUT} "Interpreted as: $1 $s\n"; 5560 $line = "$1 $s"; 5561 5562 # Call self recursively to really do the command. 5563 return _cmd_l_main( $s ); 5564} 5565 5566sub _cmd_l_handle_subname { 5567 5568 my $s = $subname; 5569 5570 # De-Perl4. 5571 $subname =~ s/\'/::/; 5572 5573 # Put it in this package unless it starts with ::. 5574 $subname = $package . "::" . $subname unless $subname =~ /::/; 5575 5576 # Put it in CORE::GLOBAL if t doesn't start with :: and 5577 # it doesn't live in this package and it lives in CORE::GLOBAL. 5578 $subname = "CORE::GLOBAL::$s" 5579 if not defined &$subname 5580 and $s !~ /::/ 5581 and defined &{"CORE::GLOBAL::$s"}; 5582 5583 # Put leading '::' names into 'main::'. 5584 $subname = "main" . $subname if substr( $subname, 0, 2 ) eq "::"; 5585 5586 # Get name:start-stop from find_sub, and break this up at 5587 # colons. 5588 my @pieces = split( /:/, find_sub($subname) || $sub{$subname} ); 5589 5590 # Pull off start-stop. 5591 my $subrange = pop @pieces; 5592 5593 # If the name contained colons, the split broke it up. 5594 # Put it back together. 5595 $file = join( ':', @pieces ); 5596 5597 # If we're not in that file, switch over to it. 5598 if ( $file ne $filename ) { 5599 if (! $slave_editor) { 5600 print {$OUT} "Switching to file '$file'.\n"; 5601 } 5602 5603 # Switch debugger's magic structures. 5604 *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $file }; 5605 $max = $#dbline; 5606 $filename = $file; 5607 } ## end if ($file ne $filename) 5608 5609 # Subrange is 'start-stop'. If this is less than a window full, 5610 # swap it to 'start+', which will list a window from the start point. 5611 if ($subrange) { 5612 if ( eval($subrange) < -$window ) { 5613 $subrange =~ s/-.*/+/; 5614 } 5615 5616 # Call self recursively to list the range. 5617 return _cmd_l_main( $subrange ); 5618 } ## end if ($subrange) 5619 5620 # Couldn't find it. 5621 else { 5622 print {$OUT} "Subroutine $subname not found.\n"; 5623 return; 5624 } 5625} 5626 5627sub _cmd_l_empty { 5628 # Compute new range to list. 5629 $incr = $window - 1; 5630 5631 # Recurse to do it. 5632 return _cmd_l_main( $start . '-' . ( $start + $incr ) ); 5633} 5634 5635sub _cmd_l_plus { 5636 my ($new_start, $new_incr) = @_; 5637 5638 # Don't reset start for 'l +nnn'. 5639 $start = $new_start if $new_start; 5640 5641 # Increment for list. Use window size if not specified. 5642 # (Allows 'l +' to work.) 5643 $incr = $new_incr || ($window - 1); 5644 5645 # Create a line range we'll understand, and recurse to do it. 5646 return _cmd_l_main( $start . '-' . ( $start + $incr ) ); 5647} 5648 5649sub _cmd_l_calc_initial_end_and_i { 5650 my ($spec, $start_match, $end_match) = @_; 5651 5652 # Determine end point; use end of file if not specified. 5653 my $end = ( !defined $start_match ) ? $max : 5654 ( $end_match ? $end_match : $start_match ); 5655 5656 # Go on to the end, and then stop. 5657 _minify_to_max(\$end); 5658 5659 # Determine start line. 5660 my $i = $start_match; 5661 5662 if ($i eq '.') { 5663 $i = $spec; 5664 } 5665 5666 $i = _max($i, 1); 5667 5668 $incr = $end - $i; 5669 5670 return ($end, $i); 5671} 5672 5673sub _cmd_l_range { 5674 my ($spec, $current_line, $start_match, $end_match) = @_; 5675 5676 my ($end, $i) = 5677 _cmd_l_calc_initial_end_and_i($spec, $start_match, $end_match); 5678 5679 # If we're running under a slave editor, force it to show the lines. 5680 if ($slave_editor) { 5681 print {$OUT} "\032\032$filename:$i:0\n"; 5682 $i = $end; 5683 } 5684 # We're doing it ourselves. We want to show the line and special 5685 # markers for: 5686 # - the current line in execution 5687 # - whether a line is breakable or not 5688 # - whether a line has a break or not 5689 # - whether a line has an action or not 5690 else { 5691 I_TO_END: 5692 for ( ; $i <= $end ; $i++ ) { 5693 5694 # Check for breakpoints and actions. 5695 my ( $stop, $action ); 5696 if ($dbline{$i}) { 5697 ( $stop, $action ) = split( /\0/, $dbline{$i} ); 5698 } 5699 5700 # ==> if this is the current line in execution, 5701 # : if it's breakable. 5702 my $arrow = 5703 ( $i == $current_line and $filename eq $filename_ini ) 5704 ? '==>' 5705 : ( $dbline[$i] + 0 ? ':' : ' ' ); 5706 5707 # Add break and action indicators. 5708 $arrow .= 'b' if $stop; 5709 $arrow .= 'a' if $action; 5710 5711 # Print the line. 5712 print {$OUT} "$i$arrow\t", $dbline[$i]; 5713 5714 # Move on to the next line. Drop out on an interrupt. 5715 if ($signal) { 5716 $i++; 5717 last I_TO_END; 5718 } 5719 } ## end for (; $i <= $end ; $i++) 5720 5721 # Line the prompt up; print a newline if the last line listed 5722 # didn't have a newline. 5723 if ($dbline[ $i - 1 ] !~ /\n\z/) { 5724 print {$OUT} "\n"; 5725 } 5726 } ## end else [ if ($slave_editor) 5727 5728 # Save the point we last listed to in case another relative 'l' 5729 # command is desired. Don't let it run off the end. 5730 $start = $i; 5731 _minify_to_max(\$start); 5732 5733 return; 5734} 5735 5736sub _cmd_l_main { 5737 my $spec = shift; 5738 5739 # If this is '-something', delete any spaces after the dash. 5740 $spec =~ s/\A-\s*\z/-/; 5741 5742 # If the line is '$something', assume this is a scalar containing a 5743 # line number. 5744 # Set up for DB::eval() - evaluate in *user* context. 5745 if ( my ($var_name) = $spec =~ /\A(\$.*)/s ) { 5746 return _cmd_l_handle_var_name($var_name); 5747 } 5748 # l name. Try to find a sub by that name. 5749 elsif ( ($subname) = $spec =~ /\A([\':A-Za-z_][\':\w]*(?:\[.*\])?)/s ) { 5750 return _cmd_l_handle_subname(); 5751 } 5752 # Bare 'l' command. 5753 elsif ( $spec !~ /\S/ ) { 5754 return _cmd_l_empty(); 5755 } 5756 # l [start]+number_of_lines 5757 elsif ( my ($new_start, $new_incr) = $spec =~ /\A(\d*)\+(\d*)\z/ ) { 5758 return _cmd_l_plus($new_start, $new_incr); 5759 } 5760 # l start-stop or l start,stop 5761 elsif (my ($s, $e) = $spec =~ /^(?:(-?[\d\$\.]+)(?:[-,]([\d\$\.]+))?)?/ ) { 5762 return _cmd_l_range($spec, $line, $s, $e); 5763 } 5764 5765 return; 5766} ## end sub cmd_l 5767 5768sub cmd_l { 5769 my (undef, $line) = @_; 5770 5771 return _cmd_l_main($line); 5772} 5773 5774=head3 C<cmd_L> - list breakpoints, actions, and watch expressions (command) 5775 5776To list breakpoints, the command has to look determine where all of them are 5777first. It starts a C<%had_breakpoints>, which tells us what all files have 5778breakpoints and/or actions. For each file, we switch the C<*dbline> glob (the 5779magic source and breakpoint data structures) to the file, and then look 5780through C<%dbline> for lines with breakpoints and/or actions, listing them 5781out. We look through C<%postponed> not-yet-compiled subroutines that have 5782breakpoints, and through C<%postponed_file> for not-yet-C<require>'d files 5783that have breakpoints. 5784 5785Watchpoints are simpler: we just list the entries in C<@to_watch>. 5786 5787=cut 5788 5789sub _cmd_L_calc_arg { 5790 # If no argument, list everything. Pre-5.8.0 version always lists 5791 # everything 5792 my $arg = shift || 'abw'; 5793 if ($CommandSet ne '580') 5794 { 5795 $arg = 'abw'; 5796 } 5797 5798 return $arg; 5799} 5800 5801sub _cmd_L_calc_wanted_flags { 5802 my $arg = _cmd_L_calc_arg(shift); 5803 5804 return (map { index($arg, $_) >= 0 ? 1 : 0 } qw(a b w)); 5805} 5806 5807 5808sub _cmd_L_handle_breakpoints { 5809 my ($handle_db_line) = @_; 5810 5811 BREAKPOINTS_SCAN: 5812 # Look in all the files with breakpoints... 5813 for my $file ( keys %had_breakpoints ) { 5814 5815 # Temporary switch to this file. 5816 local *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $file }; 5817 5818 # Set up to look through the whole file. 5819 $max = $#dbline; 5820 my $was; # Flag: did we print something 5821 # in this file? 5822 5823 # For each line in the file ... 5824 for my $i (1 .. $max) { 5825 5826 # We've got something on this line. 5827 if ( defined $dbline{$i} ) { 5828 5829 # Print the header if we haven't. 5830 if (not $was++) { 5831 print {$OUT} "$file:\n"; 5832 } 5833 5834 # Print the line. 5835 print {$OUT} " $i:\t", $dbline[$i]; 5836 5837 $handle_db_line->($dbline{$i}); 5838 5839 # Quit if the user hit interrupt. 5840 if ($signal) { 5841 last BREAKPOINTS_SCAN; 5842 } 5843 } ## end if (defined $dbline{$i... 5844 } ## end for my $i (1 .. $max) 5845 } ## end for my $file (keys %had_breakpoints) 5846 5847 return; 5848} 5849 5850sub _cmd_L_handle_postponed_breakpoints { 5851 my ($handle_db_line) = @_; 5852 5853 print {$OUT} "Postponed breakpoints in files:\n"; 5854 5855 POSTPONED_SCANS: 5856 for my $file ( keys %postponed_file ) { 5857 my $db = $postponed_file{$file}; 5858 print {$OUT} " $file:\n"; 5859 for my $line ( sort { $a <=> $b } keys %$db ) { 5860 print {$OUT} " $line:\n"; 5861 5862 $handle_db_line->($db->{$line}); 5863 5864 if ($signal) { 5865 last POSTPONED_SCANS; 5866 } 5867 } 5868 if ($signal) { 5869 last POSTPONED_SCANS; 5870 } 5871 } 5872 5873 return; 5874} 5875 5876 5877sub cmd_L { 5878 my $cmd = shift; 5879 5880 my ($action_wanted, $break_wanted, $watch_wanted) = 5881 _cmd_L_calc_wanted_flags(shift); 5882 5883 my $handle_db_line = sub { 5884 my ($l) = @_; 5885 5886 my ( $stop, $action ) = split( /\0/, $l ); 5887 5888 if ($stop and $break_wanted) { 5889 print {$OUT} " break if (", $stop, ")\n" 5890 } 5891 5892 if ($action && $action_wanted) { 5893 print {$OUT} " action: ", $action, "\n" 5894 } 5895 5896 return; 5897 }; 5898 5899 # Breaks and actions are found together, so we look in the same place 5900 # for both. 5901 if ( $break_wanted or $action_wanted ) { 5902 _cmd_L_handle_breakpoints($handle_db_line); 5903 } 5904 5905 # Look for breaks in not-yet-compiled subs: 5906 if ( %postponed and $break_wanted ) { 5907 print {$OUT} "Postponed breakpoints in subroutines:\n"; 5908 my $subname; 5909 SUBS_SCAN: 5910 for $subname ( keys %postponed ) { 5911 print {$OUT} " $subname\t$postponed{$subname}\n"; 5912 if ($signal) { 5913 last SUBS_SCAN; 5914 } 5915 } 5916 } ## end if (%postponed and $break_wanted) 5917 5918 # Find files that have not-yet-loaded breaks: 5919 my @have = map { # Combined keys 5920 keys %{ $postponed_file{$_} } 5921 } keys %postponed_file; 5922 5923 # If there are any, list them. 5924 if ( @have and ( $break_wanted or $action_wanted ) ) { 5925 _cmd_L_handle_postponed_breakpoints($handle_db_line); 5926 } ## end if (@have and ($break_wanted... 5927 5928 if ( %break_on_load and $break_wanted ) { 5929 print {$OUT} "Breakpoints on load:\n"; 5930 BREAK_ON_LOAD: for my $filename ( keys %break_on_load ) { 5931 print {$OUT} " $filename\n"; 5932 last BREAK_ON_LOAD if $signal; 5933 } 5934 } ## end if (%break_on_load and... 5935 5936 if ($watch_wanted and ( $trace & 2 )) { 5937 print {$OUT} "Watch-expressions:\n" if @to_watch; 5938 TO_WATCH: for my $expr (@to_watch) { 5939 print {$OUT} " $expr\n"; 5940 last TO_WATCH if $signal; 5941 } 5942 } 5943 5944 return; 5945} ## end sub cmd_L 5946 5947=head3 C<cmd_M> - list modules (command) 5948 5949Just call C<list_modules>. 5950 5951=cut 5952 5953sub cmd_M { 5954 list_modules(); 5955 5956 return; 5957} 5958 5959=head3 C<cmd_o> - options (command) 5960 5961If this is just C<o> by itself, we list the current settings via 5962C<dump_option>. If there's a nonblank value following it, we pass that on to 5963C<parse_options> for processing. 5964 5965=cut 5966 5967sub cmd_o { 5968 my $cmd = shift; 5969 my $opt = shift || ''; # opt[=val] 5970 5971 # Nonblank. Try to parse and process. 5972 if ( $opt =~ /^(\S.*)/ ) { 5973 parse_options($1); 5974 } 5975 5976 # Blank. List the current option settings. 5977 else { 5978 for (@options) { 5979 dump_option($_); 5980 } 5981 } 5982} ## end sub cmd_o 5983 5984=head3 C<cmd_O> - nonexistent in 5.8.x (command) 5985 5986Advises the user that the O command has been renamed. 5987 5988=cut 5989 5990sub cmd_O { 5991 print $OUT "The old O command is now the o command.\n"; # hint 5992 print $OUT "Use 'h' to get current command help synopsis or\n"; # 5993 print $OUT "use 'o CommandSet=pre580' to revert to old usage\n"; # 5994} 5995 5996=head3 C<cmd_v> - view window (command) 5997 5998Uses the C<$preview> variable set in the second C<BEGIN> block (q.v.) to 5999move back a few lines to list the selected line in context. Uses C<cmd_l> 6000to do the actual listing after figuring out the range of line to request. 6001 6002=cut 6003 6004use vars qw($preview); 6005 6006sub cmd_v { 6007 my $cmd = shift; 6008 my $line = shift; 6009 6010 # Extract the line to list around. (Astute readers will have noted that 6011 # this pattern will match whether or not a numeric line is specified, 6012 # which means that we'll always enter this loop (though a non-numeric 6013 # argument results in no action at all)). 6014 if ( $line =~ /^(\d*)$/ ) { 6015 6016 # Total number of lines to list (a windowful). 6017 $incr = $window - 1; 6018 6019 # Set the start to the argument given (if there was one). 6020 $start = $1 if $1; 6021 6022 # Back up by the context amount. 6023 $start -= $preview; 6024 6025 # Put together a linespec that cmd_l will like. 6026 $line = $start . '-' . ( $start + $incr ); 6027 6028 # List the lines. 6029 cmd_l( 'l', $line ); 6030 } ## end if ($line =~ /^(\d*)$/) 6031} ## end sub cmd_v 6032 6033=head3 C<cmd_w> - add a watch expression (command) 6034 6035The 5.8 version of this command adds a watch expression if one is specified; 6036it does nothing if entered with no operands. 6037 6038We extract the expression, save it, evaluate it in the user's context, and 6039save the value. We'll re-evaluate it each time the debugger passes a line, 6040and will stop (see the code at the top of the command loop) if the value 6041of any of the expressions changes. 6042 6043=cut 6044 6045sub _add_watch_expr { 6046 my $expr = shift; 6047 6048 # ... save it. 6049 push @to_watch, $expr; 6050 6051 # Parameterize DB::eval and call it to get the expression's value 6052 # in the user's context. This version can handle expressions which 6053 # return a list value. 6054 $evalarg = $expr; 6055 # The &-call is here to ascertain the mutability of @_. 6056 my ($val) = join( ' ', &DB::eval); 6057 $val = ( defined $val ) ? "'$val'" : 'undef'; 6058 6059 # Save the current value of the expression. 6060 push @old_watch, $val; 6061 6062 # We are now watching expressions. 6063 $trace |= 2; 6064 6065 return; 6066} 6067 6068sub cmd_w { 6069 my $cmd = shift; 6070 6071 # Null expression if no arguments. 6072 my $expr = shift || ''; 6073 6074 # If expression is not null ... 6075 if ( $expr =~ /\A\S/ ) { 6076 _add_watch_expr($expr); 6077 } ## end if ($expr =~ /^(\S.*)/) 6078 6079 # You have to give one to get one. 6080 else { 6081 print $OUT "Adding a watch-expression requires an expression\n"; # hint 6082 } 6083 6084 return; 6085} 6086 6087=head3 C<cmd_W> - delete watch expressions (command) 6088 6089This command accepts either a watch expression to be removed from the list 6090of watch expressions, or C<*> to delete them all. 6091 6092If C<*> is specified, we simply empty the watch expression list and the 6093watch expression value list. We also turn off the bit that says we've got 6094watch expressions. 6095 6096If an expression (or partial expression) is specified, we pattern-match 6097through the expressions and remove the ones that match. We also discard 6098the corresponding values. If no watch expressions are left, we turn off 6099the I<watching expressions> bit. 6100 6101=cut 6102 6103sub cmd_W { 6104 my $cmd = shift; 6105 my $expr = shift || ''; 6106 6107 # Delete them all. 6108 if ( $expr eq '*' ) { 6109 6110 # Not watching now. 6111 $trace &= ~2; 6112 6113 print $OUT "Deleting all watch expressions ...\n"; 6114 6115 # And all gone. 6116 @to_watch = @old_watch = (); 6117 } 6118 6119 # Delete one of them. 6120 elsif ( $expr =~ /^(\S.*)/ ) { 6121 6122 # Where we are in the list. 6123 my $i_cnt = 0; 6124 6125 # For each expression ... 6126 foreach (@to_watch) { 6127 my $val = $to_watch[$i_cnt]; 6128 6129 # Does this one match the command argument? 6130 if ( $val eq $expr ) { # =~ m/^\Q$i$/) { 6131 # Yes. Turn it off, and its value too. 6132 splice( @to_watch, $i_cnt, 1 ); 6133 splice( @old_watch, $i_cnt, 1 ); 6134 } 6135 $i_cnt++; 6136 } ## end foreach (@to_watch) 6137 6138 # We don't bother to turn watching off because 6139 # a) we don't want to stop calling watchfunction() if it exists 6140 # b) foreach over a null list doesn't do anything anyway 6141 6142 } ## end elsif ($expr =~ /^(\S.*)/) 6143 6144 # No command arguments entered. 6145 else { 6146 print $OUT 6147 "Deleting a watch-expression requires an expression, or '*' for all\n" 6148 ; # hint 6149 } 6150} ## end sub cmd_W 6151 6152### END of the API section 6153 6154=head1 SUPPORT ROUTINES 6155 6156These are general support routines that are used in a number of places 6157throughout the debugger. 6158 6159=head2 save 6160 6161save() saves the user's versions of globals that would mess us up in C<@saved>, 6162and installs the versions we like better. 6163 6164=cut 6165 6166sub save { 6167 6168 # Save eval failure, command failure, extended OS error, output field 6169 # separator, input record separator, output record separator and 6170 # the warning setting. 6171 @saved = ( $@, $!, $^E, $,, $/, $\, $^W ); 6172 6173 $, = ""; # output field separator is null string 6174 $/ = "\n"; # input record separator is newline 6175 $\ = ""; # output record separator is null string 6176 $^W = 0; # warnings are off 6177} ## end sub save 6178 6179=head2 C<print_lineinfo> - show where we are now 6180 6181print_lineinfo prints whatever it is that it is handed; it prints it to the 6182C<$LINEINFO> filehandle instead of just printing it to STDOUT. This allows 6183us to feed line information to a slave editor without messing up the 6184debugger output. 6185 6186=cut 6187 6188sub print_lineinfo { 6189 6190 # Make the terminal sensible if we're not the primary debugger. 6191 resetterm(1) if $LINEINFO eq $OUT and $term_pid != $$; 6192 local $\ = ''; 6193 local $, = ''; 6194 # $LINEINFO may be undef if $noTTY is set or some other issue. 6195 if ($LINEINFO) 6196 { 6197 print {$LINEINFO} @_; 6198 } 6199} ## end sub print_lineinfo 6200 6201=head2 C<postponed_sub> 6202 6203Handles setting postponed breakpoints in subroutines once they're compiled. 6204For breakpoints, we use C<DB::find_sub> to locate the source file and line 6205range for the subroutine, then mark the file as having a breakpoint, 6206temporarily switch the C<*dbline> glob over to the source file, and then 6207search the given range of lines to find a breakable line. If we find one, 6208we set the breakpoint on it, deleting the breakpoint from C<%postponed>. 6209 6210=cut 6211 6212# The following takes its argument via $evalarg to preserve current @_ 6213 6214sub postponed_sub { 6215 6216 # Get the subroutine name. 6217 my $subname = shift; 6218 6219 # If this is a 'break +<n> if <condition>' ... 6220 if ( $postponed{$subname} =~ s/^break\s([+-]?\d+)\s+if\s// ) { 6221 6222 # If there's no offset, use '+0'. 6223 my $offset = $1 || 0; 6224 6225 # find_sub's value is 'fullpath-filename:start-stop'. It's 6226 # possible that the filename might have colons in it too. 6227 my ( $file, $i ) = ( find_sub($subname) =~ /^(.*):(\d+)-.*$/ ); 6228 if ($i) { 6229 6230 # We got the start line. Add the offset '+<n>' from 6231 # $postponed{subname}. 6232 $i += $offset; 6233 6234 # Switch to the file this sub is in, temporarily. 6235 local *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $file }; 6236 6237 # No warnings, please. 