libpython.py 60.8 KB
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#!/usr/bin/python
'''
From gdb 7 onwards, gdb's build can be configured --with-python, allowing gdb
to be extended with Python code e.g. for library-specific data visualizations,
such as for the C++ STL types.  Documentation on this API can be seen at:
http://sourceware.org/gdb/current/onlinedocs/gdb/Python-API.html


This python module deals with the case when the process being debugged (the
"inferior process" in gdb parlance) is itself python, or more specifically,
linked against libpython.  In this situation, almost every item of data is a
(PyObject*), and having the debugger merely print their addresses is not very
enlightening.

This module embeds knowledge about the implementation details of libpython so
that we can emit useful visualizations e.g. a string, a list, a dict, a frame
giving file/line information and the state of local variables

In particular, given a gdb.Value corresponding to a PyObject* in the inferior
process, we can generate a "proxy value" within the gdb process.  For example,
given a PyObject* in the inferior process that is in fact a PyListObject*
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holding three PyObject* that turn out to be PyBytesObject* instances, we can
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generate a proxy value within the gdb process that is a list of bytes
instances:
  [b"foo", b"bar", b"baz"]
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Doing so can be expensive for complicated graphs of objects, and could take
some time, so we also have a "write_repr" method that writes a representation
of the data to a file-like object.  This allows us to stop the traversal by
having the file-like object raise an exception if it gets too much data.

With both "proxyval" and "write_repr" we keep track of the set of all addresses
visited so far in the traversal, to avoid infinite recursion due to cycles in
the graph of object references.

We try to defer gdb.lookup_type() invocations for python types until as late as
possible: for a dynamically linked python binary, when the process starts in
the debugger, the libpython.so hasn't been dynamically loaded yet, so none of
the type names are known to the debugger

The module also extends gdb with some python-specific commands.
'''
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# NOTE: some gdbs are linked with Python 3, so this file should be dual-syntax
# compatible (2.6+ and 3.0+).  See #19308.

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from __future__ import print_function
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import gdb
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import os
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import locale
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import sys
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if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
    unichr = chr
    xrange = range
    long = int

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# Look up the gdb.Type for some standard types:
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# Those need to be refreshed as types (pointer sizes) may change when
# gdb loads different executables

def _type_char_ptr():
    return gdb.lookup_type('char').pointer()  # char*


def _type_unsigned_char_ptr():
    return gdb.lookup_type('unsigned char').pointer()  # unsigned char*


def _type_unsigned_short_ptr():
    return gdb.lookup_type('unsigned short').pointer()


def _type_unsigned_int_ptr():
    return gdb.lookup_type('unsigned int').pointer()
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def _sizeof_void_p():
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    return gdb.lookup_type('void').pointer().sizeof
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# value computed later, see PyUnicodeObjectPtr.proxy()
_is_pep393 = None
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Py_TPFLAGS_HEAPTYPE = (1 << 9)
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Py_TPFLAGS_LONG_SUBCLASS     = (1 << 24)
Py_TPFLAGS_LIST_SUBCLASS     = (1 << 25)
Py_TPFLAGS_TUPLE_SUBCLASS    = (1 << 26)
Py_TPFLAGS_BYTES_SUBCLASS    = (1 << 27)
Py_TPFLAGS_UNICODE_SUBCLASS  = (1 << 28)
Py_TPFLAGS_DICT_SUBCLASS     = (1 << 29)
Py_TPFLAGS_BASE_EXC_SUBCLASS = (1 << 30)
Py_TPFLAGS_TYPE_SUBCLASS     = (1 << 31)
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MAX_OUTPUT_LEN=1024

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hexdigits = "0123456789abcdef"

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ENCODING = locale.getpreferredencoding()
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class NullPyObjectPtr(RuntimeError):
    pass


def safety_limit(val):
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    # Given an integer value from the process being debugged, limit it to some
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    # safety threshold so that arbitrary breakage within said process doesn't
    # break the gdb process too much (e.g. sizes of iterations, sizes of lists)
    return min(val, 1000)


def safe_range(val):
    # As per range, but don't trust the value too much: cap it to a safety
    # threshold in case the data was corrupted
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    return xrange(safety_limit(int(val)))

if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
    def write_unicode(file, text):
        file.write(text)
else:
    def write_unicode(file, text):
        # Write a byte or unicode string to file. Unicode strings are encoded to
        # ENCODING encoding with 'backslashreplace' error handler to avoid
        # UnicodeEncodeError.
        if isinstance(text, unicode):
            text = text.encode(ENCODING, 'backslashreplace')
        file.write(text)

try:
    os_fsencode = os.fsencode
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except AttributeError:
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    def os_fsencode(filename):
        if not isinstance(filename, unicode):
            return filename
        encoding = sys.getfilesystemencoding()
        if encoding == 'mbcs':
            # mbcs doesn't support surrogateescape
            return filename.encode(encoding)
        encoded = []
        for char in filename:
            # surrogateescape error handler
            if 0xDC80 <= ord(char) <= 0xDCFF:
                byte = chr(ord(char) - 0xDC00)
            else:
                byte = char.encode(encoding)
            encoded.append(byte)
        return ''.join(encoded)
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class StringTruncated(RuntimeError):
    pass

class TruncatedStringIO(object):
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    '''Similar to io.StringIO, but can truncate the output by raising a
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    StringTruncated exception'''
    def __init__(self, maxlen=None):
        self._val = ''
        self.maxlen = maxlen

    def write(self, data):
        if self.maxlen:
            if len(data) + len(self._val) > self.maxlen:
                # Truncation:
                self._val += data[0:self.maxlen - len(self._val)]
                raise StringTruncated()

        self._val += data

    def getvalue(self):
        return self._val

class PyObjectPtr(object):
    """
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    Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's either a (PyObject*) within the
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    inferior process, or some subclass pointer e.g. (PyBytesObject*)
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    There will be a subclass for every refined PyObject type that we care
    about.

    Note that at every stage the underlying pointer could be NULL, point
    to corrupt data, etc; this is the debugger, after all.
    """
    _typename = 'PyObject'

    def __init__(self, gdbval, cast_to=None):
        if cast_to:
            self._gdbval = gdbval.cast(cast_to)
        else:
            self._gdbval = gdbval

    def field(self, name):
        '''
        Get the gdb.Value for the given field within the PyObject, coping with
        some python 2 versus python 3 differences.

        Various libpython types are defined using the "PyObject_HEAD" and
        "PyObject_VAR_HEAD" macros.

        In Python 2, this these are defined so that "ob_type" and (for a var
        object) "ob_size" are fields of the type in question.

