xref: /openbsd-src/gnu/usr.bin/perl/lib/perl5db.pl (revision 2b0358df1d88d06ef4139321dd05bd5e05d91eaf)
1
2=head1 NAME
3
4perl5db.pl - the perl debugger
5
6=head1 SYNOPSIS
7
8    perl -d  your_Perl_script
9
10=head1 DESCRIPTION
11
12C<perl5db.pl> is the perl debugger. It is loaded automatically by Perl when
13you invoke a script with C<perl -d>. This documentation tries to outline the
14structure and services provided by C<perl5db.pl>, and to describe how you
15can use them.
16
17=head1 GENERAL NOTES
18
19The debugger can look pretty forbidding to many Perl programmers. There are
20a number of reasons for this, many stemming out of the debugger's history.
21
22When the debugger was first written, Perl didn't have a lot of its nicer
23features - no references, no lexical variables, no closures, no object-oriented
24programming. So a lot of the things one would normally have done using such
25features was done using global variables, globs and the C<local()> operator
26in creative ways.
27
28Some of these have survived into the current debugger; a few of the more
29interesting and still-useful idioms are noted in this section, along with notes
30on the comments themselves.
31
32=head2 Why not use more lexicals?
33
34Experienced Perl programmers will note that the debugger code tends to use
35mostly package globals rather than lexically-scoped variables. This is done
36to allow a significant amount of control of the debugger from outside the
37debugger itself.
38
39Unfortunately, though the variables are accessible, they're not well
40documented, so it's generally been a decision that hasn't made a lot of
41difference to most users. Where appropriate, comments have been added to
42make variables more accessible and usable, with the understanding that these
43I<are> debugger internals, and are therefore subject to change. Future
44development should probably attempt to replace the globals with a well-defined
45API, but for now, the variables are what we've got.
46
47=head2 Automated variable stacking via C<local()>
48
49As you may recall from reading C<perlfunc>, the C<local()> operator makes a
50temporary copy of a variable in the current scope. When the scope ends, the
51old copy is restored. This is often used in the debugger to handle the
52automatic stacking of variables during recursive calls:
53
54     sub foo {
55        local $some_global++;
56
57        # Do some stuff, then ...
58        return;
59     }
60
61What happens is that on entry to the subroutine, C<$some_global> is localized,
62then altered. When the subroutine returns, Perl automatically undoes the
63localization, restoring the previous value. Voila, automatic stack management.
64
65The debugger uses this trick a I<lot>. Of particular note is C<DB::eval>,
66which lets the debugger get control inside of C<eval>'ed code. The debugger
67localizes a saved copy of C<$@> inside the subroutine, which allows it to
68keep C<$@> safe until it C<DB::eval> returns, at which point the previous
69value of C<$@> is restored. This makes it simple (well, I<simpler>) to keep
70track of C<$@> inside C<eval>s which C<eval> other C<eval's>.
71
72In any case, watch for this pattern. It occurs fairly often.
73
74=head2 The C<^> trick
75
76This is used to cleverly reverse the sense of a logical test depending on
77the value of an auxiliary variable. For instance, the debugger's C<S>
78(search for subroutines by pattern) allows you to negate the pattern
79like this:
80
81   # Find all non-'foo' subs:
82   S !/foo/
83
84Boolean algebra states that the truth table for XOR looks like this:
85
86=over 4
87
88=item * 0 ^ 0 = 0
89
90(! not present and no match) --> false, don't print
91
92=item * 0 ^ 1 = 1
93
94(! not present and matches) --> true, print
95
96=item * 1 ^ 0 = 1
97
98(! present and no match) --> true, print
99
100=item * 1 ^ 1 = 0
101
102(! present and matches) --> false, don't print
103
104=back
105
106As you can see, the first pair applies when C<!> isn't supplied, and
107the second pair applies when it is. The XOR simply allows us to
108compact a more complicated if-then-elseif-else into a more elegant
109(but perhaps overly clever) single test. After all, it needed this
110explanation...
111
112=head2 FLAGS, FLAGS, FLAGS
113
114There is a certain C programming legacy in the debugger. Some variables,
115such as C<$single>, C<$trace>, and C<$frame>, have I<magical> values composed
116of 1, 2, 4, etc. (powers of 2) OR'ed together. This allows several pieces
117of state to be stored independently in a single scalar.
118
119A test like
120
121    if ($scalar & 4) ...
122
123is checking to see if the appropriate bit is on. Since each bit can be
124"addressed" independently in this way, C<$scalar> is acting sort of like
125an array of bits. Obviously, since the contents of C<$scalar> are just a
126bit-pattern, we can save and restore it easily (it will just look like
127a number).
128
129The problem, is of course, that this tends to leave magic numbers scattered
130all over your program whenever a bit is set, cleared, or checked. So why do
131it?
132
133=over 4
134
135=item *
136
137First, doing an arithmetical or bitwise operation on a scalar is
138just about the fastest thing you can do in Perl: C<use constant> actually
139creates a subroutine call, and array and hash lookups are much slower. Is
140this over-optimization at the expense of readability? Possibly, but the
141debugger accesses these  variables a I<lot>. Any rewrite of the code will
142probably have to benchmark alternate implementations and see which is the
143best balance of readability and speed, and then document how it actually
144works.
145
146=item *
147
148Second, it's very easy to serialize a scalar number. This is done in
149the restart code; the debugger state variables are saved in C<%ENV> and then
150restored when the debugger is restarted. Having them be just numbers makes
151this trivial.
152
153=item *
154
155Third, some of these variables are being shared with the Perl core
156smack in the middle of the interpreter's execution loop. It's much faster for
157a C program (like the interpreter) to check a bit in a scalar than to access
158several different variables (or a Perl array).
159
160=back
161
162=head2 What are those C<XXX> comments for?
163
164Any comment containing C<XXX> means that the comment is either somewhat
165speculative - it's not exactly clear what a given variable or chunk of
166code is doing, or that it is incomplete - the basics may be clear, but the
167subtleties are not completely documented.
168
169Send in a patch if you can clear up, fill out, or clarify an C<XXX>.
170
171=head1 DATA STRUCTURES MAINTAINED BY CORE
172
173There are a number of special data structures provided to the debugger by
174the Perl interpreter.
175
176The array C<@{$main::{'_<'.$filename}}> (aliased locally to C<@dbline> via glob
177assignment) contains the text from C<$filename>, with each element
178corresponding to a single line of C<$filename>.
179
180The hash C<%{'_<'.$filename}> (aliased locally to C<%dbline> via glob
181assignment) contains breakpoints and actions.  The keys are line numbers;
182you can set individual values, but not the whole hash. The Perl interpreter
183uses this hash to determine where breakpoints have been set. Any true value is
184considered to be a breakpoint; C<perl5db.pl> uses C<$break_condition\0$action>.
185Values are magical in numeric context: 1 if the line is breakable, 0 if not.
186
187The scalar C<${"_<$filename"}> simply contains the string C<_<$filename>.
188This is also the case for evaluated strings that contain subroutines, or
189which are currently being executed.  The $filename for C<eval>ed strings looks
190like C<(eval 34)> or C<(re_eval 19)>.
191
192=head1 DEBUGGER STARTUP
193
194When C<perl5db.pl> starts, it reads an rcfile (C<perl5db.ini> for
195non-interactive sessions, C<.perldb> for interactive ones) that can set a number
196of options. In addition, this file may define a subroutine C<&afterinit>
197that will be executed (in the debugger's context) after the debugger has
198initialized itself.
199
200Next, it checks the C<PERLDB_OPTS> environment variable and treats its
201contents as the argument of a C<o> command in the debugger.
202
203=head2 STARTUP-ONLY OPTIONS
204
205The following options can only be specified at startup.
206To set them in your rcfile, add a call to
207C<&parse_options("optionName=new_value")>.
208
209=over 4
210
211=item * TTY
212
213the TTY to use for debugging i/o.
214
215=item * noTTY
216
217if set, goes in NonStop mode.  On interrupt, if TTY is not set,
218uses the value of noTTY or F<$HOME/.perldbtty$$> to find TTY using
219Term::Rendezvous.  Current variant is to have the name of TTY in this
220file.
221
222=item * ReadLine
223
224if false, a dummy ReadLine is used, so you can debug
225ReadLine applications.
226
227=item * NonStop
228
229if true, no i/o is performed until interrupt.
230
231=item * LineInfo
232
233file or pipe to print line number info to.  If it is a
234pipe, a short "emacs like" message is used.
235
236=item * RemotePort
237
238host:port to connect to on remote host for remote debugging.
239
240=item * HistFile
241
242file to store session history to. There is no default and so no
243history file is written unless this variable is explicitly set.
244
245=item * HistSize
246
247number of commands to store to the file specified in C<HistFile>.
248Default is 100.
249
250=back
251
252=head3 SAMPLE RCFILE
253
254 &parse_options("NonStop=1 LineInfo=db.out");
255  sub afterinit { $trace = 1; }
256
257The script will run without human intervention, putting trace
258information into C<db.out>.  (If you interrupt it, you had better
259reset C<LineInfo> to something I<interactive>!)
260
261=head1 INTERNALS DESCRIPTION
262
263=head2 DEBUGGER INTERFACE VARIABLES
264
265Perl supplies the values for C<%sub>.  It effectively inserts
266a C<&DB::DB();> in front of each place that can have a
267breakpoint. At each subroutine call, it calls C<&DB::sub> with
268C<$DB::sub> set to the called subroutine. It also inserts a C<BEGIN
269{require 'perl5db.pl'}> before the first line.
270
271After each C<require>d file is compiled, but before it is executed, a
272call to C<&DB::postponed($main::{'_<'.$filename})> is done. C<$filename>
273is the expanded name of the C<require>d file (as found via C<%INC>).
274
275=head3 IMPORTANT INTERNAL VARIABLES
276
277=head4 C<$CreateTTY>
278
279Used to control when the debugger will attempt to acquire another TTY to be
280used for input.
281
282=over
283
284=item * 1 -  on C<fork()>
285
286=item * 2 - debugger is started inside debugger
287
288=item * 4 -  on startup
289
290=back
291
292=head4 C<$doret>
293
294The value -2 indicates that no return value should be printed.
295Any other positive value causes C<DB::sub> to print return values.
296
297=head4 C<$evalarg>
298
299The item to be eval'ed by C<DB::eval>. Used to prevent messing with the current
300contents of C<@_> when C<DB::eval> is called.
301
302=head4 C<$frame>
303
304Determines what messages (if any) will get printed when a subroutine (or eval)
305is entered or exited.
306
307=over 4
308
309=item * 0 -  No enter/exit messages
310
311=item * 1 - Print I<entering> messages on subroutine entry
312
313=item * 2 - Adds exit messages on subroutine exit. If no other flag is on, acts like 1+2.
314
315=item * 4 - Extended messages: C<< <in|out> I<context>=I<fully-qualified sub name> from I<file>:I<line> >>. If no other flag is on, acts like 1+4.
316
317=item * 8 - Adds parameter information to messages, and overloaded stringify and tied FETCH is enabled on the printed arguments. Ignored if C<4> is not on.
318
319=item * 16 - Adds C<I<context> return from I<subname>: I<value>> messages on subroutine/eval exit. Ignored if C<4> is is not on.
320
321=back
322
323To get everything, use C<$frame=30> (or C<o f=30> as a debugger command).
324The debugger internally juggles the value of C<$frame> during execution to
325protect external modules that the debugger uses from getting traced.
326
327=head4 C<$level>
328
329Tracks current debugger nesting level. Used to figure out how many
330C<E<lt>E<gt>> pairs to surround the line number with when the debugger
331outputs a prompt. Also used to help determine if the program has finished
332during command parsing.
333
334=head4 C<$onetimeDump>
335
336Controls what (if anything) C<DB::eval()> will print after evaluating an
337expression.
338
339=over 4
340
341=item * C<undef> - don't print anything
342
343=item * C<dump> - use C<dumpvar.pl> to display the value returned
344
345=item * C<methods> - print the methods callable on the first item returned
346
347=back
348
349=head4 C<$onetimeDumpDepth>
350
351Controls how far down C<dumpvar.pl> will go before printing C<...> while
352dumping a structure. Numeric. If C<undef>, print all levels.
