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Ben Cheng09ebc132013-10-18 00:02:49 -07001# Pretty-printer utilities.
Ben Cheng7334f0a2014-04-30 14:28:17 -07002# Copyright (C) 2010-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Ben Cheng09ebc132013-10-18 00:02:49 -07003
4# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
5# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
6# the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
7# (at your option) any later version.
8#
9# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
10# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
11# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
12# GNU General Public License for more details.
13#
14# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
15# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
16
17"""Utilities for working with pretty-printers."""
18
19import gdb
20import gdb.types
21import re
22import sys
23
24if sys.version_info[0] > 2:
25 # Python 3 removed basestring and long
26 basestring = str
27 long = int
28
29class PrettyPrinter(object):
30 """A basic pretty-printer.
31
32 Attributes:
33 name: A unique string among all printers for the context in which
34 it is defined (objfile, progspace, or global(gdb)), and should
35 meaningfully describe what can be pretty-printed.
36 E.g., "StringPiece" or "protobufs".
37 subprinters: An iterable object with each element having a `name'
38 attribute, and, potentially, "enabled" attribute.
39 Or this is None if there are no subprinters.
40 enabled: A boolean indicating if the printer is enabled.
41
42 Subprinters are for situations where "one" pretty-printer is actually a
43 collection of several printers. E.g., The libstdc++ pretty-printer has
44 a pretty-printer for each of several different types, based on regexps.
45 """
46
47 # While one might want to push subprinters into the subclass, it's
48 # present here to formalize such support to simplify
49 # commands/pretty_printers.py.
50
51 def __init__(self, name, subprinters=None):
52 self.name = name
53 self.subprinters = subprinters
54 self.enabled = True
55
56 def __call__(self, val):
57 # The subclass must define this.
58 raise NotImplementedError("PrettyPrinter __call__")
59
60
61class SubPrettyPrinter(object):
62 """Baseclass for sub-pretty-printers.
63
64 Sub-pretty-printers needn't use this, but it formalizes what's needed.
65
66 Attributes:
67 name: The name of the subprinter.
68 enabled: A boolean indicating if the subprinter is enabled.
69 """
70
71 def __init__(self, name):
72 self.name = name
73 self.enabled = True
74
75
76def register_pretty_printer(obj, printer, replace=False):
77 """Register pretty-printer PRINTER with OBJ.
78
79 The printer is added to the front of the search list, thus one can override
80 an existing printer if one needs to. Use a different name when overriding
81 an existing printer, otherwise an exception will be raised; multiple
82 printers with the same name are disallowed.
83
84 Arguments:
85 obj: Either an objfile, progspace, or None (in which case the printer
86 is registered globally).
87 printer: Either a function of one argument (old way) or any object
88 which has attributes: name, enabled, __call__.
89 replace: If True replace any existing copy of the printer.
90 Otherwise if the printer already exists raise an exception.
91
92 Returns:
93 Nothing.
94
95 Raises:
96 TypeError: A problem with the type of the printer.
97 ValueError: The printer's name contains a semicolon ";".
98 RuntimeError: A printer with the same name is already registered.
99
100 If the caller wants the printer to be listable and disableable, it must
101 follow the PrettyPrinter API. This applies to the old way (functions) too.
102 If printer is an object, __call__ is a method of two arguments:
103 self, and the value to be pretty-printed. See PrettyPrinter.
104 """
105
106 # Watch for both __name__ and name.
107 # Functions get the former for free, but we don't want to use an
108 # attribute named __foo__ for pretty-printers-as-objects.
109 # If printer has both, we use `name'.
110 if not hasattr(printer, "__name__") and not hasattr(printer, "name"):
111 raise TypeError("printer missing attribute: name")
112 if hasattr(printer, "name") and not hasattr(printer, "enabled"):
113 raise TypeError("printer missing attribute: enabled")
114 if not hasattr(printer, "__call__"):
115 raise TypeError("printer missing attribute: __call__")
116
117 if obj is None:
118 if gdb.parameter("verbose"):
119 gdb.write("Registering global %s pretty-printer ...\n" % name)
120 obj = gdb
121 else:
122 if gdb.parameter("verbose"):
123 gdb.write("Registering %s pretty-printer for %s ...\n" %
124 (printer.name, obj.filename))
125
126 if hasattr(printer, "name"):
127 if not isinstance(printer.name, basestring):
128 raise TypeError("printer name is not a string")
129 # If printer provides a name, make sure it doesn't contain ";".
130 # Semicolon is used by the info/enable/disable pretty-printer commands
131 # to delimit subprinters.