6238 local $^W = 0; # != 0 is magical below 6239 6240 # This file's got a breakpoint in it. 6241 $had_breakpoints{$file} |= 1; 6242 6243 # Last line in file. 6244 $max = $#dbline; 6245 6246 # Search forward until we hit a breakable line or get to 6247 # the end of the file. 6248 ++$i until $dbline[$i] != 0 or $i >= $max; 6249 6250 # Copy the breakpoint in and delete it from %postponed. 6251 $dbline{$i} = delete $postponed{$subname}; 6252 } ## end if ($i) 6253 6254 # find_sub didn't find the sub. 6255 else { 6256 local $\ = ''; 6257 print $OUT "Subroutine $subname not found.\n"; 6258 } 6259 return; 6260 } ## end if ($postponed{$subname... 6261 elsif ( $postponed{$subname} eq 'compile' ) { $signal = 1 } 6262 6263 #print $OUT "In postponed_sub for '$subname'.\n"; 6264} ## end sub postponed_sub 6265 6266=head2 C<postponed> 6267 6268Called after each required file is compiled, but before it is executed; 6269also called if the name of a just-compiled subroutine is a key of 6270C<%postponed>. Propagates saved breakpoints (from C<b compile>, C<b load>, 6271etc.) into the just-compiled code. 6272 6273If this is a C<require>'d file, the incoming parameter is the glob 6274C<*{"_<$filename"}>, with C<$filename> the name of the C<require>'d file. 6275 6276If it's a subroutine, the incoming parameter is the subroutine name. 6277 6278=cut 6279 6280sub postponed { 6281 6282 # If there's a break, process it. 6283 if ($ImmediateStop) { 6284 6285 # Right, we've stopped. Turn it off. 6286 $ImmediateStop = 0; 6287 6288 # Enter the command loop when DB::DB gets called. 6289 $signal = 1; 6290 } 6291 6292 # If this is a subroutine, let postponed_sub() deal with it. 6293 if (ref(\$_[0]) ne 'GLOB') { 6294 return postponed_sub(@_); 6295 } 6296 6297 # Not a subroutine. Deal with the file. 6298 local *dbline = shift; 6299 my $filename = $dbline; 6300 $filename =~ s/^_<//; 6301 local $\ = ''; 6302 $signal = 1, print $OUT "'$filename' loaded...\n" 6303 if $break_on_load{$filename}; 6304 print_lineinfo( ' ' x $stack_depth, "Package $filename.\n" ) if $frame; 6305 6306 # Do we have any breakpoints to put in this file? 6307 return unless $postponed_file{$filename}; 6308 6309 # Yes. Mark this file as having breakpoints. 6310 $had_breakpoints{$filename} |= 1; 6311 6312 # "Cannot be done: insufficient magic" - we can't just put the 6313 # breakpoints saved in %postponed_file into %dbline by assigning 6314 # the whole hash; we have to do it one item at a time for the 6315 # breakpoints to be set properly. 6316 #%dbline = %{$postponed_file{$filename}}; 6317 6318 # Set the breakpoints, one at a time. 6319 my $key; 6320 6321 for $key ( keys %{ $postponed_file{$filename} } ) { 6322 6323 # Stash the saved breakpoint into the current file's magic line array. 6324 $dbline{$key} = ${ $postponed_file{$filename} }{$key}; 6325 } 6326 6327 # This file's been compiled; discard the stored breakpoints. 6328 delete $postponed_file{$filename}; 6329 6330} ## end sub postponed 6331 6332=head2 C<dumpit> 6333 6334C<dumpit> is the debugger's wrapper around dumpvar.pl. 6335 6336It gets a filehandle (to which C<dumpvar.pl>'s output will be directed) and 6337a reference to a variable (the thing to be dumped) as its input. 6338 6339The incoming filehandle is selected for output (C<dumpvar.pl> is printing to 6340the currently-selected filehandle, thank you very much). The current 6341values of the package globals C<$single> and C<$trace> are backed up in 6342lexicals, and they are turned off (this keeps the debugger from trying 6343to single-step through C<dumpvar.pl> (I think.)). C<$frame> is localized to 6344preserve its current value and it is set to zero to prevent entry/exit 6345messages from printing, and C<$doret> is localized as well and set to -2 to 6346prevent return values from being shown. 6347 6348C<dumpit()> then checks to see if it needs to load C<dumpvar.pl> and 6349tries to load it (note: if you have a C<dumpvar.pl> ahead of the 6350installed version in C<@INC>, yours will be used instead. Possible security 6351problem?). 6352 6353It then checks to see if the subroutine C<main::dumpValue> is now defined 6354it should have been defined by C<dumpvar.pl>). If it has, C<dumpit()> 6355localizes the globals necessary for things to be sane when C<main::dumpValue()> 6356is called, and picks up the variable to be dumped from the parameter list. 6357 6358It checks the package global C<%options> to see if there's a C<dumpDepth> 6359specified. If not, -1 is assumed; if so, the supplied value gets passed on to 6360C<dumpvar.pl>. This tells C<dumpvar.pl> where to leave off when dumping a 6361structure: -1 means dump everything. 6362 6363C<dumpValue()> is then called if possible; if not, C<dumpit()>just prints a 6364warning. 6365 6366In either case, C<$single>, C<$trace>, C<$frame>, and C<$doret> are restored 6367and we then return to the caller. 6368 6369=cut 6370 6371sub dumpit { 6372 6373 # Save the current output filehandle and switch to the one 6374 # passed in as the first parameter. 6375 my $savout = select(shift); 6376 6377 # Save current settings of $single and $trace, and then turn them off. 6378 my $osingle = $single; 6379 my $otrace = $trace; 6380 $single = $trace = 0; 6381 6382 # XXX Okay, what do $frame and $doret do, again? 6383 local $frame = 0; 6384 local $doret = -2; 6385 6386 # Load dumpvar.pl unless we've already got the sub we need from it. 6387 unless ( defined &main::dumpValue ) { 6388 do 'dumpvar.pl' or die $@; 6389 } 6390 6391 # If the load succeeded (or we already had dumpvalue()), go ahead 6392 # and dump things. 6393 if ( defined &main::dumpValue ) { 6394 local $\ = ''; 6395 local $, = ''; 6396 local $" = ' '; 6397 my $v = shift; 6398 my $maxdepth = shift || $option{dumpDepth}; 6399 $maxdepth = -1 unless defined $maxdepth; # -1 means infinite depth 6400 main::dumpValue( $v, $maxdepth ); 6401 } ## end if (defined &main::dumpValue) 6402 6403 # Oops, couldn't load dumpvar.pl. 6404 else { 6405 local $\ = ''; 6406 print $OUT "dumpvar.pl not available.\n"; 6407 } 6408 6409 # Reset $single and $trace to their old values. 6410 $single = $osingle; 6411 $trace = $otrace; 6412 6413 # Restore the old filehandle. 6414 select($savout); 6415} ## end sub dumpit 6416 6417=head2 C<print_trace> 6418 6419C<print_trace>'s job is to print a stack trace. It does this via the 6420C<dump_trace> routine, which actually does all the ferreting-out of the 6421stack trace data. C<print_trace> takes care of formatting it nicely and 6422printing it to the proper filehandle. 6423 6424Parameters: 6425 6426=over 4 6427 6428=item * 6429 6430The filehandle to print to. 6431 6432=item * 6433 6434How many frames to skip before starting trace. 6435 6436=item * 6437 6438How many frames to print. 6439 6440=item * 6441 6442A flag: if true, print a I<short> trace without filenames, line numbers, or arguments 6443 6444=back 6445 6446The original comment below seems to be noting that the traceback may not be 6447correct if this routine is called in a tied method. 6448 6449=cut 6450 6451# Tied method do not create a context, so may get wrong message: 6452 6453sub print_trace { 6454 local $\ = ''; 6455 my $fh = shift; 6456 6457 # If this is going to a slave editor, but we're not the primary 6458 # debugger, reset it first. 6459 resetterm(1) 6460 if $fh eq $LINEINFO # slave editor 6461 and $LINEINFO eq $OUT # normal output 6462 and $term_pid != $$; # not the primary 6463 6464 # Collect the actual trace information to be formatted. 6465 # This is an array of hashes of subroutine call info. 6466 my @sub = dump_trace( $_[0] + 1, $_[1] ); 6467 6468 # Grab the "short report" flag from @_. 6469 my $short = $_[2]; # Print short report, next one for sub name 6470 6471 # Run through the traceback info, format it, and print it. 6472 my $s; 6473 for my $i (0 .. $#sub) { 6474 6475 # Drop out if the user has lost interest and hit control-C. 6476 last if $signal; 6477 6478 # Set the separator so arrays print nice. 6479 local $" = ', '; 6480 6481 # Grab and stringify the arguments if they are there. 6482 my $args = 6483 defined $sub[$i]{args} 6484 ? "(@{ $sub[$i]{args} })" 6485 : ''; 6486 6487 # Shorten them up if $maxtrace says they're too long. 6488 $args = ( substr $args, 0, $maxtrace - 3 ) . '...' 6489 if length $args > $maxtrace; 6490 6491 # Get the file name. 6492 my $file = $sub[$i]{file}; 6493 6494 # Put in a filename header if short is off. 6495 $file = $file eq '-e' ? $file : "file '$file'" unless $short; 6496 6497 # Get the actual sub's name, and shorten to $maxtrace's requirement. 6498 $s = $sub[$i]{'sub'}; 6499 $s = ( substr $s, 0, $maxtrace - 3 ) . '...' if length $s > $maxtrace; 6500 6501 # Short report uses trimmed file and sub names. 6502 if ($short) { 6503 my $sub = @_ >= 4 ? $_[3] : $s; 6504 print $fh "$sub[$i]{context}=$sub$args from $file:$sub[$i]{line}\n"; 6505 } ## end if ($short) 6506 6507 # Non-short report includes full names. 6508 else { 6509 print $fh "$sub[$i]{context} = $s$args" 6510 . " called from $file" 6511 . " line $sub[$i]{line}\n"; 6512 } 6513 } ## end for my $i (0 .. $#sub) 6514} ## end sub print_trace 6515 6516=head2 dump_trace(skip[,count]) 6517 6518Actually collect the traceback information available via C<caller()>. It does 6519some filtering and cleanup of the data, but mostly it just collects it to 6520make C<print_trace()>'s job easier. 6521 6522C<skip> defines the number of stack frames to be skipped, working backwards 6523from the most current. C<count> determines the total number of frames to 6524be returned; all of them (well, the first 10^9) are returned if C<count> 6525is omitted. 6526 6527This routine returns a list of hashes, from most-recent to least-recent 6528stack frame. Each has the following keys and values: 6529 6530=over 4 6531 6532=item * C<context> - C<.> (null), C<$> (scalar), or C<@> (array) 6533 6534=item * C<sub> - subroutine name, or C<eval> information 6535 6536=item * C<args> - undef, or a reference to an array of arguments 6537 6538=item * C<file> - the file in which this item was defined (if any) 6539 6540=item * C<line> - the line on which it was defined 6541 6542=back 6543 6544=cut 6545 6546sub _dump_trace_calc_saved_single_arg 6547{ 6548 my ($nothard, $arg) = @_; 6549 6550 my $type; 6551 if ( not defined $arg ) { # undefined parameter 6552 return "undef"; 6553 } 6554 6555 elsif ( $nothard and tied $arg ) { # tied parameter 6556 return "tied"; 6557 } 6558 elsif ( $nothard and $type = ref $arg ) { # reference 6559 return "ref($type)"; 6560 } 6561 else { # can be stringified 6562 local $_ = 6563 "$arg"; # Safe to stringify now - should not call f(). 6564 6565 # Backslash any single-quotes or backslashes. 6566 s/([\'\\])/\\$1/g; 6567 6568 # Single-quote it unless it's a number or a colon-separated 6569 # name. 6570 s/(.*)/'$1'/s 6571 unless /^(?: -?[\d.]+ | \*[\w:]* )$/x; 6572 6573 # Turn high-bit characters into meta-whatever, and controls into like 6574 # '^D'. 6575 require 'meta_notation.pm'; 6576 $_ = _meta_notation($_) if /[[:^print:]]/a; 6577 6578 return $_; 6579 } 6580} 6581 6582sub _dump_trace_calc_save_args { 6583 my ($nothard) = @_; 6584 6585 return [ 6586 map { _dump_trace_calc_saved_single_arg($nothard, $_) } @args 6587 ]; 6588} 6589 6590sub dump_trace { 6591 6592 # How many levels to skip. 6593 my $skip = shift; 6594 6595 # How many levels to show. (1e9 is a cheap way of saying "all of them"; 6596 # it's unlikely that we'll have more than a billion stack frames. If you 6597 # do, you've got an awfully big machine...) 6598 my $count = shift || 1e9; 6599 6600 # We increment skip because caller(1) is the first level *back* from 6601 # the current one. Add $skip to the count of frames so we have a 6602 # simple stop criterion, counting from $skip to $count+$skip. 6603 $skip++; 6604 $count += $skip; 6605 6606 # These variables are used to capture output from caller(); 6607 my ( $p, $file, $line, $sub, $h, $context ); 6608 6609 my ( $e, $r, @sub, $args ); 6610 6611 # XXX Okay... why'd we do that? 6612 my $nothard = not $frame & 8; 6613 local $frame = 0; 6614 6615 # Do not want to trace this. 6616 my $otrace = $trace; 6617 $trace = 0; 6618 6619 # Start out at the skip count. 6620 # If we haven't reached the number of frames requested, and caller() is 6621 # still returning something, stay in the loop. (If we pass the requested 6622 # number of stack frames, or we run out - caller() returns nothing - we 6623 # quit. 6624 # Up the stack frame index to go back one more level each time. 6625 for ( 6626 my $i = $skip ; 6627 $i < $count 6628 and ( $p, $file, $line, $sub, $h, $context, $e, $r ) = caller($i) ; 6629 $i++ 6630 ) 6631 { 6632 # if the sub has args ($h true), make an anonymous array of the 6633 # dumped args. 6634 my $args = $h ? _dump_trace_calc_save_args($nothard) : undef; 6635 6636 # If context is true, this is array (@)context. 6637 # If context is false, this is scalar ($) context. 6638 # If neither, context isn't defined. (This is apparently a 'can't 6639 # happen' trap.) 6640 $context = $context ? '@' : ( defined $context ? "\$" : '.' ); 6641 6642 # remove trailing newline-whitespace-semicolon-end of line sequence 6643 # from the eval text, if any. 6644 $e =~ s/\n\s*\;\s*\Z// if $e; 6645 6646 # Escape backslashed single-quotes again if necessary. 6647 $e =~ s/([\\\'])/\\$1/g if $e; 6648 6649 # if the require flag is true, the eval text is from a require. 6650 if ($r) { 6651 $sub = "require '$e'"; 6652 } 6653 6654 # if it's false, the eval text is really from an eval. 6655 elsif ( defined $r ) { 6656 $sub = "eval '$e'"; 6657 } 6658 6659 # If the sub is '(eval)', this is a block eval, meaning we don't 6660 # know what the eval'ed text actually was. 6661 elsif ( $sub eq '(eval)' ) { 6662 $sub = "eval {...}"; 6663 } 6664 6665 # Stick the collected information into @sub as an anonymous hash. 6666 push( 6667 @sub, 6668 { 6669 context => $context, 6670 sub => $sub, 6671 args => $args, 6672 file => $file, 6673 line => $line 6674 } 6675 ); 6676 6677 # Stop processing frames if the user hit control-C. 6678 last if $signal; 6679 } ## end for ($i = $skip ; $i < ... 6680 6681 # Restore the trace value again. 6682 $trace = $otrace; 6683 @sub; 6684} ## end sub dump_trace 6685 6686=head2 C<action()> 6687 6688C<action()> takes input provided as the argument to an add-action command, 6689either pre- or post-, and makes sure it's a complete command. It doesn't do 6690any fancy parsing; it just keeps reading input until it gets a string 6691without a trailing backslash. 6692 6693=cut 6694 6695sub action { 6696 my $action = shift; 6697 6698 while ( $action =~ s/\\$// ) { 6699 6700 # We have a backslash on the end. Read more. 6701 $action .= gets(); 6702 } ## end while ($action =~ s/\\$//) 6703 6704 # Return the assembled action. 6705 $action; 6706} ## end sub action 6707 6708=head2 unbalanced 6709 6710This routine mostly just packages up a regular expression to be used 6711to check that the thing it's being matched against has properly-matched 6712curly braces. 6713 6714Of note is the definition of the C<$balanced_brace_re> global via C<||=>, which 6715speeds things up by only creating the qr//'ed expression once; if it's 6716already defined, we don't try to define it again. A speed hack. 6717 6718=cut 6719 6720use vars qw($balanced_brace_re); 6721 6722sub unbalanced { 6723 6724 # I hate using globals! 6725 $balanced_brace_re ||= qr{ 6726 ^ \{ 6727 (?: 6728 (?> [^{}] + ) # Non-parens without backtracking 6729 | 6730 (??{ $balanced_brace_re }) # Group with matching parens 6731 ) * 6732 \} $ 6733 }x; 6734 return $_[0] !~ m/$balanced_brace_re/; 6735} ## end sub unbalanced 6736 6737=head2 C<gets()> 6738 6739C<gets()> is a primitive (very primitive) routine to read continuations. 6740It was devised for reading continuations for actions. 6741it just reads more input with C<readline()> and returns it. 6742 6743=cut 6744 6745sub gets { 6746 return DB::readline("cont: "); 6747} 6748 6749=head2 C<_db_system()> - handle calls to<system()> without messing up the debugger 6750 6751The C<system()> function assumes that it can just go ahead and use STDIN and 6752STDOUT, but under the debugger, we want it to use the debugger's input and 6753outout filehandles. 6754 6755C<_db_system()> socks away the program's STDIN and STDOUT, and then substitutes 6756the debugger's IN and OUT filehandles for them. It does the C<system()> call, 6757and then puts everything back again. 6758 6759=cut 6760 6761sub _db_system { 6762 6763 # We save, change, then restore STDIN and STDOUT to avoid fork() since 6764 # some non-Unix systems can do system() but have problems with fork(). 6765 open( SAVEIN, "<&STDIN" ) || _db_warn("Can't save STDIN"); 6766 open( SAVEOUT, ">&STDOUT" ) || _db_warn("Can't save STDOUT"); 6767 open( STDIN, "<&IN" ) || _db_warn("Can't redirect STDIN"); 6768 open( STDOUT, ">&OUT" ) || _db_warn("Can't redirect STDOUT"); 6769 6770 # XXX: using csh or tcsh destroys sigint retvals! 6771 system(@_); 6772 open( STDIN, "<&SAVEIN" ) || _db_warn("Can't restore STDIN"); 6773 open( STDOUT, ">&SAVEOUT" ) || _db_warn("Can't restore STDOUT"); 6774 close(SAVEIN); 6775 close(SAVEOUT); 6776 6777 # most of the $? crud was coping with broken cshisms 6778 if ( $? >> 8 ) { 6779 _db_warn( "(Command exited ", ( $? >> 8 ), ")\n" ); 6780 } 6781 elsif ($?) { 6782 _db_warn( 6783 "(Command died of SIG#", 6784 ( $? & 127 ), 6785 ( ( $? & 128 ) ? " -- core dumped" : "" ), 6786 ")", "\n" 6787 ); 6788 } ## end elsif ($?) 6789 6790 return $?; 6791 6792} ## end sub system 6793 6794*system = \&_db_system; 6795 6796=head1 TTY MANAGEMENT 6797 6798The subs here do some of the terminal management for multiple debuggers. 6799 6800=head2 setterm 6801 6802Top-level function called when we want to set up a new terminal for use 6803by the debugger. 6804 6805If the C<noTTY> debugger option was set, we'll either use the terminal 6806supplied (the value of the C<noTTY> option), or we'll use C<Term::Rendezvous> 6807to find one. If we're a forked debugger, we call C<resetterm> to try to 6808get a whole new terminal if we can. 6809 6810In either case, we set up the terminal next. If the C<ReadLine> option was 6811true, we'll get a C<Term::ReadLine> object for the current terminal and save 6812the appropriate attributes. We then 6813 6814=cut 6815 6816use vars qw($ornaments); 6817use vars qw($rl_attribs); 6818 6819sub setterm { 6820 6821 # Load Term::Readline, but quietly; don't debug it and don't trace it. 6822 local $frame = 0; 6823 local $doret = -2; 6824 require Term::ReadLine; 6825 6826 # If noTTY is set, but we have a TTY name, go ahead and hook up to it. 6827 if ($notty) { 6828 if ($tty) { 6829 my ( $i, $o ) = split $tty, /,/; 6830 $o = $i unless defined $o; 6831 open( IN, '<', $i ) or die "Cannot open TTY '$i' for read: $!"; 6832 open( OUT, '>', $o ) or die "Cannot open TTY '$o' for write: $!"; 6833 $IN = \*IN; 6834 $OUT = \*OUT; 6835 _autoflush($OUT); 6836 } ## end if ($tty) 6837 6838 # We don't have a TTY - try to find one via Term::Rendezvous. 6839 else { 6840 require Term::Rendezvous; 6841 6842 # See if we have anything to pass to Term::Rendezvous. 6843 # Use $HOME/.perldbtty$$ if not. 6844 my $rv = $ENV{PERLDB_NOTTY} || "$ENV{HOME}/.perldbtty$$"; 6845 6846 # Rendezvous and get the filehandles. 6847 my $term_rv = Term::Rendezvous->new( $rv ); 6848 $IN = $term_rv->IN; 6849 $OUT = $term_rv->OUT; 6850 } ## end else [ if ($tty) 6851 } ## end if ($notty) 6852 6853 # We're a daughter debugger. Try to fork off another TTY. 6854 if ( $term_pid eq '-1' ) { # In a TTY with another debugger 6855 resetterm(2); 6856 } 6857 6858 # If we shouldn't use Term::ReadLine, don't. 6859 if ( !