        In Python 3, this is defined as an embedded PyVarObject type thus:
           PyVarObject ob_base;
        so that the "ob_size" field is located insize the "ob_base" field, and
        the "ob_type" is most easily accessed by casting back to a (PyObject*).
        '''
        if self.is_null():
            raise NullPyObjectPtr(self)

        if name == 'ob_type':
            pyo_ptr = self._gdbval.cast(PyObjectPtr.get_gdb_type())
            return pyo_ptr.dereference()[name]

        if name == 'ob_size':
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            pyo_ptr = self._gdbval.cast(PyVarObjectPtr.get_gdb_type())
            return pyo_ptr.dereference()[name]
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        # General case: look it up inside the object:
        return self._gdbval.dereference()[name]

    def pyop_field(self, name):
        '''
        Get a PyObjectPtr for the given PyObject* field within this PyObject,
        coping with some python 2 versus python 3 differences.
        '''
        return PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self.field(name))

    def write_field_repr(self, name, out, visited):
        '''
        Extract the PyObject* field named "name", and write its representation
        to file-like object "out"
        '''
        field_obj = self.pyop_field(name)
        field_obj.write_repr(out, visited)

    def get_truncated_repr(self, maxlen):
        '''
        Get a repr-like string for the data, but truncate it at "maxlen" bytes
        (ending the object graph traversal as soon as you do)
        '''
        out = TruncatedStringIO(maxlen)
        try:
            self.write_repr(out, set())
        except StringTruncated:
            # Truncation occurred:
            return out.getvalue() + '...(truncated)'

        # No truncation occurred:
        return out.getvalue()

    def type(self):
        return PyTypeObjectPtr(self.field('ob_type'))

    def is_null(self):
        return 0 == long(self._gdbval)

    def is_optimized_out(self):
        '''
        Is the value of the underlying PyObject* visible to the debugger?

        This can vary with the precise version of the compiler used to build
        Python, and the precise version of gdb.

        See e.g. https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=556975 with
        PyEval_EvalFrameEx's "f"
        '''
        return self._gdbval.is_optimized_out

    def safe_tp_name(self):
        try:
            return self.type().field('tp_name').string()
        except NullPyObjectPtr:
            # NULL tp_name?
            return 'unknown'
        except RuntimeError:
            # Can't even read the object at all?
            return 'unknown'

    def proxyval(self, visited):
        '''
        Scrape a value from the inferior process, and try to represent it
        within the gdb process, whilst (hopefully) avoiding crashes when
        the remote data is corrupt.

        Derived classes will override this.

        For example, a PyIntObject* with ob_ival 42 in the inferior process
        should result in an int(42) in this process.

        visited: a set of all gdb.Value pyobject pointers already visited
        whilst generating this value (to guard against infinite recursion when
        visiting object graphs with loops).  Analogous to Py_ReprEnter and
        Py_ReprLeave
        '''

        class FakeRepr(object):
            """
            Class representing a non-descript PyObject* value in the inferior
            process for when we don't have a custom scraper, intended to have
            a sane repr().
            """

            def __init__(self, tp_name, address):
                self.tp_name = tp_name
                self.address = address

            def __repr__(self):
                # For the NULL pointer, we have no way of knowing a type, so
                # special-case it as per
                # http://bugs.python.org/issue8032#msg100882
                if self.address == 0:
                    return '0x0'
                return '<%s at remote 0x%x>' % (self.tp_name, self.address)

        return FakeRepr(self.safe_tp_name(),
                        long(self._gdbval))

    def write_repr(self, out, visited):
        '''
        Write a string representation of the value scraped from the inferior
        process to "out", a file-like object.
        '''
        # Default implementation: generate a proxy value and write its repr
        # However, this could involve a lot of work for complicated objects,
        # so for derived classes we specialize this
        return out.write(repr(self.proxyval(visited)))

    @classmethod
    def subclass_from_type(cls, t):
        '''
        Given a PyTypeObjectPtr instance wrapping a gdb.Value that's a
        (PyTypeObject*), determine the corresponding subclass of PyObjectPtr
        to use

        Ideally, we would look up the symbols for the global types, but that
        isn't working yet:
          (gdb) python print gdb.lookup_symbol('PyList_Type')[0].value
          Traceback (most recent call last):
            File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
          NotImplementedError: Symbol type not yet supported in Python scripts.
          Error while executing Python code.

        For now, we use tp_flags, after doing some string comparisons on the
        tp_name for some special-cases that don't seem to be visible through
        flags
        '''
        try:
            tp_name = t.field('tp_name').string()
            tp_flags = int(t.field('tp_flags'))
        except RuntimeError:
            # Handle any kind of error e.g. NULL ptrs by simply using the base
            # class
            return cls

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        #print('tp_flags = 0x%08x' % tp_flags)
        #print('tp_name = %r' % tp_name)
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        name_map = {'bool': PyBoolObjectPtr,
                    'classobj': PyClassObjectPtr,
                    'NoneType': PyNoneStructPtr,
                    'frame': PyFrameObjectPtr,
                    'set' : PySetObjectPtr,
                    'frozenset' : PySetObjectPtr,
                    'builtin_function_or_method' : PyCFunctionObjectPtr,
                    }
        if tp_name in name_map:
            return name_map[tp_name]

        if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_HEAPTYPE:
            return HeapTypeObjectPtr

        if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_LONG_SUBCLASS:
            return PyLongObjectPtr
        if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_LIST_SUBCLASS:
            return PyListObjectPtr
        if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_TUPLE_SUBCLASS:
            return PyTupleObjectPtr
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        if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_BYTES_SUBCLASS:
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            return PyBytesObjectPtr
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        if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_UNICODE_SUBCLASS:
            return PyUnicodeObjectPtr
        if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_DICT_SUBCLASS:
            return PyDictObjectPtr
        if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_BASE_EXC_SUBCLASS:
            return PyBaseExceptionObjectPtr
        #if tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_TYPE_SUBCLASS:
        #    return PyTypeObjectPtr

        # Use the base class:
        return cls

    @classmethod
    def from_pyobject_ptr(cls, gdbval):
        '''
        Try to locate the appropriate derived class dynamically, and cast
        the pointer accordingly.
        '''
        try:
            p = PyObjectPtr(gdbval)
            cls = cls.subclass_from_type(p.type())
            return cls(gdbval, cast_to=cls.get_gdb_type())
        except RuntimeError:
            # Handle any kind of error e.g. NULL ptrs by simply using the base
            # class
            pass
        return cls(gdbval)

    @classmethod
    def get_gdb_type(cls):
        return gdb.lookup_type(cls._typename).pointer()

    def as_address(self):
        return long(self._gdbval)

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class PyVarObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    _typename = 'PyVarObject'
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class ProxyAlreadyVisited(object):
    '''
    Placeholder proxy to use when protecting against infinite recursion due to
    loops in the object graph.

    Analogous to the values emitted by the users of Py_ReprEnter and Py_ReprLeave
    '''
    def __init__(self, rep):
        self._rep = rep

    def __repr__(self):
        return self._rep


def _write_instance_repr(out, visited, name, pyop_attrdict, address):
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    '''Shared code for use by all classes:
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    write a representation to file-like object "out"'''
    out.write('<')
    out.write(name)

    # Write dictionary of instance attributes:
    if isinstance(pyop_attrdict, PyDictObjectPtr):
        out.write('(')
        first = True
        for pyop_arg, pyop_val in pyop_attrdict.iteritems():
            if not first:
                out.write(', ')
            first = False
            out.write(pyop_arg.proxyval(visited))
            out.write('=')
            pyop_val.write_repr(out, visited)
        out.write(')')
    out.write(' at remote 0x%x>' % address)


class InstanceProxy(object):

    def __init__(self, cl_name, attrdict, address):
        self.cl_name = cl_name
        self.attrdict = attrdict
        self.address = address

    def __repr__(self):
        if isinstance(self.attrdict, dict):
            kwargs = ', '.join(["%s=%r" % (arg, val)
                                for arg, val in self.attrdict.iteritems()])
            return '<%s(%s) at remote 0x%x>' % (self.cl_name,
                                                kwargs, self.address)
        else:
            return '<%s at remote 0x%x>' % (self.cl_name,
                                            self.address)

def _PyObject_VAR_SIZE(typeobj, nitems):
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    if _PyObject_VAR_SIZE._type_size_t is None:
        _PyObject_VAR_SIZE._type_size_t = gdb.lookup_type('size_t')