132 if printer.name.find(";") >= 0:
133 raise ValueError("semicolon ';' in printer name")
134 # Also make sure the name is unique.
135 # Alas, we can't do the same for functions and __name__, they could
136 # all have a canonical name like "lookup_function".
137 # PERF: gdb records printers in a list, making this inefficient.
138 i = 0
139 for p in obj.pretty_printers:
140 if hasattr(p, "name") and p.name == printer.name:
141 if replace:
142 del obj.pretty_printers[i]
143 break
144 else:
145 raise RuntimeError("pretty-printer already registered: %s" %
146 printer.name)
147 i = i + 1
148
149 obj.pretty_printers.insert(0, printer)
150
151
152class RegexpCollectionPrettyPrinter(PrettyPrinter):
153 """Class for implementing a collection of regular-expression based pretty-printers.
154
155 Intended usage:
156
157 pretty_printer = RegexpCollectionPrettyPrinter("my_library")
158 pretty_printer.add_printer("myclass1", "^myclass1$", MyClass1Printer)
159 ...
160 pretty_printer.add_printer("myclassN", "^myclassN$", MyClassNPrinter)
161 register_pretty_printer(obj, pretty_printer)
162 """
163
164 class RegexpSubprinter(SubPrettyPrinter):
165 def __init__(self, name, regexp, gen_printer):
166 super(RegexpCollectionPrettyPrinter.RegexpSubprinter, self).__init__(name)
167 self.regexp = regexp
168 self.gen_printer = gen_printer
169 self.compiled_re = re.compile(regexp)
170
171 def __init__(self, name):
172 super(RegexpCollectionPrettyPrinter, self).__init__(name, [])
173
174 def add_printer(self, name, regexp, gen_printer):
175 """Add a printer to the list.
176
177 The printer is added to the end of the list.
178
179 Arguments:
180 name: The name of the subprinter.
181 regexp: The regular expression, as a string.
182 gen_printer: A function/method that given a value returns an
183 object to pretty-print it.
184
185 Returns:
186 Nothing.
187 """
188
189 # NOTE: A previous version made the name of each printer the regexp.
190 # That makes it awkward to pass to the enable/disable commands (it's
191 # cumbersome to make a regexp of a regexp). So now the name is a
192 # separate parameter.
193
194 self.subprinters.append(self.RegexpSubprinter(name, regexp,
195 gen_printer))
196
197 def __call__(self, val):
198 """Lookup the pretty-printer for the provided value."""
199
200 # Get the type name.
201 typename = gdb.types.get_basic_type(val.type).tag
202 if not typename:
203 return None
204
205 # Iterate over table of type regexps to determine
206 # if a printer is registered for that type.
207 # Return an instantiation of the printer if found.
208 for printer in self.subprinters:
209 if printer.enabled and printer.compiled_re.search(typename):
210 return printer.gen_printer(val)
211
212 # Cannot find a pretty printer. Return None.
213 return None
214
215# A helper class for printing enum types. This class is instantiated
216# with a list of enumerators to print a particular Value.
217class _EnumInstance:
218 def __init__(self, enumerators, val):
219 self.enumerators = enumerators
220 self.val = val
221
222 def to_string(self):
223 flag_list = []
224 v = long(self.val)
225 any_found = False
226 for (e_name, e_value) in self.enumerators:
227 if v & e_value != 0:
228 flag_list.append(e_name)
229 v = v & ~e_value
230 any_found = True
231 if not any_found or v != 0:
232 # Leftover value.
233 flag_list.append('<unknown: 0x%x>' % v)
234 return "0x%x [%s]" % (self.val, " | ".join(flag_list))
235
236class FlagEnumerationPrinter(PrettyPrinter):
237 """A pretty-printer which can be used to print a flag-style enumeration.
238 A flag-style enumeration is one where the enumerators are or'd
239 together to create values. The new printer will print these
240 symbolically using '|' notation. The printer must be registered
241 manually. This printer is most useful when an enum is flag-like,
242 but has some overlap. GDB's built-in printing will not handle
243 this case, but this printer will attempt to."""
244
245 def __init__(self, enum_type):
246 super(FlagEnumerationPrinter, self).__init__(enum_type)
247 self.initialized = False
248
249 def __call__(self, val):
250 if not self.initialized:
251 self.initialized = True
252 flags = gdb.lookup_type(self.name)
253 self.enumerators = []
254 for field in flags.fields():
255 self.enumerators.append((field.name, field.enumval))
256 # Sorting the enumerators by value usually does the right
257 # thing.
258 self.enumerators.sort(key = lambda x: x.enumval)
259
260 if self.enabled:
261 return _EnumInstance(self.enumerators, val)
262 else:
263 return None