$rl ) { 6860 $term = Term::ReadLine::Stub->new( 'perldb', $IN, $OUT ); 6861 } 6862 6863 # We're using Term::ReadLine. Get all the attributes for this terminal. 6864 else { 6865 $term = Term::ReadLine->new( 'perldb', $IN, $OUT ); 6866 6867 $rl_attribs = $term->Attribs; 6868 $rl_attribs->{basic_word_break_characters} .= '-:+/*,[])}' 6869 if defined $rl_attribs->{basic_word_break_characters} 6870 and index( $rl_attribs->{basic_word_break_characters}, ":" ) == -1; 6871 $rl_attribs->{special_prefixes} = '$@&%'; 6872 $rl_attribs->{completer_word_break_characters} .= '$@&%'; 6873 $rl_attribs->{completion_function} = \&db_complete; 6874 } ## end else [ if (!$rl) 6875 6876 # Set up the LINEINFO filehandle. 6877 $LINEINFO = $OUT unless defined $LINEINFO; 6878 $lineinfo = $console unless defined $lineinfo; 6879 6880 $term->MinLine(2); 6881 6882 load_hist(); 6883 6884 if ( $term->Features->{setHistory} and "@hist" ne "?" ) { 6885 $term->SetHistory(@hist); 6886 } 6887 6888 # XXX Ornaments are turned on unconditionally, which is not 6889 # always a good thing. 6890 ornaments($ornaments) if defined $ornaments; 6891 $term_pid = $$; 6892} ## end sub setterm 6893 6894sub load_hist { 6895 $histfile //= option_val("HistFile", undef); 6896 return unless defined $histfile; 6897 open my $fh, "<", $histfile or return; 6898 local $/ = "\n"; 6899 @hist = (); 6900 while (<$fh>) { 6901 chomp; 6902 push @hist, $_; 6903 } 6904 close $fh; 6905} 6906 6907sub save_hist { 6908 return unless defined $histfile; 6909 eval { require File::Path } or return; 6910 eval { require File::Basename } or return; 6911 File::Path::mkpath(File::Basename::dirname($histfile)); 6912 open my $fh, ">", $histfile or die "Could not open '$histfile': $!"; 6913 $histsize //= option_val("HistSize",100); 6914 my @copy = grep { $_ ne '?' } @hist; 6915 my $start = scalar(@copy) > $histsize ? scalar(@copy)-$histsize : 0; 6916 for ($start .. $#copy) { 6917 print $fh "$copy[$_]\n"; 6918 } 6919 close $fh or die "Could not write '$histfile': $!"; 6920} 6921 6922=head1 GET_FORK_TTY EXAMPLE FUNCTIONS 6923 6924When the process being debugged forks, or the process invokes a command 6925via C<system()> which starts a new debugger, we need to be able to get a new 6926C<IN> and C<OUT> filehandle for the new debugger. Otherwise, the two processes 6927fight over the terminal, and you can never quite be sure who's going to get the 6928input you're typing. 6929 6930C<get_fork_TTY> is a glob-aliased function which calls the real function that 6931is tasked with doing all the necessary operating system mojo to get a new 6932TTY (and probably another window) and to direct the new debugger to read and 6933write there. 6934 6935The debugger provides C<get_fork_TTY> functions which work for TCP 6936socket servers, X11, OS/2, and Mac OS X. Other systems are not 6937supported. You are encouraged to write C<get_fork_TTY> functions which 6938work for I<your> platform and contribute them. 6939 6940=head3 C<socket_get_fork_TTY> 6941 6942=cut 6943 6944sub connect_remoteport { 6945 require IO::Socket; 6946 6947 my $socket = IO::Socket::INET->new( 6948 Timeout => '10', 6949 PeerAddr => $remoteport, 6950 Proto => 'tcp', 6951 ); 6952 if ( ! $socket ) { 6953 die "Unable to connect to remote host: $remoteport\n"; 6954 } 6955 return $socket; 6956} 6957 6958sub socket_get_fork_TTY { 6959 $tty = $LINEINFO = $IN = $OUT = connect_remoteport(); 6960 6961 # Do I need to worry about setting $term? 6962 6963 reset_IN_OUT( $IN, $OUT ); 6964 return ''; 6965} 6966 6967=head3 C<xterm_get_fork_TTY> 6968 6969This function provides the C<get_fork_TTY> function for X11. If a 6970program running under the debugger forks, a new <xterm> window is opened and 6971the subsidiary debugger is directed there. 6972 6973The C<open()> call is of particular note here. We have the new C<xterm> 6974we're spawning route file number 3 to STDOUT, and then execute the C<tty> 6975command (which prints the device name of the TTY we'll want to use for input 6976and output to STDOUT, then C<sleep> for a very long time, routing this output 6977to file number 3. This way we can simply read from the <XT> filehandle (which 6978is STDOUT from the I<commands> we ran) to get the TTY we want to use. 6979 6980Only works if C<xterm> is in your path and C<$ENV{DISPLAY}>, etc. are 6981properly set up. 6982 6983=cut 6984 6985sub xterm_get_fork_TTY { 6986 ( my $name = $0 ) =~ s,^.*[/\\],,s; 6987 open XT, 6988qq[3>&1 xterm -title "Daughter Perl debugger $pids $name" -e sh -c 'tty 1>&3;\ 6989 sleep 10000000' |]; 6990 6991 # Get the output from 'tty' and clean it up a little. 6992 my $tty = <XT>; 6993 chomp $tty; 6994 6995 $pidprompt = ''; # Shown anyway in titlebar 6996 6997 # We need $term defined or we can not switch to the newly created xterm 6998 if ($tty ne '' && !defined $term) { 6999 require Term::ReadLine; 7000 if ( !$rl ) { 7001 $term = Term::ReadLine::Stub->new( 'perldb', $IN, $OUT ); 7002 } 7003 else { 7004 $term = Term::ReadLine->new( 'perldb', $IN, $OUT ); 7005 } 7006 } 7007 # There's our new TTY. 7008 return $tty; 7009} ## end sub xterm_get_fork_TTY 7010 7011=head3 C<os2_get_fork_TTY> 7012 7013XXX It behooves an OS/2 expert to write the necessary documentation for this! 7014 7015=cut 7016 7017# This example function resets $IN, $OUT itself 7018my $c_pipe = 0; 7019sub os2_get_fork_TTY { # A simplification of the following (and works without): 7020 local $\ = ''; 7021 ( my $name = $0 ) =~ s,^.*[/\\],,s; 7022 my %opt = ( title => "Daughter Perl debugger $pids $name", 7023 ($rl ? (read_by_key => 1) : ()) ); 7024 require OS2::Process; 7025 my ($in, $out, $pid) = eval { OS2::Process::io_term(related => 0, %opt) } 7026 or return; 7027 $pidprompt = ''; # Shown anyway in titlebar 7028 reset_IN_OUT($in, $out); 7029 $tty = '*reset*'; 7030 return ''; # Indicate that reset_IN_OUT is called 7031} ## end sub os2_get_fork_TTY 7032 7033=head3 C<macosx_get_fork_TTY> 7034 7035The Mac OS X version uses AppleScript to tell Terminal.app to create 7036a new window. 7037 7038=cut 7039 7040# Notes about Terminal.app's AppleScript support, 7041# (aka things that might break in future OS versions). 7042# 7043# The "do script" command doesn't return a reference to the new window 7044# it creates, but since it appears frontmost and windows are enumerated 7045# front to back, we can use "first window" === "window 1". 7046# 7047# Since "do script" is implemented by supplying the argument (plus a 7048# return character) as terminal input, there's a potential race condition 7049# where the debugger could beat the shell to reading the command. 7050# To prevent this, we wait for the screen to clear before proceeding. 7051# 7052# 10.3 and 10.4: 7053# There's no direct accessor for the tty device name, so we fiddle 7054# with the window title options until it says what we want. 7055# 7056# 10.5: 7057# There _is_ a direct accessor for the tty device name, _and_ there's 7058# a new possible component of the window title (the name of the settings 7059# set). A separate version is needed. 7060 7061my @script_versions= 7062 7063 ([237, <<'__LEOPARD__'], 7064tell application "Terminal" 7065 do script "clear;exec sleep 100000" 7066 tell first tab of first window 7067 copy tty to thetty 7068 set custom title to "forked perl debugger" 7069 set title displays custom title to true 7070 repeat while (length of first paragraph of (get contents)) > 0 7071 delay 0.1 7072 end repeat 7073 end tell 7074end tell 7075thetty 7076__LEOPARD__ 7077 7078 [100, <<'__JAGUAR_TIGER__'], 7079tell application "Terminal" 7080 do script "clear;exec sleep 100000" 7081 tell first window 7082 set title displays shell path to false 7083 set title displays window size to false 7084 set title displays file name to false 7085 set title displays device name to true 7086 set title displays custom title to true 7087 set custom title to "" 7088 copy "/dev/" & name to thetty 7089 set custom title to "forked perl debugger" 7090 repeat while (length of first paragraph of (get contents)) > 0 7091 delay 0.1 7092 end repeat 7093 end tell 7094end tell 7095thetty 7096__JAGUAR_TIGER__ 7097 7098); 7099 7100sub macosx_get_fork_TTY 7101{ 7102 my($version,$script,$pipe,$tty); 7103 7104 return unless $version=$ENV{TERM_PROGRAM_VERSION}; 7105 foreach my $entry (@script_versions) { 7106 if ($version>=$entry->[0]) { 7107 $script=$entry->[1]; 7108 last; 7109 } 7110 } 7111 return unless defined($script); 7112 return unless open($pipe,'-|','/usr/bin/osascript','-e',$script); 7113 $tty=readline($pipe); 7114 close($pipe); 7115 return unless defined($tty) && $tty =~ m(^/dev/); 7116 chomp $tty; 7117 return $tty; 7118} 7119 7120=head3 C<tmux_get_fork_TTY> 7121 7122Creates a split window for subprocesses when a process running under the 7123perl debugger in Tmux forks. 7124 7125=cut 7126 7127sub tmux_get_fork_TTY { 7128 return unless $ENV{TMUX}; 7129 7130 my $pipe; 7131 7132 my $status = open $pipe, '-|', 'tmux', 'split-window', 7133 '-P', '-F', '#{pane_tty}', 'sleep 100000'; 7134 7135 if ( !$status ) { 7136 return; 7137 } 7138 7139 my $tty = <$pipe>; 7140 close $pipe; 7141 7142 if ( $tty ) { 7143 chomp $tty; 7144 7145 if ( !defined $term ) { 7146 require Term::ReadLine; 7147 if ( !$rl ) { 7148 $term = Term::ReadLine::Stub->new( 'perldb', $IN, $OUT ); 7149 } 7150 else { 7151 $term = Term::ReadLine->new( 'perldb', $IN, $OUT ); 7152 } 7153 } 7154 } 7155 7156 return $tty; 7157} 7158 7159=head2 C<create_IN_OUT($flags)> 7160 7161Create a new pair of filehandles, pointing to a new TTY. If impossible, 7162try to diagnose why. 7163 7164Flags are: 7165 7166=over 4 7167 7168=item * 1 - Don't know how to create a new TTY. 7169 7170=item * 2 - Debugger has forked, but we can't get a new TTY. 7171 7172=item * 4 - standard debugger startup is happening. 7173 7174=back 7175 7176=cut 7177 7178use vars qw($fork_TTY); 7179 7180sub create_IN_OUT { # Create a window with IN/OUT handles redirected there 7181 7182 # If we know how to get a new TTY, do it! $in will have 7183 # the TTY name if get_fork_TTY works. 7184 my $in = get_fork_TTY(@_) if defined &get_fork_TTY; 7185 7186 # It used to be that 7187 $in = $fork_TTY if defined $fork_TTY; # Backward compatibility 7188 7189 if ( not defined $in ) { 7190 my $why = shift; 7191 7192 # We don't know how. 7193 print_help(<<EOP) if $why == 1; 7194I<#########> Forked, but do not know how to create a new B<TTY>. I<#########> 7195EOP 7196 7197 # Forked debugger. 7198 print_help(<<EOP) if $why == 2; 7199I<#########> Daughter session, do not know how to change a B<TTY>. I<#########> 7200 This may be an asynchronous session, so the parent debugger may be active. 7201EOP 7202 7203 # Note that both debuggers are fighting over the same input. 7204 print_help(<<EOP) if $why != 4; 7205 Since two debuggers fight for the same TTY, input is severely entangled. 7206 7207EOP 7208 print_help(<<EOP); 7209 I know how to switch the output to a different window in xterms, OS/2 7210 consoles, and Mac OS X Terminal.app only. For a manual switch, put the name 7211 of the created I<TTY> in B<\$DB::fork_TTY>, or define a function 7212 B<DB::get_fork_TTY()> returning this. 7213 7214 On I<UNIX>-like systems one can get the name of a I<TTY> for the given window 7215 by typing B<tty>, and disconnect the I<shell> from I<TTY> by B<sleep 1000000>. 7216 7217EOP 7218 } ## end if (not defined $in) 7219 elsif ( $in ne '' ) { 7220 TTY($in); 7221 } 7222 else { 7223 $console = ''; # Indicate no need to open-from-the-console 7224 } 7225 undef $fork_TTY; 7226} ## end sub create_IN_OUT 7227 7228=head2 C<resetterm> 7229 7230Handles rejiggering the prompt when we've forked off a new debugger. 7231 7232If the new debugger happened because of a C<system()> that invoked a 7233program under the debugger, the arrow between the old pid and the new 7234in the prompt has I<two> dashes instead of one. 7235 7236We take the current list of pids and add this one to the end. If there 7237isn't any list yet, we make one up out of the initial pid associated with 7238the terminal and our new pid, sticking an arrow (either one-dashed or 7239two dashed) in between them. 7240 7241If C<CreateTTY> is off, or C<resetterm> was called with no arguments, 7242we don't try to create a new IN and OUT filehandle. Otherwise, we go ahead 7243and try to do that. 7244 7245=cut 7246 7247sub resetterm { # We forked, so we need a different TTY 7248 7249 # Needs to be passed to create_IN_OUT() as well. 7250 my $in = shift; 7251 7252 # resetterm(2): got in here because of a system() starting a debugger. 7253 # resetterm(1): just forked. 7254 my $systemed = $in > 1 ? '-' : ''; 7255 7256 # If there's already a list of pids, add this to the end. 7257 if ($pids) { 7258 $pids =~ s/\]/$systemed->$$]/; 7259 } 7260 7261 # No pid list. Time to make one. 7262 else { 7263 $pids = "[$term_pid->$$]"; 7264 } 7265 7266 # The prompt we're going to be using for this debugger. 7267 $pidprompt = $pids; 7268 7269 # We now 0wnz this terminal. 7270 $term_pid = $$; 7271 7272 # Just return if we're not supposed to try to create a new TTY. 7273 return unless $CreateTTY & $in; 7274 7275 # Try to create a new IN/OUT pair. 7276 create_IN_OUT($in); 7277} ## end sub resetterm 7278 7279=head2 C<readline> 7280 7281First, we handle stuff in the typeahead buffer. If there is any, we shift off 7282the next line, print a message saying we got it, add it to the terminal 7283history (if possible), and return it. 7284 7285If there's nothing in the typeahead buffer, check the command filehandle stack. 7286If there are any filehandles there, read from the last one, and return the line 7287if we got one. If not, we pop the filehandle off and close it, and try the 7288next one up the stack. 7289 7290If we've emptied the filehandle stack, we check to see if we've got a socket 7291open, and we read that and return it if we do. If we don't, we just call the 7292core C<readline()> and return its value. 7293 7294=cut 7295 7296sub readline { 7297 7298 # Localize to prevent it from being smashed in the program being debugged. 7299 local $.; 7300 7301 # If there are stacked filehandles to read from ... 7302 # (Handle it before the typeahead, because we may call source/etc. from 7303 # the typeahead.) 7304 while (@cmdfhs) { 7305 7306 # Read from the last one in the stack. 7307 my $line = CORE::readline( $cmdfhs[-1] ); 7308 7309 # If we got a line ... 7310 defined $line 7311 ? ( print $OUT ">> $line" and return $line ) # Echo and return 7312 : close pop @cmdfhs; # Pop and close 7313 } ## end while (@cmdfhs) 7314 7315 # Pull a line out of the typeahead if there's stuff there. 7316 if (@typeahead) { 7317 7318 # How many lines left. 7319 my $left = @typeahead; 7320 7321 # Get the next line. 7322 my $got = shift @typeahead; 7323 7324 # Print a message saying we got input from the typeahead. 7325 local $\ = ''; 7326 print $OUT "auto(-$left)", shift, $got, "\n"; 7327 7328 # Add it to the terminal history (if possible). 7329 $term->AddHistory($got) 7330 if length($got) > 1 7331 and defined $term->Features->{addHistory}; 7332 return $got; 7333 } ## end if (@typeahead) 7334 7335 # We really need to read some input. Turn off entry/exit trace and 7336 # return value printing. 7337 local $frame = 0; 7338 local $doret = -2; 7339 7340 # Nothing on the filehandle stack. Socket? 7341 if ( ref $OUT and UNIVERSAL::isa( $OUT, 'IO::Socket::INET' ) ) { 7342 7343 # Send anything we have to send. 7344 $OUT->write( join( '', @_ ) ); 7345 7346 # Receive anything there is to receive. 7347 my $stuff = ''; 7348 my $buf; 7349 my $first_time = 1; 7350 7351 while ($first_time or (length($buf) && ($stuff .= $buf) !~ /\n/)) 7352 { 7353 $first_time = 0; 7354 $IN->recv( $buf = '', 2048 ); # XXX "what's wrong with sysread?" 7355 # XXX Don't know. You tell me. 7356 } 7357 7358 # What we got. 7359 return $stuff; 7360 } ## end if (ref $OUT and UNIVERSAL::isa... 7361 7362 # No socket. Just read from the terminal. 7363 else { 7364 return $term->readline(@_); 7365 } 7366} ## end sub readline 7367 7368=head1 OPTIONS SUPPORT ROUTINES 7369 7370These routines handle listing and setting option values. 7371 7372=head2 C<dump_option> - list the current value of an option setting 7373 7374This routine uses C<option_val> to look up the value for an option. 7375It cleans up escaped single-quotes and then displays the option and 7376its value. 7377 7378=cut 7379 7380sub dump_option { 7381 my ( $opt, $val ) = @_; 7382 $val = option_val( $opt, 'N/A' ); 7383 $val =~ s/([\\\'])/\\$1/g; 7384 printf $OUT "%20s = '%s'\n", $opt, $val; 7385} ## end sub dump_option 7386 7387sub options2remember { 7388 foreach my $k (@RememberOnROptions) { 7389 $option{$k} = option_val( $k, 'N/A' ); 7390 } 7391 return %option; 7392} 7393 7394=head2 C<option_val> - find the current value of an option 7395 7396This can't just be a simple hash lookup because of the indirect way that 7397the option values are stored. Some are retrieved by calling a subroutine, 7398some are just variables. 7399 7400You must supply a default value to be used in case the option isn't set. 7401 7402=cut 7403 7404sub option_val { 7405 my ( $opt, $default ) = @_; 7406 my $val; 7407 7408 # Does this option exist, and is it a variable? 7409 # If so, retrieve the value via the value in %optionVars. 7410 if ( defined $optionVars{$opt} 7411 and defined ${ $optionVars{$opt} } ) 7412 { 7413 $val = ${ $optionVars{$opt} }; 7414 } 7415 7416 # Does this option exist, and it's a subroutine? 7417 # If so, call the subroutine via the ref in %optionAction 7418 # and capture the value. 7419 elsif ( defined $optionAction{$opt} 7420 and defined &{ $optionAction{$opt} } ) 7421 { 7422 $val = &{ $optionAction{$opt} }(); 7423 } 7424 7425 # If there's an action or variable for the supplied option, 7426 # but no value was set, use the default. 7427 elsif (defined $optionAction{$opt} and not defined $option{$opt} 7428 or defined $optionVars{$opt} and not defined ${ $optionVars{$opt} } ) 7429 { 7430 $val = $default; 7431 } 7432 7433 # Otherwise, do the simple hash lookup. 7434 else { 7435 $val = $option{$opt}; 7436 } 7437 7438 # If the value isn't defined, use the default. 7439 # Then return whatever the value is. 7440 $val = $default unless defined $val; 7441 $val; 7442} ## end sub option_val 7443 7444=head2 C<parse_options> 7445 7446Handles the parsing and execution of option setting/displaying commands. 7447 7448An option entered by itself is assumed to be I<set me to 1> (the default value) 7449if the option is a boolean one. If not, the user is prompted to enter a valid 7450value or to query the current value (via C<option? >). 7451 7452If C<option=value> is entered, we try to extract a quoted string from the 7453value (if it is quoted). If it's not, we just use the whole value as-is. 7454 7455We load any modules required to service this option, and then we set it: if 7456it just gets stuck in a variable, we do that; if there's a subroutine to 7457handle setting the option, we call that. 7458 7459Finally, if we're running in interactive mode, we display the effect of the 7460user's command back to the terminal, skipping this if we're setting things 7461during initialization. 7462 7463=cut 7464 7465sub parse_options { 7466 my ($s) = @_; 7467 local $\ = ''; 7468 7469 my $option; 7470 7471 # These options need a value. Don't allow them to be clobbered by accident. 