At 20:49 29/05/01 , Kevin Buettner a écrit: >On May 28, 1:31pm, Pierre Muller wrote: > > > The definition of MERGEPID macro currently on CVS seems > > wrong to me: > > > > the macro is the following, > > > > #define MERGEPID(PID,TID) ptid_build(PID,TID, 0) > >I think the comment in defs.h sort of explains this... > >/* Provide default definitions of PIDGET, TIDGET, and MERGEPID. > The name ``TIDGET'' is a historical accident. Many uses of TIDGET > in the code actually refer to a lightweight process id, i.e, > something that can be considered a process id in its own right for > certain purposes. */ > >I.e, for MERGEPID, the TID parameter is actually a lightweight process >id in most cases. > > > but ptid_build is defined as > > > > ptid_t > > ptid_build (int pid, long lwp, long tid) > > > > So I think that the right macro should be > > > > #define MERGEPID(PID,TID) ptid_build(PID, 0, TID) > >If this is done, then the TIDGET macro would also have to change. Some >of the low level thread code might also have to change. For the short >term, I think it would be better to change the MERGEPID define to read >as follows: > >#define MERGEPID(PID,LWP) ptid_build(PID, LWP, 0) > >Now that we have ptid_t with separate pid, tid, and lwp components we >should able to clean up a lot of code which used to overload PIDs, LWPs >and TIDs onto an int. I think that would be indeed nicer, because when you do a grep MERGEPID * in gdb dir you get the following: defs.h:/* Provide default definitions of PIDGET, TIDGET, and MERGEPID. defs.h:#define MERGEPID(PID, TID) ptid_build (PID, TID, 0) gnu-nat.c: proc->inf->pid, pid_to_thread_id (MERGEPID (proc->tid, 0))); lynx-nat.c: inferior_ptid = MERGEPID (PIDGET (inferior_ptid), thread); proc-service.c:#define BUILD_LWP(tid, pid) MERGEPID (pid, tid) procfs.c: return MERGEPID (pi->pid, proc_get_current_thread (pi)); procfs.c: retval = MERGEPID (pi->pid, proc_get_current_thread (pi)); procfs.c: temp_ptid = MERGEPID (pi->pid, temp_tid); procfs.c: temp_ptid = MERGEPID (pi->pid, temp_tid); procfs.c: inferior_ptid = MERGEPID (pi->pid, proc_get_current_thread (pi)); procfs.c: ptid_t gdb_threadid = MERGEPID (pi->pid, thread->tid); As the distinction between tid and lwp is still rather obsucre to me, I am just wondering if all the above uses of MERGEPID are completely aware of this subtility! The BUILD_LWP macro seems to be a nice example showing that. Coming back to the ptid_t structure, I still wonder how threads and processes are handled... Looking for instance in the win32-nat.c code, I see that each thread is considered as a different process, why ?? Pierre Muller Institut Charles Sadron 6,rue Boussingault F 67083 STRASBOURG CEDEX (France) mailto:muller@ics.u-strasbg.fr Phone : (33)-3-88-41-40-07 Fax : (33)-3-88-41-40-99