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    return ( ( typeobj.field('tp_basicsize') +
               nitems * typeobj.field('tp_itemsize') +
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               (_sizeof_void_p() - 1)
             ) & ~(_sizeof_void_p() - 1)
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           ).cast(_PyObject_VAR_SIZE._type_size_t)
_PyObject_VAR_SIZE._type_size_t = None
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class HeapTypeObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    _typename = 'PyObject'

    def get_attr_dict(self):
        '''
        Get the PyDictObject ptr representing the attribute dictionary
        (or None if there's a problem)
        '''
        try:
            typeobj = self.type()
            dictoffset = int_from_int(typeobj.field('tp_dictoffset'))
            if dictoffset != 0:
                if dictoffset < 0:
                    type_PyVarObject_ptr = gdb.lookup_type('PyVarObject').pointer()
                    tsize = int_from_int(self._gdbval.cast(type_PyVarObject_ptr)['ob_size'])
                    if tsize < 0:
                        tsize = -tsize
                    size = _PyObject_VAR_SIZE(typeobj, tsize)
                    dictoffset += size
                    assert dictoffset > 0
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                    assert dictoffset % _sizeof_void_p() == 0
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                dictptr = self._gdbval.cast(_type_char_ptr()) + dictoffset
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                PyObjectPtrPtr = PyObjectPtr.get_gdb_type().pointer()
                dictptr = dictptr.cast(PyObjectPtrPtr)
                return PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(dictptr.dereference())
        except RuntimeError:
            # Corrupt data somewhere; fail safe
            pass

        # Not found, or some kind of error:
        return None

    def proxyval(self, visited):
        '''
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        Support for classes.
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        Currently we just locate the dictionary using a transliteration to
        python of _PyObject_GetDictPtr, ignoring descriptors
        '''
        # Guard against infinite loops:
        if self.as_address() in visited:
            return ProxyAlreadyVisited('<...>')
        visited.add(self.as_address())

        pyop_attr_dict = self.get_attr_dict()
        if pyop_attr_dict:
            attr_dict = pyop_attr_dict.proxyval(visited)
        else:
            attr_dict = {}
        tp_name = self.safe_tp_name()

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        # Class:
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        return InstanceProxy(tp_name, attr_dict, long(self._gdbval))

    def write_repr(self, out, visited):
        # Guard against infinite loops:
        if self.as_address() in visited:
            out.write('<...>')
            return
        visited.add(self.as_address())

        pyop_attrdict = self.get_attr_dict()
        _write_instance_repr(out, visited,
                             self.safe_tp_name(), pyop_attrdict, self.as_address())

class ProxyException(Exception):
    def __init__(self, tp_name, args):
        self.tp_name = tp_name
        self.args = args

    def __repr__(self):
        return '%s%r' % (self.tp_name, self.args)

class PyBaseExceptionObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    """
    Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's a PyBaseExceptionObject* i.e. an exception
    within the process being debugged.
    """
    _typename = 'PyBaseExceptionObject'

    def proxyval(self, visited):
        # Guard against infinite loops:
        if self.as_address() in visited:
            return ProxyAlreadyVisited('(...)')
        visited.add(self.as_address())
        arg_proxy = self.pyop_field('args').proxyval(visited)
        return ProxyException(self.safe_tp_name(),
                              arg_proxy)

    def write_repr(self, out, visited):
        # Guard against infinite loops:
        if self.as_address() in visited:
            out.write('(...)')
            return
        visited.add(self.as_address())

        out.write(self.safe_tp_name())
        self.write_field_repr('args', out, visited)

class PyClassObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    """
    Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's a PyClassObject* i.e. a <classobj>
    instance within the process being debugged.
    """
    _typename = 'PyClassObject'


class BuiltInFunctionProxy(object):
    def __init__(self, ml_name):
        self.ml_name = ml_name

    def __repr__(self):
        return "<built-in function %s>" % self.ml_name

class BuiltInMethodProxy(object):
    def __init__(self, ml_name, pyop_m_self):
        self.ml_name = ml_name
        self.pyop_m_self = pyop_m_self

    def __repr__(self):
        return ('<built-in method %s of %s object at remote 0x%x>'
                % (self.ml_name,
                   self.pyop_m_self.safe_tp_name(),
                   self.pyop_m_self.as_address())
                )

class PyCFunctionObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    """
    Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's a PyCFunctionObject*
    (see Include/methodobject.h and Objects/methodobject.c)
    """
    _typename = 'PyCFunctionObject'

    def proxyval(self, visited):
        m_ml = self.field('m_ml') # m_ml is a (PyMethodDef*)
        ml_name = m_ml['ml_name'].string()

        pyop_m_self = self.pyop_field('m_self')
        if pyop_m_self.is_null():
            return BuiltInFunctionProxy(ml_name)
        else:
            return BuiltInMethodProxy(ml_name, pyop_m_self)


class PyCodeObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    """
    Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's a PyCodeObject* i.e. a <code> instance
    within the process being debugged.
    """
    _typename = 'PyCodeObject'

    def addr2line(self, addrq):
        '''
        Get the line number for a given bytecode offset

        Analogous to PyCode_Addr2Line; translated from pseudocode in
        Objects/lnotab_notes.txt
        '''
        co_lnotab = self.pyop_field('co_lnotab').proxyval(set())

        # Initialize lineno to co_firstlineno as per PyCode_Addr2Line
        # not 0, as lnotab_notes.txt has it:
        lineno = int_from_int(self.field('co_firstlineno'))

        addr = 0
        for addr_incr, line_incr in zip(co_lnotab[::2], co_lnotab[1::2]):
            addr += ord(addr_incr)
            if addr > addrq:
                return lineno
            lineno += ord(line_incr)
        return lineno


class PyDictObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    """
    Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's a PyDictObject* i.e. a dict instance
    within the process being debugged.
    """
    _typename = 'PyDictObject'

    def iteritems(self):
        '''
        Yields a sequence of (PyObjectPtr key, PyObjectPtr value) pairs,
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        analogous to dict.iteritems()
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        '''
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        keys = self.field('ma_keys')
        values = self.field('ma_values')
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        entries, nentries = self._get_entries(keys)
        for i in safe_range(nentries):
            ep = entries[i]
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            if long(values):
                pyop_value = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(values[i])
            else:
                pyop_value = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(ep['me_value'])
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            if not pyop_value.is_null():
                pyop_key = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(ep['me_key'])
                yield (pyop_key, pyop_value)

    def proxyval(self, visited):
        # Guard against infinite loops:
        if self.as_address() in visited:
            return ProxyAlreadyVisited('{...}')
        visited.add(self.as_address())

        result = {}
        for pyop_key, pyop_value in self.iteritems():
            proxy_key = pyop_key.proxyval(visited)
            proxy_value = pyop_value.proxyval(visited)
            result[proxy_key] = proxy_value
        return result

    def write_repr(self, out, visited):
        # Guard against infinite loops:
        if self.as_address() in visited:
            out.write('{...}')
            return
        visited.add(self.as_address())

        out.write('{')
        first = True
        for pyop_key, pyop_value in self.iteritems():
            if not first:
                out.write(', ')
            first = False
            pyop_key.write_repr(out, visited)
            out.write(': ')
            pyop_value.write_repr(out, visited)
        out.write('}')