7472 my %opt_needs_val = map { ( $_ => 1 ) } qw{ 7473 dumpDepth arrayDepth hashDepth LineInfo maxTraceLen ornaments windowSize 7474 pager quote ReadLine recallCommand RemotePort ShellBang TTY CommandSet 7475 }; 7476 7477 while (length($s)) { 7478 my $val_defaulted; 7479 7480 # Clean off excess leading whitespace. 7481 $s =~ s/^\s+// && next; 7482 7483 # Options are always all word characters, followed by a non-word 7484 # separator. 7485 if ($s !~ s/^(\w+)(\W?)//) { 7486 print {$OUT} "Invalid option '$s'\n"; 7487 last; 7488 } 7489 my ( $opt, $sep ) = ( $1, $2 ); 7490 7491 # Make sure that such an option exists. 7492 my $matches = ( grep { /^\Q$opt/ && ( $option = $_ ) } @options ) 7493 || ( grep { /^\Q$opt/i && ( $option = $_ ) } @options ); 7494 7495 unless ($matches) { 7496 print {$OUT} "Unknown option '$opt'\n"; 7497 next; 7498 } 7499 if ($matches > 1) { 7500 print {$OUT} "Ambiguous option '$opt'\n"; 7501 next; 7502 } 7503 my $val; 7504 7505 # '?' as separator means query, but must have whitespace after it. 7506 if ( "?" eq $sep ) { 7507 if ($s =~ /\A\S/) { 7508 print {$OUT} "Option query '$opt?' followed by non-space '$s'\n" ; 7509 7510 last; 7511 } 7512 7513 #&dump_option($opt); 7514 } ## end if ("?" eq $sep) 7515 7516 # Separator is whitespace (or just a carriage return). 7517 # They're going for a default, which we assume is 1. 7518 elsif ( $sep !~ /\S/ ) { 7519 $val_defaulted = 1; 7520 $val = "1"; # this is an evil default; make 'em set it! 7521 } 7522 7523 # Separator is =. Trying to set a value. 7524 elsif ( $sep eq "=" ) { 7525 7526 # If quoted, extract a quoted string. 7527 if ($s =~ s/ (["']) ( (?: \\. | (?! \1 ) [^\\] )* ) \1 //x) { 7528 my $quote = $1; 7529 ( $val = $2 ) =~ s/\\([$quote\\])/$1/g; 7530 } 7531 7532 # Not quoted. Use the whole thing. Warn about 'option='. 7533 else { 7534 $s =~ s/^(\S*)//; 7535 $val = $1; 7536 print OUT qq(Option better cleared using $opt=""\n) 7537 unless length $val; 7538 } ## end else [ if (s/ (["']) ( (?: \\. | (?! \1 ) [^\\] )* ) \1 //x) 7539 7540 } ## end elsif ($sep eq "=") 7541 7542 # "Quoted" with [], <>, or {}. 7543 else { #{ to "let some poor schmuck bounce on the % key in B<vi>." 7544 my ($end) = 7545 "\\" . substr( ")]>}$sep", index( "([<{", $sep ), 1 ); #} 7546 $s =~ s/^(([^\\$end]|\\[\\$end])*)$end($|\s+)// 7547 or print( $OUT "Unclosed option value '$opt$sep$_'\n" ), last; 7548 ( $val = $1 ) =~ s/\\([\\$end])/$1/g; 7549 } ## end else [ if ("?" eq $sep) 7550 7551 # Exclude non-booleans from getting set to 1 by default. 7552 if ( $opt_needs_val{$option} && $val_defaulted ) { 7553 my $cmd = ( $CommandSet eq '580' ) ? 'o' : 'O'; 7554 print {$OUT} 7555"Option '$opt' is non-boolean. Use '$cmd $option=VAL' to set, '$cmd $option?' to query\n"; 7556 next; 7557 } ## end if ($opt_needs_val{$option... 7558 7559 # Save the option value. 7560 $option{$option} = $val if defined $val; 7561 7562 # Load any module that this option requires. 7563 if ( defined($optionRequire{$option}) && defined($val) ) { 7564 eval qq{ 7565 local \$frame = 0; 7566 local \$doret = -2; 7567 require '$optionRequire{$option}'; 7568 1; 7569 } || die $@ # XXX: shouldn't happen 7570 } 7571 7572 # Set it. 7573 # Stick it in the proper variable if it goes in a variable. 7574 if (defined($optionVars{$option}) && defined($val)) { 7575 ${ $optionVars{$option} } = $val; 7576 } 7577 7578 # Call the appropriate sub if it gets set via sub. 7579 if (defined($optionAction{$option}) 7580 && defined (&{ $optionAction{$option} }) 7581 && defined ($val)) 7582 { 7583 &{ $optionAction{$option} }($val); 7584 } 7585 7586 # Not initialization - echo the value we set it to. 7587 dump_option($option) if ($OUT ne \*STDERR); 7588 } ## end while (length) 7589} ## end sub parse_options 7590 7591=head1 RESTART SUPPORT 7592 7593These routines are used to store (and restore) lists of items in environment 7594variables during a restart. 7595 7596=head2 set_list 7597 7598Set_list packages up items to be stored in a set of environment variables 7599(VAR_n, containing the number of items, and VAR_0, VAR_1, etc., containing 7600the values). Values outside the standard ASCII charset are stored by encoding 7601them as hexadecimal values. 7602 7603=cut 7604 7605sub set_list { 7606 my ( $stem, @list ) = @_; 7607 my $val; 7608 7609 # VAR_n: how many we have. Scalar assignment gets the number of items. 7610 $ENV{"${stem}_n"} = @list; 7611 7612 # Grab each item in the list, escape the backslashes, encode the non-ASCII 7613 # as hex, and then save in the appropriate VAR_0, VAR_1, etc. 7614 for my $i ( 0 .. $#list ) { 7615 $val = $list[$i]; 7616 $val =~ s/\\/\\\\/g; 7617 no warnings 'experimental::regex_sets'; 7618 $val =~ s/ ( (?[ [\000-\xFF] & [:^print:] ]) ) / 7619 "\\0x" . unpack('H2',$1)/xaeg; 7620 $ENV{"${stem}_$i"} = $val; 7621 } ## end for $i (0 .. $#list) 7622} ## end sub set_list 7623 7624=head2 get_list 7625 7626Reverse the set_list operation: grab VAR_n to see how many we should be getting 7627back, and then pull VAR_0, VAR_1. etc. back out. 7628 7629=cut 7630 7631sub get_list { 7632 my $stem = shift; 7633 my @list; 7634 my $n = delete $ENV{"${stem}_n"}; 7635 my $val; 7636 for my $i ( 0 .. $n - 1 ) { 7637 $val = delete $ENV{"${stem}_$i"}; 7638 $val =~ s/\\((\\)|0x(..))/ $2 ? $2 : pack('H2', $3) /ge; 7639 push @list, $val; 7640 } 7641 @list; 7642} ## end sub get_list 7643 7644=head1 MISCELLANEOUS SIGNAL AND I/O MANAGEMENT 7645 7646=head2 catch() 7647 7648The C<catch()> subroutine is the essence of fast and low-impact. We simply 7649set an already-existing global scalar variable to a constant value. This 7650avoids allocating any memory possibly in the middle of something that will 7651get all confused if we do, particularly under I<unsafe signals>. 7652 7653=cut 7654 7655sub catch { 7656 $signal = 1; 7657 return; # Put nothing on the stack - malloc/free land! 7658} 7659 7660=head2 C<warn()> 7661 7662C<warn> emits a warning, by joining together its arguments and printing 7663them, with couple of fillips. 7664 7665If the composited message I<doesn't> end with a newline, we automatically 7666add C<$!> and a newline to the end of the message. The subroutine expects $OUT 7667to be set to the filehandle to be used to output warnings; it makes no 7668assumptions about what filehandles are available. 7669 7670=cut 7671 7672sub _db_warn { 7673 my ($msg) = join( "", @_ ); 7674 $msg .= ": $!\n" unless $msg =~ /\n$/; 7675 local $\ = ''; 7676 print $OUT $msg; 7677} ## end sub warn 7678 7679*warn = \&_db_warn; 7680 7681=head1 INITIALIZATION TTY SUPPORT 7682 7683=head2 C<reset_IN_OUT> 7684 7685This routine handles restoring the debugger's input and output filehandles 7686after we've tried and failed to move them elsewhere. In addition, it assigns 7687the debugger's output filehandle to $LINEINFO if it was already open there. 7688 7689=cut 7690 7691sub reset_IN_OUT { 7692 my $switch_li = $LINEINFO eq $OUT; 7693 7694 # If there's a term and it's able to get a new tty, try to get one. 7695 if ( $term and $term->Features->{newTTY} ) { 7696 ( $IN, $OUT ) = ( shift, shift ); 7697 $term->newTTY( $IN, $OUT ); 7698 } 7699 7700 # This term can't get a new tty now. Better luck later. 7701 elsif ($term) { 7702 _db_warn("Too late to set IN/OUT filehandles, enabled on next 'R'!\n"); 7703 } 7704 7705 # Set the filehndles up as they were. 7706 else { 7707 ( $IN, $OUT ) = ( shift, shift ); 7708 } 7709 7710 # Unbuffer the output filehandle. 7711 _autoflush($OUT); 7712 7713 # Point LINEINFO to the same output filehandle if it was there before. 7714 $LINEINFO = $OUT if $switch_li; 7715} ## end sub reset_IN_OUT 7716 7717=head1 OPTION SUPPORT ROUTINES 7718 7719The following routines are used to process some of the more complicated 7720debugger options. 7721 7722=head2 C<TTY> 7723 7724Sets the input and output filehandles to the specified files or pipes. 7725If the terminal supports switching, we go ahead and do it. If not, and 7726there's already a terminal in place, we save the information to take effect 7727on restart. 7728 7729If there's no terminal yet (for instance, during debugger initialization), 7730we go ahead and set C<$console> and C<$tty> to the file indicated. 7731 7732=cut 7733 7734sub TTY { 7735 7736 if ( @_ and $term and $term->Features->{newTTY} ) { 7737 7738 # This terminal supports switching to a new TTY. 7739 # Can be a list of two files, or on string containing both names, 7740 # comma-separated. 7741 # XXX Should this perhaps be an assignment from @_? 7742 my ( $in, $out ) = shift; 7743 if ( $in =~ /,/ ) { 7744 7745 # Split list apart if supplied. 7746 ( $in, $out ) = split /,/, $in, 2; 7747 } 7748 else { 7749 7750 # Use the same file for both input and output. 7751 $out = $in; 7752 } 7753 7754 # Open file onto the debugger's filehandles, if you can. 7755 open IN, '<', $in or die "cannot open '$in' for read: $!"; 7756 open OUT, '>', $out or die "cannot open '$out' for write: $!"; 7757 7758 # Swap to the new filehandles. 7759 reset_IN_OUT( \*IN, \*OUT ); 7760 7761 # Save the setting for later. 7762 return $tty = $in; 7763 } ## end if (@_ and $term and $term... 7764 7765 # Terminal doesn't support new TTY, or doesn't support readline. 7766 # Can't do it now, try restarting. 7767 if ($term and @_) { 7768 _db_warn("Too late to set TTY, enabled on next 'R'!\n"); 7769 } 7770 7771 # Useful if done through PERLDB_OPTS: 7772 $console = $tty = shift if @_; 7773 7774 # Return whatever the TTY is. 7775 $tty or $console; 7776} ## end sub TTY 7777 7778=head2 C<noTTY> 7779 7780Sets the C<$notty> global, controlling whether or not the debugger tries to 7781get a terminal to read from. If called after a terminal is already in place, 7782we save the value to use it if we're restarted. 7783 7784=cut 7785 7786sub noTTY { 7787 if ($term) { 7788 _db_warn("Too late to set noTTY, enabled on next 'R'!\n") if @_; 7789 } 7790 $notty = shift if @_; 7791 $notty; 7792} ## end sub noTTY 7793 7794=head2 C<ReadLine> 7795 7796Sets the C<$rl> option variable. If 0, we use C<Term::ReadLine::Stub> 7797(essentially, no C<readline> processing on this I<terminal>). Otherwise, we 7798use C<Term::ReadLine>. Can't be changed after a terminal's in place; we save 7799the value in case a restart is done so we can change it then. 7800 7801=cut 7802 7803sub ReadLine { 7804 if ($term) { 7805 _db_warn("Too late to set ReadLine, enabled on next 'R'!\n") if @_; 7806 } 7807 $rl = shift if @_; 7808 $rl; 7809} ## end sub ReadLine 7810 7811=head2 C<RemotePort> 7812 7813Sets the port that the debugger will try to connect to when starting up. 7814If the terminal's already been set up, we can't do it, but we remember the 7815setting in case the user does a restart. 7816 7817=cut 7818 7819sub RemotePort { 7820 if ($term) { 7821 _db_warn("Too late to set RemotePort, enabled on next 'R'!\n") if @_; 7822 } 7823 $remoteport = shift if @_; 7824 $remoteport; 7825} ## end sub RemotePort 7826 7827=head2 C<tkRunning> 7828 7829Checks with the terminal to see if C<Tk> is running, and returns true or 7830false. Returns false if the current terminal doesn't support C<readline>. 7831 7832=cut 7833 7834sub tkRunning { 7835 if ( ${ $term->Features }{tkRunning} ) { 7836 return $term->tkRunning(@_); 7837 } 7838 else { 7839 local $\ = ''; 7840 print $OUT "tkRunning not supported by current ReadLine package.\n"; 7841 0; 7842 } 7843} ## end sub tkRunning 7844 7845=head2 C<NonStop> 7846 7847Sets nonstop mode. If a terminal's already been set up, it's too late; the 7848debugger remembers the setting in case you restart, though. 7849 7850=cut 7851 7852sub NonStop { 7853 if ($term) { 7854 _db_warn("Too late to set up NonStop mode, enabled on next 'R'!\n") 7855 if @_; 7856 } 7857 $runnonstop = shift if @_; 7858 $runnonstop; 7859} ## end sub NonStop 7860 7861sub DollarCaretP { 7862 if ($term) { 7863 _db_warn("Some flag changes could not take effect until next 'R'!\n") 7864 if @_; 7865 } 7866 $^P = parse_DollarCaretP_flags(shift) if @_; 7867 expand_DollarCaretP_flags($^P); 7868} 7869 7870=head2 C<pager> 7871 7872Set up the C<$pager> variable. Adds a pipe to the front unless there's one 7873there already. 7874 7875=cut 7876 7877sub pager { 7878 if (@_) { 7879 $pager = shift; 7880 $pager = "|" . $pager unless $pager =~ /^(\+?\>|\|)/; 7881 } 7882 $pager; 7883} ## end sub pager 7884 7885=head2 C<shellBang> 7886 7887Sets the shell escape command, and generates a printable copy to be used 7888in the help. 7889 7890=cut 7891 7892sub shellBang { 7893 7894 # If we got an argument, meta-quote it, and add '\b' if it 7895 # ends in a word character. 7896 if (@_) { 7897 $sh = quotemeta shift; 7898 $sh .= "\\b" if $sh =~ /\w$/; 7899 } 7900 7901 # Generate the printable version for the help: 7902 $psh = $sh; # copy it 7903 $psh =~ s/\\b$//; # Take off trailing \b if any 7904 $psh =~ s/\\(.)/$1/g; # De-escape 7905 $psh; # return the printable version 7906} ## end sub shellBang 7907 7908=head2 C<ornaments> 7909 7910If the terminal has its own ornaments, fetch them. Otherwise accept whatever 7911was passed as the argument. (This means you can't override the terminal's 7912ornaments.) 7913 7914=cut 7915 7916sub ornaments { 7917 if ( defined $term ) { 7918 7919 # We don't want to show warning backtraces, but we do want die() ones. 7920 local $warnLevel = 0; 7921 local $dieLevel = 1; 7922 7923 # No ornaments if the terminal doesn't support them. 7924 if (not $term->Features->{ornaments}) { 7925 return ''; 7926 } 7927 7928 return (eval { $term->ornaments(@_) } || ''); 7929 } 7930 7931 # Use what was passed in if we can't determine it ourselves. 7932 else { 7933 $ornaments = shift; 7934 7935 return $ornaments; 7936 } 7937 7938} ## end sub ornaments 7939 7940=head2 C<recallCommand> 7941 7942Sets the recall command, and builds a printable version which will appear in 7943the help text. 7944 7945=cut 7946 7947sub recallCommand { 7948 7949 # If there is input, metaquote it. Add '\b' if it ends with a word 7950 # character. 7951 if (@_) { 7952 $rc = quotemeta shift; 7953 $rc .= "\\b" if $rc =~ /\w$/; 7954 } 7955 7956 # Build it into a printable version. 7957 $prc = $rc; # Copy it 7958 $prc =~ s/\\b$//; # Remove trailing \b 7959 $prc =~ s/\\(.)/$1/g; # Remove escapes 7960 return $prc; # Return the printable version 7961} ## end sub recallCommand 7962 7963=head2 C<LineInfo> - where the line number information goes 7964 7965Called with no arguments, returns the file or pipe that line info should go to. 7966 7967Called with an argument (a file or a pipe), it opens that onto the 7968C<LINEINFO> filehandle, unbuffers the filehandle, and then returns the 7969file or pipe again to the caller. 7970 7971=cut 7972 7973sub LineInfo { 7974 if (@_) { 7975 $lineinfo = shift; 7976 7977 # If this is a valid "thing to be opened for output", tack a 7978 # '>' onto the front. 7979 my $stream = ( $lineinfo =~ /^(\+?\>|\|)/ ) ? $lineinfo : ">$lineinfo"; 7980 7981 # If this is a pipe, the stream points to a slave editor. 7982 $slave_editor = ( $stream =~ /^\|/ ); 7983 7984 my $new_lineinfo_fh; 7985 # Open it up and unbuffer it. 7986 open ($new_lineinfo_fh , $stream ) 7987 or _db_warn("Cannot open '$stream' for write"); 7988 $LINEINFO = $new_lineinfo_fh; 7989 _autoflush($LINEINFO); 7990 } 7991 7992 return $lineinfo; 7993} ## end sub LineInfo 7994 7995=head1 COMMAND SUPPORT ROUTINES 7996 7997These subroutines provide functionality for various commands. 7998 7999=head2 C<list_modules> 8000 8001For the C<M> command: list modules loaded and their versions. 8002Essentially just runs through the keys in %INC, picks each package's 8003C<$VERSION> variable, gets the file name, and formats the information 8004for output. 8005 8006=cut 8007 8008sub list_modules { # versions 8009 my %version; 8010 my $file; 8011 8012 # keys are the "as-loaded" name, values are the fully-qualified path 8013 # to the file itself. 8014 for ( keys %INC ) { 8015 $file = $_; # get the module name 8016 s,\.p[lm]$,,i; # remove '.pl' or '.pm' 8017 s,/,::,g; # change '/' to '::' 8018 s/^perl5db$/DB/; # Special case: debugger 8019 # moves to package DB 8020 s/^Term::ReadLine::readline$/readline/; # simplify readline 8021 8022 # If the package has a $VERSION package global (as all good packages 8023 # should!) decode it and save as partial message. 8024 my $pkg_version = do { no strict 'refs'; ${ $_ . '::VERSION' } }; 8025 if ( defined $pkg_version ) { 8026 $version{$file} = "$pkg_version from "; 8027 } 8028 8029 # Finish up the message with the file the package came from. 8030 $version{$file} .= $INC{$file}; 8031 } ## end for (keys %INC) 8032 8033 # Hey, dumpit() formats a hash nicely, so why not use it? 8034 dumpit( $OUT, \%version ); 8035} ## end sub list_modules 8036 8037=head2 C<sethelp()> 8038 8039Sets up the monster string used to format and print the help. 8040 8041=head3 HELP MESSAGE FORMAT 8042 8043The help message is a peculiar format unto itself; it mixes C<pod> I<ornaments> 8044(C<< B<> >> C<< I<> >>) with tabs to come up with a format that's fairly 8045easy to parse and portable, but which still allows the help to be a little 8046nicer than just plain text. 8047 8048Essentially, you define the command name (usually marked up with C<< B<> >> 8049and C<< I<> >>), followed by a tab, and then the descriptive text, ending in a 8050newline. The descriptive text can also be marked up in the same way. If you 8051need to continue the descriptive text to another line, start that line with 8052just tabs and then enter the marked-up text. 8053 8054If you are modifying the help text, I<be careful>. The help-string parser is 8055not very sophisticated, and if you don't follow these rules it will mangle the 8056help beyond hope until you fix the string. 8057 8058=cut 8059 8060use vars qw($pre580_help); 8061use vars qw($pre580_summary); 8062 8063sub sethelp { 8064 8065 # XXX: make sure there are tabs between the command and explanation, 8066 # or print_help will screw up your formatting if you have 8067 # eeevil ornaments enabled. This is an insane mess. 8068 8069 $help = " 8070Help is currently only available for the new 5.8 command set. 8071No help is available for the old command set. 8072We assume you know what you're doing if you switch to it. 8073 8074B<T> Stack trace. 8075B<s> [I<expr>] Single step [in I<expr>]. 8076B<n> [I<expr>] Next, steps over subroutine calls [in I<expr>]. 8077<B<CR>> Repeat last B<n> or B<s> command. 8078B<r> Return from current subroutine. 8079B<c> [I<line>|I<sub>] Continue; optionally inserts a one-time-only breakpoint 8080 at the specified position. 8081B<l> I<min>B<+>I<incr> List I<incr>+1 lines starting at I<min>. 8082B<l> I<min>B<->I<max> List lines I<min> through I<max>. 8083B<l> I<line> List single I<line>. 8084B<l> I<subname> List first window of lines from subroutine. 8085B<l> I<\$var> List first window of lines from subroutine referenced by I<\$var>. 8086B<l> List next window of lines. 8087B<-> List previous window of lines. 8088B<v> [I<line>] View window around I<line>. 8089B<.> Return to the executed line. 8090B<f> I<filename> Switch to viewing I<filename>. File must be already loaded. 8091 I<filename> may be either the full name of the file, or a regular 8092 expression matching the full file name: 8093 B<f> I</home/me/foo.pl> and B<f> I<oo\\.> may access the same file. 8094 Evals (with saved bodies) are considered to be filenames: 8095 B<f> I<(eval 7)> and B<f> I<eval 7\\b> access the body of the 7th eval 8096 (in the order of execution). 