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qt-creator/src/plugins/debugger/breakhandler.h

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/****************************************************************************
2008-12-02 12:01:29 +01:00
**
** Copyright (C) 2016 The Qt Company Ltd.
** Contact: https://www.qt.io/licensing/
2008-12-02 12:01:29 +01:00
**
** This file is part of Qt Creator.
2008-12-02 12:01:29 +01:00
**
** Commercial License Usage
** Licensees holding valid commercial Qt licenses may use this file in
** accordance with the commercial license agreement provided with the
** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in
** a written agreement between you and The Qt Company. For licensing terms
** and conditions see https://www.qt.io/terms-conditions. For further
** information use the contact form at https://www.qt.io/contact-us.
**
** GNU General Public License Usage
** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU
** General Public License version 3 as published by the Free Software
** Foundation with exceptions as appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL3-EXCEPT
** included in the packaging of this file. Please review the following
** information to ensure the GNU General Public License requirements will
** be met: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html.
2010-12-17 16:01:08 +01:00
**
****************************************************************************/
2008-12-02 15:08:31 +01:00
#pragma once
2008-12-02 12:01:29 +01:00
#include "breakpoint.h"
#include "debuggerprotocol.h"
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
#include <utils/fileutils.h>
#include <utils/treemodel.h>
#include <QCoreApplication>
#include <QPointer>
namespace Utils { class ItemViewEvent; }
namespace Debugger {
namespace Internal {
class BreakpointItem;
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
class BreakpointMarker;
class BreakHandler;
class DebuggerCommand;
class DebuggerEngine;
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
class BreakpointManager;
class GlobalBreakpointMarker;
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
class SubBreakpointItem : public QObject, public Utils::TypedTreeItem<Utils::TreeItem, BreakpointItem>
{
public:
QVariant data(int column, int role) const final;
BreakpointItem *breakpoint() const { return Utils::TypedTreeItem<Utils::TreeItem, BreakpointItem>::parent(); }
void setParameters(const BreakpointParameters &pars) { params = pars; }
BreakpointParameters params;
QString responseId; //!< Breakpoint number assigned by the debugger engine.
QString displayName; //!< Breakpoint number assigned by the debugger engine.
};
using SubBreakpoint = QPointer<SubBreakpointItem>;
class GlobalBreakpointItem : public QObject, public Utils::TreeItem
{
Q_DECLARE_TR_FUNCTIONS(Debugger::Internal::BreakHandler)
public:
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
explicit GlobalBreakpointItem();
~GlobalBreakpointItem() override;
QVariant data(int column, int role) const override;
QIcon icon() const;
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
void deleteBreakpoint();
void removeBreakpointFromModel();
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
void updateLineNumber(int lineNumber);
void updateFileName(const Utils::FileName &fileName);
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
bool isLocatedAt(const QString &fileName, int lineNumber, bool useMarkerPosition) const;
QString displayName() const;
QString markerFileName() const;
QString toolTip() const;
int markerLineNumber() const;
int modelId() const;
bool isEnabled() const { return m_params.enabled; }
void setEnabled(bool enabled);
const BreakpointParameters &parameters() const { return m_params; }
private:
friend class BreakHandler;
friend class BreakpointManager;
friend class BreakpointMarker;
friend class GlobalBreakpointMarker;
void updateMarker();
void updateMarkerIcon();
void destroyMarker();
void scheduleSynchronization();
QPointer<DebuggerEngine> usingEngine() const;
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
bool isEngineRunning() const;
const int m_modelId;
BreakpointParameters m_params;
GlobalBreakpointMarker *m_marker = nullptr; // The primary marker set by the user.