353
354=head4 C<$signal>
355
356Used to track whether or not an C<INT> signal has been detected. C<DB::DB()>,
357which is called before every statement, checks this and puts the user into
358command mode if it finds C<$signal> set to a true value.
359
360=head4 C<$single>
361
362Controls behavior during single-stepping. Stacked in C<@stack> on entry to
363each subroutine; popped again at the end of each subroutine.
364
365=over 4
366
367=item * 0 - run continuously.
368
369=item * 1 - single-step, go into subs. The C<s> command.
370
371=item * 2 - single-step, don't go into subs. The C<n> command.
372
373=item * 4 - print current sub depth (turned on to force this when C<too much
374recursion> occurs.
375
376=back
377
378=head4 C<$trace>
379
380Controls the output of trace information.
381
382=over 4
383
384=item * 1 - The C<t> command was entered to turn on tracing (every line executed is printed)
385
386=item * 2 - watch expressions are active
387
388=item * 4 - user defined a C<watchfunction()> in C<afterinit()>
389
390=back
391
392=head4 C<$slave_editor>
393
3941 if C<LINEINFO> was directed to a pipe; 0 otherwise.
395
396=head4 C<@cmdfhs>
397
398Stack of filehandles that C<DB::readline()> will read commands from.
399Manipulated by the debugger's C<source> command and C<DB::readline()> itself.
400
401=head4 C<@dbline>
402
403Local alias to the magical line array, C<@{$main::{'_<'.$filename}}> ,
404supplied by the Perl interpreter to the debugger. Contains the source.
405
406=head4 C<@old_watch>
407
408Previous values of watch expressions. First set when the expression is
409entered; reset whenever the watch expression changes.
410
411=head4 C<@saved>
412
413Saves important globals (C<$@>, C<$!>, C<$^E>, C<$,>, C<$/>, C<$\>, C<$^W>)
414so that the debugger can substitute safe values while it's running, and
415restore them when it returns control.
416
417=head4 C<@stack>
418
419Saves the current value of C<$single> on entry to a subroutine.
420Manipulated by the C<c> command to turn off tracing in all subs above the
421current one.
422
423=head4 C<@to_watch>
424
425The 'watch' expressions: to be evaluated before each line is executed.
426
427=head4 C<@typeahead>
428
429The typeahead buffer, used by C<DB::readline>.
430
431=head4 C<%alias>
432
433Command aliases. Stored as character strings to be substituted for a command
434entered.
435
436=head4 C<%break_on_load>
437
438Keys are file names, values are 1 (break when this file is loaded) or undef
439(don't break when it is loaded).
440
441=head4 C<%dbline>
442
443Keys are line numbers, values are C<condition\0action>. If used in numeric
444context, values are 0 if not breakable, 1 if breakable, no matter what is
445in the actual hash entry.
446
447=head4 C<%had_breakpoints>
448
449Keys are file names; values are bitfields:
450
451=over 4
452
453=item * 1 - file has a breakpoint in it.
454
455=item * 2 - file has an action in it.
456
457=back
458
459A zero or undefined value means this file has neither.
460
461=head4 C<%option>
462
463Stores the debugger options. These are character string values.
464
465=head4 C<%postponed>
466
467Saves breakpoints for code that hasn't been compiled yet.
468Keys are subroutine names, values are:
469
470=over 4
471
472=item * C<compile> - break when this sub is compiled
473
474=item * C<< break +0 if <condition> >> - break (conditionally) at the start of this routine. The condition will be '1' if no condition was specified.
475
476=back
477
478=head4 C<%postponed_file>
479
480This hash keeps track of breakpoints that need to be set for files that have
481not yet been compiled. Keys are filenames; values are references to hashes.
482Each of these hashes is keyed by line number, and its values are breakpoint
483definitions (C<condition\0action>).
484
485=head1 DEBUGGER INITIALIZATION
486
487The debugger's initialization actually jumps all over the place inside this
488package. This is because there are several BEGIN blocks (which of course
489execute immediately) spread through the code. Why is that?
490
491The debugger needs to be able to change some things and set some things up
492before the debugger code is compiled; most notably, the C<$deep> variable that
493C<DB::sub> uses to tell when a program has recursed deeply. In addition, the
494debugger has to turn off warnings while the debugger code is compiled, but then
495restore them to their original setting before the program being debugged begins
496executing.
497
498The first C<BEGIN> block simply turns off warnings by saving the current
499setting of C<$^W> and then setting it to zero. The second one initializes
500the debugger variables that are needed before the debugger begins executing.
501The third one puts C<$^X> back to its former value.
502
503We'll detail the second C<BEGIN> block later; just remember that if you need
504to initialize something before the debugger starts really executing, that's
505where it has to go.
506
507=cut
508
509package DB;
510
511BEGIN {eval 'use IO::Handle'};	# Needed for flush only? breaks under miniperl
512
513# Debugger for Perl 5.00x; perl5db.pl patch level:
514$VERSION = 1.30;
515
516$header = "perl5db.pl version $VERSION";
517
518=head1 DEBUGGER ROUTINES
519
520=head2 C<DB::eval()>
521
522This function replaces straight C<eval()> inside the debugger; it simplifies
523the process of evaluating code in the user's context.
524
525The code to be evaluated is passed via the package global variable
526C<$DB::evalarg>; this is done to avoid fiddling with the contents of C<@_>.
527
528Before we do the C<eval()>, we preserve the current settings of C<$trace>,
529C<$single>, C<$^D> and C<$usercontext>.  The latter contains the
530preserved values of C<$@>, C<$!>, C<$^E>, C<$,>, C<$/>, C<$\>, C<$^W> and the
531user's current package, grabbed when C<DB::DB> got control.  This causes the
532proper context to be used when the eval is actually done.  Afterward, we
533restore C<$trace>, C<$single>, and C<$^D>.
534
535Next we need to handle C<$@> without getting confused. We save C<$@> in a
536local lexical, localize C<$saved[0]> (which is where C<save()> will put
537C<$@>), and then call C<save()> to capture C<$@>, C<$!>, C<$^E>, C<$,>,
538C<$/>, C<$\>, and C<$^W>) and set C<$,>, C<$/>, C<$\>, and C<$^W> to values
539considered sane by the debugger. If there was an C<eval()> error, we print
540it on the debugger's output. If C<$onetimedump> is defined, we call
541C<dumpit> if it's set to 'dump', or C<methods> if it's set to
542'methods'. Setting it to something else causes the debugger to do the eval
543but not print the result - handy if you want to do something else with it
544(the "watch expressions" code does this to get the value of the watch
545expression but not show it unless it matters).
546
547In any case, we then return the list of output from C<eval> to the caller,
548and unwinding restores the former version of C<$@> in C<@saved> as well
549(the localization of C<$saved[0]> goes away at the end of this scope).
550
551=head3 Parameters and variables influencing execution of DB::eval()
552
553C<DB::eval> isn't parameterized in the standard way; this is to keep the
554debugger's calls to C<DB::eval()> from mucking with C<@_>, among other things.
555The variables listed below influence C<DB::eval()>'s execution directly.
556
557=over 4
558
559=item C<$evalarg> - the thing to actually be eval'ed
560
561=item C<$trace> - Current state of execution tracing
562
563=item C<$single> - Current state of single-stepping
564
565=item C<$onetimeDump> - what is to be displayed after the evaluation
566
567=item C<$onetimeDumpDepth> - how deep C<dumpit()> should go when dumping results
568
569=back
570
571The following variables are altered by C<DB::eval()> during its execution. They
572are "stacked" via C<local()>, enabling recursive calls to C<DB::eval()>.
573
574=over 4
575
576=item C<@res> - used to capture output from actual C<eval>.
577
578=item C<$otrace> - saved value of C<$trace>.
579
580=item C<$osingle> - saved value of C<$single>.
581
582=item C<$od> - saved value of C<$^D>.
583
584=item C<$saved[0]> - saved value of C<$@>.
585
586=item $\ - for output of C<$@> if there is an evaluation error.
587
588=back
589
590=head3 The problem of lexicals
591
592The context of C<DB::eval()> presents us with some problems. Obviously,
593we want to be 'sandboxed' away from the debugger's internals when we do
594the eval, but we need some way to control how punctuation variables and
595debugger globals are used.
596
597We can't use local, because the code inside C<DB::eval> can see localized
598variables; and we can't use C<my> either for the same reason. The code
599in this routine compromises and uses C<my>.
600
601After this routine is over, we don't have user code executing in the debugger's
602context, so we can use C<my> freely.
603
604=cut
605
606############################################## Begin lexical danger zone
607
608# 'my' variables used here could leak into (that is, be visible in)
609# the context that the code being evaluated is executing in. This means that
610# the code could modify the debugger's variables.
611#
612# Fiddling with the debugger's context could be Bad. We insulate things as
613# much as we can.
614
615sub eval {
616
617    # 'my' would make it visible from user code
618    #    but so does local! --tchrist
619    # Remember: this localizes @DB::res, not @main::res.
620    local @res;
621    {
622
623        # Try to keep the user code from messing  with us. Save these so that
624        # even if the eval'ed code changes them, we can put them back again.
625        # Needed because the user could refer directly to the debugger's
626        # package globals (and any 'my' variables in this containing scope)
627        # inside the eval(), and we want to try to stay safe.
628        local $otrace  = $trace;
629        local $osingle = $single;
630        local $od      = $^D;
631
632        # Untaint the incoming eval() argument.
633        { ($evalarg) = $evalarg =~ /(.*)/s; }
634
635        # $usercontext built in DB::DB near the comment
636        # "set up the context for DB::eval ..."
637        # Evaluate and save any results.
638        @res = eval "$usercontext $evalarg;\n";  # '\n' for nice recursive debug
639
640        # Restore those old values.
641        $trace  = $otrace;
642        $single = $osingle;
643        $^D     = $od;
644    }
645
646    # Save the current value of $@, and preserve it in the debugger's copy
647    # of the saved precious globals.
648    my $at = $@;
649
650    # Since we're only saving $@, we only have to localize the array element
651    # that it will be stored in.
652    local $saved[0];    # Preserve the old value of $@
653    eval { &DB::save };
654
655    # Now see whether we need to report an error back to the user.
656    if ($at) {
657        local $\ = '';
658        print $OUT $at;
659    }
660
661    # Display as required by the caller. $onetimeDump and $onetimedumpDepth
662    # are package globals.
663    elsif ($onetimeDump) {
664        if ( $onetimeDump eq 'dump' ) {
665            local $option{dumpDepth} = $onetimedumpDepth
666              if defined $onetimedumpDepth;
667            dumpit( $OUT, \@res );
668        }
669        elsif ( $onetimeDump eq 'methods' ) {
670            methods( $res[0] );
671        }
672    } ## end elsif ($onetimeDump)
673    @res;
674} ## end sub eval
675
676############################################## End lexical danger zone
677
678# After this point it is safe to introduce lexicals.
679# The code being debugged will be executing in its own context, and
680# can't see the inside of the debugger.
681#
682# However, one should not overdo it: leave as much control from outside as
683# possible. If you make something a lexical, it's not going to be addressable
684# from outside the debugger even if you know its name.
685
686# This file is automatically included if you do perl -d.
687# It's probably not useful to include this yourself.
688#
689# Before venturing further into these twisty passages, it is
690# wise to read the perldebguts man page or risk the ire of dragons.
691#
692# (It should be noted that perldebguts will tell you a lot about
693# the underlying mechanics of how the debugger interfaces into the
694# Perl interpreter, but not a lot about the debugger itself. The new
695# comments in this code try to address this problem.)
696
697# Note that no subroutine call is possible until &DB::sub is defined
698# (for subroutines defined outside of the package DB). In fact the same is
699# true if $deep is not defined.
700
701# Enhanced by ilya@math.ohio-state.edu (Ilya Zakharevich)
702
703# modified Perl debugger, to be run from Emacs in perldb-mode
704# Ray Lischner (uunet!mntgfx!lisch) as of 5 Nov 1990
705# Johan Vromans -- upgrade to 4.0 pl 10
706# Ilya Zakharevich -- patches after 5.001 (and some before ;-)
707
708# (We have made efforts to  clarify the comments in the change log
709# in other places; some of them may seem somewhat obscure as they
710# were originally written, and explaining them away from the code
711# in question seems conterproductive.. -JM)
712
713########################################################################
714# Changes: 0.94
715#   + A lot of things changed after 0.94. First of all, core now informs
716#     debugger about entry into XSUBs, overloaded operators, tied operations,
717#     BEGIN and END. Handy with `O f=2'.