8097B</>I<pattern>B</> Search forwards for I<pattern>; final B</> is optional. 8098B<?>I<pattern>B<?> Search backwards for I<pattern>; final B<?> is optional. 8099B<L> [I<a|b|w>] List actions and or breakpoints and or watch-expressions. 8100B<S> [[B<!>]I<pattern>] List subroutine names [not] matching I<pattern>. 8101B<t> [I<n>] Toggle trace mode (to max I<n> levels below current stack depth). 8102B<t> [I<n>] I<expr> Trace through execution of I<expr>. 8103B<b> Sets breakpoint on current line) 8104B<b> [I<line>] [I<condition>] 8105 Set breakpoint; I<line> defaults to the current execution line; 8106 I<condition> breaks if it evaluates to true, defaults to '1'. 8107B<b> I<subname> [I<condition>] 8108 Set breakpoint at first line of subroutine. 8109B<b> I<\$var> Set breakpoint at first line of subroutine referenced by I<\$var>. 8110B<b> B<load> I<filename> Set breakpoint on 'require'ing the given file. 8111B<b> B<postpone> I<subname> [I<condition>] 8112 Set breakpoint at first line of subroutine after 8113 it is compiled. 8114B<b> B<compile> I<subname> 8115 Stop after the subroutine is compiled. 8116B<B> [I<line>] Delete the breakpoint for I<line>. 8117B<B> I<*> Delete all breakpoints. 8118B<a> [I<line>] I<command> 8119 Set an action to be done before the I<line> is executed; 8120 I<line> defaults to the current execution line. 8121 Sequence is: check for breakpoint/watchpoint, print line 8122 if necessary, do action, prompt user if necessary, 8123 execute line. 8124B<a> Does nothing 8125B<A> [I<line>] Delete the action for I<line>. 8126B<A> I<*> Delete all actions. 8127B<w> I<expr> Add a global watch-expression. 8128B<w> Does nothing 8129B<W> I<expr> Delete a global watch-expression. 8130B<W> I<*> Delete all watch-expressions. 8131B<V> [I<pkg> [I<vars>]] List some (default all) variables in package (default current). 8132 Use B<~>I<pattern> and B<!>I<pattern> for positive and negative regexps. 8133B<X> [I<vars>] Same as \"B<V> I<currentpackage> [I<vars>]\". 8134B<x> I<expr> Evals expression in list context, dumps the result. 8135B<m> I<expr> Evals expression in list context, prints methods callable 8136 on the first element of the result. 8137B<m> I<class> Prints methods callable via the given class. 8138B<M> Show versions of loaded modules. 8139B<i> I<class> Prints nested parents of given class. 8140B<e> Display current thread id. 8141B<E> Display all thread ids the current one will be identified: <n>. 8142B<y> [I<n> [I<Vars>]] List lexicals in higher scope <n>. Vars same as B<V>. 8143 8144B<<> ? List Perl commands to run before each prompt. 8145B<<> I<expr> Define Perl command to run before each prompt. 8146B<<<> I<expr> Add to the list of Perl commands to run before each prompt. 8147B<< *> Delete the list of perl commands to run before each prompt. 8148B<>> ? List Perl commands to run after each prompt. 8149B<>> I<expr> Define Perl command to run after each prompt. 8150B<>>B<>> I<expr> Add to the list of Perl commands to run after each prompt. 8151B<>>B< *> Delete the list of Perl commands to run after each prompt. 8152B<{> I<db_command> Define debugger command to run before each prompt. 8153B<{> ? List debugger commands to run before each prompt. 8154B<{{> I<db_command> Add to the list of debugger commands to run before each prompt. 8155B<{ *> Delete the list of debugger commands to run before each prompt. 8156B<$prc> I<number> Redo a previous command (default previous command). 8157B<$prc> I<-number> Redo number'th-to-last command. 8158B<$prc> I<pattern> Redo last command that started with I<pattern>. 8159 See 'B<O> I<recallCommand>' too. 8160B<$psh$psh> I<cmd> Run cmd in a subprocess (reads from DB::IN, writes to DB::OUT)" 8161 . ( 8162 $rc eq $sh 8163 ? "" 8164 : " 8165B<$psh> [I<cmd>] Run I<cmd> in subshell (forces \"\$SHELL -c 'cmd'\")." 8166 ) . " 8167 See 'B<O> I<shellBang>' too. 8168B<source> I<file> Execute I<file> containing debugger commands (may nest). 8169B<save> I<file> Save current debugger session (actual history) to I<file>. 8170B<rerun> Rerun session to current position. 8171B<rerun> I<n> Rerun session to numbered command. 8172B<rerun> I<-n> Rerun session to number'th-to-last command. 8173B<H> I<-number> Display last number commands (default all). 8174B<H> I<*> Delete complete history. 8175B<p> I<expr> Same as \"I<print {DB::OUT} expr>\" in current package. 8176B<|>I<dbcmd> Run debugger command, piping DB::OUT to current pager. 8177B<||>I<dbcmd> Same as B<|>I<dbcmd> but DB::OUT is temporarily select()ed as well. 8178B<\=> [I<alias> I<value>] Define a command alias, or list current aliases. 8179I<command> Execute as a perl statement in current package. 8180B<R> Pure-man-restart of debugger, some of debugger state 8181 and command-line options may be lost. 8182 Currently the following settings are preserved: 8183 history, breakpoints and actions, debugger B<O>ptions 8184 and the following command-line options: I<-w>, I<-I>, I<-e>. 8185 8186B<o> [I<opt>] ... Set boolean option to true 8187B<o> [I<opt>B<?>] Query options 8188B<o> [I<opt>B<=>I<val>] [I<opt>=B<\">I<val>B<\">] ... 8189 Set options. Use quotes if spaces in value. 8190 I<recallCommand>, I<ShellBang> chars used to recall command or spawn shell; 8191 I<pager> program for output of \"|cmd\"; 8192 I<tkRunning> run Tk while prompting (with ReadLine); 8193 I<signalLevel> I<warnLevel> I<dieLevel> level of verbosity; 8194 I<inhibit_exit> Allows stepping off the end of the script. 8195 I<ImmediateStop> Debugger should stop as early as possible. 8196 I<RemotePort> Remote hostname:port for remote debugging 8197 The following options affect what happens with B<V>, B<X>, and B<x> commands: 8198 I<arrayDepth>, I<hashDepth> print only first N elements ('' for all); 8199 I<compactDump>, I<veryCompact> change style of array and hash dump; 8200 I<globPrint> whether to print contents of globs; 8201 I<DumpDBFiles> dump arrays holding debugged files; 8202 I<DumpPackages> dump symbol tables of packages; 8203 I<DumpReused> dump contents of \"reused\" addresses; 8204 I<quote>, I<HighBit>, I<undefPrint> change style of string dump; 8205 I<bareStringify> Do not print the overload-stringified value; 8206 Other options include: 8207 I<PrintRet> affects printing of return value after B<r> command, 8208 I<frame> affects printing messages on subroutine entry/exit. 8209 I<AutoTrace> affects printing messages on possible breaking points. 8210 I<maxTraceLen> gives max length of evals/args listed in stack trace. 8211 I<ornaments> affects screen appearance of the command line. 8212 I<CreateTTY> bits control attempts to create a new TTY on events: 8213 1: on fork() 2: debugger is started inside debugger 8214 4: on startup 8215 During startup options are initialized from \$ENV{PERLDB_OPTS}. 8216 You can put additional initialization options I<TTY>, I<noTTY>, 8217 I<ReadLine>, I<NonStop>, and I<RemotePort> there (or use 8218 B<R> after you set them). 8219 8220B<q> or B<^D> Quit. Set B<\$DB::finished = 0> to debug global destruction. 8221B<h> Summary of debugger commands. 8222B<h> [I<db_command>] Get help [on a specific debugger command], enter B<|h> to page. 8223B<h h> Long help for debugger commands 8224B<$doccmd> I<manpage> Runs the external doc viewer B<$doccmd> command on the 8225 named Perl I<manpage>, or on B<$doccmd> itself if omitted. 8226 Set B<\$DB::doccmd> to change viewer. 8227 8228Type '|h h' for a paged display if this was too hard to read. 8229 8230"; # Fix balance of vi % matching: }}}} 8231 8232 # note: tabs in the following section are not-so-helpful 8233 $summary = <<"END_SUM"; 8234I<List/search source lines:> I<Control script execution:> 8235 B<l> [I<ln>|I<sub>] List source code B<T> Stack trace 8236 B<-> or B<.> List previous/current line B<s> [I<expr>] Single step [in expr] 8237 B<v> [I<line>] View around line B<n> [I<expr>] Next, steps over subs 8238 B<f> I<filename> View source in file <B<CR>/B<Enter>> Repeat last B<n> or B<s> 8239 B</>I<pattern>B</> B<?>I<patt>B<?> Search forw/backw B<r> Return from subroutine 8240 B<M> Show module versions B<c> [I<ln>|I<sub>] Continue until position 8241I<Debugger controls:> B<L> List break/watch/actions 8242 B<o> [...] Set debugger options B<t> [I<n>] [I<expr>] Toggle trace [max depth] ][trace expr] 8243 B<<>[B<<>]|B<{>[B<{>]|B<>>[B<>>] [I<cmd>] Do pre/post-prompt B<b> [I<ln>|I<event>|I<sub>] [I<cnd>] Set breakpoint 8244 B<$prc> [I<N>|I<pat>] Redo a previous command B<B> I<ln|*> Delete a/all breakpoints 8245 B<H> [I<-num>] Display last num commands B<a> [I<ln>] I<cmd> Do cmd before line 8246 B<=> [I<a> I<val>] Define/list an alias B<A> I<ln|*> Delete a/all actions 8247 B<h> [I<db_cmd>] Get help on command B<w> I<expr> Add a watch expression 8248 B<h h> Complete help page B<W> I<expr|*> Delete a/all watch exprs 8249 B<|>[B<|>]I<db_cmd> Send output to pager B<$psh>\[B<$psh>\] I<syscmd> Run cmd in a subprocess 8250 B<q> or B<^D> Quit B<R> Attempt a restart 8251I<Data Examination:> B<expr> Execute perl code, also see: B<s>,B<n>,B<t> I<expr> 8252 B<x>|B<m> I<expr> Evals expr in list context, dumps the result or lists methods. 8253 B<p> I<expr> Print expression (uses script's current package). 8254 B<S> [[B<!>]I<pat>] List subroutine names [not] matching pattern 8255 B<V> [I<Pk> [I<Vars>]] List Variables in Package. Vars can be ~pattern or !pattern. 8256 B<X> [I<Vars>] Same as \"B<V> I<current_package> [I<Vars>]\". B<i> I<class> inheritance tree. 8257 B<y> [I<n> [I<Vars>]] List lexicals in higher scope <n>. Vars same as B<V>. 8258 B<e> Display thread id B<E> Display all thread ids. 8259For more help, type B<h> I<cmd_letter>, or run B<$doccmd perldebug> for all docs. 8260END_SUM 8261 8262 # ')}}; # Fix balance of vi % matching 8263 8264 # and this is really numb... 8265 $pre580_help = " 8266B<T> Stack trace. 8267B<s> [I<expr>] Single step [in I<expr>]. 8268B<n> [I<expr>] Next, steps over subroutine calls [in I<expr>]. 8269B<CR>> Repeat last B<n> or B<s> command. 8270B<r> Return from current subroutine. 8271B<c> [I<line>|I<sub>] Continue; optionally inserts a one-time-only breakpoint 8272 at the specified position. 8273B<l> I<min>B<+>I<incr> List I<incr>+1 lines starting at I<min>. 8274B<l> I<min>B<->I<max> List lines I<min> through I<max>. 8275B<l> I<line> List single I<line>. 8276B<l> I<subname> List first window of lines from subroutine. 8277B<l> I<\$var> List first window of lines from subroutine referenced by I<\$var>. 8278B<l> List next window of lines. 8279B<-> List previous window of lines. 8280B<w> [I<line>] List window around I<line>. 8281B<.> Return to the executed line. 8282B<f> I<filename> Switch to viewing I<filename>. File must be already loaded. 8283 I<filename> may be either the full name of the file, or a regular 8284 expression matching the full file name: 8285 B<f> I</home/me/foo.pl> and B<f> I<oo\\.> may access the same file. 8286 Evals (with saved bodies) are considered to be filenames: 8287 B<f> I<(eval 7)> and B<f> I<eval 7\\b> access the body of the 7th eval 8288 (in the order of execution). 8289B</>I<pattern>B</> Search forwards for I<pattern>; final B</> is optional. 8290B<?>I<pattern>B<?> Search backwards for I<pattern>; final B<?> is optional. 8291B<L> List all breakpoints and actions. 8292B<S> [[B<!>]I<pattern>] List subroutine names [not] matching I<pattern>. 8293B<t> [I<n>] Toggle trace mode (to max I<n> levels below current stack depth) . 8294B<t> [I<n>] I<expr> Trace through execution of I<expr>. 8295B<b> [I<line>] [I<condition>] 8296 Set breakpoint; I<line> defaults to the current execution line; 8297 I<condition> breaks if it evaluates to true, defaults to '1'. 8298B<b> I<subname> [I<condition>] 8299 Set breakpoint at first line of subroutine. 8300B<b> I<\$var> Set breakpoint at first line of subroutine referenced by I<\$var>. 8301B<b> B<load> I<filename> Set breakpoint on 'require'ing the given file. 8302B<b> B<postpone> I<subname> [I<condition>] 8303 Set breakpoint at first line of subroutine after 8304 it is compiled. 8305B<b> B<compile> I<subname> 8306 Stop after the subroutine is compiled. 8307B<d> [I<line>] Delete the breakpoint for I<line>. 8308B<D> Delete all breakpoints. 8309B<a> [I<line>] I<command> 8310 Set an action to be done before the I<line> is executed; 8311 I<line> defaults to the current execution line. 8312 Sequence is: check for breakpoint/watchpoint, print line 8313 if necessary, do action, prompt user if necessary, 8314 execute line. 8315B<a> [I<line>] Delete the action for I<line>. 8316B<A> Delete all actions. 8317B<W> I<expr> Add a global watch-expression. 8318B<W> Delete all watch-expressions. 8319B<V> [I<pkg> [I<vars>]] List some (default all) variables in package (default current). 8320 Use B<~>I<pattern> and B<!>I<pattern> for positive and negative regexps. 8321B<X> [I<vars>] Same as \"B<V> I<currentpackage> [I<vars>]\". 8322B<x> I<expr> Evals expression in list context, dumps the result. 8323B<m> I<expr> Evals expression in list context, prints methods callable 8324 on the first element of the result. 8325B<m> I<class> Prints methods callable via the given class. 8326 8327B<<> ? List Perl commands to run before each prompt. 8328B<<> I<expr> Define Perl command to run before each prompt. 8329B<<<> I<expr> Add to the list of Perl commands to run before each prompt. 8330B<>> ? List Perl commands to run after each prompt. 8331B<>> I<expr> Define Perl command to run after each prompt. 8332B<>>B<>> I<expr> Add to the list of Perl commands to run after each prompt. 8333B<{> I<db_command> Define debugger command to run before each prompt. 8334B<{> ? List debugger commands to run before each prompt. 8335B<{{> I<db_command> Add to the list of debugger commands to run before each prompt. 8336B<$prc> I<number> Redo a previous command (default previous command). 8337B<$prc> I<-number> Redo number'th-to-last command. 8338B<$prc> I<pattern> Redo last command that started with I<pattern>. 8339 See 'B<O> I<recallCommand>' too. 8340B<$psh$psh> I<cmd> Run cmd in a subprocess (reads from DB::IN, writes to DB::OUT)" 8341 . ( 8342 $rc eq $sh 8343 ? "" 8344 : " 8345B<$psh> [I<cmd>] Run I<cmd> in subshell (forces \"\$SHELL -c 'cmd'\")." 8346 ) . " 8347 See 'B<O> I<shellBang>' too. 8348B<source> I<file> Execute I<file> containing debugger commands (may nest). 8349B<H> I<-number> Display last number commands (default all). 8350B<p> I<expr> Same as \"I<print {DB::OUT} expr>\" in current package. 8351B<|>I<dbcmd> Run debugger command, piping DB::OUT to current pager. 8352B<||>I<dbcmd> Same as B<|>I<dbcmd> but DB::OUT is temporarilly select()ed as well. 8353B<\=> [I<alias> I<value>] Define a command alias, or list current aliases. 8354I<command> Execute as a perl statement in current package. 8355B<v> Show versions of loaded modules. 8356B<R> Pure-man-restart of debugger, some of debugger state 8357 and command-line options may be lost. 8358 Currently the following settings are preserved: 8359 history, breakpoints and actions, debugger B<O>ptions 8360 and the following command-line options: I<-w>, I<-I>, I<-e>. 8361 8362B<O> [I<opt>] ... Set boolean option to true 8363B<O> [I<opt>B<?>] Query options 8364B<O> [I<opt>B<=>I<val>] [I<opt>=B<\">I<val>B<\">] ... 8365 Set options. Use quotes if spaces in value. 8366 I<recallCommand>, I<ShellBang> chars used to recall command or spawn shell; 8367 I<pager> program for output of \"|cmd\"; 8368 I<tkRunning> run Tk while prompting (with ReadLine); 8369 I<signalLevel> I<warnLevel> I<dieLevel> level of verbosity; 8370 I<inhibit_exit> Allows stepping off the end of the script. 8371 I<ImmediateStop> Debugger should stop as early as possible. 8372 I<RemotePort> Remote hostname:port for remote debugging 8373 The following options affect what happens with B<V>, B<X>, and B<x> commands: 8374 I<arrayDepth>, I<hashDepth> print only first N elements ('' for all); 8375 I<compactDump>, I<veryCompact> change style of array and hash dump; 8376 I<globPrint> whether to print contents of globs; 8377 I<DumpDBFiles> dump arrays holding debugged files; 8378 I<DumpPackages> dump symbol tables of packages; 8379 I<DumpReused> dump contents of \"reused\" addresses; 8380 I<quote>, I<HighBit>, I<undefPrint> change style of string dump; 8381 I<bareStringify> Do not print the overload-stringified value; 8382 Other options include: 8383 I<PrintRet> affects printing of return value after B<r> command, 8384 I<frame> affects printing messages on subroutine entry/exit. 8385 I<AutoTrace> affects printing messages on possible breaking points. 8386 I<maxTraceLen> gives max length of evals/args listed in stack trace. 8387 I<ornaments> affects screen appearance of the command line. 8388 I<CreateTTY> bits control attempts to create a new TTY on events: 8389 1: on fork() 2: debugger is started inside debugger 8390 4: on startup 8391 During startup options are initialized from \$ENV{PERLDB_OPTS}. 8392 You can put additional initialization options I<TTY>, I<noTTY>, 8393 I<ReadLine>, I<NonStop>, and I<RemotePort> there (or use 8394 B<R> after you set them). 8395 8396B<q> or B<^D> Quit. Set B<\$DB::finished = 0> to debug global destruction. 8397B<h> [I<db_command>] Get help [on a specific debugger command], enter B<|h> to page. 8398B<h h> Summary of debugger commands. 8399B<$doccmd> I<manpage> Runs the external doc viewer B<$doccmd> command on the 8400 named Perl I<manpage>, or on B<$doccmd> itself if omitted. 8401 Set B<\$DB::doccmd> to change viewer. 8402 8403Type '|h' for a paged display if this was too hard to read. 8404 8405"; # Fix balance of vi % matching: }}}} 8406 8407 # note: tabs in the following section are not-so-helpful 8408 $pre580_summary = <<"END_SUM"; 8409I<List/search source lines:> I<Control script execution:> 8410 B<l> [I<ln>|I<sub>] List source code B<T> Stack trace 8411 B<-> or B<.> List previous/current line B<s> [I<expr>] Single step [in expr] 8412 B<w> [I<line>] List around line B<n> [I<expr>] Next, steps over subs 8413 B<f> I<filename> View source in file <B<CR>/B<Enter>> Repeat last B<n> or B<s> 8414 B</>I<pattern>B</> B<?>I<patt>B<?> Search forw/backw B<r> Return from subroutine 8415 B<v> Show versions of modules B<c> [I<ln>|I<sub>] Continue until position 8416I<Debugger controls:> B<L> List break/watch/actions 8417 B<O> [...] Set debugger options B<t> [I<expr>] Toggle trace [trace expr] 8418 B<<>[B<<>]|B<{>[B<{>]|B<>>[B<>>] [I<cmd>] Do pre/post-prompt B<b> [I<ln>|I<event>|I<sub>] [I<cnd>] Set breakpoint 8419 B<$prc> [I<N>|I<pat>] Redo a previous command B<d> [I<ln>] or B<D> Delete a/all breakpoints 8420 B<H> [I<-num>] Display last num commands B<a> [I<ln>] I<cmd> Do cmd before line 8421 B<=> [I<a> I<val>] Define/list an alias B<W> I<expr> Add a watch expression 8422 B<h> [I<db_cmd>] Get help on command B<A> or B<W> Delete all actions/watch 8423 B<|>[B<|>]I<db_cmd> Send output to pager B<$psh>\[B<$psh>\] I<syscmd> Run cmd in a subprocess 8424 B<q> or B<^D> Quit B<R> Attempt a restart 8425I<Data Examination:> B<expr> Execute perl code, also see: B<s>,B<n>,B<t> I<expr> 8426 B<x>|B<m> I<expr> Evals expr in list context, dumps the result or lists methods. 8427 B<p> I<expr> Print expression (uses script's current package). 8428 B<S> [[B<!>]I<pat>] List subroutine names [not] matching pattern 8429 B<V> [I<Pk> [I<Vars>]] List Variables in Package. Vars can be ~pattern or !pattern. 8430 B<X> [I<Vars>] Same as \"B<V> I<current_package> [I<Vars>]\". 8431 B<y> [I<n> [I<Vars>]] List lexicals in higher scope <n>. Vars same as B<V>. 