* [PATCH] tracepoint.c
@ 2002-01-07 17:54 Michael Snyder
2002-01-08 1:46 ` Klee Dienes
0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread
From: Michael Snyder @ 2002-01-07 17:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: gdb-patches; +Cc: klee
2002-01-07 Michael Snyder <msnyder@redhat.com>
* tracepoint.c (tracepoint_save_command): From Klee Dienes --
use tilde_expand and strerror for opening save-tracepoints file.
Index: tracepoint.c
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/src/src/gdb/tracepoint.c,v
retrieving revision 1.29
retrieving revision 1.30
diff -p -r1.29 -r1.30
*** tracepoint.c 2001/12/25 22:24:38 1.29
--- tracepoint.c 2002/01/08 01:52:12 1.30
*************** tracepoint_save_command (char *args, int
*** 2263,2269 ****
struct action_line *line;
FILE *fp;
char *i1 = " ", *i2 = " ";
! char *indent, *actionline;
char tmp[40];
if (args == 0 || *args == 0)
--- 2263,2269 ----
struct action_line *line;
FILE *fp;
char *i1 = " ", *i2 = " ";
! char *indent, *actionline, *pathname;
char tmp[40];
if (args == 0 || *args == 0)
*************** tracepoint_save_command (char *args, int
*** 2275,2283 ****
return;
}
! if (!(fp = fopen (args, "w")))
! error ("Unable to open file '%s' for saving tracepoints");
!
ALL_TRACEPOINTS (tp)
{
if (tp->addr_string)
--- 2275,2286 ----
return;
}
! pathname = tilde_expand (args);
! if (!(fp = fopen (pathname, "w")))
! error ("Unable to open file '%s' for saving tracepoints (%s)",
! args, strerror (errno));
! xfree (pathname);
!
ALL_TRACEPOINTS (tp)
{
if (tp->addr_string)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: [PATCH] tracepoint.c
2002-01-07 17:54 [PATCH] tracepoint.c Michael Snyder
@ 2002-01-08 1:46 ` Klee Dienes
2002-01-08 15:15 ` Michael Snyder
0 siblings, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread
From: Klee Dienes @ 2002-01-08 1:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Michael Snyder; +Cc: gdb-patches
Michael Snyder <msnyder@cygnus.com> writes:
> 2002-01-07 Michael Snyder <msnyder@redhat.com>
>
> * tracepoint.c (tracepoint_save_command): From Klee Dienes --
> use tilde_expand and strerror for opening save-tracepoints file.
>
Just to make sure I understand the procedure I should be following:
Does this mean that I should re-submit a version of the
'save-breakpoints' patch with this change removed from it? Or does it
just mean that this part of the patch has been accepted, and I should
wait to hear from the other relevant maintainers before revising or
committing the rest of the save-breakpoint patch? If the latter, why
not just say "the changes to tracepoint.c are approved; please commit
them"? I don't mean this as complaint, just trying to make sure I'm
following the system properly.
Also, is there a formalized way to ping or somehow track already
submitted patches? We've got a number of other patches pretty much
ready to submit (the Objective-C patches being the most notable of
these), but since they depend on some of the patches already
submitted, I was hoping to get these resolved first. Should I just go
ahead and post them, with a note that they assume that some of the
already-submitted patches have been committed? This can get to be a
real mess eventually, as when I modify one patch in response to
feedback, I then have to go modify all the dependent patches. Or
should I just badger individual maintainers until the ones already
submitted have been resolved?
I realize the irony of showing up after years of code-divergence, and
then being in a big "rush rush rush" mode to get patches considered
for acceptance. But I'm sure we (the Apple GDB engineers) only have a
limited window of oppotunity before some other crisis comes up to
distract us, and I'm hoping to take as much advantage of this
opportunity to merge the sources as I possibly can.
Thanks,
- Klee
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: [PATCH] tracepoint.c
2002-01-08 1:46 ` Klee Dienes
@ 2002-01-08 15:15 ` Michael Snyder
0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Michael Snyder @ 2002-01-08 15:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: gdb-patches
Klee Dienes wrote:
>
> Michael Snyder <msnyder@cygnus.com> writes:
>
> > 2002-01-07 Michael Snyder <msnyder@redhat.com>
> >
> > * tracepoint.c (tracepoint_save_command): From Klee Dienes --
> > use tilde_expand and strerror for opening save-tracepoints file.