718#   + This can make debugger a little bit too verbose, please be patient
719#     and report your problems promptly.
720#   + Now the option frame has 3 values: 0,1,2. XXX Document!
721#   + Note that if DESTROY returns a reference to the object (or object),
722#     the deletion of data may be postponed until the next function call,
723#     due to the need to examine the return value.
724#
725# Changes: 0.95
726#   + `v' command shows versions.
727#
728# Changes: 0.96
729#   + `v' command shows version of readline.
730#     primitive completion works (dynamic variables, subs for `b' and `l',
731#     options). Can `p %var'
732#   + Better help (`h <' now works). New commands <<, >>, {, {{.
733#     {dump|print}_trace() coded (to be able to do it from <<cmd).
734#   + `c sub' documented.
735#   + At last enough magic combined to stop after the end of debuggee.
736#   + !! should work now (thanks to Emacs bracket matching an extra
737#     `]' in a regexp is caught).
738#   + `L', `D' and `A' span files now (as documented).
739#   + Breakpoints in `require'd code are possible (used in `R').
740#   +  Some additional words on internal work of debugger.
741#   + `b load filename' implemented.
742#   + `b postpone subr' implemented.
743#   + now only `q' exits debugger (overwritable on $inhibit_exit).
744#   + When restarting debugger breakpoints/actions persist.
745#   + Buglet: When restarting debugger only one breakpoint/action per
746#             autoloaded function persists.
747#
748# Changes: 0.97: NonStop will not stop in at_exit().
749#   + Option AutoTrace implemented.
750#   + Trace printed differently if frames are printed too.
751#   + new `inhibitExit' option.
752#   + printing of a very long statement interruptible.
753# Changes: 0.98: New command `m' for printing possible methods
754#   + 'l -' is a synonym for `-'.
755#   + Cosmetic bugs in printing stack trace.
756#   +  `frame' & 8 to print "expanded args" in stack trace.
757#   + Can list/break in imported subs.
758#   + new `maxTraceLen' option.
759#   + frame & 4 and frame & 8 granted.
760#   + new command `m'
761#   + nonstoppable lines do not have `:' near the line number.
762#   + `b compile subname' implemented.
763#   + Will not use $` any more.
764#   + `-' behaves sane now.
765# Changes: 0.99: Completion for `f', `m'.
766#   +  `m' will remove duplicate names instead of duplicate functions.
767#   + `b load' strips trailing whitespace.
768#     completion ignores leading `|'; takes into account current package
769#     when completing a subroutine name (same for `l').
770# Changes: 1.07: Many fixed by tchrist 13-March-2000
771#   BUG FIXES:
772#   + Added bare minimal security checks on perldb rc files, plus
773#     comments on what else is needed.
774#   + Fixed the ornaments that made "|h" completely unusable.
775#     They are not used in print_help if they will hurt.  Strip pod
776#     if we're paging to less.
777#   + Fixed mis-formatting of help messages caused by ornaments
778#     to restore Larry's original formatting.
779#   + Fixed many other formatting errors.  The code is still suboptimal,
780#     and needs a lot of work at restructuring.  It's also misindented
781#     in many places.
782#   + Fixed bug where trying to look at an option like your pager
783#     shows "1".
784#   + Fixed some $? processing.  Note: if you use csh or tcsh, you will
785#     lose.  You should consider shell escapes not using their shell,
786#     or else not caring about detailed status.  This should really be
787#     unified into one place, too.
788#   + Fixed bug where invisible trailing whitespace on commands hoses you,
789#     tricking Perl into thinking you weren't calling a debugger command!
790#   + Fixed bug where leading whitespace on commands hoses you.  (One
791#     suggests a leading semicolon or any other irrelevant non-whitespace
792#     to indicate literal Perl code.)
793#   + Fixed bugs that ate warnings due to wrong selected handle.
794#   + Fixed a precedence bug on signal stuff.
795#   + Fixed some unseemly wording.
796#   + Fixed bug in help command trying to call perl method code.
797#   + Fixed to call dumpvar from exception handler.  SIGPIPE killed us.
798#   ENHANCEMENTS:
799#   + Added some comments.  This code is still nasty spaghetti.
800#   + Added message if you clear your pre/post command stacks which was
801#     very easy to do if you just typed a bare >, <, or {.  (A command
802#     without an argument should *never* be a destructive action; this
803#     API is fundamentally screwed up; likewise option setting, which
804#     is equally buggered.)
805#   + Added command stack dump on argument of "?" for >, <, or {.
806#   + Added a semi-built-in doc viewer command that calls man with the
807#     proper %Config::Config path (and thus gets caching, man -k, etc),
808#     or else perldoc on obstreperous platforms.
809#   + Added to and rearranged the help information.
810#   + Detected apparent misuse of { ... } to declare a block; this used
811#     to work but now is a command, and mysteriously gave no complaint.
812#
813# Changes: 1.08: Apr 25, 2001  Jon Eveland <jweveland@yahoo.com>
814#   BUG FIX:
815#   + This patch to perl5db.pl cleans up formatting issues on the help
816#     summary (h h) screen in the debugger.  Mostly columnar alignment
817#     issues, plus converted the printed text to use all spaces, since
818#     tabs don't seem to help much here.
819#
820# Changes: 1.09: May 19, 2001  Ilya Zakharevich <ilya@math.ohio-state.edu>
821#   Minor bugs corrected;
822#   + Support for auto-creation of new TTY window on startup, either
823#     unconditionally, or if started as a kid of another debugger session;
824#   + New `O'ption CreateTTY
825#       I<CreateTTY>      bits control attempts to create a new TTY on events:
826#                         1: on fork()
827#                         2: debugger is started inside debugger
828#                         4: on startup
829#   + Code to auto-create a new TTY window on OS/2 (currently one
830#     extra window per session - need named pipes to have more...);
831#   + Simplified interface for custom createTTY functions (with a backward
832#     compatibility hack); now returns the TTY name to use; return of ''
833#     means that the function reset the I/O handles itself;
834#   + Better message on the semantic of custom createTTY function;
835#   + Convert the existing code to create a TTY into a custom createTTY
836#     function;
837#   + Consistent support for TTY names of the form "TTYin,TTYout";
838#   + Switch line-tracing output too to the created TTY window;
839#   + make `b fork' DWIM with CORE::GLOBAL::fork;
840#   + High-level debugger API cmd_*():
841#      cmd_b_load($filenamepart)            # b load filenamepart
842#      cmd_b_line($lineno [, $cond])        # b lineno [cond]
843#      cmd_b_sub($sub [, $cond])            # b sub [cond]
844#      cmd_stop()                           # Control-C
845#      cmd_d($lineno)                       # d lineno (B)
846#      The cmd_*() API returns FALSE on failure; in this case it outputs
847#      the error message to the debugging output.
848#   + Low-level debugger API
849#      break_on_load($filename)             # b load filename
850#      @files = report_break_on_load()      # List files with load-breakpoints
851#      breakable_line_in_filename($name, $from [, $to])
852#                                           # First breakable line in the
853#                                           # range $from .. $to.  $to defaults
854#                                           # to $from, and may be less than
855#                                           # $to
856#      breakable_line($from [, $to])        # Same for the current file
857#      break_on_filename_line($name, $lineno [, $cond])
858#                                           # Set breakpoint,$cond defaults to
859#                                           # 1
860#      break_on_filename_line_range($name, $from, $to [, $cond])
861#                                           # As above, on the first
862#                                           # breakable line in range
863#      break_on_line($lineno [, $cond])     # As above, in the current file
864#      break_subroutine($sub [, $cond])     # break on the first breakable line
865#      ($name, $from, $to) = subroutine_filename_lines($sub)
866#                                           # The range of lines of the text
867#      The low-level API returns TRUE on success, and die()s on failure.
868#
869# Changes: 1.10: May 23, 2001  Daniel Lewart <d-lewart@uiuc.edu>
870#   BUG FIXES:
871#   + Fixed warnings generated by "perl -dWe 42"
872#   + Corrected spelling errors
873#   + Squeezed Help (h) output into 80 columns
874#
875# Changes: 1.11: May 24, 2001  David Dyck <dcd@tc.fluke.com>
876#   + Made "x @INC" work like it used to
877#
878# Changes: 1.12: May 24, 2001  Daniel Lewart <d-lewart@uiuc.edu>
879#   + Fixed warnings generated by "O" (Show debugger options)
880#   + Fixed warnings generated by "p 42" (Print expression)
881# Changes: 1.13: Jun 19, 2001 Scott.L.Miller@compaq.com
882#   + Added windowSize option
883# Changes: 1.14: Oct  9, 2001 multiple
884#   + Clean up after itself on VMS (Charles Lane in 12385)
885#   + Adding "@ file" syntax (Peter Scott in 12014)
886#   + Debug reloading selfloaded stuff (Ilya Zakharevich in 11457)
887#   + $^S and other debugger fixes (Ilya Zakharevich in 11120)
888#   + Forgot a my() declaration (Ilya Zakharevich in 11085)
889# Changes: 1.15: Nov  6, 2001 Michael G Schwern <schwern@pobox.com>
890#   + Updated 1.14 change log
891#   + Added *dbline explainatory comments
892#   + Mentioning perldebguts man page
893# Changes: 1.16: Feb 15, 2002 Mark-Jason Dominus <mjd@plover.com>
894#   + $onetimeDump improvements
895# Changes: 1.17: Feb 20, 2002 Richard Foley <richard.foley@rfi.net>
896#   Moved some code to cmd_[.]()'s for clarity and ease of handling,
897#   rationalised the following commands and added cmd_wrapper() to
898#   enable switching between old and frighteningly consistent new
899#   behaviours for diehards: 'o CommandSet=pre580' (sigh...)
900#     a(add),       A(del)            # action expr   (added del by line)
901#   + b(add),       B(del)            # break  [line] (was b,D)
902#   + w(add),       W(del)            # watch  expr   (was W,W)
903#                                     # added del by expr
904#   + h(summary), h h(long)           # help (hh)     (was h h,h)
905#   + m(methods),   M(modules)        # ...           (was m,v)
906#   + o(option)                       # lc            (was O)
907#   + v(view code), V(view Variables) # ...           (was w,V)
908# Changes: 1.18: Mar 17, 2002 Richard Foley <richard.foley@rfi.net>
909#   + fixed missing cmd_O bug
910# Changes: 1.19: Mar 29, 2002 Spider Boardman
911#   + Added missing local()s -- DB::DB is called recursively.
912# Changes: 1.20: Feb 17, 2003 Richard Foley <richard.foley@rfi.net>
913#   + pre'n'post commands no longer trashed with no args
914#   + watch val joined out of eval()
915# Changes: 1.21: Jun 04, 2003 Joe McMahon <mcmahon@ibiblio.org>
916#   + Added comments and reformatted source. No bug fixes/enhancements.
917#   + Includes cleanup by Robin Barker and Jarkko Hietaniemi.
918# Changes: 1.22  Jun 09, 2003 Alex Vandiver <alexmv@MIT.EDU>
919#   + Flush stdout/stderr before the debugger prompt is printed.
920# Changes: 1.23: Dec 21, 2003 Dominique Quatravaux
921#   + Fix a side-effect of bug #24674 in the perl debugger ("odd taint bug")
922# Changes: 1.24: Mar 03, 2004 Richard Foley <richard.foley@rfi.net>
923#   + Added command to save all debugger commands for sourcing later.
924#   + Added command to display parent inheritance tree of given class.
925#   + Fixed minor newline in history bug.
926# Changes: 1.25: Apr 17, 2004 Richard Foley <richard.foley@rfi.net>
927#   + Fixed option bug (setting invalid options + not recognising valid short forms)
928# Changes: 1.26: Apr 22, 2004 Richard Foley <richard.foley@rfi.net>
929#   + unfork the 5.8.x and 5.9.x debuggers.
930#   + whitespace and assertions call cleanup across versions
931#   + H * deletes (resets) history
932#   + i now handles Class + blessed objects
933# Changes: 1.27: May 09, 2004 Richard Foley <richard.foley@rfi.net>
934#   + updated pod page references - clunky.
935#   + removed windowid restriction for forking into an xterm.
936#   + more whitespace again.