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    def _get_entries(self, keys):
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        dk_nentries = int(keys['dk_nentries'])
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        dk_size = int(keys['dk_size'])
        try:
            # <= Python 3.5
            return keys['dk_entries'], dk_size
        except gdb.error:
            # >= Python 3.6
            pass

        if dk_size <= 0xFF:
            offset = dk_size
        elif dk_size <= 0xFFFF:
            offset = 2 * dk_size
        elif dk_size <= 0xFFFFFFFF:
            offset = 4 * dk_size
        else:
            offset = 8 * dk_size

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        ent_addr = keys['dk_indices']['as_1'].address
        ent_addr = ent_addr.cast(_type_unsigned_char_ptr()) + offset
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        ent_ptr_t = gdb.lookup_type('PyDictKeyEntry').pointer()
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        ent_addr = ent_addr.cast(ent_ptr_t)

        return ent_addr, dk_nentries
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class PyListObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    _typename = 'PyListObject'

    def __getitem__(self, i):
        # Get the gdb.Value for the (PyObject*) with the given index:
        field_ob_item = self.field('ob_item')
        return field_ob_item[i]

    def proxyval(self, visited):
        # Guard against infinite loops:
        if self.as_address() in visited:
            return ProxyAlreadyVisited('[...]')
        visited.add(self.as_address())

        result = [PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self[i]).proxyval(visited)
                  for i in safe_range(int_from_int(self.field('ob_size')))]
        return result

    def write_repr(self, out, visited):
        # Guard against infinite loops:
        if self.as_address() in visited:
            out.write('[...]')
            return
        visited.add(self.as_address())

        out.write('[')
        for i in safe_range(int_from_int(self.field('ob_size'))):
            if i > 0:
                out.write(', ')
            element = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self[i])
            element.write_repr(out, visited)
        out.write(']')

class PyLongObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    _typename = 'PyLongObject'

    def proxyval(self, visited):
        '''
        Python's Include/longobjrep.h has this declaration:
           struct _longobject {
               PyObject_VAR_HEAD
               digit ob_digit[1];
           };

        with this description:
            The absolute value of a number is equal to
                 SUM(for i=0 through abs(ob_size)-1) ob_digit[i] * 2**(SHIFT*i)
            Negative numbers are represented with ob_size < 0;
            zero is represented by ob_size == 0.

        where SHIFT can be either:
            #define PyLong_SHIFT        30
            #define PyLong_SHIFT        15
        '''
        ob_size = long(self.field('ob_size'))
        if ob_size == 0:
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            return 0
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        ob_digit = self.field('ob_digit')

        if gdb.lookup_type('digit').sizeof == 2:
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            SHIFT = 15
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        else:
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            SHIFT = 30
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        digits = [long(ob_digit[i]) * 2**(SHIFT*i)
                  for i in safe_range(abs(ob_size))]
        result = sum(digits)
        if ob_size < 0:
            result = -result
        return result

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    def write_repr(self, out, visited):
        # Write this out as a Python 3 int literal, i.e. without the "L" suffix
        proxy = self.proxyval(visited)
        out.write("%s" % proxy)


class PyBoolObjectPtr(PyLongObjectPtr):
    """
    Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's a PyBoolObject* i.e. one of the two
    <bool> instances (Py_True/Py_False) within the process being debugged.
    """
    def proxyval(self, visited):
        if PyLongObjectPtr.proxyval(self, visited):
            return True
        else:
            return False
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class PyNoneStructPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    """
    Class wrapping a gdb.Value that's a PyObject* pointing to the
    singleton (we hope) _Py_NoneStruct with ob_type PyNone_Type
    """
    _typename = 'PyObject'

    def proxyval(self, visited):
        return None


class PyFrameObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    _typename = 'PyFrameObject'

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    def __init__(self, gdbval, cast_to=None):
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        PyObjectPtr.__init__(self, gdbval, cast_to)

        if not self.is_optimized_out():
            self.co = PyCodeObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self.field('f_code'))
            self.co_name = self.co.pyop_field('co_name')
            self.co_filename = self.co.pyop_field('co_filename')

            self.f_lineno = int_from_int(self.field('f_lineno'))
            self.f_lasti = int_from_int(self.field('f_lasti'))
            self.co_nlocals = int_from_int(self.co.field('co_nlocals'))
            self.co_varnames = PyTupleObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self.co.field('co_varnames'))

    def iter_locals(self):
        '''
        Yield a sequence of (name,value) pairs of PyObjectPtr instances, for
        the local variables of this frame
        '''
        if self.is_optimized_out():
            return

        f_localsplus = self.field('f_localsplus')
        for i in safe_range(self.co_nlocals):
            pyop_value = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(f_localsplus[i])
            if not pyop_value.is_null():
                pyop_name = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self.co_varnames[i])
                yield (pyop_name, pyop_value)

    def iter_globals(self):
        '''
        Yield a sequence of (name,value) pairs of PyObjectPtr instances, for
        the global variables of this frame
        '''
        if self.is_optimized_out():
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            return ()
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        pyop_globals = self.pyop_field('f_globals')
        return pyop_globals.iteritems()

    def iter_builtins(self):
        '''
        Yield a sequence of (name,value) pairs of PyObjectPtr instances, for
        the builtin variables
        '''
        if self.is_optimized_out():
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            return ()
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        pyop_builtins = self.pyop_field('f_builtins')
        return pyop_builtins.iteritems()

    def get_var_by_name(self, name):
        '''
        Look for the named local variable, returning a (PyObjectPtr, scope) pair
        where scope is a string 'local', 'global', 'builtin'

        If not found, return (None, None)
        '''
        for pyop_name, pyop_value in self.iter_locals():
            if name == pyop_name.proxyval(set()):
                return pyop_value, 'local'
        for pyop_name, pyop_value in self.iter_globals():
            if name == pyop_name.proxyval(set()):
                return pyop_value, 'global'
        for pyop_name, pyop_value in self.iter_builtins():
            if name == pyop_name.proxyval(set()):
                return pyop_value, 'builtin'
        return None, None

    def filename(self):
        '''Get the path of the current Python source file, as a string'''
        if self.is_optimized_out():
            return '(frame information optimized out)'
        return self.co_filename.proxyval(set())

    def current_line_num(self):
        '''Get current line number as an integer (1-based)

        Translated from PyFrame_GetLineNumber and PyCode_Addr2Line

        See Objects/lnotab_notes.txt
        '''
        if self.is_optimized_out():
            return None
        f_trace = self.field('f_trace')
        if long(f_trace) != 0:
            # we have a non-NULL f_trace:
            return self.f_lineno
        else:
            #try:
            return self.co.addr2line(self.f_lasti)
            #except ValueError:
            #    return self.f_lineno

    def current_line(self):
        '''Get the text of the current source line as a string, with a trailing
        newline character'''
        if self.is_optimized_out():
            return '(frame information optimized out)'
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        filename = self.filename()
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        try:
            f = open(os_fsencode(filename), 'r')
        except IOError:
            return None
        with f:
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            all_lines = f.readlines()
            # Convert from 1-based current_line_num to 0-based list offset:
            return all_lines[self.current_line_num()-1]

    def write_repr(self, out, visited):
        if self.is_optimized_out():
            out.write('(frame information optimized out)')
            return
        out.write('Frame 0x%x, for file %s, line %i, in %s ('
                  % (self.as_address(),
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                     self.co_filename.proxyval(visited),
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                     self.current_line_num(),
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                     self.co_name.proxyval(visited)))
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        first = True
        for pyop_name, pyop_value in self.iter_locals():
            if not first:
                out.write(', ')
            first = False

            out.write(pyop_name.proxyval(visited))
            out.write('=')
            pyop_value.write_repr(out, visited)

        out.write(')')