8432For more help, type B<h> I<cmd_letter>, or run B<$doccmd perldebug> for all docs. 8433END_SUM 8434 8435 # ')}}; # Fix balance of vi % matching 8436 8437} ## end sub sethelp 8438 8439=head2 C<print_help()> 8440 8441Most of what C<print_help> does is just text formatting. It finds the 8442C<B> and C<I> ornaments, cleans them off, and substitutes the proper 8443terminal control characters to simulate them (courtesy of 8444C<Term::ReadLine::TermCap>). 8445 8446=cut 8447 8448sub print_help { 8449 my $help_str = shift; 8450 8451 # Restore proper alignment destroyed by eeevil I<> and B<> 8452 # ornaments: A pox on both their houses! 8453 # 8454 # A help command will have everything up to and including 8455 # the first tab sequence padded into a field 16 (or if indented 20) 8456 # wide. If it's wider than that, an extra space will be added. 8457 $help_str =~ s{ 8458 ^ # only matters at start of line 8459 ( \ {4} | \t )* # some subcommands are indented 8460 ( < ? # so <CR> works 8461 [BI] < [^\t\n] + ) # find an eeevil ornament 8462 ( \t+ ) # original separation, discarded 8463 ( .* ) # this will now start (no earlier) than 8464 # column 16 8465 } { 8466 my($leadwhite, $command, $midwhite, $text) = ($1, $2, $3, $4); 8467 my $clean = $command; 8468 $clean =~ s/[BI]<([^>]*)>/$1/g; 8469 8470 # replace with this whole string: 8471 ($leadwhite ? " " x 4 : "") 8472 . $command 8473 . ((" " x (16 + ($leadwhite ? 4 : 0) - length($clean))) || " ") 8474 . $text; 8475 8476 }mgex; 8477 8478 $help_str =~ s{ # handle bold ornaments 8479 B < ( [^>] + | > ) > 8480 } { 8481 $Term::ReadLine::TermCap::rl_term_set[2] 8482 . $1 8483 . $Term::ReadLine::TermCap::rl_term_set[3] 8484 }gex; 8485 8486 $help_str =~ s{ # handle italic ornaments 8487 I < ( [^>] + | > ) > 8488 } { 8489 $Term::ReadLine::TermCap::rl_term_set[0] 8490 . $1 8491 . $Term::ReadLine::TermCap::rl_term_set[1] 8492 }gex; 8493 8494 local $\ = ''; 8495 print {$OUT} $help_str; 8496 8497 return; 8498} ## end sub print_help 8499 8500=head2 C<fix_less> 8501 8502This routine does a lot of gyrations to be sure that the pager is C<less>. 8503It checks for C<less> masquerading as C<more> and records the result in 8504C<$fixed_less> so we don't have to go through doing the stats again. 8505 8506=cut 8507 8508use vars qw($fixed_less); 8509 8510sub _calc_is_less { 8511 if ($pager =~ /\bless\b/) 8512 { 8513 return 1; 8514 } 8515 elsif ($pager =~ /\bmore\b/) 8516 { 8517 # Nope, set to more. See what's out there. 8518 my @st_more = stat('/usr/bin/more'); 8519 my @st_less = stat('/usr/bin/less'); 8520 8521 # is it really less, pretending to be more? 8522 return ( 8523 @st_more 8524 && @st_less 8525 && $st_more[0] == $st_less[0] 8526 && $st_more[1] == $st_less[1] 8527 ); 8528 } 8529 else { 8530 return; 8531 } 8532} 8533 8534sub fix_less { 8535 8536 # We already know if this is set. 8537 return if $fixed_less; 8538 8539 # changes environment! 8540 # 'r' added so we don't do (slow) stats again. 8541 $fixed_less = 1 if _calc_is_less(); 8542 8543 return; 8544} ## end sub fix_less 8545 8546=head1 DIE AND WARN MANAGEMENT 8547 8548=head2 C<diesignal> 8549 8550C<diesignal> is a just-drop-dead C<die> handler. It's most useful when trying 8551to debug a debugger problem. 8552 8553It does its best to report the error that occurred, and then forces the 8554program, debugger, and everything to die. 8555 8556=cut 8557 8558sub diesignal { 8559 8560 # No entry/exit messages. 8561 local $frame = 0; 8562 8563 # No return value prints. 8564 local $doret = -2; 8565 8566 # set the abort signal handling to the default (just terminate). 8567 $SIG{'ABRT'} = 'DEFAULT'; 8568 8569 # If we enter the signal handler recursively, kill myself with an 8570 # abort signal (so we just terminate). 8571 kill 'ABRT', $$ if $panic++; 8572 8573 # If we can show detailed info, do so. 8574 if ( defined &Carp::longmess ) { 8575 8576 # Don't recursively enter the warn handler, since we're carping. 8577 local $SIG{__WARN__} = ''; 8578 8579 # Skip two levels before reporting traceback: we're skipping 8580 # mydie and confess. 8581 local $Carp::CarpLevel = 2; # mydie + confess 8582 8583 # Tell us all about it. 8584 _db_warn( Carp::longmess("Signal @_") ); 8585 } 8586 8587 # No Carp. Tell us about the signal as best we can. 8588 else { 8589 local $\ = ''; 8590 print $DB::OUT "Got signal @_\n"; 8591 } 8592 8593 # Drop dead. 8594 kill 'ABRT', $$; 8595} ## end sub diesignal 8596 8597=head2 C<dbwarn> 8598 8599The debugger's own default C<$SIG{__WARN__}> handler. We load C<Carp> to 8600be able to get a stack trace, and output the warning message vi C<DB::dbwarn()>. 8601 8602=cut 8603 8604sub dbwarn { 8605 8606 # No entry/exit trace. 8607 local $frame = 0; 8608 8609 # No return value printing. 8610 local $doret = -2; 8611 8612 # Turn off warn and die handling to prevent recursive entries to this 8613 # routine. 8614 local $SIG{__WARN__} = ''; 8615 local $SIG{__DIE__} = ''; 8616 8617 # Load Carp if we can. If $^S is false (current thing being compiled isn't 8618 # done yet), we may not be able to do a require. 8619 eval { require Carp } 8620 if defined $^S; # If error/warning during compilation, 8621 # require may be broken. 8622 8623 # Use the core warn() unless Carp loaded OK. 8624 CORE::warn( @_, 8625 "\nCannot print stack trace, load with -MCarp option to see stack" ), 8626 return 8627 unless defined &Carp::longmess; 8628 8629 # Save the current values of $single and $trace, and then turn them off. 8630 my ( $mysingle, $mytrace ) = ( $single, $trace ); 8631 $single = 0; 8632 $trace = 0; 8633 8634 # We can call Carp::longmess without its being "debugged" (which we 8635 # don't want - we just want to use it!). Capture this for later. 8636 my $mess = Carp::longmess(@_); 8637 8638 # Restore $single and $trace to their original values. 8639 ( $single, $trace ) = ( $mysingle, $mytrace ); 8640 8641 # Use the debugger's own special way of printing warnings to print 8642 # the stack trace message. 8643 _db_warn($mess); 8644} ## end sub dbwarn 8645 8646=head2 C<dbdie> 8647 8648The debugger's own C<$SIG{__DIE__}> handler. Handles providing a stack trace 8649by loading C<Carp> and calling C<Carp::longmess()> to get it. We turn off 8650single stepping and tracing during the call to C<Carp::longmess> to avoid 8651debugging it - we just want to use it. 8652 8653If C<dieLevel> is zero, we let the program being debugged handle the 8654exceptions. If it's 1, you get backtraces for any exception. If it's 2, 8655the debugger takes over all exception handling, printing a backtrace and 8656displaying the exception via its C<dbwarn()> routine. 8657 8658=cut 8659 8660sub dbdie { 8661 local $frame = 0; 8662 local $doret = -2; 8663 local $SIG{__DIE__} = ''; 8664 local $SIG{__WARN__} = ''; 8665 if ( $dieLevel > 2 ) { 8666 local $SIG{__WARN__} = \&dbwarn; 8667 _db_warn(@_); # Yell no matter what 8668 return; 8669 } 8670 if ( $dieLevel < 2 ) { 8671 die @_ if $^S; # in eval propagate 8672 } 8673 8674 # The code used to check $^S to see if compilation of the current thing 8675 # hadn't finished. We don't do it anymore, figuring eval is pretty stable. 8676 eval { require Carp }; 8677 8678 die( @_, 8679 "\nCannot print stack trace, load with -MCarp option to see stack" ) 8680 unless defined &Carp::longmess; 8681 8682 # We do not want to debug this chunk (automatic disabling works 8683 # inside DB::DB, but not in Carp). Save $single and $trace, turn them off, 8684 # get the stack trace from Carp::longmess (if possible), restore $signal 8685 # and $trace, and then die with the stack trace. 8686 my ( $mysingle, $mytrace ) = ( $single, $trace ); 8687 $single = 0; 8688 $trace = 0; 8689 my $mess = "@_"; 8690 { 8691 8692 package Carp; # Do not include us in the list 8693 eval { $mess = Carp::longmess(@_); }; 8694 } 8695 ( $single, $trace ) = ( $mysingle, $mytrace ); 8696 die $mess; 8697} ## end sub dbdie 8698 8699=head2 C<warnlevel()> 8700 8701Set the C<$DB::warnLevel> variable that stores the value of the 8702C<warnLevel> option. Calling C<warnLevel()> with a positive value 8703results in the debugger taking over all warning handlers. Setting 8704C<warnLevel> to zero leaves any warning handlers set up by the program 8705being debugged in place. 8706 8707=cut 8708 8709sub warnLevel { 8710 if (@_) { 8711 my $prevwarn = $SIG{__WARN__} unless $warnLevel; 8712 $warnLevel = shift; 8713 if ($warnLevel) { 8714 $SIG{__WARN__} = \&DB::dbwarn; 8715 } 8716 elsif ($prevwarn) { 8717 $SIG{__WARN__} = $prevwarn; 8718 } else { 8719 undef $SIG{__WARN__}; 8720 } 8721 } ## end if (@_) 8722 $warnLevel; 8723} ## end sub warnLevel 8724 8725=head2 C<dielevel> 8726 8727Similar to C<warnLevel>. Non-zero values for C<dieLevel> result in the 8728C<DB::dbdie()> function overriding any other C<die()> handler. Setting it to 8729zero lets you use your own C<die()> handler. 8730 8731=cut 8732 8733sub dieLevel { 8734 local $\ = ''; 8735 if (@_) { 8736 my $prevdie = $SIG{__DIE__} unless $dieLevel; 8737 $dieLevel = shift; 8738 if ($dieLevel) { 8739 8740 # Always set it to dbdie() for non-zero values. 8741 $SIG{__DIE__} = \&DB::dbdie; # if $dieLevel < 2; 8742 8743 # No longer exists, so don't try to use it. 8744 #$SIG{__DIE__} = \&DB::diehard if $dieLevel >= 2; 8745 8746 # If we've finished initialization, mention that stack dumps 8747 # are enabled, If dieLevel is 1, we won't stack dump if we die 8748 # in an eval(). 8749 print $OUT "Stack dump during die enabled", 8750 ( $dieLevel == 1 ? " outside of evals" : "" ), ".\n" 8751 if $I_m_init; 8752 8753 # XXX This is probably obsolete, given that diehard() is gone. 8754 print $OUT "Dump printed too.\n" if $dieLevel > 2; 8755 } ## end if ($dieLevel) 8756 8757 # Put the old one back if there was one. 8758 elsif ($prevdie) { 8759 $SIG{__DIE__} = $prevdie; 8760 print $OUT "Default die handler restored.\n"; 8761 } else { 8762 undef $SIG{__DIE__}; 8763 print $OUT "Die handler removed.\n"; 8764 } 8765 } ## end if (@_) 8766 $dieLevel; 8767} ## end sub dieLevel 8768 8769=head2 C<signalLevel> 8770 8771Number three in a series: set C<signalLevel> to zero to keep your own 8772signal handler for C<SIGSEGV> and/or C<SIGBUS>. Otherwise, the debugger 8773takes over and handles them with C<DB::diesignal()>. 8774 8775=cut 8776 8777sub signalLevel { 8778 if (@_) { 8779 my $prevsegv = $SIG{SEGV} unless $signalLevel; 8780 my $prevbus = $SIG{BUS} unless $signalLevel; 8781 $signalLevel = shift; 8782 if ($signalLevel) { 8783 $SIG{SEGV} = \&DB::diesignal; 8784 $SIG{BUS} = \&DB::diesignal; 8785 } 8786 else { 8787 $SIG{SEGV} = $prevsegv; 8788 $SIG{BUS} = $prevbus; 8789 } 8790 } ## end if (@_) 8791 $signalLevel; 8792} ## end sub signalLevel 8793 8794=head1 SUBROUTINE DECODING SUPPORT 8795 8796These subroutines are used during the C<x> and C<X> commands to try to 8797produce as much information as possible about a code reference. They use 8798L<Devel::Peek> to try to find the glob in which this code reference lives 8799(if it does) - this allows us to actually code references which correspond 8800to named subroutines (including those aliased via glob assignment). 8801 8802=head2 C<CvGV_name()> 8803 8804Wrapper for C<CvGV_name_or_bust>; tries to get the name of a reference 8805via that routine. If this fails, return the reference again (when the 8806reference is stringified, it'll come out as C<SOMETHING(0x...)>). 8807 8808=cut 8809 8810sub CvGV_name { 8811 my $in = shift; 8812 my $name = CvGV_name_or_bust($in); 8813 defined $name ? $name : $in; 8814} 8815 8816=head2 C<CvGV_name_or_bust> I<coderef> 8817 8818Calls L<Devel::Peek> to try to find the glob the ref lives in; returns 8819C<undef> if L<Devel::Peek> can't be loaded, or if C<Devel::Peek::CvGV> can't 8820find a glob for this ref. 8821 8822Returns C<< I<package>::I<glob name> >> if the code ref is found in a glob. 8823 8824=cut 8825 8826use vars qw($skipCvGV); 8827 8828sub CvGV_name_or_bust { 8829 my $in = shift; 8830 return if $skipCvGV; # Backdoor to avoid problems if XS broken... 8831 return unless ref $in; 8832 $in = \&$in; # Hard reference... 8833 eval { require Devel::Peek; 1 } or return; 8834 my $gv = Devel::Peek::CvGV($in) or return; 8835 *$gv{PACKAGE} . '::' . *$gv{NAME}; 8836} ## end sub CvGV_name_or_bust 8837 8838=head2 C<find_sub> 8839 8840A utility routine used in various places; finds the file where a subroutine 8841was defined, and returns that filename and a line-number range. 8842 8843Tries to use C<@sub> first; if it can't find it there, it tries building a 8844reference to the subroutine and uses C<CvGV_name_or_bust> to locate it, 8845loading it into C<@sub> as a side effect (XXX I think). If it can't find it 8846this way, it brute-force searches C<%sub>, checking for identical references. 8847 8848=cut 8849 8850sub _find_sub_helper { 8851 my $subr = shift; 8852 8853 return unless defined &$subr; 8854 my $name = CvGV_name_or_bust($subr); 8855 my $data; 8856 $data = $sub{$name} if defined $name; 8857 return $data if defined $data; 8858 8859 # Old stupid way... 8860 $subr = \&$subr; # Hard reference 8861 my $s; 8862 for ( keys %sub ) { 8863 $s = $_, last if $subr eq \&$_; 8864 } 8865 if ($s) 8866 { 8867 return $sub{$s}; 8868 } 8869 else 8870 { 8871 return; 8872 } 8873 8874} 8875 8876sub find_sub { 8877 my $subr = shift; 8878 return ( $sub{$subr} || _find_sub_helper($subr) ); 8879} ## end sub find_sub 8880 8881=head2 C<methods> 8882 8883A subroutine that uses the utility function C<methods_via> to find all the 8884methods in the class corresponding to the current reference and in 8885C<UNIVERSAL>. 8886 8887=cut 8888 8889use vars qw(%seen); 8890 8891sub methods { 8892 8893 # Figure out the class - either this is the class or it's a reference 8894 # to something blessed into that class. 8895 my $class = shift; 8896 $class = ref $class if ref $class; 8897 8898 local %seen; 8899 8900 # Show the methods that this class has. 8901 methods_via( $class, '', 1 ); 8902 8903 # Show the methods that UNIVERSAL has. 8904 methods_via( 'UNIVERSAL', 'UNIVERSAL', 0 ); 8905} ## end sub methods 8906 8907=head2 C<methods_via($class, $prefix, $crawl_upward)> 8908 8909C<methods_via> does the work of crawling up the C<@ISA> tree and reporting 8910all the parent class methods. C<$class> is the name of the next class to 8911try; C<$prefix> is the message prefix, which gets built up as we go up the 8912C<@ISA> tree to show parentage; C<$crawl_upward> is 1 if we should try to go 8913higher in the C<@ISA> tree, 0 if we should stop. 8914 8915=cut 8916 8917sub methods_via { 8918 8919 # If we've processed this class already, just quit. 8920 my $class = shift; 8921 return if $seen{$class}++; 8922 8923 # This is a package that is contributing the methods we're about to print. 8924 my $prefix = shift; 8925 my $prepend = $prefix ? "via $prefix: " : ''; 8926 my @to_print; 8927 8928 # Extract from all the symbols in this class. 8929 my $class_ref = do { no strict "refs"; \%{$class . '::'} }; 8930 while (my ($name, $glob) = each %$class_ref) { 8931 # references directly in the symbol table are Proxy Constant 8932 # Subroutines, and are by their very nature defined 8933 # Otherwise, check if the thing is a typeglob, and if it is, it decays 8934 # to a subroutine reference, which can be tested by defined. 8935 # $glob might also be the value -1 (from sub foo;) 8936 # or (say) '$$' (from sub foo ($$);) 8937 # \$glob will be SCALAR in both cases. 8938 if ((ref $glob || ($glob && ref \$glob eq 'GLOB' && defined &$glob)) 8939 && !$seen{$name}++) { 8940 push @to_print, "$prepend$name\n"; 8941 } 8942 } 8943 8944 { 8945 local $\ = ''; 8946 local $, = ''; 8947 print $DB::OUT $_ foreach sort @to_print; 8948 } 8949 8950 # If the $crawl_upward argument is false, just quit here. 8951 return unless shift; 8952 8953 # $crawl_upward true: keep going up the tree. 8954 # Find all the classes this one is a subclass of. 8955 my $class_ISA_ref = do { no strict "refs"; \@{"${class}::ISA"} }; 8956 for my $name ( @$class_ISA_ref ) { 8957 8958 # Set up the new prefix. 8959 $prepend = $prefix ? $prefix . " -> $name" : $name; 8960 8961 # Crawl up the tree and keep trying to crawl up. 8962 methods_via( $name, $prepend, 1 ); 8963 } 8964} ## end sub methods_via 8965 8966=head2 C<setman> - figure out which command to use to show documentation 8967 8968Just checks the contents of C<$^O> and sets the C<$doccmd> global accordingly. 8969 8970=cut 8971 8972sub setman { 8973 $doccmd = $^O !~ /^(?:MSWin32|VMS|os2|dos|amigaos|riscos|NetWare)\z/s 8974 ? "man" # O Happy Day! 8975 : "perldoc"; # Alas, poor unfortunates 8976} ## end sub setman 8977 8978=head2 C<runman> - run the appropriate command to show documentation 8979 8980Accepts a man page name; runs the appropriate command to display it (set up 8981during debugger initialization). Uses C<_db_system()> to avoid mucking up the 8982program's STDIN and STDOUT. 8983 8984=cut 8985 8986sub runman { 8987 my $page = shift; 8988 unless ($page) { 8989 _db_system("$doccmd $doccmd"); 8990 return; 8991 } 8992 8993 # this way user can override, like with $doccmd="man -Mwhatever" 8994 # or even just "man " to disable the path check. 8995 if ( $doccmd ne 'man' ) { 8996 _db_system("$doccmd $page"); 8997 return; 8998 } 8999 9000 $page = 'perl' if lc($page) eq 'help'; 9001 9002 require Config; 9003 my $man1dir = $Config::Config{man1direxp}; 9004 my $man3dir = $Config::Config{man3direxp}; 9005 for ( $man1dir, $man3dir ) { s#/[^/]*\z## if /\S/ } 9006 my $manpath = ''; 9007 $manpath .= "$man1dir:" if $man1dir =~ /\S/; 9008 $manpath .= "$man3dir:" if $man3dir =~ /\S/ && $man1dir ne $man3dir; 9009 chop $manpath if $manpath; 9010 9011 # harmless if missing, I figure 9012 local $ENV{MANPATH} = $manpath if $manpath; 9013 my $nopathopt = $^O =~ /dunno what goes here/; 9014 if ( 9015 CORE::system( 9016 $doccmd, 9017 9018 # I just *know* there are men without -M 9019 ( ( $manpath && !$nopathopt ) ? ( "-M", $manpath ) : () ), 9020 split ' ', $page 9021 ) 9022 ) 9023 { 9024 unless ( $page =~ /^perl\w/ ) { 9025 # Previously the debugger contained a list which it slurped in, 9026 # listing the known "perl" manpages. However, it was out of date, 9027 # with errors both of omission and inclusion. This approach is 9028 # considerably less complex. The failure mode on a butchered 9029 # install is simply that the user has to run man or perldoc 9030 # "manually" with the full manpage name. 9031 9032 # There is a list of $^O values in installperl to determine whether 9033 # the directory is 'pods' or 'pod'. However, we can avoid tight 9034 # coupling to that by simply checking the "non-standard" 'pods' 9035 # first. 9036 my $pods = "$Config::Config{privlibexp}/pods"; 9037 $pods = "$Config::Config{privlibexp}/pod" 9038 unless -d $pods; 9039 if (-f "$pods/perl$page.pod") { 9040 CORE::system( $doccmd, 9041 ( ( $manpath && !$nopathopt ) ? ( "-M", $manpath ) : () ), 9042 "perl$page" ); 9043 } 9044 } 9045 } ## end if (CORE::system($doccmd... 9046} ## end sub runman 9047 9048#use Carp; # This did break, left for debugging 9049 9050=head1 DEBUGGER INITIALIZATION - THE SECOND BEGIN BLOCK 9051 9052Because of the way the debugger interface to the Perl core is designed, any 9053debugger package globals that C<DB::sub()> requires have to be defined before 9054any subroutines can be called. These are defined in the second C<BEGIN> block. 