937#   + wrapped restart and enabled rerun [-n] (go back n steps) command.
938# Changes: 1.28: Oct 12, 2004 Richard Foley <richard.foley@rfi.net>
939#   + Added threads support (inc. e and E commands)
940# Changes: 1.29: Nov 28, 2006 Bo Lindbergh <blgl@hagernas.com>
941#   + Added macosx_get_fork_TTY support
942# Changes: 1.30: Mar 06, 2007 Andreas Koenig <andk@cpan.org>
943#   + Added HistFile, HistSize
944########################################################################
945
946=head1 DEBUGGER INITIALIZATION
947
948The debugger starts up in phases.
949
950=head2 BASIC SETUP
951
952First, it initializes the environment it wants to run in: turning off
953warnings during its own compilation, defining variables which it will need
954to avoid warnings later, setting itself up to not exit when the program
955terminates, and defaulting to printing return values for the C<r> command.
956
957=cut
958
959# Needed for the statement after exec():
960#
961# This BEGIN block is simply used to switch off warnings during debugger
962# compiliation. Probably it would be better practice to fix the warnings,
963# but this is how it's done at the moment.
964
965BEGIN {
966    $ini_warn = $^W;
967    $^W       = 0;
968}    # Switch compilation warnings off until another BEGIN.
969
970local ($^W) = 0;    # Switch run-time warnings off during init.
971
972=head2 THREADS SUPPORT
973
974If we are running under a threaded Perl, we require threads and threads::shared
975if the environment variable C<PERL5DB_THREADED> is set, to enable proper
976threaded debugger control.  C<-dt> can also be used to set this.
977
978Each new thread will be announced and the debugger prompt will always inform
979you of each new thread created.  It will also indicate the thread id in which
980we are currently running within the prompt like this:
981
982	[tid] DB<$i>
983
984Where C<[tid]> is an integer thread id and C<$i> is the familiar debugger
985command prompt.  The prompt will show: C<[0]> when running under threads, but
986not actually in a thread.  C<[tid]> is consistent with C<gdb> usage.
987
988While running under threads, when you set or delete a breakpoint (etc.), this
989will apply to all threads, not just the currently running one.  When you are
990in a currently executing thread, you will stay there until it completes.  With
991the current implementation it is not currently possible to hop from one thread
992to another.
993
994The C<e> and C<E> commands are currently fairly minimal - see C<h e> and C<h E>.
995
996Note that threading support was built into the debugger as of Perl version
997C<5.8.6> and debugger version C<1.2.8>.
998
999=cut
1000
1001BEGIN {
1002  # ensure we can share our non-threaded variables or no-op
1003  if ($ENV{PERL5DB_THREADED}) {
1004	require threads;
1005	require threads::shared;
1006	import threads::shared qw(share);
1007	$DBGR;
1008	share(\$DBGR);
1009	lock($DBGR);
1010	print "Threads support enabled\n";
1011  } else {
1012	*lock  = sub(*) {};
1013	*share = sub(*) {};
1014  }
1015}
1016
1017# This would probably be better done with "use vars", but that wasn't around
1018# when this code was originally written. (Neither was "use strict".) And on
1019# the principle of not fiddling with something that was working, this was
1020# left alone.
1021warn(               # Do not ;-)
1022    # These variables control the execution of 'dumpvar.pl'.
1023    $dumpvar::hashDepth,
1024    $dumpvar::arrayDepth,
1025    $dumpvar::dumpDBFiles,
1026    $dumpvar::dumpPackages,
1027    $dumpvar::quoteHighBit,
1028    $dumpvar::printUndef,
1029    $dumpvar::globPrint,
1030    $dumpvar::usageOnly,
1031
1032    # used to save @ARGV and extract any debugger-related flags.
1033    @ARGS,
1034
1035    # used to control die() reporting in diesignal()
1036    $Carp::CarpLevel,
1037
1038    # used to prevent multiple entries to diesignal()
1039    # (if for instance diesignal() itself dies)
1040    $panic,
1041
1042    # used to prevent the debugger from running nonstop
1043    # after a restart
1044    $second_time,
1045  )
1046  if 0;
1047
1048foreach my $k (keys (%INC)) {
1049	&share(\$main::{'_<'.$filename});
1050};
1051
1052# Command-line + PERLLIB:
1053# Save the contents of @INC before they are modified elsewhere.
1054@ini_INC = @INC;
1055
1056# This was an attempt to clear out the previous values of various
1057# trapped errors. Apparently it didn't help. XXX More info needed!
1058# $prevwarn = $prevdie = $prevbus = $prevsegv = ''; # Does not help?!
1059
1060# We set these variables to safe values. We don't want to blindly turn
1061# off warnings, because other packages may still want them.
1062$trace = $signal = $single = 0;    # Uninitialized warning suppression
1063                                   # (local $^W cannot help - other packages!).
1064
1065# Default to not exiting when program finishes; print the return
1066# value when the 'r' command is used to return from a subroutine.
1067$inhibit_exit = $option{PrintRet} = 1;
1068
1069=head1 OPTION PROCESSING
1070
1071The debugger's options are actually spread out over the debugger itself and
1072C<dumpvar.pl>; some of these are variables to be set, while others are
1073subs to be called with a value. To try to make this a little easier to
1074manage, the debugger uses a few data structures to define what options
1075are legal and how they are to be processed.
1076
1077First, the C<@options> array defines the I<names> of all the options that
1078are to be accepted.
1079
1080=cut
1081
1082@options = qw(
1083  CommandSet   HistFile      HistSize
1084  hashDepth    arrayDepth    dumpDepth
1085  DumpDBFiles  DumpPackages  DumpReused
1086  compactDump  veryCompact   quote
1087  HighBit      undefPrint    globPrint
1088  PrintRet     UsageOnly     frame
1089  AutoTrace    TTY           noTTY
1090  ReadLine     NonStop       LineInfo
1091  maxTraceLen  recallCommand ShellBang
1092  pager        tkRunning     ornaments
1093  signalLevel  warnLevel     dieLevel
1094  inhibit_exit ImmediateStop bareStringify
1095  CreateTTY    RemotePort    windowSize
1096  DollarCaretP
1097);
1098
1099@RememberOnROptions = qw(DollarCaretP);
1100
1101=pod
1102
1103Second, C<optionVars> lists the variables that each option uses to save its
1104state.
1105
1106=cut
1107
1108%optionVars = (
1109    hashDepth     => \$dumpvar::hashDepth,
1110    arrayDepth    => \$dumpvar::arrayDepth,
1111    CommandSet    => \$CommandSet,
1112    DumpDBFiles   => \$dumpvar::dumpDBFiles,
1113    DumpPackages  => \$dumpvar::dumpPackages,
1114    DumpReused    => \$dumpvar::dumpReused,
1115    HighBit       => \$dumpvar::quoteHighBit,
1116    undefPrint    => \$dumpvar::printUndef,
1117    globPrint     => \$dumpvar::globPrint,
1118    UsageOnly     => \$dumpvar::usageOnly,
1119    CreateTTY     => \$CreateTTY,
1120    bareStringify => \$dumpvar::bareStringify,
1121    frame         => \$frame,
1122    AutoTrace     => \$trace,
1123    inhibit_exit  => \$inhibit_exit,
1124    maxTraceLen   => \$maxtrace,
1125    ImmediateStop => \$ImmediateStop,
1126    RemotePort    => \$remoteport,
1127    windowSize    => \$window,
1128    HistFile      => \$histfile,
1129    HistSize      => \$histsize,
1130);
1131
1132=pod
1133
1134Third, C<%optionAction> defines the subroutine to be called to process each
1135option.
1136
1137=cut 
1138
1139%optionAction = (
1140    compactDump   => \&dumpvar::compactDump,
1141    veryCompact   => \&dumpvar::veryCompact,
1142    quote         => \&dumpvar::quote,
1143    TTY           => \&TTY,
1144    noTTY         => \&noTTY,
1145    ReadLine      => \&ReadLine,
1146    NonStop       => \&NonStop,
1147    LineInfo      => \&LineInfo,
1148    recallCommand => \&recallCommand,
1149    ShellBang     => \&shellBang,
1150    pager         => \&pager,
1151    signalLevel   => \&signalLevel,
1152    warnLevel     => \&warnLevel,
1153    dieLevel      => \&dieLevel,
1154    tkRunning     => \&tkRunning,
1155    ornaments     => \&ornaments,
1156    RemotePort    => \&RemotePort,
1157    DollarCaretP  => \&DollarCaretP,
1158);
1159
1160=pod
1161
1162Last, the C<%optionRequire> notes modules that must be C<require>d if an
1163option is used.
1164
1165=cut
1166
1167# Note that this list is not complete: several options not listed here
1168# actually require that dumpvar.pl be loaded for them to work, but are
1169# not in the table. A subsequent patch will correct this problem; for
1170# the moment, we're just recommenting, and we are NOT going to change
1171# function.
1172%optionRequire = (
1173    compactDump => 'dumpvar.pl',
1174    veryCompact => 'dumpvar.pl',
1175    quote       => 'dumpvar.pl',
1176);
1177
1178=pod
1179
1180There are a number of initialization-related variables which can be set
1181by putting code to set them in a BEGIN block in the C<PERL5DB> environment
1182variable. These are:
1183
1184=over 4
1185
1186=item C<$rl> - readline control XXX needs more explanation
1187
1188=item C<$warnLevel> - whether or not debugger takes over warning handling
1189
1190=item C<$dieLevel> - whether or not debugger takes over die handling
1191
1192=item C<$signalLevel> - whether or not debugger takes over signal handling
1193
1194=item C<$pre> - preprompt actions (array reference)
1195
1196=item C<$post> - postprompt actions (array reference)
1197
1198=item C<$pretype>
1199
1200=item C<$CreateTTY> - whether or not to create a new TTY for this debugger
1201
1202=item C<$CommandSet> - which command set to use (defaults to new, documented set)
1203
1204=back
1205
1206=cut
1207
1208# These guys may be defined in $ENV{PERL5DB} :
1209$rl          = 1     unless defined $rl;
1210$warnLevel   = 1     unless defined $warnLevel;
1211$dieLevel    = 1     unless defined $dieLevel;
1212$signalLevel = 1     unless defined $signalLevel;
1213$pre         = []    unless defined $pre;
1214$post        = []    unless defined $post;
1215$pretype     = []    unless defined $pretype;
1216$CreateTTY   = 3     unless defined $CreateTTY;
1217$CommandSet  = '580' unless defined $CommandSet;
1218
1219share($rl);
1220share($warnLevel);
1221share($dieLevel);
1222share($signalLevel);
1223share($pre);
1224share($post);
1225share($pretype);
1226share($rl);
1227share($CreateTTY);
1228share($CommandSet);
1229
1230=pod
1231
1232The default C<die>, C<warn>, and C<signal> handlers are set up.
1233
1234=cut
1235
1236warnLevel($warnLevel);
1237dieLevel($dieLevel);
1238signalLevel($signalLevel);
1239
1240=pod
1241
1242The pager to be used is needed next. We try to get it from the
1243environment first.  If it's not defined there, we try to find it in
1244the Perl C<Config.pm>.  If it's not there, we default to C<more>. We
1245then call the C<pager()> function to save the pager name.
1246
1247=cut
1248
1249# This routine makes sure $pager is set up so that '|' can use it.
1250pager(
1251
1252    # If PAGER is defined in the environment, use it.
1253    defined $ENV{PAGER}
1254    ? $ENV{PAGER}
1255
1256      # If not, see if Config.pm defines it.
1257    : eval { require Config }
1258      && defined $Config::Config{pager}
1259    ? $Config::Config{pager}
1260
1261      # If not, fall back to 'more'.
1262    : 'more'
1263  )
1264  unless defined $pager;
1265
1266=pod
1267
1268We set up the command to be used to access the man pages, the command
1269recall character (C<!> unless otherwise defined) and the shell escape
1270character (C<!> unless otherwise defined). Yes, these do conflict, and
1271neither works in the debugger at the moment.
1272
1273=cut
1274
1275setman();
1276
1277# Set up defaults for command recall and shell escape (note:
1278# these currently don't work in linemode debugging).
1279&recallCommand("!") unless defined $prc;
1280&shellBang("!")     unless defined $psh;
1281
1282=pod
1283
1284We then set up the gigantic string containing the debugger help.
1285We also set the limit on the number of arguments we'll display during a
1286trace.