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    def print_traceback(self):
        if self.is_optimized_out():
            sys.stdout.write('  (frame information optimized out)\n')
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            return
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        visited = set()
        sys.stdout.write('  File "%s", line %i, in %s\n'
                  % (self.co_filename.proxyval(visited),
                     self.current_line_num(),
                     self.co_name.proxyval(visited)))

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class PySetObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    _typename = 'PySetObject'

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    @classmethod
    def _dummy_key(self):
        return gdb.lookup_global_symbol('_PySet_Dummy').value()

    def __iter__(self):
        dummy_ptr = self._dummy_key()
        table = self.field('table')
        for i in safe_range(self.field('mask') + 1):
            setentry = table[i]
            key = setentry['key']
            if key != 0 and key != dummy_ptr:
                yield PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(key)

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    def proxyval(self, visited):
        # Guard against infinite loops:
        if self.as_address() in visited:
            return ProxyAlreadyVisited('%s(...)' % self.safe_tp_name())
        visited.add(self.as_address())

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        members = (key.proxyval(visited) for key in self)
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        if self.safe_tp_name() == 'frozenset':
            return frozenset(members)
        else:
            return set(members)

    def write_repr(self, out, visited):
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        # Emulate Python 3's set_repr
        tp_name = self.safe_tp_name()
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        # Guard against infinite loops:
        if self.as_address() in visited:
            out.write('(...)')
            return
        visited.add(self.as_address())

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        # Python 3's set_repr special-cases the empty set:
        if not self.field('used'):
            out.write(tp_name)
            out.write('()')
            return

        # Python 3 uses {} for set literals:
        if tp_name != 'set':
            out.write(tp_name)
            out.write('(')

        out.write('{')
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        first = True
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        for key in self:
            if not first:
                out.write(', ')
            first = False
            key.write_repr(out, visited)
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        out.write('}')

        if tp_name != 'set':
            out.write(')')
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class PyBytesObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    _typename = 'PyBytesObject'
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    def __str__(self):
        field_ob_size = self.field('ob_size')
        field_ob_sval = self.field('ob_sval')
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        char_ptr = field_ob_sval.address.cast(_type_unsigned_char_ptr())
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        return ''.join([chr(char_ptr[i]) for i in safe_range(field_ob_size)])

    def proxyval(self, visited):
        return str(self)

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    def write_repr(self, out, visited):
        # Write this out as a Python 3 bytes literal, i.e. with a "b" prefix

        # Get a PyStringObject* within the Python 2 gdb process:
        proxy = self.proxyval(visited)

        # Transliteration of Python 3's Objects/bytesobject.c:PyBytes_Repr
        # to Python 2 code:
        quote = "'"
        if "'" in proxy and not '"' in proxy:
            quote = '"'
        out.write('b')
        out.write(quote)
        for byte in proxy:
            if byte == quote or byte == '\\':
                out.write('\\')
                out.write(byte)
            elif byte == '\t':
                out.write('\\t')
            elif byte == '\n':
                out.write('\\n')
            elif byte == '\r':
                out.write('\\r')
            elif byte < ' ' or ord(byte) >= 0x7f:
                out.write('\\x')
                out.write(hexdigits[(ord(byte) & 0xf0) >> 4])
                out.write(hexdigits[ord(byte) & 0xf])
            else:
                out.write(byte)
        out.write(quote)

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class PyTupleObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    _typename = 'PyTupleObject'

    def __getitem__(self, i):
        # Get the gdb.Value for the (PyObject*) with the given index:
        field_ob_item = self.field('ob_item')
        return field_ob_item[i]

    def proxyval(self, visited):
        # Guard against infinite loops:
        if self.as_address() in visited:
            return ProxyAlreadyVisited('(...)')
        visited.add(self.as_address())

        result = tuple([PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self[i]).proxyval(visited)
                        for i in safe_range(int_from_int(self.field('ob_size')))])
        return result

    def write_repr(self, out, visited):
        # Guard against infinite loops:
        if self.as_address() in visited:
            out.write('(...)')
            return
        visited.add(self.as_address())

        out.write('(')
        for i in safe_range(int_from_int(self.field('ob_size'))):
            if i > 0:
                out.write(', ')
            element = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self[i])
            element.write_repr(out, visited)
        if self.field('ob_size') == 1:
            out.write(',)')
        else:
            out.write(')')

class PyTypeObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    _typename = 'PyTypeObject'


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def _unichr_is_printable(char):
    # Logic adapted from Python 3's Tools/unicode/makeunicodedata.py
    if char == u" ":
        return True
    import unicodedata
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    return unicodedata.category(char) not in ("C", "Z")

if sys.maxunicode >= 0x10000:
    _unichr = unichr
else:
    # Needed for proper surrogate support if sizeof(Py_UNICODE) is 2 in gdb
    def _unichr(x):
        if x < 0x10000:
            return unichr(x)
        x -= 0x10000
        ch1 = 0xD800 | (x >> 10)
        ch2 = 0xDC00 | (x & 0x3FF)
        return unichr(ch1) + unichr(ch2)
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class PyUnicodeObjectPtr(PyObjectPtr):
    _typename = 'PyUnicodeObject'

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    def char_width(self):
        _type_Py_UNICODE = gdb.lookup_type('Py_UNICODE')
        return _type_Py_UNICODE.sizeof

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    def proxyval(self, visited):
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        global _is_pep393
        if _is_pep393 is None:
            fields = gdb.lookup_type('PyUnicodeObject').target().fields()
            _is_pep393 = 'data' in [f.name for f in fields]
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        if _is_pep393:
            # Python 3.3 and newer
            may_have_surrogates = False
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            compact = self.field('_base')
            ascii = compact['_base']
            state = ascii['state']
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            is_compact_ascii = (int(state['ascii']) and int(state['compact']))
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            if not int(state['ready']):
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                # string is not ready
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                field_length = long(compact['wstr_length'])
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                may_have_surrogates = True
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                field_str = ascii['wstr']
            else:
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                field_length = long(ascii['length'])
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                if is_compact_ascii:
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                    field_str = ascii.address + 1
                elif int(state['compact']):
                    field_str = compact.address + 1
                else:
                    field_str = self.field('data')['any']
                repr_kind = int(state['kind'])
                if repr_kind == 1:
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                    field_str = field_str.cast(_type_unsigned_char_ptr())
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                elif repr_kind == 2:
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                    field_str = field_str.cast(_type_unsigned_short_ptr())
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                elif repr_kind == 4:
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                    field_str = field_str.cast(_type_unsigned_int_ptr())
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        else:
            # Python 3.2 and earlier
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            field_length = long(self.field('length'))
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            field_str = self.field('str')
            may_have_surrogates = self.char_width() == 2
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        # Gather a list of ints from the Py_UNICODE array; these are either
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        # UCS-1, UCS-2 or UCS-4 code points:
        if not may_have_surrogates:
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            Py_UNICODEs = [int(field_str[i]) for i in safe_range(field_length)]
        else:
            # A more elaborate routine if sizeof(Py_UNICODE) is 2 in the
            # inferior process: we must join surrogate pairs.
            Py_UNICODEs = []
            i = 0
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            limit = safety_limit(field_length)
            while i < limit:
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                ucs = int(field_str[i])
                i += 1
                if ucs < 0xD800 or ucs >= 0xDC00 or i == field_length:
                    Py_UNICODEs.append(ucs)
                    continue
                # This could be a surrogate pair.
                ucs2 = int(field_str[i])
                if ucs2 < 0xDC00 or ucs2 > 0xDFFF:
                    continue
                code = (ucs & 0x03FF) << 10
                code |= ucs2 & 0x03FF
                code += 0x00010000
                Py_UNICODEs.append(code)
                i += 1
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        # Convert the int code points to unicode characters, and generate a
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        # local unicode instance.
        # This splits surrogate pairs if sizeof(Py_UNICODE) is 2 here (in gdb).
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        result = u''.join([
            (_unichr(ucs) if ucs <= 0x10ffff else '\ufffd')
            for ucs in Py_UNICODEs])
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        return result