9055 9056This block sets things up so that (basically) the world is sane 9057before the debugger starts executing. We set up various variables that the 9058debugger has to have set up before the Perl core starts running: 9059 9060=over 4 9061 9062=item * 9063 9064The debugger's own filehandles (copies of STD and STDOUT for now). 9065 9066=item * 9067 9068Characters for shell escapes, the recall command, and the history command. 9069 9070=item * 9071 9072The maximum recursion depth. 9073 9074=item * 9075 9076The size of a C<w> command's window. 9077 9078=item * 9079 9080The before-this-line context to be printed in a C<v> (view a window around this line) command. 9081 9082=item * 9083 9084The fact that we're not in a sub at all right now. 9085 9086=item * 9087 9088The default SIGINT handler for the debugger. 9089 9090=item * 9091 9092The appropriate value of the flag in C<$^D> that says the debugger is running 9093 9094=item * 9095 9096The current debugger recursion level 9097 9098=item * 9099 9100The list of postponed items and the C<$single> stack (XXX define this) 9101 9102=item * 9103 9104That we want no return values and no subroutine entry/exit trace. 9105 9106=back 9107 9108=cut 9109 9110# The following BEGIN is very handy if debugger goes havoc, debugging debugger? 9111 9112use vars qw($db_stop); 9113 9114BEGIN { # This does not compile, alas. (XXX eh?) 9115 $IN = \*STDIN; # For bugs before DB::OUT has been opened 9116 $OUT = \*STDERR; # For errors before DB::OUT has been opened 9117 9118 # Define characters used by command parsing. 9119 $sh = '!'; # Shell escape (does not work) 9120 $rc = ','; # Recall command (does not work) 9121 @hist = ('?'); # Show history (does not work) 9122 @truehist = (); # Can be saved for replay (per session) 9123 9124 # This defines the point at which you get the 'deep recursion' 9125 # warning. It MUST be defined or the debugger will not load. 9126 $deep = 1000; 9127 9128 # Number of lines around the current one that are shown in the 9129 # 'w' command. 9130 $window = 10; 9131 9132 # How much before-the-current-line context the 'v' command should 9133 # use in calculating the start of the window it will display. 9134 $preview = 3; 9135 9136 # We're not in any sub yet, but we need this to be a defined value. 9137 $sub = ''; 9138 9139 # Set up the debugger's interrupt handler. It simply sets a flag 9140 # ($signal) that DB::DB() will check before each command is executed. 9141 $SIG{INT} = \&DB::catch; 9142 9143 # The following lines supposedly, if uncommented, allow the debugger to 9144 # debug itself. Perhaps we can try that someday. 9145 # This may be enabled to debug debugger: 9146 #$warnLevel = 1 unless defined $warnLevel; 9147 #$dieLevel = 1 unless defined $dieLevel; 9148 #$signalLevel = 1 unless defined $signalLevel; 9149 9150 # This is the flag that says "a debugger is running, please call 9151 # DB::DB and DB::sub". We will turn it on forcibly before we try to 9152 # execute anything in the user's context, because we always want to 9153 # get control back. 9154 $db_stop = 0; # Compiler warning ... 9155 $db_stop = 1 << 30; # ... because this is only used in an eval() later. 9156 9157 # This variable records how many levels we're nested in debugging. Used 9158 # Used in the debugger prompt, and in determining whether it's all over or 9159 # not. 9160 $level = 0; # Level of recursive debugging 9161 9162 # "Triggers bug (?) in perl if we postpone this until runtime." 9163 # XXX No details on this yet, or whether we should fix the bug instead 9164 # of work around it. Stay tuned. 9165 @stack = (0); 9166 9167 # Used to track the current stack depth using the auto-stacked-variable 9168 # trick. 9169 $stack_depth = 0; # Localized repeatedly; simple way to track $#stack 9170 9171 # Don't print return values on exiting a subroutine. 9172 $doret = -2; 9173 9174 # No extry/exit tracing. 9175 $frame = 0; 9176 9177} ## end BEGIN 9178 9179BEGIN { $^W = $ini_warn; } # Switch warnings back 9180 9181=head1 READLINE SUPPORT - COMPLETION FUNCTION 9182 9183=head2 db_complete 9184 9185C<readline> support - adds command completion to basic C<readline>. 9186 9187Returns a list of possible completions to C<readline> when invoked. C<readline> 9188will print the longest common substring following the text already entered. 9189 9190If there is only a single possible completion, C<readline> will use it in full. 9191 9192This code uses C<map> and C<grep> heavily to create lists of possible 9193completion. Think LISP in this section. 9194 9195=cut 9196 9197sub db_complete { 9198 9199 # Specific code for b c l V m f O, &blah, $blah, @blah, %blah 9200 # $text is the text to be completed. 9201 # $line is the incoming line typed by the user. 9202 # $start is the start of the text to be completed in the incoming line. 9203 my ( $text, $line, $start ) = @_; 9204 9205 # Save the initial text. 9206 # The search pattern is current package, ::, extract the next qualifier 9207 # Prefix and pack are set to undef. 9208 my ( $itext, $search, $prefix, $pack ) = 9209 ( $text, "^\Q${package}::\E([^:]+)\$" ); 9210 9211=head3 C<b postpone|compile> 9212 9213=over 4 9214 9215=item * 9216 9217Find all the subroutines that might match in this package 9218 9219=item * 9220 9221Add C<postpone>, C<load>, and C<compile> as possibles (we may be completing the keyword itself) 9222 9223=item * 9224 9225Include all the rest of the subs that are known 9226 9227=item * 9228 9229C<grep> out the ones that match the text we have so far 9230 9231=item * 9232 9233Return this as the list of possible completions 9234 9235=back 9236 9237=cut 9238 9239 return sort grep /^\Q$text/, ( keys %sub ), 9240 qw(postpone load compile), # subroutines 9241 ( map { /$search/ ? ($1) : () } keys %sub ) 9242 if ( substr $line, 0, $start ) =~ /^\|*[blc]\s+((postpone|compile)\s+)?$/; 9243 9244=head3 C<b load> 9245 9246Get all the possible files from C<@INC> as it currently stands and 9247select the ones that match the text so far. 9248 9249=cut 9250 9251 return sort grep /^\Q$text/, values %INC # files 9252 if ( substr $line, 0, $start ) =~ /^\|*b\s+load\s+$/; 9253 9254=head3 C<V> (list variable) and C<m> (list modules) 9255 9256There are two entry points for these commands: 9257 9258=head4 Unqualified package names 9259 9260Get the top-level packages and grab everything that matches the text 9261so far. For each match, recursively complete the partial packages to 9262get all possible matching packages. Return this sorted list. 9263 9264=cut 9265 9266 return sort map { ( $_, db_complete( $_ . "::", "V ", 2 ) ) } 9267 grep /^\Q$text/, map { /^(.*)::$/ ? ($1) : () } keys %:: # top-packages 9268 if ( substr $line, 0, $start ) =~ /^\|*[Vm]\s+$/ and $text =~ /^\w*$/; 9269 9270=head4 Qualified package names 9271 9272Take a partially-qualified package and find all subpackages for it 9273by getting all the subpackages for the package so far, matching all 9274the subpackages against the text, and discarding all of them which 9275start with 'main::'. Return this list. 9276 9277=cut 9278 9279 return sort map { ( $_, db_complete( $_ . "::", "V ", 2 ) ) } 9280 grep !/^main::/, grep /^\Q$text/, 9281 map { /^(.*)::$/ ? ( $prefix . "::$1" ) : () } 9282 do { no strict 'refs'; keys %{ $prefix . '::' } } 9283 if ( substr $line, 0, $start ) =~ /^\|*[Vm]\s+$/ 9284 and $text =~ /^(.*[^:])::?(\w*)$/ 9285 and $prefix = $1; 9286 9287=head3 C<f> - switch files 9288 9289Here, we want to get a fully-qualified filename for the C<f> command. 9290Possibilities are: 9291 9292=over 4 9293 9294=item 1. The original source file itself 9295 9296=item 2. A file from C<@INC> 9297 9298=item 3. An C<eval> (the debugger gets a C<(eval N)> fake file for each C<eval>). 9299 9300=back 9301 9302=cut 9303 9304 if ( $line =~ /^\|*f\s+(.*)/ ) { # Loaded files 9305 # We might possibly want to switch to an eval (which has a "filename" 9306 # like '(eval 9)'), so we may need to clean up the completion text 9307 # before proceeding. 9308 $prefix = length($1) - length($text); 9309 $text = $1; 9310 9311=pod 9312 9313Under the debugger, source files are represented as C<_E<lt>/fullpath/to/file> 9314(C<eval>s are C<_E<lt>(eval NNN)>) keys in C<%main::>. We pull all of these 9315out of C<%main::>, add the initial source file, and extract the ones that 9316match the completion text so far. 9317 9318=cut 9319 9320 return sort 9321 map { substr $_, 2 + $prefix } grep /^_<\Q$text/, ( keys %main:: ), 9322 $0; 9323 } ## end if ($line =~ /^\|*f\s+(.*)/) 9324 9325=head3 Subroutine name completion 9326 9327We look through all of the defined subs (the keys of C<%sub>) and 9328return both all the possible matches to the subroutine name plus 9329all the matches qualified to the current package. 9330 9331=cut 9332 9333 if ( ( substr $text, 0, 1 ) eq '&' ) { # subroutines 9334 $text = substr $text, 1; 9335 $prefix = "&"; 9336 return sort map "$prefix$_", grep /^\Q$text/, ( keys %sub ), 9337 ( 9338 map { /$search/ ? ($1) : () } 9339 keys %sub 9340 ); 9341 } ## end if ((substr $text, 0, ... 9342 9343=head3 Scalar, array, and hash completion: partially qualified package 9344 9345Much like the above, except we have to do a little more cleanup: 9346 9347=cut 9348 9349 if ( $text =~ /^[\$@%](.*)::(.*)/ ) { # symbols in a package 9350 9351=pod 9352 9353=over 4 9354 9355=item * 9356 9357Determine the package that the symbol is in. Put it in C<::> (effectively C<main::>) if no package is specified. 9358 9359=cut 9360 9361 $pack = ( $1 eq 'main' ? '' : $1 ) . '::'; 9362 9363=pod 9364 9365=item * 9366 9367Figure out the prefix vs. what needs completing. 9368 9369=cut 9370 9371 $prefix = ( substr $text, 0, 1 ) . $1 . '::'; 9372 $text = $2; 9373 9374=pod 9375 9376=item * 9377 9378Look through all the symbols in the package. C<grep> out all the possible hashes/arrays/scalars, and then C<grep> the possible matches out of those. C<map> the prefix onto all the possibilities. 9379 9380=cut 9381 9382 my @out = do { 9383 no strict 'refs'; 9384 map "$prefix$_", grep /^\Q$text/, grep /^_?[a-zA-Z]/, 9385 keys %$pack; 9386 }; 9387 9388=pod 9389 9390=item * 9391 9392If there's only one hit, and it's a package qualifier, and it's not equal to the initial text, re-complete it using the symbol we actually found. 9393 9394=cut 9395 9396 if ( @out == 1 and $out[0] =~ /::$/ and $out[0] ne $itext ) { 9397 return db_complete( $out[0], $line, $start ); 9398 } 9399 9400 # Return the list of possibles. 9401 return sort @out; 9402 9403 } ## end if ($text =~ /^[\$@%](.*)::(.*)/) 9404 9405=pod 9406 9407=back 9408 9409=head3 Symbol completion: current package or package C<main>. 9410 9411=cut 9412 9413 if ( $text =~ /^[\$@%]/ ) { # symbols (in $package + packages in main) 9414=pod 9415 9416=over 4 9417 9418=item * 9419 9420If it's C<main>, delete main to just get C<::> leading. 9421 9422=cut 9423 9424 $pack = ( $package eq 'main' ? '' : $package ) . '::'; 9425 9426=pod 9427 9428=item * 9429 9430We set the prefix to the item's sigil, and trim off the sigil to get the text to be completed. 9431 9432=cut 9433 9434 $prefix = substr $text, 0, 1; 9435 $text = substr $text, 1; 9436 9437 my @out; 9438 9439=pod 9440 9441=item * 9442 9443We look for the lexical scope above DB::DB and auto-complete lexical variables 9444if PadWalker could be loaded. 9445 9446=cut 9447 9448 if (not $text =~ /::/ and eval { 9449 local @INC = @INC; 9450 pop @INC if $INC[-1] eq '.'; 9451 require PadWalker } ) { 9452 my $level = 1; 9453 while (1) { 9454 my @info = caller($level); 9455 $level++; 9456 $level = -1, last 9457 if not @info; 9458 last if $info[3] eq 'DB::DB'; 9459 } 9460 if ($level > 0) { 9461 my $lexicals = PadWalker::peek_my($level); 9462 push @out, grep /^\Q$prefix$text/, keys %$lexicals; 9463 } 9464 } 9465 9466=pod 9467 9468=item * 9469 9470If the package is C<::> (C<main>), create an empty list; if it's something else, create a list of all the packages known. Append whichever list to a list of all the possible symbols in the current package. C<grep> out the matches to the text entered so far, then C<map> the prefix back onto the symbols. 9471 9472=cut 9473 9474 push @out, map "$prefix$_", grep /^\Q$text/, 9475 ( grep /^_?[a-zA-Z]/, do { no strict 'refs'; keys %$pack } ), 9476 ( $pack eq '::' ? () : ( grep /::$/, keys %:: ) ); 9477 9478=item * 9479 9480If there's only one hit, it's a package qualifier, and it's not equal to the initial text, recomplete using this symbol. 9481 9482=back 9483 9484=cut 9485 9486 if ( @out == 1 and $out[0] =~ /::$/ and $out[0] ne $itext ) { 9487 return db_complete( $out[0], $line, $start ); 9488 } 9489 9490 # Return the list of possibles. 9491 return sort @out; 9492 } ## end if ($text =~ /^[\$@%]/) 9493 9494=head3 Options 9495 9496We use C<option_val()> to look up the current value of the option. If there's 9497only a single value, we complete the command in such a way that it is a 9498complete command for setting the option in question. If there are multiple 9499possible values, we generate a command consisting of the option plus a trailing 9500question mark, which, if executed, will list the current value of the option. 9501 9502=cut 9503 9504 if ( ( substr $line, 0, $start ) =~ /^\|*[oO]\b.*\s$/ ) 9505 { # Options after space 9506 # We look for the text to be matched in the list of possible options, 9507 # and fetch the current value. 9508 my @out = grep /^\Q$text/, @options; 9509 my $val = option_val( $out[0], undef ); 9510 9511 # Set up a 'query option's value' command. 9512 my $out = '? '; 9513 if ( not defined $val or $val =~ /[\n\r]/ ) { 9514 9515 # There's really nothing else we can do. 9516 } 9517 9518 # We have a value. Create a proper option-setting command. 9519 elsif ( $val =~ /\s/ ) { 9520 9521 # XXX This may be an extraneous variable. 9522 my $found; 9523 9524 # We'll want to quote the string (because of the embedded 9525 # whtespace), but we want to make sure we don't end up with 9526 # mismatched quote characters. We try several possibilities. 9527 foreach my $l ( split //, qq/\"\'\#\|/ ) { 9528 9529 # If we didn't find this quote character in the value, 9530 # quote it using this quote character. 9531 $out = "$l$val$l ", last if ( index $val, $l ) == -1; 9532 } 9533 } ## end elsif ($val =~ /\s/) 9534 9535 # Don't need any quotes. 9536 else { 9537 $out = "=$val "; 9538 } 9539 9540 # If there were multiple possible values, return '? ', which 9541 # makes the command into a query command. If there was just one, 9542 # have readline append that. 9543 $rl_attribs->{completer_terminator_character} = 9544 ( @out == 1 ? $out : '? ' ); 9545 9546 # Return list of possibilities. 9547 return sort @out; 9548 } ## end if ((substr $line, 0, ... 9549 9550=head3 Filename completion 9551 9552For entering filenames. We simply call C<readline>'s C<filename_list()> 9553method with the completion text to get the possible completions. 9554 9555=cut 9556 9557 return $term->filename_list($text); # filenames 9558 9559} ## end sub db_complete 9560 9561=head1 MISCELLANEOUS SUPPORT FUNCTIONS 9562 9563Functions that possibly ought to be somewhere else. 9564 9565=head2 end_report 9566 9567Say we're done. 9568 9569=cut 9570 9571sub end_report { 9572 local $\ = ''; 9573 print $OUT "Use 'q' to quit or 'R' to restart. 'h q' for details.\n"; 9574} 9575 9576=head2 clean_ENV 9577 9578If we have $ini_pids, save it in the environment; else remove it from the 9579environment. Used by the C<R> (restart) command. 9580 9581=cut 9582 9583sub clean_ENV { 9584 if ( defined($ini_pids) ) { 9585 $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} = $ini_pids; 9586 } 9587 else { 9588 delete( $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} ); 9589 } 9590} ## end sub clean_ENV 9591 9592# PERLDBf_... flag names from perl.h 9593our ( %DollarCaretP_flags, %DollarCaretP_flags_r ); 9594 9595BEGIN { 9596 %DollarCaretP_flags = ( 9597 PERLDBf_SUB => 0x01, # Debug sub enter/exit 9598 PERLDBf_LINE => 0x02, # Keep line # 9599 PERLDBf_NOOPT => 0x04, # Switch off optimizations 9600 PERLDBf_INTER => 0x08, # Preserve more data 9601 PERLDBf_SUBLINE => 0x10, # Keep subr source lines 9602 PERLDBf_SINGLE => 0x20, # Start with single-step on 9603 PERLDBf_NONAME => 0x40, # For _SUB: no name of the subr 9604 PERLDBf_GOTO => 0x80, # Report goto: call DB::goto 9605 PERLDBf_NAMEEVAL => 0x100, # Informative names for evals 9606 PERLDBf_NAMEANON => 0x200, # Informative names for anon subs 9607 PERLDBf_SAVESRC => 0x400, # Save source lines into @{"_<$filename"} 9608 PERLDB_ALL => 0x33f, # No _NONAME, _GOTO 9609 ); 9610 # PERLDBf_LINE also enables the actions of PERLDBf_SAVESRC, so the debugger 9611 # doesn't need to set it. It's provided for the benefit of profilers and 9612 # other code analysers. 9613 9614 %DollarCaretP_flags_r = reverse %DollarCaretP_flags; 9615} 9616 9617sub parse_DollarCaretP_flags { 9618 my $flags = shift; 9619 $flags =~ s/^\s+//; 9620 $flags =~ s/\s+$//; 9621 my $acu = 0; 9622 foreach my $f ( split /\s*\|\s*/, $flags ) { 9623 my $value; 9624 if ( $f =~ /^0x([[:xdigit:]]+)$/ ) { 9625 $value = hex $1; 9626 } 9627 elsif ( $f =~ /^(\d+)$/ ) { 9628 $value = int $1; 9629 } 9630 elsif ( $f =~ /^DEFAULT$/i ) { 9631 $value = $DollarCaretP_flags{PERLDB_ALL}; 9632 } 9633 else { 9634 $f =~ /^(?:PERLDBf_)?(.*)$/i; 9635 $value = $DollarCaretP_flags{ 'PERLDBf_' . uc($1) }; 9636 unless ( defined $value ) { 9637 print $OUT ( 9638 "Unrecognized \$^P flag '$f'!\n", 9639 "Acceptable flags are: " 9640 . join( ', ', sort keys %DollarCaretP_flags ), 9641 ", and hexadecimal and decimal numbers.\n" 9642 ); 9643 return undef; 9644 } 9645 } 9646 $acu |= $value; 9647 } 9648 $acu; 9649} 9650 9651sub expand_DollarCaretP_flags { 9652 my $DollarCaretP = shift; 9653 my @bits = ( 9654 map { 9655 my $n = ( 1 << $_ ); 9656 ( $DollarCaretP & $n ) 9657 ? ( $DollarCaretP_flags_r{$n} 9658 || sprintf( '0x%x', $n ) ) 9659 : () 9660 } 0 .. 31 9661 ); 9662 return @bits ? join( '|', @bits ) : 0; 9663} 9664 9665=over 4 9666 9667=item rerun 9668 9669Rerun the current session to: 9670 9671 rerun current position 9672 9673 rerun 4 command number 4 9674 9675 rerun -4 current command minus 4 (go back 4 steps) 9676 9677Whether this always makes sense, in the current context is unknowable, and is 9678in part left as a useful exercise for the reader. This sub returns the 9679appropriate arguments to rerun the current session. 9680 9681=cut 9682 9683sub rerun { 9684 my $i = shift; 9685 my @args; 9686 pop(@truehist); # strim 9687 unless (defined $truehist[$i]) { 9688 print "Unable to return to non-existent command: $i\n"; 9689 } else { 9690 $#truehist = ($i < 0 ? $#truehist + $i : $i > 0 ? $i : $#truehist); 9691 my @temp = @truehist; # store 9692 push(@DB::typeahead, @truehist); # saved 9693 @truehist = @hist = (); # flush 9694 @args = restart(); # setup 9695 get_list("PERLDB_HIST"); # clean 9696 set_list("PERLDB_HIST", @temp); # reset 9697 } 9698 return @args; 9699} 9700 9701=item restart 9702 9703Restarting the debugger is a complex operation that occurs in several phases. 9704First, we try to reconstruct the command line that was used to invoke Perl 9705and the debugger. 9706 9707=cut 9708 9709sub restart { 9710 # I may not be able to resurrect you, but here goes ... 9711 print $OUT 9712"Warning: some settings and command-line options may be lost!\n"; 9713 my ( @script, @flags, $cl ); 9714 9715 # If warn was on before, turn it on again. 9716 push @flags, '-w' if $ini_warn; 9717 9718 # Rebuild the -I flags that were on the initial 9719 # command line. 9720 for (@ini_INC) { 9721 push @flags, '-I', $_; 9722 } 9723 9724 # Turn on taint if it was on before. 