1287
1288=cut
1289
1290sethelp();
1291
1292# If we didn't get a default for the length of eval/stack trace args,
1293# set it here.
1294$maxtrace = 400 unless defined $maxtrace;
1295
1296=head2 SETTING UP THE DEBUGGER GREETING
1297
1298The debugger I<greeting> helps to inform the user how many debuggers are
1299running, and whether the current debugger is the primary or a child.
1300
1301If we are the primary, we just hang onto our pid so we'll have it when
1302or if we start a child debugger. If we are a child, we'll set things up
1303so we'll have a unique greeting and so the parent will give us our own
1304TTY later.
1305
1306We save the current contents of the C<PERLDB_PIDS> environment variable
1307because we mess around with it. We'll also need to hang onto it because
1308we'll need it if we restart.
1309
1310Child debuggers make a label out of the current PID structure recorded in
1311PERLDB_PIDS plus the new PID. They also mark themselves as not having a TTY
1312yet so the parent will give them one later via C<resetterm()>.
1313
1314=cut
1315
1316# Save the current contents of the environment; we're about to
1317# much with it. We'll need this if we have to restart.
1318$ini_pids = $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS};
1319
1320if ( defined $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} ) {
1321
1322    # We're a child. Make us a label out of the current PID structure
1323    # recorded in PERLDB_PIDS plus our (new) PID. Mark us as not having
1324    # a term yet so the parent will give us one later via resetterm().
1325
1326    my $env_pids = $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS};
1327    $pids = "[$env_pids]";
1328
1329    # Unless we are on OpenVMS, all programs under the DCL shell run under
1330    # the same PID.
1331
1332    if (($^O eq 'VMS') && ($env_pids =~ /\b$$\b/)) {
1333        $term_pid         = $$;
1334    }
1335    else {
1336        $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} .= "->$$";
1337        $term_pid = -1;
1338    }
1339
1340} ## end if (defined $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS...
1341else {
1342
1343    # We're the parent PID. Initialize PERLDB_PID in case we end up with a
1344    # child debugger, and mark us as the parent, so we'll know to set up
1345    # more TTY's is we have to.
1346    $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} = "$$";
1347    $pids             = "[pid=$$]";
1348    $term_pid         = $$;
1349}
1350
1351$pidprompt = '';
1352
1353# Sets up $emacs as a synonym for $slave_editor.
1354*emacs = $slave_editor if $slave_editor;    # May be used in afterinit()...
1355
1356=head2 READING THE RC FILE
1357
1358The debugger will read a file of initialization options if supplied. If
1359running interactively, this is C<.perldb>; if not, it's C<perldb.ini>.
1360
1361=cut      
1362
1363# As noted, this test really doesn't check accurately that the debugger
1364# is running at a terminal or not.
1365
1366if ( -e "/dev/tty" ) {                      # this is the wrong metric!
1367    $rcfile = ".perldb";
1368}
1369else {
1370    $rcfile = "perldb.ini";
1371}
1372
1373=pod
1374
1375The debugger does a safety test of the file to be read. It must be owned
1376either by the current user or root, and must only be writable by the owner.
1377
1378=cut
1379
1380# This wraps a safety test around "do" to read and evaluate the init file.
1381#
1382# This isn't really safe, because there's a race
1383# between checking and opening.  The solution is to
1384# open and fstat the handle, but then you have to read and
1385# eval the contents.  But then the silly thing gets
1386# your lexical scope, which is unfortunate at best.
1387sub safe_do {
1388    my $file = shift;
1389
1390    # Just exactly what part of the word "CORE::" don't you understand?
1391    local $SIG{__WARN__};
1392    local $SIG{__DIE__};
1393
1394    unless ( is_safe_file($file) ) {
1395        CORE::warn <<EO_GRIPE;
1396perldb: Must not source insecure rcfile $file.
1397        You or the superuser must be the owner, and it must not
1398        be writable by anyone but its owner.
1399EO_GRIPE
1400        return;
1401    } ## end unless (is_safe_file($file...
1402
1403    do $file;
1404    CORE::warn("perldb: couldn't parse $file: $@") if $@;
1405} ## end sub safe_do
1406
1407# This is the safety test itself.
1408#
1409# Verifies that owner is either real user or superuser and that no
1410# one but owner may write to it.  This function is of limited use
1411# when called on a path instead of upon a handle, because there are
1412# no guarantees that filename (by dirent) whose file (by ino) is
1413# eventually accessed is the same as the one tested.
1414# Assumes that the file's existence is not in doubt.
1415sub is_safe_file {
1416    my $path = shift;
1417    stat($path) || return;    # mysteriously vaporized
1418    my ( $dev, $ino, $mode, $nlink, $uid, $gid ) = stat(_);
1419
1420    return 0 if $uid != 0 && $uid != $<;
1421    return 0 if $mode & 022;
1422    return 1;
1423} ## end sub is_safe_file
1424
1425# If the rcfile (whichever one we decided was the right one to read)
1426# exists, we safely do it.
1427if ( -f $rcfile ) {
1428    safe_do("./$rcfile");
1429}
1430
1431# If there isn't one here, try the user's home directory.
1432elsif ( defined $ENV{HOME} && -f "$ENV{HOME}/$rcfile" ) {
1433    safe_do("$ENV{HOME}/$rcfile");
1434}
1435
1436# Else try the login directory.
1437elsif ( defined $ENV{LOGDIR} && -f "$ENV{LOGDIR}/$rcfile" ) {
1438    safe_do("$ENV{LOGDIR}/$rcfile");
1439}
1440
1441# If the PERLDB_OPTS variable has options in it, parse those out next.
1442if ( defined $ENV{PERLDB_OPTS} ) {
1443    parse_options( $ENV{PERLDB_OPTS} );
1444}
1445
1446=pod
1447
1448The last thing we do during initialization is determine which subroutine is
1449to be used to obtain a new terminal when a new debugger is started. Right now,
1450the debugger only handles X Windows, OS/2, and Mac OS X (darwin).
1451
1452=cut
1453
1454# Set up the get_fork_TTY subroutine to be aliased to the proper routine.
1455# Works if you're running an xterm or xterm-like window, or you're on
1456# OS/2, or on Mac OS X. This may need some expansion.
1457
1458if (not defined &get_fork_TTY)       # only if no routine exists
1459{
1460    if (defined $ENV{TERM}                       # If we know what kind
1461                                                 # of terminal this is,
1462        and $ENV{TERM} eq 'xterm'                # and it's an xterm,
1463        and defined $ENV{DISPLAY}                # and what display it's on,
1464      )
1465    {
1466        *get_fork_TTY = \&xterm_get_fork_TTY;    # use the xterm version
1467    }
1468    elsif ( $^O eq 'os2' ) {                     # If this is OS/2,
1469        *get_fork_TTY = \&os2_get_fork_TTY;      # use the OS/2 version
1470    }
1471    elsif ( $^O eq 'darwin'                      # If this is Mac OS X
1472            and defined $ENV{TERM_PROGRAM}       # and we're running inside
1473            and $ENV{TERM_PROGRAM}
1474                eq 'Apple_Terminal'              # Terminal.app
1475            )
1476    {
1477        *get_fork_TTY = \&macosx_get_fork_TTY;   # use the Mac OS X version
1478    }
1479} ## end if (not defined &get_fork_TTY...
1480
1481# untaint $^O, which may have been tainted by the last statement.
1482# see bug [perl #24674]
1483$^O =~ m/^(.*)\z/;
1484$^O = $1;
1485
1486# Here begin the unreadable code.  It needs fixing.
1487
1488=head2 RESTART PROCESSING
1489
1490This section handles the restart command. When the C<R> command is invoked, it
1491tries to capture all of the state it can into environment variables, and
1492then sets C<PERLDB_RESTART>. When we start executing again, we check to see
1493if C<PERLDB_RESTART> is there; if so, we reload all the information that
1494the R command stuffed into the environment variables.
1495
1496  PERLDB_RESTART   - flag only, contains no restart data itself.
1497  PERLDB_HIST      - command history, if it's available
1498  PERLDB_ON_LOAD   - breakpoints set by the rc file
1499  PERLDB_POSTPONE  - subs that have been loaded/not executed, and have actions
1500  PERLDB_VISITED   - files that had breakpoints
1501  PERLDB_FILE_...  - breakpoints for a file
1502  PERLDB_OPT       - active options
1503  PERLDB_INC       - the original @INC
1504  PERLDB_PRETYPE   - preprompt debugger actions
1505  PERLDB_PRE       - preprompt Perl code
1506  PERLDB_POST      - post-prompt Perl code
1507  PERLDB_TYPEAHEAD - typeahead captured by readline()
1508
1509We chug through all these variables and plug the values saved in them
1510back into the appropriate spots in the debugger.
1511
1512=cut
1513
1514if ( exists $ENV{PERLDB_RESTART} ) {
1515
1516    # We're restarting, so we don't need the flag that says to restart anymore.
1517    delete $ENV{PERLDB_RESTART};
1518
1519    # $restart = 1;
1520    @hist          = get_list('PERLDB_HIST');
1521    %break_on_load = get_list("PERLDB_ON_LOAD");
1522    %postponed     = get_list("PERLDB_POSTPONE");
1523
1524	share(@hist);
1525	share(@truehist);
1526	share(%break_on_load);
1527	share(%postponed);
1528
1529    # restore breakpoints/actions
1530    my @had_breakpoints = get_list("PERLDB_VISITED");
1531    for ( 0 .. $#had_breakpoints ) {
1532        my %pf = get_list("PERLDB_FILE_$_");
1533        $postponed_file{ $had_breakpoints[$_] } = \%pf if %pf;
1534    }
1535
1536    # restore options
1537    my %opt = get_list("PERLDB_OPT");
1538    my ( $opt, $val );
1539    while ( ( $opt, $val ) = each %opt ) {
1540        $val =~ s/[\\\']/\\$1/g;
1541        parse_options("$opt'$val'");
1542    }
1543
1544    # restore original @INC
1545    @INC     = get_list("PERLDB_INC");
1546    @ini_INC = @INC;
1547
1548    # return pre/postprompt actions and typeahead buffer
1549    $pretype   = [ get_list("PERLDB_PRETYPE") ];
1550    $pre       = [ get_list("PERLDB_PRE") ];
1551    $post      = [ get_list("PERLDB_POST") ];
1552    @typeahead = get_list( "PERLDB_TYPEAHEAD", @typeahead );
1553} ## end if (exists $ENV{PERLDB_RESTART...
1554
1555=head2 SETTING UP THE TERMINAL
1556
1557Now, we'll decide how the debugger is going to interact with the user.
1558If there's no TTY, we set the debugger to run non-stop; there's not going
1559to be anyone there to enter commands.
1560
1561=cut
1562
1563if ($notty) {
1564    $runnonstop = 1;
1565	share($runnonstop);
1566}
1567
1568=pod
1569
1570If there is a TTY, we have to determine who it belongs to before we can
1571proceed. If this is a slave editor or graphical debugger (denoted by
1572the first command-line switch being '-emacs'), we shift this off and
1573set C<$rl> to 0 (XXX ostensibly to do straight reads).
1574
1575=cut
1576
1577else {
1578
1579    # Is Perl being run from a slave editor or graphical debugger?
1580    # If so, don't use readline, and set $slave_editor = 1.
1581    $slave_editor =
1582      ( ( defined $main::ARGV[0] ) and ( $main::ARGV[0] eq '-emacs' ) );
1583    $rl = 0, shift(@main::ARGV) if $slave_editor;
1584
1585    #require Term::ReadLine;
1586
1587=pod
1588
1589We then determine what the console should be on various systems:
1590
1591=over 4
1592
1593=item * Cygwin - We use C<stdin> instead of a separate device.
1594
1595=cut
1596
1597    if ( $^O eq 'cygwin' ) {
1598
1599        # /dev/tty is binary. use stdin for textmode
1600        undef $console;
1601    }
1602
1603=item * Unix - use C</dev/tty>.
1604
1605=cut
1606
1607    elsif ( -e "/dev/tty" ) {
1608        $console = "/dev/tty";
1609    }
1610
1611=item * Windows or MSDOS - use C<con>.