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    def write_repr(self, out, visited):
        # Write this out as a Python 3 str literal, i.e. without a "u" prefix

        # Get a PyUnicodeObject* within the Python 2 gdb process:
        proxy = self.proxyval(visited)

        # Transliteration of Python 3's Object/unicodeobject.c:unicode_repr
        # to Python 2:
        if "'" in proxy and '"' not in proxy:
            quote = '"'
        else:
            quote = "'"
        out.write(quote)

        i = 0
        while i < len(proxy):
            ch = proxy[i]
            i += 1

            # Escape quotes and backslashes
            if ch == quote or ch == '\\':
                out.write('\\')
                out.write(ch)

            #  Map special whitespace to '\t', \n', '\r'
            elif ch == '\t':
                out.write('\\t')
            elif ch == '\n':
                out.write('\\n')
            elif ch == '\r':
                out.write('\\r')

            # Map non-printable US ASCII to '\xhh' */
            elif ch < ' ' or ch == 0x7F:
                out.write('\\x')
                out.write(hexdigits[(ord(ch) >> 4) & 0x000F])
                out.write(hexdigits[ord(ch) & 0x000F])

            # Copy ASCII characters as-is
            elif ord(ch) < 0x7F:
                out.write(ch)

            # Non-ASCII characters
            else:
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                ucs = ch
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                ch2 = None
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                if sys.maxunicode < 0x10000:
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                    # If sizeof(Py_UNICODE) is 2 here (in gdb), join
                    # surrogate pairs before calling _unichr_is_printable.
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                    if (i < len(proxy)
                    and 0xD800 <= ord(ch) < 0xDC00 \
                    and 0xDC00 <= ord(proxy[i]) <= 0xDFFF):
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                        ch2 = proxy[i]
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                        ucs = ch + ch2
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                        i += 1

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                # Unfortuately, Python 2's unicode type doesn't seem
                # to expose the "isprintable" method
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                printable = _unichr_is_printable(ucs)
                if printable:
                    try:
                        ucs.encode(ENCODING)
                    except UnicodeEncodeError:
                        printable = False
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                # Map Unicode whitespace and control characters
                # (categories Z* and C* except ASCII space)
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                if not printable:
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                    if ch2 is not None:
                        # Match Python 3's representation of non-printable
                        # wide characters.
                        code = (ord(ch) & 0x03FF) << 10
                        code |= ord(ch2) & 0x03FF
                        code += 0x00010000
                    else:
                        code = ord(ucs)
1300 1301

                    # Map 8-bit characters to '\\xhh'
1302
                    if code <= 0xff:
1303
                        out.write('\\x')
1304 1305
                        out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 4) & 0x000F])
                        out.write(hexdigits[code & 0x000F])
1306
                    # Map 21-bit characters to '\U00xxxxxx'
1307
                    elif code >= 0x10000:
1308
                        out.write('\\U')
1309 1310 1311 1312 1313 1314 1315 1316
                        out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 28) & 0x0000000F])
                        out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 24) & 0x0000000F])
                        out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 20) & 0x0000000F])
                        out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 16) & 0x0000000F])
                        out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 12) & 0x0000000F])
                        out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 8) & 0x0000000F])
                        out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 4) & 0x0000000F])
                        out.write(hexdigits[code & 0x0000000F])
1317 1318 1319
                    # Map 16-bit characters to '\uxxxx'
                    else:
                        out.write('\\u')
1320 1321 1322 1323
                        out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 12) & 0x000F])
                        out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 8) & 0x000F])
                        out.write(hexdigits[(code >> 4) & 0x000F])
                        out.write(hexdigits[code & 0x000F])
1324 1325 1326
                else:
                    # Copy characters as-is
                    out.write(ch)
1327
                    if ch2 is not None:
1328
                        out.write(ch2)
1329 1330 1331 1332 1333

        out.write(quote)



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def int_from_int(gdbval):
    return int(str(gdbval))


def stringify(val):
    # TODO: repr() puts everything on one line; pformat can be nicer, but
    # can lead to v.long results; this function isolates the choice
    if True:
        return repr(val)
    else:
        from pprint import pformat
        return pformat(val)


class PyObjectPtrPrinter:
    "Prints a (PyObject*)"

    def __init__ (self, gdbval):
        self.gdbval = gdbval

    def to_string (self):
        pyop = PyObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(self.gdbval)
        if True:
            return pyop.get_truncated_repr(MAX_OUTPUT_LEN)
        else:
            # Generate full proxy value then stringify it.
            # Doing so could be expensive
            proxyval = pyop.proxyval(set())
            return stringify(proxyval)

def pretty_printer_lookup(gdbval):
    type = gdbval.type.unqualified()
    if type.code == gdb.TYPE_CODE_PTR:
        type = type.target().unqualified()
        t = str(type)
1370
        if t in ("PyObject", "PyFrameObject", "PyUnicodeObject"):
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            return PyObjectPtrPrinter(gdbval)

"""
During development, I've been manually invoking the code in this way:
(gdb) python

import sys
sys.path.append('/home/david/coding/python-gdb')
import libpython
end

then reloading it after each edit like this:
(gdb) python reload(libpython)

The following code should ensure that the prettyprinter is registered
if the code is autoloaded by gdb when visiting libpython.so, provided
that this python file is installed to the same path as the library (or its
.debug file) plus a "-gdb.py" suffix, e.g:
  /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0-gdb.py
  /usr/lib/debug/usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0.debug-gdb.py
"""
def register (obj):
1393
    if obj is None:
1394 1395 1396 1397 1398 1399 1400 1401
        obj = gdb

    # Wire up the pretty-printer
    obj.pretty_printers.append(pretty_printer_lookup)

register (gdb.current_objfile ())


1402 1403 1404 1405 1406

# Unfortunately, the exact API exposed by the gdb module varies somewhat
# from build to build
# See http://bugs.python.org/issue8279?#msg102276

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class Frame(object):
    '''
    Wrapper for gdb.Frame, adding various methods
    '''
    def __init__(self, gdbframe):
        self._gdbframe = gdbframe

    def older(self):
        older = self._gdbframe.older()
        if older:
            return Frame(older)
        else:
            return None

    def newer(self):
        newer = self._gdbframe.newer()
        if newer:
            return Frame(newer)
        else:
            return None

    def select(self):
1429 1430 1431 1432 1433 1434 1435 1436
        '''If supported, select this frame and return True; return False if unsupported