};
using GlobalBreakpoint = QPointer<GlobalBreakpointItem>;
using GlobalBreakpoints = QList<GlobalBreakpoint>;
class BreakpointItem : public QObject, public Utils::TypedTreeItem<SubBreakpointItem>
{
Q_DECLARE_TR_FUNCTIONS(Debugger::Internal::BreakHandler)
public:
explicit BreakpointItem(const GlobalBreakpoint &gbp);
~BreakpointItem() final;
QVariant data(int column, int role) const final;
QIcon icon() const;
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
void setMarkerFileAndLine(const QString &fileName, int lineNumber);
bool needsChange() const;
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
SubBreakpoint findOrCreateSubBreakpoint(const QString &responseId);
QString markerFileName() const;
int markerLineNumber() const;
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
const BreakpointParameters &requestedParameters() const;
void addToCommand(DebuggerCommand *cmd) const;
void updateFromGdbOutput(const GdbMi &bkpt);
int modelId() const;
QString responseId() const { return m_responseId; }
QString displayName() const { return m_displayName; }
QString toolTip() const;
QString shortToolTip() const;
BreakpointState state() const { return m_state; }
BreakpointType type() const { return m_parameters.type; }
BreakpointPathUsage pathUsage() const;
const BreakpointParameters parameters() const { return m_parameters; }
QString condition() const { return m_parameters.condition; }
int ignoreCount() const { return m_parameters.ignoreCount; }
int threadSpec() const { return m_parameters.threadSpec; }
QString fileName() const { return m_parameters.fileName; }
QString functionName() const { return m_parameters.functionName; }
QString expression() const { return m_parameters.expression; }
QString message() const { return m_parameters.message; }
QString command() const { return m_parameters.command; }
quint64 address() const { return m_parameters.address; }
int lineNumber() const { return m_parameters.lineNumber; }
bool isEnabled() const { return m_parameters.enabled; }
bool isWatchpoint() const { return m_parameters.isWatchpoint(); }
bool isTracepoint() const { return m_parameters.isTracepoint(); }
bool isOneShot() const { return m_parameters.oneShot; }
bool isPending() const { return m_parameters.pending; }
void setLineNumber(int lineNumber) { m_parameters.lineNumber = lineNumber; }
void setFileName(const QString &fileName) { m_parameters.fileName = fileName; }
void setFunctionName(const QString &functionName) { m_parameters.functionName = functionName; }
void setPending(bool pending);
void setResponseId(const QString &str) { m_responseId = str; }
void setDisplayName(const QString &name) { m_displayName = name; }
void setParameters(const BreakpointParameters &value);
void setAddress(quint64 address) { m_parameters.address = address; }
void setEnabled(bool on);
void setHitCount(int hitCount) { m_parameters.hitCount = hitCount; }
void setThreadSpec(int threadSpec) { m_parameters.threadSpec = threadSpec; }
void setIgnoreCount(int count) { m_parameters.ignoreCount = count; }
void setCommand(const QString &command) { m_parameters.command = command; }
void setCondition(const QString &condition) { m_parameters.condition = condition; }
QString msgWatchpointByAddressTriggered(quint64 address) const;
QString msgWatchpointByAddressTriggered(quint64 address, const QString &threadId) const;
QString msgWatchpointByExpressionTriggered(const QString &expr) const;
QString msgWatchpointByExpressionTriggered(const QString &expr, const QString &threadId) const;
QString msgBreakpointTriggered(const QString &threadId) const;
friend class BreakpointManager;
friend class BreakHandler;
friend class DebuggerEngine;
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
void adjustMarker();
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
void deleteBreakpoint();
void deleteGlobalOrThisBreakpoint();
void updateLineNumber(int lineNumber);
void updateFileName(const Utils::FileName &fileName);
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
const GlobalBreakpoint globalBreakpoint() const;
void gotoState(BreakpointState target, BreakpointState assumedCurrent);
private:
void destroyMarker();
void updateMarker();
void updateMarkerIcon();
void setState(BreakpointState state);
const GlobalBreakpoint m_globalBreakpoint; // Origin, or null for aliens.
BreakpointParameters m_requestedParameters; // May differ from global value over lifetime of breakpoint.
BreakpointParameters m_parameters;
BreakpointState m_state = BreakpointNew; // Current state of breakpoint.
BreakpointMarker *m_marker = nullptr;
QString m_responseId; //!< Breakpoint number or id assigne by or used in the debugger backend.
QString m_displayName;
};
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
using Breakpoint = QPointer<BreakpointItem>;
using Breakpoints = const QList<Breakpoint>;
using SubBreakpoints = const QList<SubBreakpoint>;
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
using BreakHandlerModel = Utils::TreeModel<Utils::TypedTreeItem<BreakpointItem>, BreakpointItem, SubBreakpointItem>;
using BreakpointManagerModel = Utils::TreeModel<Utils::TypedTreeItem<GlobalBreakpointItem>, GlobalBreakpointItem>;
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
inline uint qHash(const Debugger::Internal::SubBreakpoint &b) { return qHash(b.data()); }
inline uint qHash(const Debugger::Internal::Breakpoint &b) { return qHash(b.data()); }
inline uint qHash(const Debugger::Internal::GlobalBreakpoint &b) { return qHash(b.data()); }
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
class BreakHandler : public BreakHandlerModel
2008-12-02 12:01:29 +01:00
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
explicit BreakHandler(DebuggerEngine *engine);
QAbstractItemModel *model() { return this; }
const Breakpoints breakpoints() const;
2008-12-02 12:01:29 +01:00
void loadSessionData();
void saveSessionData();
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
bool tryClaimBreakpoint(const GlobalBreakpoint &gbp);
void releaseAllBreakpoints();
2008-12-02 12:01:29 +01:00
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
void handleAlienBreakpoint(const QString &responseId, const BreakpointParameters &response);
void removeAlienBreakpoint(const QString &responseId);
void requestBreakpointInsertion(const Breakpoint &bp);
void requestBreakpointUpdate(const Breakpoint &bp);
void requestBreakpointRemoval(const Breakpoint &bp);
void requestBreakpointEnabling(const Breakpoint &bp, bool enabled);
void requestSubBreakpointEnabling(const SubBreakpoint &sbp, bool enabled);
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
void removeBreakpoint(const Breakpoint &bp);
void editBreakpoint(const Breakpoint &bp, QWidget *parent);
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
Breakpoint findBreakpointByResponseId(const QString &responseId) const;
SubBreakpoint findSubBreakpointByResponseId(const QString &responseId) const;
Breakpoint findWatchpoint(const BreakpointParameters &data) const;
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
Breakpoint findBreakpointByModelId(int modelId) const;
2008-12-02 12:01:29 +01:00
static QString displayFromThreadSpec(int spec);
static int threadSpecFromDisplay(const QString &str);
// Convenience.