1612
1613=cut
1614
1615    elsif ( $^O eq 'dos' or -e "con" or $^O eq 'MSWin32' ) {
1616        $console = "con";
1617    }
1618
1619=item * MacOS - use C<Dev:Console:Perl Debug> if this is the MPW version; C<Dev:
1620Console> if not.
1621
1622Note that Mac OS X returns C<darwin>, not C<MacOS>. Also note that the debugger doesn't do anything special for C<darwin>. Maybe it should.
1623
1624=cut
1625
1626    elsif ( $^O eq 'MacOS' ) {
1627        if ( $MacPerl::Version !~ /MPW/ ) {
1628            $console =
1629              "Dev:Console:Perl Debug";    # Separate window for application
1630        }
1631        else {
1632            $console = "Dev:Console";
1633        }
1634    } ## end elsif ($^O eq 'MacOS')
1635
1636=item * VMS - use C<sys$command>.
1637
1638=cut
1639
1640    else {
1641
1642        # everything else is ...
1643        $console = "sys\$command";
1644    }
1645
1646=pod
1647
1648=back
1649
1650Several other systems don't use a specific console. We C<undef $console>
1651for those (Windows using a slave editor/graphical debugger, NetWare, OS/2
1652with a slave editor, Epoc).
1653
1654=cut
1655
1656    if ( ( $^O eq 'MSWin32' ) and ( $slave_editor or defined $ENV{EMACS} ) ) {
1657
1658        # /dev/tty is binary. use stdin for textmode
1659        $console = undef;
1660    }
1661
1662    if ( $^O eq 'NetWare' ) {
1663
1664        # /dev/tty is binary. use stdin for textmode
1665        $console = undef;
1666    }
1667
1668    # In OS/2, we need to use STDIN to get textmode too, even though
1669    # it pretty much looks like Unix otherwise.
1670    if ( defined $ENV{OS2_SHELL} and ( $slave_editor or $ENV{WINDOWID} ) )
1671    {    # In OS/2
1672        $console = undef;
1673    }
1674
1675    # EPOC also falls into the 'got to use STDIN' camp.
1676    if ( $^O eq 'epoc' ) {
1677        $console = undef;
1678    }
1679
1680=pod
1681
1682If there is a TTY hanging around from a parent, we use that as the console.
1683
1684=cut
1685
1686    $console = $tty if defined $tty;
1687
1688=head2 SOCKET HANDLING
1689
1690The debugger is capable of opening a socket and carrying out a debugging
1691session over the socket.
1692
1693If C<RemotePort> was defined in the options, the debugger assumes that it
1694should try to start a debugging session on that port. It builds the socket
1695and then tries to connect the input and output filehandles to it.
1696
1697=cut
1698
1699    # Handle socket stuff.
1700
1701    if ( defined $remoteport ) {
1702
1703        # If RemotePort was defined in the options, connect input and output
1704        # to the socket.
1705        require IO::Socket;
1706        $OUT = new IO::Socket::INET(
1707            Timeout  => '10',
1708            PeerAddr => $remoteport,
1709            Proto    => 'tcp',
1710        );
1711        if ( !$OUT ) { die "Unable to connect to remote host: $remoteport\n"; }
1712        $IN = $OUT;
1713    } ## end if (defined $remoteport)
1714
1715=pod
1716
1717If no C<RemotePort> was defined, and we want to create a TTY on startup,
1718this is probably a situation where multiple debuggers are running (for example,
1719a backticked command that starts up another debugger). We create a new IN and
1720OUT filehandle, and do the necessary mojo to create a new TTY if we know how
1721and if we can.
1722
1723=cut
1724
1725    # Non-socket.
1726    else {
1727
1728        # Two debuggers running (probably a system or a backtick that invokes
1729        # the debugger itself under the running one). create a new IN and OUT
1730        # filehandle, and do the necessary mojo to create a new tty if we
1731        # know how, and we can.
1732        create_IN_OUT(4) if $CreateTTY & 4;
1733        if ($console) {
1734
1735            # If we have a console, check to see if there are separate ins and
1736            # outs to open. (They are assumed identical if not.)
1737
1738            my ( $i, $o ) = split /,/, $console;
1739            $o = $i unless defined $o;
1740
1741            # read/write on in, or just read, or read on STDIN.
1742            open( IN,      "+<$i" )
1743              || open( IN, "<$i" )
1744              || open( IN, "<&STDIN" );
1745
1746            # read/write/create/clobber out, or write/create/clobber out,
1747            # or merge with STDERR, or merge with STDOUT.
1748                 open( OUT, "+>$o" )
1749              || open( OUT, ">$o" )
1750              || open( OUT, ">&STDERR" )
1751              || open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" );    # so we don't dongle stdout
1752
1753        } ## end if ($console)
1754        elsif ( not defined $console ) {
1755
1756            # No console. Open STDIN.
1757            open( IN, "<&STDIN" );
1758
1759            # merge with STDERR, or with STDOUT.
1760            open( OUT,      ">&STDERR" )
1761              || open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" );    # so we don't dongle stdout
1762            $console = 'STDIN/OUT';
1763        } ## end elsif (not defined $console)
1764
1765        # Keep copies of the filehandles so that when the pager runs, it
1766        # can close standard input without clobbering ours.
1767        $IN = \*IN, $OUT = \*OUT if $console or not defined $console;
1768    } ## end elsif (from if(defined $remoteport))
1769
1770    # Unbuffer DB::OUT. We need to see responses right away.
1771    my $previous = select($OUT);
1772    $| = 1;                                  # for DB::OUT
1773    select($previous);
1774
1775    # Line info goes to debugger output unless pointed elsewhere.
1776    # Pointing elsewhere makes it possible for slave editors to
1777    # keep track of file and position. We have both a filehandle
1778    # and a I/O description to keep track of.
1779    $LINEINFO = $OUT     unless defined $LINEINFO;
1780    $lineinfo = $console unless defined $lineinfo;
1781	# share($LINEINFO); # <- unable to share globs
1782	share($lineinfo);   #
1783
1784=pod
1785
1786To finish initialization, we show the debugger greeting,
1787and then call the C<afterinit()> subroutine if there is one.
1788
1789=cut
1790
1791    # Show the debugger greeting.
1792    $header =~ s/.Header: ([^,]+),v(\s+\S+\s+\S+).*$/$1$2/;
1793    unless ($runnonstop) {
1794        local $\ = '';
1795        local $, = '';
1796        if ( $term_pid eq '-1' ) {
1797            print $OUT "\nDaughter DB session started...\n";
1798        }
1799        else {
1800            print $OUT "\nLoading DB routines from $header\n";
1801            print $OUT (
1802                "Editor support ",
1803                $slave_editor ? "enabled" : "available", ".\n"
1804            );
1805            print $OUT
1806"\nEnter h or `h h' for help, or `$doccmd perldebug' for more help.\n\n";
1807        } ## end else [ if ($term_pid eq '-1')
1808    } ## end unless ($runnonstop)
1809} ## end else [ if ($notty)
1810
1811# XXX This looks like a bug to me.
1812# Why copy to @ARGS and then futz with @args?
1813@ARGS = @ARGV;
1814for (@args) {
1815    # Make sure backslashes before single quotes are stripped out, and
1816    # keep args unless they are numeric (XXX why?)
1817    # s/\'/\\\'/g;                      # removed while not justified understandably
1818    # s/(.*)/'$1'/ unless /^-?[\d.]+$/; # ditto
1819}
1820
1821# If there was an afterinit() sub defined, call it. It will get
1822# executed in our scope, so it can fiddle with debugger globals.
1823if ( defined &afterinit ) {    # May be defined in $rcfile
1824    &afterinit();
1825}
1826
1827# Inform us about "Stack dump during die enabled ..." in dieLevel().
1828$I_m_init = 1;
1829
1830############################################################ Subroutines
1831
1832=head1 SUBROUTINES
1833
1834=head2 DB
1835
1836This gigantic subroutine is the heart of the debugger. Called before every
1837statement, its job is to determine if a breakpoint has been reached, and
1838stop if so; read commands from the user, parse them, and execute
1839them, and hen send execution off to the next statement.
1840
1841Note that the order in which the commands are processed is very important;
1842some commands earlier in the loop will actually alter the C<$cmd> variable
1843to create other commands to be executed later. This is all highly I<optimized>
1844but can be confusing. Check the comments for each C<$cmd ... && do {}> to
1845see what's happening in any given command.
1846
1847=cut
1848
1849sub DB {
1850
1851    # lock the debugger and get the thread id for the prompt
1852	lock($DBGR);
1853	my $tid;
1854	if ($ENV{PERL5DB_THREADED}) {
1855		$tid = eval { "[".threads->tid."]" };
1856	}
1857
1858    # Check for whether we should be running continuously or not.
1859    # _After_ the perl program is compiled, $single is set to 1:
1860    if ( $single and not $second_time++ ) {
1861
1862        # Options say run non-stop. Run until we get an interrupt.
1863        if ($runnonstop) {    # Disable until signal
1864                # If there's any call stack in place, turn off single
1865                # stepping into subs throughout the stack.
1866            for ( $i = 0 ; $i <= $stack_depth ; ) {
1867                $stack[ $i++ ] &= ~1;
1868            }
1869
1870            # And we are now no longer in single-step mode.
1871            $single = 0;
1872
1873            # If we simply returned at this point, we wouldn't get
1874            # the trace info. Fall on through.
1875            # return;
1876        } ## end if ($runnonstop)
1877
1878        elsif ($ImmediateStop) {
1879
1880            # We are supposed to stop here; XXX probably a break.
1881            $ImmediateStop = 0;    # We've processed it; turn it off
1882            $signal        = 1;    # Simulate an interrupt to force
1883                                   # us into the command loop
1884        }
1885    } ## end if ($single and not $second_time...
1886
1887    # If we're in single-step mode, or an interrupt (real or fake)
1888    # has occurred, turn off non-stop mode.
1889    $runnonstop = 0 if $single or $signal;
1890
1891    # Preserve current values of $@, $!, $^E, $,, $/, $\, $^W.
1892    # The code being debugged may have altered them.
1893    &save;
1894
1895    # Since DB::DB gets called after every line, we can use caller() to
1896    # figure out where we last were executing. Sneaky, eh? This works because
1897    # caller is returning all the extra information when called from the
1898    # debugger.
1899    local ( $package, $filename, $line ) = caller;
1900    local $filename_ini = $filename;
1901
1902    # set up the context for DB::eval, so it can properly execute
1903    # code on behalf of the user. We add the package in so that the
1904    # code is eval'ed in the proper package (not in the debugger!).
1905    local $usercontext =
1906      '($@, $!, $^E, $,, $/, $\, $^W) = @saved;' . "package $package;";
1907
1908    # Create an alias to the active file magical array to simplify
1909    # the code here.
1910    local (*dbline) = $main::{ '_<' . $filename };
1911
1912    # we need to check for pseudofiles on Mac OS (these are files
1913    # not attached to a filename, but instead stored in Dev:Pseudo)
1914    if ( $^O eq 'MacOS' && $#dbline < 0 ) {
1915        $filename_ini = $filename = 'Dev:Pseudo';
1916        *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $filename };
1917    }
1918
1919    # Last line in the program.
1920    local $max = $#dbline;
1921
1922    # if we have something here, see if we should break.
1923    if ( $dbline{$line}
1924        && ( ( $stop, $action ) = split( /\0/, $dbline{$line} ) ) )
1925    {
1926
1927        # Stop if the stop criterion says to just stop.
1928        if ( $stop eq '1' ) {
1929            $signal |= 1;
1930        }
1931
1932        # It's a conditional stop; eval it in the user's context and
1933        # see if we should stop. If so, remove the one-time sigil.
1934        elsif ($stop) {
1935            $evalarg = "\$DB::signal |= 1 if do {$stop}";
1936            &eval;
1937            $dbline{$line} =~ s/;9($|\0)/$1/;
1938        }
1939    } ## end if ($dbline{$line} && ...
1940
1941    # Preserve the current stop-or-not, and see if any of the W
1942    # (watch expressions) has changed.
1943    my $was_signal = $signal;
1944
1945    # If we have any watch expressions ...
1946    if ( $trace & 2 ) {
1947        for ( my $n = 0 ; $n <= $#to_watch ; $n++ ) {
1948            $evalarg = $to_watch[$n];
1949            local $onetimeDump;    # Tell DB::eval() to not output results
1950
1951            # Fix context DB::eval() wants to return an array, but
1952            # we need a scalar here.