        Not all builds have a gdb.Frame.select method; seems to be present on Fedora 12
        onwards, but absent on Ubuntu buildbot'''
        if not hasattr(self._gdbframe, 'select'):
            print ('Unable to select frame: '
                   'this build of gdb does not expose a gdb.Frame.select method')
            return False
1437
        self._gdbframe.select()
1438
        return True
1439 1440 1441 1442 1443 1444 1445 1446 1447 1448 1449 1450

    def get_index(self):
        '''Calculate index of frame, starting at 0 for the newest frame within
        this thread'''
        index = 0
        # Go down until you reach the newest frame:
        iter_frame = self
        while iter_frame.newer():
            index += 1
            iter_frame = iter_frame.newer()
        return index

1451 1452 1453 1454 1455 1456 1457 1458 1459 1460 1461 1462 1463 1464 1465 1466 1467
    # We divide frames into:
    #   - "python frames":
    #       - "bytecode frames" i.e. PyEval_EvalFrameEx
    #       - "other python frames": things that are of interest from a python
    #         POV, but aren't bytecode (e.g. GC, GIL)
    #   - everything else

    def is_python_frame(self):
        '''Is this a PyEval_EvalFrameEx frame, or some other important
        frame? (see is_other_python_frame for what "important" means in this
        context)'''
        if self.is_evalframeex():
            return True
        if self.is_other_python_frame():
            return True
        return False

1468
    def is_evalframeex(self):
1469
        '''Is this a PyEval_EvalFrameEx frame?'''
1470 1471 1472 1473 1474 1475 1476 1477 1478 1479 1480
        if self._gdbframe.name() == 'PyEval_EvalFrameEx':
            '''
            I believe we also need to filter on the inline
            struct frame_id.inline_depth, only regarding frames with
            an inline depth of 0 as actually being this function

            So we reject those with type gdb.INLINE_FRAME
            '''
            if self._gdbframe.type() == gdb.NORMAL_FRAME:
                # We have a PyEval_EvalFrameEx frame:
                return True
1481 1482 1483

        return False

1484 1485 1486 1487 1488 1489 1490 1491 1492 1493 1494
    def is_other_python_frame(self):
        '''Is this frame worth displaying in python backtraces?
        Examples:
          - waiting on the GIL
          - garbage-collecting
          - within a CFunction
         If it is, return a descriptive string
         For other frames, return False
         '''
        if self.is_waiting_for_gil():
            return 'Waiting for the GIL'
1495 1496

        if self.is_gc_collect():
1497
            return 'Garbage-collecting'
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        # Detect invocations of PyCFunction instances:
        older = self.older()
        if not older:
            return False

        caller = older._gdbframe.name()
        if not caller:
            return False

        if caller == 'PyCFunction_Call':
            # Within that frame:
            #   "func" is the local containing the PyObject* of the
            # PyCFunctionObject instance
            #   "f" is the same value, but cast to (PyCFunctionObject*)
            #   "self" is the (PyObject*) of the 'self'
            try:
                # Use the prettyprinter for the func:
                func = older._gdbframe.read_var('func')
                return str(func)
            except RuntimeError:
                return 'PyCFunction invocation (unable to read "func")'

        elif caller == '_PyCFunction_FastCallDict':
            try:
                func = older._gdbframe.read_var('func_obj')
                return str(func)
            except RuntimeError:
                return 'PyCFunction invocation (unable to read "func_obj")'
1527 1528 1529 1530 1531 1532 1533 1534 1535

        # This frame isn't worth reporting:
        return False

    def is_waiting_for_gil(self):
        '''Is this frame waiting on the GIL?'''
        # This assumes the _POSIX_THREADS version of Python/ceval_gil.h:
        name = self._gdbframe.name()
        if name:
1536
            return 'pthread_cond_timedwait' in name
1537 1538

    def is_gc_collect(self):
1539
        '''Is this frame "collect" within the garbage-collector?'''
1540 1541
        return self._gdbframe.name() == 'collect'

1542 1543 1544
    def get_pyop(self):
        try:
            f = self._gdbframe.read_var('f')
1545 1546 1547 1548 1549 1550 1551 1552 1553 1554 1555 1556 1557 1558
            frame = PyFrameObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(f)
            if not frame.is_optimized_out():
                return frame
            # gdb is unable to get the "f" argument of PyEval_EvalFrameEx()
            # because it was "optimized out". Try to get "f" from the frame
            # of the caller, PyEval_EvalCodeEx().
            orig_frame = frame
            caller = self._gdbframe.older()
            if caller:
                f = caller.read_var('f')
                frame = PyFrameObjectPtr.from_pyobject_ptr(f)
                if not frame.is_optimized_out():
                    return frame
            return orig_frame
1559 1560 1561 1562 1563 1564 1565 1566 1567 1568 1569 1570
        except ValueError:
            return None

    @classmethod
    def get_selected_frame(cls):
        _gdbframe = gdb.selected_frame()
        if _gdbframe:
            return Frame(_gdbframe)
        return None

    @classmethod
    def get_selected_python_frame(cls):
1571 1572 1573 1574 1575 1576 1577 1578 1579 1580 1581 1582 1583 1584 1585 1586
        '''Try to obtain the Frame for the python-related code in the selected
        frame, or None'''
        frame = cls.get_selected_frame()

        while frame:
            if frame.is_python_frame():
                return frame
            frame = frame.older()

        # Not found:
        return None

    @classmethod
    def get_selected_bytecode_frame(cls):
        '''Try to obtain the Frame for the python bytecode interpreter in the
        selected GDB frame, or None'''
1587 1588 1589 1590 1591 1592 1593 1594 1595 1596 1597 1598 1599 1600
        frame = cls.get_selected_frame()

        while frame:
            if frame.is_evalframeex():
                return frame
            frame = frame.older()

        # Not found:
        return None

    def print_summary(self):
        if self.is_evalframeex():
            pyop = self.get_pyop()
            if pyop:
1601 1602
                line = pyop.get_truncated_repr(MAX_OUTPUT_LEN)
                write_unicode(sys.stdout, '#%i %s\n' % (self.get_index(), line))
1603 1604 1605 1606
                if not pyop.is_optimized_out():
                    line = pyop.current_line()
                    if line is not None:
                        sys.stdout.write('    %s\n' % line.strip())
1607 1608 1609
            else:
                sys.stdout.write('#%i (unable to read python frame information)\n' % self.get_index())
        else:
1610 1611 1612 1613 1614
            info = self.is_other_python_frame()
            if info:
                sys.stdout.write('#%i %s\n' % (self.get_index(), info))
            else:
                sys.stdout.write('#%i\n' % self.get_index())
1615

1616 1617 1618 1619 1620
    def print_traceback(self):
        if self.is_evalframeex():
            pyop = self.get_pyop()
            if pyop:
                pyop.print_traceback()
1621 1622 1623 1624
                if not pyop.is_optimized_out():
                    line = pyop.current_line()
                    if line is not None:
                        sys.stdout.write('    %s\n' % line.strip())
1625 1626 1627
            else:
                sys.stdout.write('  (unable to read python frame information)\n')
        else:
1628 1629 1630 1631 1632
            info = self.is_other_python_frame()
            if info:
                sys.stdout.write('  %s\n' % info)
            else:
                sys.stdout.write('  (not a python frame)\n')
1633

1634 1635 1636 1637 1638 1639 1640 1641 1642 1643 1644 1645 1646 1647 1648 1649 1650 1651 1652 1653 1654 1655 1656 1657 1658 1659 1660 1661 1662 1663 1664 1665 1666 1667
class PyList(gdb.Command):
    '''List the current Python source code, if any

    Use
       py-list START
    to list at a different line number within the python source.

