From: Daniel Jacobowitz <dan@codesourcery.com>
To: Ulrich Weigand <uweigand@de.ibm.com>
Cc: Ken Werner <ken@linux.vnet.ibm.com>,
gdb-patches@sourceware.org,
Joel Brobecker <brobecker@adacore.com>
Subject: Re: [patch] fix pre-/post- in-/decrement
Date: Tue, 05 Oct 2010 01:17:00 -0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20101005011650.GF6985@caradoc.them.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <201010042324.o94NOp3Y021755@d12av02.megacenter.de.ibm.com>
On Tue, Oct 05, 2010 at 01:24:51AM +0200, Ulrich Weigand wrote:
> Well, this behavior clearly seems an accident in the current code;
> you get this only if the target of the assignment happened to be
> a lazy value before value_assign. For example, while you do get
> the extra read after:
> print *$p = 1
> you get *no* extra read after:
> print *$p += 1
>
> This seems inconsistent, at the very least.
Yes, yes it is. I was not aware of this. I think Vladimir has also
fixed some bugs in this area for varobjs; I don't know if that was
posted yet.
> In any case, I'm wondering a bit why you prefer this behavior; this
> seems to have quite unexpected consequences to me:
>
> - If you execute "set *$p = *$q = 0" and the write to *$q fails,
> do you really expect *$p to be set to the old value of *$q
> instead of to 0?
Yes, I would expect that. To me, this is roughly "the debugger treats
all pointers as volatile".
> - If *$p is a memory-mapped register where reading and writing have
> different effects, should assigning to *$p really trigger *both*
> a write and a read cycle, even though a C assignment wouldn't?
If you say "print", yes. If you don't want this behavior - often I
don't - then use set.
> - In the case you refer to where writing to ROM fails, shouldn't
> we actually get an error thrown anyway? Writing to an unmapped
> address does that as well ...
Well, possibly. It depends on the system. It's very useful to be
able to use GDB to generate bus cycles. And, for instance, I
sometimes use GDB to poke at a flash device; it's programmable, but
not in the straightforward write-to-memory way that RAM is.
--
Daniel Jacobowitz
CodeSourcery
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2010-10-05 1:17 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 30+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2010-09-17 12:58 [patch] GNU vector unop support Ken Werner
2010-09-28 16:04 ` Ken Werner
[not found] ` <20100930185634.GC6213@adacore.com>
2010-10-01 17:45 ` [patch] fix pre-/post- in-/decrement Ken Werner
2010-10-04 13:01 ` Ulrich Weigand
2010-10-04 19:47 ` Ken Werner
2010-10-04 20:45 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2010-10-04 21:58 ` Ulrich Weigand
2010-10-04 22:59 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2010-10-04 23:25 ` Ulrich Weigand
2010-10-05 1:17 ` Daniel Jacobowitz [this message]
2010-10-05 13:28 ` Ulrich Weigand
2010-10-05 13:42 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2010-10-06 18:59 ` [rfc] Fix value_assign return value (Re: [patch] fix pre-/post- in-/decrement) Ulrich Weigand
2010-10-26 13:42 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2010-12-01 16:51 ` Ulrich Weigand
2010-10-06 20:55 ` [patch] fix pre-/post- in-/decrement Vladimir Prus
2010-10-07 12:38 ` Ken Werner
2010-10-12 23:00 ` Tom Tromey
2010-10-13 8:45 ` Andreas Schwab
2010-10-13 9:23 ` Ken Werner
2010-10-13 16:07 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2010-10-13 19:01 ` Tom Tromey
2010-10-19 7:38 ` Ken Werner
2010-11-02 8:23 ` Ken Werner
2010-11-02 20:31 ` Tom Tromey
2010-11-03 13:52 ` Ken Werner
2010-10-04 20:52 ` [patch] GNU vector unop support Ken Werner
2010-10-06 23:27 ` Joel Brobecker
2010-10-07 16:23 ` Ken Werner
2010-11-03 14:07 ` Ken Werner
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