1953            my ($val) = join( "', '", &eval );
1954            $val = ( ( defined $val ) ? "'$val'" : 'undef' );
1955
1956            # Did it change?
1957            if ( $val ne $old_watch[$n] ) {
1958
1959                # Yep! Show the difference, and fake an interrupt.
1960                $signal = 1;
1961                print $OUT <<EOP;
1962Watchpoint $n:\t$to_watch[$n] changed:
1963    old value:\t$old_watch[$n]
1964    new value:\t$val
1965EOP
1966                $old_watch[$n] = $val;
1967            } ## end if ($val ne $old_watch...
1968        } ## end for (my $n = 0 ; $n <= ...
1969    } ## end if ($trace & 2)
1970
1971=head2 C<watchfunction()>
1972
1973C<watchfunction()> is a function that can be defined by the user; it is a
1974function which will be run on each entry to C<DB::DB>; it gets the
1975current package, filename, and line as its parameters.
1976
1977The watchfunction can do anything it likes; it is executing in the
1978debugger's context, so it has access to all of the debugger's internal
1979data structures and functions.
1980
1981C<watchfunction()> can control the debugger's actions. Any of the following
1982will cause the debugger to return control to the user's program after
1983C<watchfunction()> executes:
1984
1985=over 4
1986
1987=item *
1988
1989Returning a false value from the C<watchfunction()> itself.
1990
1991=item *
1992
1993Altering C<$single> to a false value.
1994
1995=item *
1996
1997Altering C<$signal> to a false value.
1998
1999=item *
2000
2001Turning off the C<4> bit in C<$trace> (this also disables the
2002check for C<watchfunction()>. This can be done with
2003
2004    $trace &= ~4;
2005
2006=back
2007
2008=cut
2009
2010    # If there's a user-defined DB::watchfunction, call it with the
2011    # current package, filename, and line. The function executes in
2012    # the DB:: package.
2013    if ( $trace & 4 ) {    # User-installed watch
2014        return
2015          if watchfunction( $package, $filename, $line )
2016          and not $single
2017          and not $was_signal
2018          and not( $trace & ~4 );
2019    } ## end if ($trace & 4)
2020
2021    # Pick up any alteration to $signal in the watchfunction, and
2022    # turn off the signal now.
2023    $was_signal = $signal;
2024    $signal     = 0;
2025
2026=head2 GETTING READY TO EXECUTE COMMANDS
2027
2028The debugger decides to take control if single-step mode is on, the
2029C<t> command was entered, or the user generated a signal. If the program
2030has fallen off the end, we set things up so that entering further commands
2031won't cause trouble, and we say that the program is over.
2032
2033=cut
2034
2035    # Check to see if we should grab control ($single true,
2036    # trace set appropriately, or we got a signal).
2037    if ( $single || ( $trace & 1 ) || $was_signal ) {
2038
2039        # Yes, grab control.
2040        if ($slave_editor) {
2041
2042            # Tell the editor to update its position.
2043            $position = "\032\032$filename:$line:0\n";
2044            print_lineinfo($position);
2045        }
2046
2047=pod
2048
2049Special check: if we're in package C<DB::fake>, we've gone through the
2050C<END> block at least once. We set up everything so that we can continue
2051to enter commands and have a valid context to be in.
2052
2053=cut
2054
2055        elsif ( $package eq 'DB::fake' ) {
2056
2057            # Fallen off the end already.
2058            $term || &setterm;
2059            print_help(<<EOP);
2060Debugged program terminated.  Use B<q> to quit or B<R> to restart,
2061  use B<o> I<inhibit_exit> to avoid stopping after program termination,
2062  B<h q>, B<h R> or B<h o> to get additional info.
2063EOP
2064
2065            # Set the DB::eval context appropriately.
2066            $package     = 'main';
2067            $usercontext =
2068                '($@, $!, $^E, $,, $/, $\, $^W) = @saved;'
2069              . "package $package;";    # this won't let them modify, alas
2070        } ## end elsif ($package eq 'DB::fake')
2071
2072=pod
2073
2074If the program hasn't finished executing, we scan forward to the
2075next executable line, print that out, build the prompt from the file and line
2076number information, and print that.
2077
2078=cut
2079
2080        else {
2081
2082            # Still somewhere in the midst of execution. Set up the
2083            #  debugger prompt.
2084            $sub =~ s/\'/::/;    # Swap Perl 4 package separators (') to
2085                                 # Perl 5 ones (sorry, we don't print Klingon
2086                                 #module names)
2087
2088            $prefix = $sub =~ /::/ ? "" : "${'package'}::";
2089            $prefix .= "$sub($filename:";
2090            $after = ( $dbline[$line] =~ /\n$/ ? '' : "\n" );
2091
2092            # Break up the prompt if it's really long.
2093            if ( length($prefix) > 30 ) {
2094                $position = "$prefix$line):\n$line:\t$dbline[$line]$after";
2095                $prefix   = "";
2096                $infix    = ":\t";
2097            }
2098            else {
2099                $infix    = "):\t";
2100                $position = "$prefix$line$infix$dbline[$line]$after";
2101            }
2102
2103            # Print current line info, indenting if necessary.
2104            if ($frame) {
2105                print_lineinfo( ' ' x $stack_depth,
2106                    "$line:\t$dbline[$line]$after" );
2107            }
2108            else {
2109                print_lineinfo($position);
2110            }
2111
2112            # Scan forward, stopping at either the end or the next
2113            # unbreakable line.
2114            for ( $i = $line + 1 ; $i <= $max && $dbline[$i] == 0 ; ++$i )
2115            {    #{ vi
2116
2117                # Drop out on null statements, block closers, and comments.
2118                last if $dbline[$i] =~ /^\s*[\;\}\#\n]/;
2119
2120                # Drop out if the user interrupted us.
2121                last if $signal;
2122
2123                # Append a newline if the line doesn't have one. Can happen
2124                # in eval'ed text, for instance.
2125                $after = ( $dbline[$i] =~ /\n$/ ? '' : "\n" );
2126
2127                # Next executable line.
2128                $incr_pos = "$prefix$i$infix$dbline[$i]$after";
2129                $position .= $incr_pos;
2130                if ($frame) {
2131
2132                    # Print it indented if tracing is on.
2133                    print_lineinfo( ' ' x $stack_depth,
2134                        "$i:\t$dbline[$i]$after" );
2135                }
2136                else {
2137                    print_lineinfo($incr_pos);
2138                }
2139            } ## end for ($i = $line + 1 ; $i...
2140        } ## end else [ if ($slave_editor)
2141    } ## end if ($single || ($trace...
2142
2143=pod
2144
2145If there's an action to be executed for the line we stopped at, execute it.
2146If there are any preprompt actions, execute those as well.
2147
2148=cut
2149
2150    # If there's an action, do it now.
2151    $evalarg = $action, &eval if $action;
2152
2153    # Are we nested another level (e.g., did we evaluate a function
2154    # that had a breakpoint in it at the debugger prompt)?
2155    if ( $single || $was_signal ) {
2156
2157        # Yes, go down a level.
2158        local $level = $level + 1;
2159
2160        # Do any pre-prompt actions.
2161        foreach $evalarg (@$pre) {
2162            &eval;
2163        }
2164
2165        # Complain about too much recursion if we passed the limit.
2166        print $OUT $stack_depth . " levels deep in subroutine calls!\n"
2167          if $single & 4;
2168
2169        # The line we're currently on. Set $incr to -1 to stay here
2170        # until we get a command that tells us to advance.
2171        $start = $line;
2172        $incr  = -1;      # for backward motion.
2173
2174        # Tack preprompt debugger actions ahead of any actual input.
2175        @typeahead = ( @$pretype, @typeahead );
2176
2177=head2 WHERE ARE WE?
2178
2179XXX Relocate this section?
2180
2181The debugger normally shows the line corresponding to the current line of
2182execution. Sometimes, though, we want to see the next line, or to move elsewhere
2183in the file. This is done via the C<$incr>, C<$start>, and C<$max> variables.
2184
2185C<$incr> controls by how many lines the I<current> line should move forward
2186after a command is executed. If set to -1, this indicates that the I<current>
2187line shouldn't change.
2188
2189C<$start> is the I<current> line. It is used for things like knowing where to
2190move forwards or backwards from when doing an C<L> or C<-> command.
2191
2192C<$max> tells the debugger where the last line of the current file is. It's
2193used to terminate loops most often.
2194
2195=head2 THE COMMAND LOOP
2196
2197Most of C<DB::DB> is actually a command parsing and dispatch loop. It comes
2198in two parts:
2199
2200=over 4
2201
2202=item *
2203
2204The outer part of the loop, starting at the C<CMD> label. This loop
2205reads a command and then executes it.
2206
2207=item *
2208
2209The inner part of the loop, starting at the C<PIPE> label. This part
2210is wholly contained inside the C<CMD> block and only executes a command.
2211Used to handle commands running inside a pager.
2212
2213=back
2214
2215So why have two labels to restart the loop? Because sometimes, it's easier to
2216have a command I<generate> another command and then re-execute the loop to do
2217the new command. This is faster, but perhaps a bit more convoluted.
2218
2219=cut
2220
2221        # The big command dispatch loop. It keeps running until the
2222        # user yields up control again.
2223        #
2224        # If we have a terminal for input, and we get something back
2225        # from readline(), keep on processing.
2226      CMD:
2227        while (
2228
2229            # We have a terminal, or can get one ...
2230            ( $term || &setterm ),
2231
2232            # ... and it belogs to this PID or we get one for this PID ...
2233            ( $term_pid == $$ or resetterm(1) ),
2234
2235            # ... and we got a line of command input ...
2236            defined(
2237                $cmd = &readline(
2238                        "$pidprompt $tid DB"
2239                      . ( '<' x $level )
2240                      . ( $#hist + 1 )
2241                      . ( '>' x $level ) . " "
2242                )
2243            )
2244          )
2245        {
2246
2247			share($cmd);
2248            # ... try to execute the input as debugger commands.
2249
2250            # Don't stop running.
2251            $single = 0;
2252
2253            # No signal is active.
2254            $signal = 0;
2255
2256            # Handle continued commands (ending with \):
2257            $cmd =~ s/\\$/\n/ && do {
2258                $cmd .= &readline("  cont: ");
2259                redo CMD;
2260            };
2261
2262=head4 The null command
2263
2264A newline entered by itself means I<re-execute the last command>. We grab the
2265command out of C<$laststep> (where it was recorded previously), and copy it
2266back into C<$cmd> to be executed below. If there wasn't any previous command,
2267we'll do nothing below (no command will match). If there was, we also save it
2268in the command history and fall through to allow the command parsing to pick
2269it up.
2270
2271=cut
2272
2273            # Empty input means repeat the last command.
2274            $cmd =~ /^$/ && ( $cmd = $laststep );
2275            chomp($cmd);    # get rid of the annoying extra newline
2276            push( @hist, $cmd ) if length($cmd) > 1;
2277            push( @truehist, $cmd );
2278			share(@hist);
2279			share(@truehist);
2280
2281            # This is a restart point for commands that didn't arrive
2282            # via direct user input. It allows us to 'redo PIPE' to
2283            # re-execute command processing without reading a new command.
2284          PIPE: {
2285                $cmd =~ s/^\s+//s;    # trim annoying leading whitespace
2286                $cmd =~ s/\s+$//s;    # trim annoying trailing whitespace
2287                ($i) = split( /\s+/, $cmd );
2288
2289=head3 COMMAND ALIASES
2290
2291The debugger can create aliases for commands (these are stored in the
2292C<%alias> hash). Before a command is executed, the command loop looks it up
2293in the alias hash and substitutes the contents of the alias for the command,
2294completely replacing it.
2295
2296=cut
2297
2298                # See if there's an alias for the command, and set it up if so.
2299                if ( $alias{$i} ) {
2300
2301                    # Squelch signal handling; we want to keep control here
2302                    # if something goes loco during the alias eval.
2303                    local $SIG{__DIE__};
2304                    local $SIG{__WARN__};
2305
2306                    # This is a command, so we eval it in the DEBUGGER's
2307                    # scope! Otherwise, we can't see the special debugger
2308                    # variables, or get to the debugger's subs. (Well, we
2309                    # _could_, but why make it even more complicated?)