> >
>
> Just to make sure I understand the procedure I should be following:
>
> Does this mean that I should re-submit a version of the
> 'save-breakpoints' patch with this change removed from it? Or does it
> just mean that this part of the patch has been accepted, and I should
> wait to hear from the other relevant maintainers before revising or
> committing the rest of the save-breakpoint patch? If the latter, why
> not just say "the changes to tracepoint.c are approved; please commit
> them"? I don't mean this as complaint, just trying to make sure I'm
> following the system properly.
Ah, I think we've had a communication breakdown. I thought that your
previous patch was defunct, and we were waiting for you to resubmit it.
Rereading the old thread, I can see where I lost continuity. Sorry for
the confusion -- can we start again?
I actually liked the 'save-breakpoints' command, and was thinking
of pinging you to see when you planned to resubmit it. But I don't
like it being grouped together with the 'future-break' command.
They're really separate, though related, and I'd rather consider
separate functionalities separately. Besides, the two together
make a really huge patch, one that it's difficult to review
line by line.
As for the change to tracepoints, I had that sitting in my source
tree from your earlier submission, and I was just cleaning up loose
ends. I decided to make sure that didn't get lost, while waiting
for you to resubmit your patch. Sorry if I jumped the gun on you.
> Also, is there a formalized way to ping or somehow track already
> submitted patches? We've got a number of other patches pretty much
> ready to submit (the Objective-C patches being the most notable of
> these), but since they depend on some of the patches already
> submitted, I was hoping to get these resolved first. Should I just go
> ahead and post them, with a note that they assume that some of the
> already-submitted patches have been committed? This can get to be a
> real mess eventually, as when I modify one patch in response to
> feedback, I then have to go modify all the dependent patches. Or
> should I just badger individual maintainers until the ones already
> submitted have been resolved?
Patches shouldn't take as long to be approved as this one.
I regret that your first major effort ran into a snag, and
promise to try and see that it doesn't happen again. Having
multiple outstanding patches that depend on each other can be
a major headache. I recommend making each patch as small and
discrete as possible, so that they can be approved quickly.
> I realize the irony of showing up after years of code-divergence, and
> then being in a big "rush rush rush" mode to get patches considered
> for acceptance. But I'm sure we (the Apple GDB engineers) only have a
> limited window of oppotunity before some other crisis comes up to
> distract us, and I'm hoping to take as much advantage of this
> opportunity to merge the sources as I possibly can.
If a week goes by without a response, you should ping the list.
We might have gotten distracted ourselves, or there could be a
misunderstanding such as this one.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: [PATCH] tracepoint.c
@ 2002-01-08 15:25 Klee Dienes
0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Klee Dienes @ 2002-01-08 15:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Michael Snyder; +Cc: gdb-patches
> Ah, I think we've had a communication breakdown. I thought that
> your
> previous patch was defunct, and we were waiting for you to resubmit
> it.
> Rereading the old thread, I can see where I lost continuity. Sorry
> for
> the confusion -- can we start again?
>
> I actually liked the 'save-breakpoints' command, and was thinking
> of pinging you to see when you planned to resubmit it. But I don't
> like it being grouped together with the 'future-break' command.
> They're really separate, though related, and I'd rather consider
> separate functionalities separately. Besides, the two together
> make a really huge patch, one that it's difficult to review
> line by line.
OK, that's fair. My main reason for combining the patches was that
they had mutual dependencies on each other ('save-breakpoints' knows
about 'future' breakpoints so that it can save and restore them; the
future-break code knows about the 'original-flags' field added by
'save-breakpoints'). But I can probably remove the future-break
support from the 'save-breakpoints' command, and resubmit future-break
once 'save-breakpoints' is committed.
> As for the change to tracepoints, I had that sitting in my source
> tree from your earlier submission, and I was just cleaning up loose
> ends. I decided to make sure that didn't get lost, while waiting
> for you to resubmit your patch. Sorry if I jumped the gun on you.
Anything that reduces the size of our diffs is a win from my
perspective; I just wanted to make sure I was understanding the
process properly.
> If a week goes by without a response, you should ping the list.
> We might have gotten distracted ourselves, or there could be a
> misunderstanding such as this one.
OK, will do. I believe there's only one other patch outstanding at
this point; I'm just eager to get it resolved, since it's holding up
some of our more interesting Objective-C patches. I'll send a ping
now; thanks for the advice!
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
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2002-01-07 17:54 [PATCH] tracepoint.c Michael Snyder
2002-01-08 1:46 ` Klee Dienes
2002-01-08 15:15 ` Michael Snyder
2002-01-08 15:25 Klee Dienes
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