9725 push @flags, '-T' if ${^TAINT}; 9726 9727 # Arrange for setting the old INC: 9728 # Save the current @init_INC in the environment. 9729 set_list( "PERLDB_INC", @ini_INC ); 9730 9731 # If this was a perl one-liner, go to the "file" 9732 # corresponding to the one-liner read all the lines 9733 # out of it (except for the first one, which is going 9734 # to be added back on again when 'perl -d' runs: that's 9735 # the 'require perl5db.pl;' line), and add them back on 9736 # to the command line to be executed. 9737 if ( $0 eq '-e' ) { 9738 my $lines = *{$main::{'_<-e'}}{ARRAY}; 9739 for ( 1 .. $#$lines ) { # The first line is PERL5DB 9740 chomp( $cl = $lines->[$_] ); 9741 push @script, '-e', $cl; 9742 } 9743 } ## end if ($0 eq '-e') 9744 9745 # Otherwise we just reuse the original name we had 9746 # before. 9747 else { 9748 @script = $0; 9749 } 9750 9751=pod 9752 9753After the command line has been reconstructed, the next step is to save 9754the debugger's status in environment variables. The C<DB::set_list> routine 9755is used to save aggregate variables (both hashes and arrays); scalars are 9756just popped into environment variables directly. 9757 9758=cut 9759 9760 # If the terminal supported history, grab it and 9761 # save that in the environment. 9762 set_list( "PERLDB_HIST", 9763 $term->Features->{getHistory} 9764 ? $term->GetHistory 9765 : @hist ); 9766 9767 # Find all the files that were visited during this 9768 # session (i.e., the debugger had magic hashes 9769 # corresponding to them) and stick them in the environment. 9770 my @had_breakpoints = keys %had_breakpoints; 9771 set_list( "PERLDB_VISITED", @had_breakpoints ); 9772 9773 # Save the debugger options we chose. 9774 set_list( "PERLDB_OPT", %option ); 9775 # set_list( "PERLDB_OPT", options2remember() ); 9776 9777 # Save the break-on-loads. 9778 set_list( "PERLDB_ON_LOAD", %break_on_load ); 9779 9780=pod 9781 9782The most complex part of this is the saving of all of the breakpoints. They 9783can live in an awful lot of places, and we have to go through all of them, 9784find the breakpoints, and then save them in the appropriate environment 9785variable via C<DB::set_list>. 9786 9787=cut 9788 9789 # Go through all the breakpoints and make sure they're 9790 # still valid. 9791 my @hard; 9792 for ( 0 .. $#had_breakpoints ) { 9793 9794 # We were in this file. 9795 my $file = $had_breakpoints[$_]; 9796 9797 # Grab that file's magic line hash. 9798 *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $file }; 9799 9800 # Skip out if it doesn't exist, or if the breakpoint 9801 # is in a postponed file (we'll do postponed ones 9802 # later). 9803 next unless %dbline or $postponed_file{$file}; 9804 9805 # In an eval. This is a little harder, so we'll 9806 # do more processing on that below. 9807 ( push @hard, $file ), next 9808 if $file =~ /^\(\w*eval/; 9809 9810 # XXX I have no idea what this is doing. Yet. 9811 my @add; 9812 @add = %{ $postponed_file{$file} } 9813 if $postponed_file{$file}; 9814 9815 # Save the list of all the breakpoints for this file. 9816 set_list( "PERLDB_FILE_$_", %dbline, @add ); 9817 9818 # Serialize the extra data %breakpoints_data hash. 9819 # That's a bug fix. 9820 set_list( "PERLDB_FILE_ENABLED_$_", 9821 map { _is_breakpoint_enabled($file, $_) ? 1 : 0 } 9822 sort { $a <=> $b } keys(%dbline) 9823 ) 9824 } ## end for (0 .. $#had_breakpoints) 9825 9826 # The breakpoint was inside an eval. This is a little 9827 # more difficult. XXX and I don't understand it. 9828 foreach my $hard_file (@hard) { 9829 # Get over to the eval in question. 9830 *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $hard_file }; 9831 my $quoted = quotemeta $hard_file; 9832 my %subs; 9833 for my $sub ( keys %sub ) { 9834 if (my ($n1, $n2) = $sub{$sub} =~ /\A$quoted:(\d+)-(\d+)\z/) { 9835 $subs{$sub} = [ $n1, $n2 ]; 9836 } 9837 } 9838 unless (%subs) { 9839 print {$OUT} 9840 "No subroutines in $hard_file, ignoring breakpoints.\n"; 9841 next; 9842 } 9843 LINES: foreach my $line ( keys %dbline ) { 9844 9845 # One breakpoint per sub only: 9846 my ( $offset, $found ); 9847 SUBS: foreach my $sub ( keys %subs ) { 9848 if ( 9849 $subs{$sub}->[1] >= $line # Not after the subroutine 9850 and ( 9851 not defined $offset # Not caught 9852 or $offset < 0 9853 ) 9854 ) 9855 { # or badly caught 9856 $found = $sub; 9857 $offset = $line - $subs{$sub}->[0]; 9858 if ($offset >= 0) { 9859 $offset = "+$offset"; 9860 last SUBS; 9861 } 9862 } ## end if ($subs{$sub}->[1] >=... 9863 } ## end for $sub (keys %subs) 9864 if ( defined $offset ) { 9865 $postponed{$found} = 9866 "break $offset if $dbline{$line}"; 9867 } 9868 else { 9869 print {$OUT} 9870 ("Breakpoint in ${hard_file}:$line ignored:" 9871 . " after all the subroutines.\n"); 9872 } 9873 } ## end for $line (keys %dbline) 9874 } ## end for (@hard) 9875 9876 # Save the other things that don't need to be 9877 # processed. 9878 set_list( "PERLDB_POSTPONE", %postponed ); 9879 set_list( "PERLDB_PRETYPE", @$pretype ); 9880 set_list( "PERLDB_PRE", @$pre ); 9881 set_list( "PERLDB_POST", @$post ); 9882 set_list( "PERLDB_TYPEAHEAD", @typeahead ); 9883 9884 # We are officially restarting. 9885 $ENV{PERLDB_RESTART} = 1; 9886 9887 # We are junking all child debuggers. 9888 delete $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS}; # Restore ini state 9889 9890 # Set this back to the initial pid. 9891 $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} = $ini_pids if defined $ini_pids; 9892 9893=pod 9894 9895After all the debugger status has been saved, we take the command we built up 9896and then return it, so we can C<exec()> it. The debugger will spot the 9897C<PERLDB_RESTART> environment variable and realize it needs to reload its state 9898from the environment. 9899 9900=cut 9901 9902 # And run Perl again. Add the "-d" flag, all the 9903 # flags we built up, the script (whether a one-liner 9904 # or a file), add on the -emacs flag for a slave editor, 9905 # and then the old arguments. 9906 9907 return ($^X, '-d', @flags, @script, ($slave_editor ? '-emacs' : ()), @ARGS); 9908 9909}; # end restart 9910 9911=back 9912 9913=head1 END PROCESSING - THE C<END> BLOCK 9914 9915Come here at the very end of processing. We want to go into a 9916loop where we allow the user to enter commands and interact with the 9917debugger, but we don't want anything else to execute. 9918 9919First we set the C<$finished> variable, so that some commands that 9920shouldn't be run after the end of program quit working. 9921 9922We then figure out whether we're truly done (as in the user entered a C<q> 9923command, or we finished execution while running nonstop). If we aren't, 9924we set C<$single> to 1 (causing the debugger to get control again). 9925 9926We then call C<DB::fake::at_exit()>, which returns the C<Use 'q' to quit ...> 9927message and returns control to the debugger. Repeat. 9928 9929When the user finally enters a C<q> command, C<$fall_off_end> is set to 99301 and the C<END> block simply exits with C<$single> set to 0 (don't 9931break, run to completion.). 9932 9933=cut 9934 9935END { 9936 $finished = 1 if $inhibit_exit; # So that some commands may be disabled. 9937 $fall_off_end = 1 unless $inhibit_exit; 9938 9939 # Do not stop in at_exit() and destructors on exit: 9940 if ($fall_off_end or $runnonstop) { 9941 save_hist(); 9942 } else { 9943 $DB::single = 1; 9944 DB::fake::at_exit(); 9945 } 9946} ## end END 9947 9948=head1 PRE-5.8 COMMANDS 9949 9950Some of the commands changed function quite a bit in the 5.8 command 9951realignment, so much so that the old code had to be replaced completely. 9952Because we wanted to retain the option of being able to go back to the 9953former command set, we moved the old code off to this section. 9954 9955There's an awful lot of duplicated code here. We've duplicated the 9956comments to keep things clear. 9957 9958=head2 Null command 9959 9960Does nothing. Used to I<turn off> commands. 9961 9962=cut 9963 9964sub cmd_pre580_null { 9965 9966 # do nothing... 9967} 9968 9969=head2 Old C<a> command. 9970 9971This version added actions if you supplied them, and deleted them 9972if you didn't. 9973 9974=cut 9975 9976sub cmd_pre580_a { 9977 my $xcmd = shift; 9978 my $cmd = shift; 9979 9980 # Argument supplied. Add the action. 9981 if ( $cmd =~ /^(\d*)\s*(.*)/ ) { 9982 9983 # If the line isn't there, use the current line. 9984 my $i = $1 || $line; 9985 my $j = $2; 9986 9987 # If there is an action ... 9988 if ( length $j ) { 9989 9990 # ... but the line isn't breakable, skip it. 9991 if ( $dbline[$i] == 0 ) { 9992 print $OUT "Line $i may not have an action.\n"; 9993 } 9994 else { 9995 9996 # ... and the line is breakable: 9997 # Mark that there's an action in this file. 9998 $had_breakpoints{$filename} |= 2; 9999 10000 # Delete any current action. 10001 $dbline{$i} =~ s/\0[^\0]*//; 10002 10003 # Add the new action, continuing the line as needed. 10004 $dbline{$i} .= "\0" . action($j); 10005 } 10006 } ## end if (length $j) 10007 10008 # No action supplied. 10009 else { 10010 10011 # Delete the action. 10012 $dbline{$i} =~ s/\0[^\0]*//; 10013 10014 # Mark as having no break or action if nothing's left. 10015 delete $dbline{$i} if $dbline{$i} eq ''; 10016 } 10017 } ## end if ($cmd =~ /^(\d*)\s*(.*)/) 10018} ## end sub cmd_pre580_a 10019 10020=head2 Old C<b> command 10021 10022Add breakpoints. 10023 10024=cut 10025 10026sub cmd_pre580_b { 10027 my $xcmd = shift; 10028 my $cmd = shift; 10029 my $dbline = shift; 10030 10031 # Break on load. 10032 if ( $cmd =~ /^load\b\s*(.*)/ ) { 10033 my $file = $1; 10034 $file =~ s/\s+$//; 10035 cmd_b_load($file); 10036 } 10037 10038 # b compile|postpone <some sub> [<condition>] 10039 # The interpreter actually traps this one for us; we just put the 10040 # necessary condition in the %postponed hash. 10041 elsif ( $cmd =~ /^(postpone|compile)\b\s*([':A-Za-z_][':\w]*)\s*(.*)/ ) { 10042 10043 # Capture the condition if there is one. Make it true if none. 10044 my $cond = length $3 ? $3 : '1'; 10045 10046 # Save the sub name and set $break to 1 if $1 was 'postpone', 0 10047 # if it was 'compile'. 10048 my ( $subname, $break ) = ( $2, $1 eq 'postpone' ); 10049 10050 # De-Perl4-ify the name - ' separators to ::. 10051 $subname =~ s/\'/::/g; 10052 10053 # Qualify it into the current package unless it's already qualified. 10054 $subname = "${package}::" . $subname 10055 unless $subname =~ /::/; 10056 10057 # Add main if it starts with ::. 10058 $subname = "main" . $subname if substr( $subname, 0, 2 ) eq "::"; 10059 10060 # Save the break type for this sub. 10061 $postponed{$subname} = $break ? "break +0 if $cond" : "compile"; 10062 } ## end elsif ($cmd =~ ... 10063 10064 # b <sub name> [<condition>] 10065 elsif ( $cmd =~ /^([':A-Za-z_][':\w]*(?:\[.*\])?)\s*(.*)/ ) { 10066 my $subname = $1; 10067 my $cond = length $2 ? $2 : '1'; 10068 cmd_b_sub( $subname, $cond ); 10069 } 10070 # b <line> [<condition>]. 10071 elsif ( $cmd =~ /^(\d*)\s*(.*)/ ) { 10072 my $i = $1 || $dbline; 10073 my $cond = length $2 ? $2 : '1'; 10074 cmd_b_line( $i, $cond ); 10075 } 10076} ## end sub cmd_pre580_b 10077 10078=head2 Old C<D> command. 10079 10080Delete all breakpoints unconditionally. 10081 10082=cut 10083 10084sub cmd_pre580_D { 10085 my $xcmd = shift; 10086 my $cmd = shift; 10087 if ( $cmd =~ /^\s*$/ ) { 10088 print $OUT "Deleting all breakpoints...\n"; 10089 10090 # %had_breakpoints lists every file that had at least one 10091 # breakpoint in it. 10092 my $file; 10093 for $file ( keys %had_breakpoints ) { 10094 10095 # Switch to the desired file temporarily. 10096 local *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $file }; 10097 10098 $max = $#dbline; 10099 my $was; 10100 10101 # For all lines in this file ... 10102 for my $i (1 .. $max) { 10103 10104 # If there's a breakpoint or action on this line ... 10105 if ( defined $dbline{$i} ) { 10106 10107 # ... remove the breakpoint. 10108 $dbline{$i} =~ s/^[^\0]+//; 10109 if ( $dbline{$i} =~ s/^\0?$// ) { 10110 10111 # Remove the entry altogether if no action is there. 10112 delete $dbline{$i}; 10113 } 10114 } ## end if (defined $dbline{$i... 10115 } ## end for my $i (1 .. $max) 10116 10117 # If, after we turn off the "there were breakpoints in this file" 10118 # bit, the entry in %had_breakpoints for this file is zero, 10119 # we should remove this file from the hash. 10120 if ( not $had_breakpoints{$file} &= ~1 ) { 10121 delete $had_breakpoints{$file}; 10122 } 10123 } ## end for $file (keys %had_breakpoints) 10124 10125 # Kill off all the other breakpoints that are waiting for files that 10126 # haven't been loaded yet. 10127 undef %postponed; 10128 undef %postponed_file; 10129 undef %break_on_load; 10130 } ## end if ($cmd =~ /^\s*$/) 10131} ## end sub cmd_pre580_D 10132 10133=head2 Old C<h> command 10134 10135Print help. Defaults to printing the long-form help; the 5.8 version 10136prints the summary by default. 10137 10138=cut 10139 10140sub cmd_pre580_h { 10141 my $xcmd = shift; 10142 my $cmd = shift; 10143 10144 # Print the *right* help, long format. 10145 if ( $cmd =~ /^\s*$/ ) { 10146 print_help($pre580_help); 10147 } 10148 10149 # 'h h' - explicitly-requested summary. 10150 elsif ( $cmd =~ /^h\s*/ ) { 10151 print_help($pre580_summary); 10152 } 10153 10154 # Find and print a command's help. 10155 elsif ( $cmd =~ /^h\s+(\S.*)$/ ) { 10156 my $asked = $1; # for proper errmsg 10157 my $qasked = quotemeta($asked); # for searching 10158 # XXX: finds CR but not <CR> 10159 if ( 10160 $pre580_help =~ /^ 10161 <? # Optional '<' 10162 (?:[IB]<) # Optional markup 10163 $qasked # The command name 10164 /mx 10165 ) 10166 { 10167 10168 while ( 10169 $pre580_help =~ /^ 10170 ( # The command help: 10171 <? # Optional '<' 10172 (?:[IB]<) # Optional markup 10173 $qasked # The command name 10174 ([\s\S]*?) # Lines starting with tabs 10175 \n # Final newline 10176 ) 10177 (?!\s)/mgx 10178 ) # Line not starting with space 10179 # (Next command's help) 10180 { 10181 print_help($1); 10182 } 10183 } ## end if ($pre580_help =~ /^<?(?:[IB]<)$qasked/m) 10184 10185 # Help not found. 10186 else { 10187 print_help("B<$asked> is not a debugger command.\n"); 10188 } 10189 } ## end elsif ($cmd =~ /^h\s+(\S.*)$/) 10190} ## end sub cmd_pre580_h 10191 10192=head2 Old C<W> command 10193 10194C<W E<lt>exprE<gt>> adds a watch expression, C<W> deletes them all. 10195 10196=cut 10197 10198sub cmd_pre580_W { 10199 my $xcmd = shift; 10200 my $cmd = shift; 10201 10202 # Delete all watch expressions. 10203 if ( $cmd =~ /^$/ ) { 10204 10205 # No watching is going on. 10206 $trace &= ~2; 10207 10208 # Kill all the watch expressions and values. 10209 @to_watch = @old_watch = (); 10210 } 10211 10212 # Add a watch expression. 10213 elsif ( $cmd =~ /^(.*)/s ) { 10214 10215 # add it to the list to be watched. 10216 push @to_watch, $1; 10217 10218 # Get the current value of the expression. 10219 # Doesn't handle expressions returning list values! 10220 $evalarg = $1; 10221 # The &-call is here to ascertain the mutability of @_. 10222 my ($val) = &DB::eval; 10223 $val = ( defined $val ) ? "'$val'" : 'undef'; 10224 10225 # Save it. 10226 push @old_watch, $val; 10227 10228 # We're watching stuff. 10229 $trace |= 2; 10230 10231 } ## end elsif ($cmd =~ /^(.*)/s) 10232} ## end sub cmd_pre580_W 10233 10234=head1 PRE-AND-POST-PROMPT COMMANDS AND ACTIONS 10235 10236The debugger used to have a bunch of nearly-identical code to handle 10237the pre-and-post-prompt action commands. C<cmd_pre590_prepost> and 10238C<cmd_prepost> unify all this into one set of code to handle the 10239appropriate actions. 10240 10241=head2 C<cmd_pre590_prepost> 10242 10243A small wrapper around C<cmd_prepost>; it makes sure that the default doesn't 10244do something destructive. In pre 5.8 debuggers, the default action was to 10245delete all the actions. 10246 10247=cut 10248 10249sub cmd_pre590_prepost { 10250 my $cmd = shift; 10251 my $line = shift || '*'; 10252 my $dbline = shift; 10253 10254 return cmd_prepost( $cmd, $line, $dbline ); 10255} ## end sub cmd_pre590_prepost 10256 10257=head2 C<cmd_prepost> 10258 10259Actually does all the handling for C<E<lt>>, C<E<gt>>, C<{{>, C<{>, etc. 10260Since the lists of actions are all held in arrays that are pointed to by 10261references anyway, all we have to do is pick the right array reference and 10262then use generic code to all, delete, or list actions. 10263 10264=cut 10265 10266sub cmd_prepost { 10267 my $cmd = shift; 10268 10269 # No action supplied defaults to 'list'. 10270 my $line = shift || '?'; 10271 10272 # Figure out what to put in the prompt. 10273 my $which = ''; 10274 10275 # Make sure we have some array or another to address later. 10276 # This means that if for some reason the tests fail, we won't be 10277 # trying to stash actions or delete them from the wrong place. 10278 my $aref = []; 10279 10280 # < - Perl code to run before prompt. 10281 if ( $cmd =~ /^\</o ) { 10282 $which = 'pre-perl'; 10283 $aref = $pre; 10284 } 10285 10286 # > - Perl code to run after prompt. 10287 elsif ( $cmd =~ /^\>/o ) { 10288 $which = 'post-perl'; 10289 $aref = $post; 10290 } 10291 10292 # { - first check for properly-balanced braces. 10293 elsif ( $cmd =~ /^\{/o ) { 10294 if ( $cmd =~ /^\{.*\}$/o && unbalanced( substr( $cmd, 1 ) ) ) { 10295 print $OUT 10296"$cmd is now a debugger command\nuse ';$cmd' if you mean Perl code\n"; 10297 } 10298 10299 # Properly balanced. Pre-prompt debugger actions. 10300 else { 10301 $which = 'pre-debugger'; 10302 $aref = $pretype; 10303 } 10304 } ## end elsif ( $cmd =~ /^\{/o ) 10305 10306 # Did we find something that makes sense? 10307 unless ($which) { 10308 print $OUT "Confused by command: $cmd\n"; 10309 } 10310 10311 # Yes. 10312 else { 10313 10314 # List actions. 10315 if ( $line =~ /^\s*\?\s*$/o ) { 10316 unless (@$aref) { 10317 10318 # Nothing there. Complain. 10319 print $OUT "No $which actions.\n"; 10320 } 10321 else { 10322 10323 # List the actions in the selected list. 10324 print $OUT "$which commands:\n"; 10325 foreach my $action (@$aref) { 10326 print $OUT "\t$cmd -- $action\n"; 10327 } 10328 } ## end else 10329 } ## end if ( $line =~ /^\s*\?\s*$/o) 10330 10331 # Might be a delete. 10332 else { 10333 if ( length($cmd) == 1 ) { 10334 if ( $line =~ /^\s*\*\s*$/o ) { 10335 10336 # It's a delete. Get rid of the old actions in the 10337 # selected list.. 10338 @$aref = (); 10339 print $OUT "All $cmd actions cleared.\n"; 10340 } 10341 else { 10342 10343 # Replace all the actions. (This is a <, >, or {). 10344 @$aref = action($line); 10345 } 10346 } ## end if ( length($cmd) == 1) 10347 elsif ( length($cmd) == 2 ) { 10348 10349 # Add the action to the line. (This is a <<, >>, or {{). 10350 push @$aref, action($line); 10351 } 10352 else { 10353 10354 # <<<, >>>>, {{{{{{ ... something not a command. 10355 print $OUT 10356 "Confused by strange length of $which command($cmd)...\n"; 10357 } 10358 } ## end else [ if ( $line =~ /^\s*\?\s*$/o) 10359 } ## end else 10360} ## end sub cmd_prepost 10361 10362=head1 C<DB::fake> 10363 10364Contains the C<at_exit> routine that the debugger uses to issue the 10365C<Debugged program terminated ...> message after the program completes. See 10366the C<END> block documentation for more details. 10367 10368=cut 10369 10370package DB::fake; 10371 10372sub at_exit { 10373 "Debugged program terminated. Use 'q' to quit or 'R' to restart."; 10374} 10375 10376package DB; # Do not trace this 1; below! 10377 103781; 10379 10380 10381