void setWatchpointAtAddress(quint64 address, unsigned size);
void setWatchpointAtExpression(const QString &exp);
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
void setBreakpointEnabled(const Breakpoint &bp, bool on);
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
void updateDisassemblerMarker(const Breakpoint &bp);
void removeDisassemblerMarker(const Breakpoint &bp);
private:
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
Breakpoint findBreakpointByIndex(const QModelIndex &index) const;
Breakpoints findBreakpointsByIndex(const QList<QModelIndex> &list) const;
SubBreakpoint findSubBreakpointByIndex(const QModelIndex &index) const;
SubBreakpoints findSubBreakpointsByIndex(const QList<QModelIndex> &list) const;
void editBreakpoints(const Breakpoints &bps, QWidget *parent);
void gotoState(Breakpoint bp, BreakpointState target, BreakpointState assumedCurrent);
void gotoLocation(const Breakpoint &bp) const;
QVariant data(const QModelIndex &idx, int role) const final;
bool setData(const QModelIndex &idx, const QVariant &value, int role) final;
bool contextMenuEvent(const Utils::ItemViewEvent &ev);
friend class BreakpointItem;
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
DebuggerEngine * const m_engine;
};
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
class BreakpointManager : public BreakpointManagerModel
{
Q_OBJECT
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
public:
BreakpointManager();
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
static QAbstractItemModel *model();
static const GlobalBreakpoints globalBreakpoints();
static void loadSessionData();
static void saveSessionData();
static void aboutToUnloadSession();
static GlobalBreakpoint createBreakpoint(const BreakpointParameters &data);
Debugger: Make most views per-engine instead of singletons This is a step towards properly supporting multiple debugger sessions side-by-side. The combined C++-and-QML engine has been removed, instead a combined setup creates now two individual engines, under a single DebuggerRunTool but mostly independent with no combined state machine. This requires a few more clicks in some cases, but makes it easier to direct e.g. interrupt requests to the interesting engine. Care has been taken to not change the UX of the single debugger session use case if possible. The fat debug button operates as-before in that case, i.e. switches to Interrupt if the single active runconfiguration runs in the debugger etc. Most views are made per-engine, running an engine creates a new Perspective, which is destroyed when the run control dies. The snapshot view remains global and becomes primary source of information on a "current engine" that receives all menu and otherwise global input. There is a new global "Breakpoint Preset" view containing all "static" breakpoint data. When an engine starts up it "claims" breakpoint it believes it can handle, but operates on a copy of the static data. The markers of the static version are suppressed as long as an engine controls a breakpoint (that inclusive all resolved locations), but are re-instatet once the engine quits. The old Breakpoint class that already contained this split per-instance was split into a new Breakpoint and a GlobalBreakpoint class, with a per-engine model for Breakpoints, and a singleton model containing GlobalBreakpoints. There is a new CppDebuggerEngine intermediate level serving as base for C++ (or, rather, "compiled") binary debugging, i.e. {Gdb,Lldb,Cdb}Engine, taking over bits of the current DebuggerEngine base that are not applicable to non-binary debuggers. Change-Id: I9994f4c188379b4aee0c4f379edd4759fbb0bd43 Reviewed-by: Christian Stenger <christian.stenger@qt.io> Reviewed-by: hjk <hjk@qt.io>
2018-07-31 12:30:48 +02:00
static GlobalBreakpoint findBreakpointByLocation(const ContextData &location);
// Find a breakpoint matching approximately the data in needle.
static GlobalBreakpoint findSimilarBreakpoint(const BreakpointParameters &needle);
static GlobalBreakpoint findWatchpoint(const BreakpointParameters &data);
static GlobalBreakpoint findBreakpointByFunction(const QString &functionName);
static void claimBreakpointsForEngine(DebuggerEngine *engine);
static void toggleBreakpoint(const ContextData &location, const QString &tracePointMessage = QString());
static void createBreakpointForEngine(const BreakpointParameters &data, DebuggerEngine *engine);
static void executeAddBreakpointDialog();
static void executeDeleteAllBreakpointsDialog();
private:
static GlobalBreakpoint createBreakpointHelper(const BreakpointParameters &data);
static GlobalBreakpoint findBreakpointByIndex(const QModelIndex &index);
static GlobalBreakpoints findBreakpointsByIndex(const QList<QModelIndex> &list);
QVariant data(const QModelIndex &idx, int role) const final;
bool setData(const QModelIndex &idx, const QVariant &value, int role) final;
bool contextMenuEvent(const Utils::ItemViewEvent &ev);
void gotoLocation(const GlobalBreakpoint &gbp) const;
2008-12-02 12:01:29 +01:00
};
} // namespace Internal
} // namespace Debugger