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From: Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
To: Martin Galvan <martin.galvan@tallertechnologies.com>
Cc: gdb-patches <gdb-patches@sourceware.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH v2][PR gdb/19893] Fix handling of synthetic C++ references
Date: Tue, 24 May 2016 14:51:00 -0000	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <d646b112-1542-ff3d-a018-dbbef37e3eca@redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CAOKbPbYGpqAYuV6Vkuq9pGVCh8g=Exwh951K6uXiLc0QCte7eQ@mail.gmail.com>

On 05/24/2016 03:07 PM, Martin Galvan wrote:
> Thanks for the answer!
> 
> On Tue, May 24, 2016 at 7:46 AM, Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> wrote:
>> ... I still don't know what to think of this -- I simply don't understand it whether
>> you're doing this because it makes sense, or because doing otherwise would be hard
>> to do?
> 
> From a consistency point of view, it's probably not the right thing.
> All of the synthetic pointer cases I've tested always show "<synthetic
> pointer>" instead of "@address".

But normal pointers don't print @address either, only references do.

Not printing "@address" with "set print object off" seems like
hiding information from the user, information that we could show.
We always print it for non-synthetic references, AFAICS.

> Or at least I don't know
> how to do it off the top of my head. I'd have to make value_addr not
> return a not_lval when passing it a synthetic ref, which I'm not sure
> it's right either.

Your comment in the patch, in generic_val_print_ref, reads:

+	 if options->objectprint is true, c_value_print will call value_addr
+	 on the reference, which coerces synthetic references and returns a
+	 'not_lval'.  */

So if that works, I don't understand -- wouldn't calling value_addr
or coerce_ref in generic_val_print_ref if you have a synthetic
reference, or any reference even, be what you'd want?

> 
> I *could*, however, manually call
> value->location.computed.funcs->check_synthetic_pointer in
> generic_val_print_ref instead of using value_bits_synthetic_pointer,
> thus avoiding the check for lval_computed. But that's a bit ugly IMHO.

I don't understand this one.  Only lval_computed values have a 
"location.computed.funcs" to call.

> 
>> - Can you show an example output?  (set print object on/off, etc. whatever might be
>>   handy to clearly explain that that is about).
>>   Pictures are really worth a thousand words.  :-)

So is the problem that this bit:

   if (options->addressprint)
     {
      CORE_ADDR addr
	= extract_typed_address (valaddr + embedded_offset, type);

doesn't work / doesn't make sense with synthetic pointers?

Should we be calling value_addr instead?

Or are we perhaps missing a lval_funcs method?  (Ideally, all
value properties/methods would go through a vtable like
lval_funcs; think "making struct value a proper C++ class" going
forward.)

> Here, 0x601038 is the address of the structure 'ref' is referencing.
> This is consistent with the output for non-synthetic references, where
> the referenced value's address is shown.
> 
>> - Is this covered by any testcase?  I looked for "object" in the whole patch and
>>   didn't seem to find it.
> 
> Not that I know of. Should I add a test for this to implref-struct?

I don't know where, but I think this should indeed be covered by
tests somewhere.

Thanks,
Pedro Alves


  reply	other threads:[~2016-05-24 14:51 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 7+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2016-05-23 16:00 Martin Galvan
2016-05-23 18:36 ` Martin Galvan
2016-05-24 10:48 ` Pedro Alves
2016-05-24 14:08   ` Martin Galvan
2016-05-24 14:51     ` Pedro Alves [this message]
2016-05-24 20:36       ` Martin Galvan
2016-05-25 18:24         ` Pedro Alves

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