    Use
       py-list START, END
    to list a specific range of lines within the python source.
    '''

    def __init__(self):
        gdb.Command.__init__ (self,
                              "py-list",
                              gdb.COMMAND_FILES,
                              gdb.COMPLETE_NONE)


    def invoke(self, args, from_tty):
        import re

        start = None
        end = None

        m = re.match(r'\s*(\d+)\s*', args)
        if m:
            start = int(m.group(0))
            end = start + 10

        m = re.match(r'\s*(\d+)\s*,\s*(\d+)\s*', args)
        if m:
            start, end = map(int, m.groups())

1668 1669
        # py-list requires an actual PyEval_EvalFrameEx frame:
        frame = Frame.get_selected_bytecode_frame()
1670
        if not frame:
1671
            print('Unable to locate gdb frame for python bytecode interpreter')
1672 1673 1674
            return

        pyop = frame.get_pyop()
1675
        if not pyop or pyop.is_optimized_out():
1676
            print('Unable to read information on python frame')
1677 1678 1679 1680 1681 1682 1683 1684 1685 1686 1687 1688
            return

        filename = pyop.filename()
        lineno = pyop.current_line_num()

        if start is None:
            start = lineno - 5
            end = lineno + 5

        if start<1:
            start = 1

1689 1690 1691 1692 1693 1694 1695
        try:
            f = open(os_fsencode(filename), 'r')
        except IOError as err:
            sys.stdout.write('Unable to open %s: %s\n'
                             % (filename, err))
            return
        with f:
1696 1697 1698 1699 1700 1701 1702 1703 1704 1705 1706 1707 1708 1709 1710 1711 1712 1713 1714 1715 1716 1717 1718 1719 1720 1721 1722
            all_lines = f.readlines()
            # start and end are 1-based, all_lines is 0-based;
            # so [start-1:end] as a python slice gives us [start, end] as a
            # closed interval
            for i, line in enumerate(all_lines[start-1:end]):
                linestr = str(i+start)
                # Highlight current line:
                if i + start == lineno:
                    linestr = '>' + linestr
                sys.stdout.write('%4s    %s' % (linestr, line))


# ...and register the command:
PyList()

def move_in_stack(move_up):
    '''Move up or down the stack (for the py-up/py-down command)'''
    frame = Frame.get_selected_python_frame()
    while frame:
        if move_up:
            iter_frame = frame.older()
        else:
            iter_frame = frame.newer()

        if not iter_frame:
            break

1723
        if iter_frame.is_python_frame():
1724
            # Result:
1725 1726
            if iter_frame.select():
                iter_frame.print_summary()
1727 1728 1729 1730 1731
            return

        frame = iter_frame

    if move_up:
1732
        print('Unable to find an older python frame')
1733
    else:
1734
        print('Unable to find a newer python frame')
1735 1736 1737 1738 1739 1740 1741 1742 1743 1744 1745 1746 1747 1748 1749 1750 1751 1752 1753 1754 1755 1756 1757 1758 1759

class PyUp(gdb.Command):
    'Select and print the python stack frame that called this one (if any)'
    def __init__(self):
        gdb.Command.__init__ (self,
                              "py-up",
                              gdb.COMMAND_STACK,
                              gdb.COMPLETE_NONE)


    def invoke(self, args, from_tty):
        move_in_stack(move_up=True)

class PyDown(gdb.Command):
    'Select and print the python stack frame called by this one (if any)'
    def __init__(self):
        gdb.Command.__init__ (self,
                              "py-down",
                              gdb.COMMAND_STACK,
                              gdb.COMPLETE_NONE)


    def invoke(self, args, from_tty):
        move_in_stack(move_up=False)

1760 1761 1762 1763
# Not all builds of gdb have gdb.Frame.select
if hasattr(gdb.Frame, 'select'):
    PyUp()
    PyDown()
1764

1765 1766 1767 1768 1769 1770 1771 1772 1773 1774 1775 1776
class PyBacktraceFull(gdb.Command):
    'Display the current python frame and all the frames within its call stack (if any)'
    def __init__(self):
        gdb.Command.__init__ (self,
                              "py-bt-full",
                              gdb.COMMAND_STACK,
                              gdb.COMPLETE_NONE)


    def invoke(self, args, from_tty):
        frame = Frame.get_selected_python_frame()
        while frame:
1777
            if frame.is_python_frame():
1778 1779 1780 1781 1782
                frame.print_summary()
            frame = frame.older()

PyBacktraceFull()

1783 1784 1785 1786 1787 1788 1789 1790 1791 1792
class PyBacktrace(gdb.Command):
    'Display the current python frame and all the frames within its call stack (if any)'
    def __init__(self):
        gdb.Command.__init__ (self,
                              "py-bt",
                              gdb.COMMAND_STACK,
                              gdb.COMPLETE_NONE)


    def invoke(self, args, from_tty):
1793
        sys.stdout.write('Traceback (most recent call first):\n')
1794 1795
        frame = Frame.get_selected_python_frame()
        while frame:
1796
            if frame.is_python_frame():
1797
                frame.print_traceback()
1798 1799 1800 1801 1802 1803 1804 1805 1806 1807 1808 1809 1810 1811 1812 1813 1814 1815
            frame = frame.older()

PyBacktrace()

class PyPrint(gdb.Command):
    'Look up the given python variable name, and print it'
    def __init__(self):
        gdb.Command.__init__ (self,
                              "py-print",
                              gdb.COMMAND_DATA,
                              gdb.COMPLETE_NONE)


    def invoke(self, args, from_tty):
        name = str(args)

        frame = Frame.get_selected_python_frame()
        if not frame:
1816
            print('Unable to locate python frame')
1817 1818 1819 1820
            return

        pyop_frame = frame.get_pyop()
        if not pyop_frame:
1821
            print('Unable to read information on python frame')
1822 1823 1824 1825 1826
            return

        pyop_var, scope = pyop_frame.get_var_by_name(name)

        if pyop_var:
1827
            print('%s %r = %s'
1828 1829 1830 1831
                   % (scope,
                      name,
                      pyop_var.get_truncated_repr(MAX_OUTPUT_LEN)))
        else:
1832
            print('%r not found' % name)
1833 1834 1835 1836 1837 1838 1839 1840 1841 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1849

PyPrint()

class PyLocals(gdb.Command):
    'Look up the given python variable name, and print it'
    def __init__(self):
        gdb.Command.__init__ (self,
                              "py-locals",
                              gdb.COMMAND_DATA,
                              gdb.COMPLETE_NONE)


    def invoke(self, args, from_tty):
        name = str(args)

        frame = Frame.get_selected_python_frame()
        if not frame:
1850
            print('Unable to locate python frame')
1851 1852 1853 1854
            return

        pyop_frame = frame.get_pyop()
        if not pyop_frame:
1855
            print('Unable to read information on python frame')
1856 1857 1858
            return

        for pyop_name, pyop_value in pyop_frame.iter_locals():
1859
            print('%s = %s'
1860 1861 1862 1863
                   % (pyop_name.proxyval(set()),
                      pyop_value.get_truncated_repr(MAX_OUTPUT_LEN)))

PyLocals()