2310                    eval "\$cmd =~ $alias{$i}";
2311                    if ($@) {
2312                        local $\ = '';
2313                        print $OUT "Couldn't evaluate `$i' alias: $@";
2314                        next CMD;
2315                    }
2316                } ## end if ($alias{$i})
2317
2318=head3 MAIN-LINE COMMANDS
2319
2320All of these commands work up to and after the program being debugged has
2321terminated.
2322
2323=head4 C<q> - quit
2324
2325Quit the debugger. This entails setting the C<$fall_off_end> flag, so we don't
2326try to execute further, cleaning any restart-related stuff out of the
2327environment, and executing with the last value of C<$?>.
2328
2329=cut
2330
2331                $cmd =~ /^q$/ && do {
2332                    $fall_off_end = 1;
2333                    clean_ENV();
2334                    exit $?;
2335                };
2336
2337=head4 C<t> - trace
2338
2339Turn tracing on or off. Inverts the appropriate bit in C<$trace> (q.v.).
2340
2341=cut
2342
2343                $cmd =~ /^t$/ && do {
2344                    $trace ^= 1;
2345                    local $\ = '';
2346                    print $OUT "Trace = "
2347                      . ( ( $trace & 1 ) ? "on" : "off" ) . "\n";
2348                    next CMD;
2349                };
2350
2351=head4 C<S> - list subroutines matching/not matching a pattern
2352
2353Walks through C<%sub>, checking to see whether or not to print the name.
2354
2355=cut
2356
2357                $cmd =~ /^S(\s+(!)?(.+))?$/ && do {
2358
2359                    $Srev     = defined $2;     # Reverse scan?
2360                    $Spatt    = $3;             # The pattern (if any) to use.
2361                    $Snocheck = !defined $1;    # No args - print all subs.
2362
2363                    # Need to make these sane here.
2364                    local $\ = '';
2365                    local $, = '';
2366
2367                    # Search through the debugger's magical hash of subs.
2368                    # If $nocheck is true, just print the sub name.
2369                    # Otherwise, check it against the pattern. We then use
2370                    # the XOR trick to reverse the condition as required.
2371                    foreach $subname ( sort( keys %sub ) ) {
2372                        if ( $Snocheck or $Srev ^ ( $subname =~ /$Spatt/ ) ) {
2373                            print $OUT $subname, "\n";
2374                        }
2375                    }
2376                    next CMD;
2377                };
2378
2379=head4 C<X> - list variables in current package
2380
2381Since the C<V> command actually processes this, just change this to the
2382appropriate C<V> command and fall through.
2383
2384=cut
2385
2386                $cmd =~ s/^X\b/V $package/;
2387
2388=head4 C<V> - list variables
2389
2390Uses C<dumpvar.pl> to dump out the current values for selected variables.
2391
2392=cut
2393
2394                # Bare V commands get the currently-being-debugged package
2395                # added.
2396                $cmd =~ /^V$/ && do {
2397                    $cmd = "V $package";
2398                };
2399
2400                # V - show variables in package.
2401                $cmd =~ /^V\b\s*(\S+)\s*(.*)/ && do {
2402
2403                    # Save the currently selected filehandle and
2404                    # force output to debugger's filehandle (dumpvar
2405                    # just does "print" for output).
2406                    local ($savout) = select($OUT);
2407
2408                    # Grab package name and variables to dump.
2409                    $packname = $1;
2410                    @vars     = split( ' ', $2 );
2411
2412                    # If main::dumpvar isn't here, get it.
2413                    do 'dumpvar.pl' || die $@ unless defined &main::dumpvar;
2414                    if ( defined &main::dumpvar ) {
2415
2416                        # We got it. Turn off subroutine entry/exit messages
2417                        # for the moment, along with return values.
2418                        local $frame = 0;
2419                        local $doret = -2;
2420
2421                        # must detect sigpipe failures  - not catching
2422                        # then will cause the debugger to die.
2423                        eval {
2424                            &main::dumpvar(
2425                                $packname,
2426                                defined $option{dumpDepth}
2427                                ? $option{dumpDepth}
2428                                : -1,    # assume -1 unless specified
2429                                @vars
2430                            );
2431                        };
2432
2433                        # The die doesn't need to include the $@, because
2434                        # it will automatically get propagated for us.
2435                        if ($@) {
2436                            die unless $@ =~ /dumpvar print failed/;
2437                        }
2438                    } ## end if (defined &main::dumpvar)
2439                    else {
2440
2441                        # Couldn't load dumpvar.
2442                        print $OUT "dumpvar.pl not available.\n";
2443                    }
2444
2445                    # Restore the output filehandle, and go round again.
2446                    select($savout);
2447                    next CMD;
2448                };
2449
2450=head4 C<x> - evaluate and print an expression
2451
2452Hands the expression off to C<DB::eval>, setting it up to print the value
2453via C<dumpvar.pl> instead of just printing it directly.
2454
2455=cut
2456
2457                $cmd =~ s/^x\b/ / && do {    # Remainder gets done by DB::eval()
2458                    $onetimeDump = 'dump';    # main::dumpvar shows the output
2459
2460                    # handle special  "x 3 blah" syntax XXX propagate
2461                    # doc back to special variables.
2462                    if ( $cmd =~ s/^\s*(\d+)(?=\s)/ / ) {
2463                        $onetimedumpDepth = $1;
2464                    }
2465                };
2466
2467=head4 C<m> - print methods
2468
2469Just uses C<DB::methods> to determine what methods are available.
2470
2471=cut
2472
2473                $cmd =~ s/^m\s+([\w:]+)\s*$/ / && do {
2474                    methods($1);
2475                    next CMD;
2476                };
2477
2478                # m expr - set up DB::eval to do the work
2479                $cmd =~ s/^m\b/ / && do {    # Rest gets done by DB::eval()
2480                    $onetimeDump = 'methods';   #  method output gets used there
2481                };
2482
2483=head4 C<f> - switch files
2484
2485=cut
2486
2487                $cmd =~ /^f\b\s*(.*)/ && do {
2488                    $file = $1;
2489                    $file =~ s/\s+$//;
2490
2491                    # help for no arguments (old-style was return from sub).
2492                    if ( !$file ) {
2493                        print $OUT
2494                          "The old f command is now the r command.\n";    # hint
2495                        print $OUT "The new f command switches filenames.\n";
2496                        next CMD;
2497                    } ## end if (!$file)
2498
2499                    # if not in magic file list, try a close match.
2500                    if ( !defined $main::{ '_<' . $file } ) {
2501                        if ( ($try) = grep( m#^_<.*$file#, keys %main:: ) ) {
2502                            {
2503                                $try = substr( $try, 2 );
2504                                print $OUT "Choosing $try matching `$file':\n";
2505                                $file = $try;
2506                            }
2507                        } ## end if (($try) = grep(m#^_<.*$file#...
2508                    } ## end if (!defined $main::{ ...
2509
2510                    # If not successfully switched now, we failed.
2511                    if ( !defined $main::{ '_<' . $file } ) {
2512                        print $OUT "No file matching `$file' is loaded.\n";
2513                        next CMD;
2514                    }
2515
2516                    # We switched, so switch the debugger internals around.
2517                    elsif ( $file ne $filename ) {
2518                        *dbline   = $main::{ '_<' . $file };
2519                        $max      = $#dbline;
2520                        $filename = $file;
2521                        $start    = 1;
2522                        $cmd      = "l";
2523                    } ## end elsif ($file ne $filename)
2524
2525                    # We didn't switch; say we didn't.
2526                    else {
2527                        print $OUT "Already in $file.\n";
2528                        next CMD;
2529                    }
2530                };
2531
2532=head4 C<.> - return to last-executed line.
2533
2534We set C<$incr> to -1 to indicate that the debugger shouldn't move ahead,
2535and then we look up the line in the magical C<%dbline> hash.
2536
2537=cut
2538
2539                # . command.
2540                $cmd =~ /^\.$/ && do {
2541                    $incr = -1;    # stay at current line
2542
2543                    # Reset everything to the old location.
2544                    $start    = $line;
2545                    $filename = $filename_ini;
2546                    *dbline   = $main::{ '_<' . $filename };
2547                    $max      = $#dbline;
2548
2549                    # Now where are we?
2550                    print_lineinfo($position);
2551                    next CMD;
2552                };
2553
2554=head4 C<-> - back one window
2555
2556We change C<$start> to be one window back; if we go back past the first line,
2557we set it to be the first line. We ser C<$incr> to put us back at the
2558currently-executing line, and then put a C<l $start +> (list one window from
2559C<$start>) in C<$cmd> to be executed later.
2560
2561=cut
2562
2563                # - - back a window.
2564                $cmd =~ /^-$/ && do {
2565
2566                    # back up by a window; go to 1 if back too far.
2567                    $start -= $incr + $window + 1;
2568                    $start = 1 if $start <= 0;
2569                    $incr  = $window - 1;
2570
2571                    # Generate and execute a "l +" command (handled below).
2572                    $cmd = 'l ' . ($start) . '+';
2573                };
2574
2575=head3 PRE-580 COMMANDS VS. NEW COMMANDS: C<a, A, b, B, h, l, L, M, o, O, P, v, w, W, E<lt>, E<lt>E<lt>, {, {{>
2576
2577In Perl 5.8.0, a realignment of the commands was done to fix up a number of
2578problems, most notably that the default case of several commands destroying
2579the user's work in setting watchpoints, actions, etc. We wanted, however, to
2580retain the old commands for those who were used to using them or who preferred
2581them. At this point, we check for the new commands and call C<cmd_wrapper> to
2582deal with them instead of processing them in-line.
2583
2584=cut
2585
2586                # All of these commands were remapped in perl 5.8.0;
2587                # we send them off to the secondary dispatcher (see below).
2588                $cmd =~ /^([aAbBeEhilLMoOPvwW]\b|[<>\{]{1,2})\s*(.*)/so && do {
2589                    &cmd_wrapper( $1, $2, $line );
2590                    next CMD;
2591                };
2592
2593=head4 C<y> - List lexicals in higher scope
2594
2595Uses C<PadWalker> to find the lexicals supplied as arguments in a scope
2596above the current one and then displays then using C<dumpvar.pl>.
2597
2598=cut
2599
2600                $cmd =~ /^y(?:\s+(\d*)\s*(.*))?$/ && do {
2601
2602                    # See if we've got the necessary support.
2603                    eval { require PadWalker; PadWalker->VERSION(0.08) }
2604                      or &warn(
2605                        $@ =~ /locate/
2606                        ? "PadWalker module not found - please install\n"
2607                        : $@
2608                      )
2609                      and next CMD;
2610
2611                    # Load up dumpvar if we don't have it. If we can, that is.
2612                    do 'dumpvar.pl' || die $@ unless defined &main::dumpvar;
2613                    defined &main::dumpvar
2614                      or print $OUT "dumpvar.pl not available.\n"
2615                      and next CMD;
2616
2617                    # Got all the modules we need. Find them and print them.
2618                    my @vars = split( ' ', $2 || '' );
2619
2620                    # Find the pad.
2621                    my $h = eval { PadWalker::peek_my( ( $1 || 0 ) + 1 ) };
2622
2623                    # Oops. Can't find it.
2624                    $@ and $@ =~ s/ at .*//, &warn($@), next CMD;
2625
2626                    # Show the desired vars with dumplex().
2627                    my $savout = select($OUT);
2628
2629                    # Have dumplex dump the lexicals.
2630                    dumpvar::dumplex( $_, $h->{$_},
2631                        defined $option{dumpDepth} ? $option{dumpDepth} : -1,
2632                        @vars )
2633                      for sort keys %$h;
2634                    select($savout);
2635                    next CMD;
2636                };
2637
2638=head3 COMMANDS NOT WORKING AFTER PROGRAM ENDS
2639
2640All of the commands below this point don't work after the program being
2641debugged has ended. All of them check to see if the program has ended; this
2642allows the commands to be relocated without worrying about a 'line of
2643demarcation' above which commands can be entered anytime, and below which
2644they can't.
2645
2646=head4 C<n> - single step, but don't trace down into subs
2647
2648Done by setting C<$single> to 2, which forces subs to execute straight through
2649when entered (see C<DB::sub>). We also save the C<n> command in C<$laststep>,
2650so a null command knows what to re-execute.
2651
2652=cut
2653
2654                # n - next
2655                $cmd =~ /^n$/ && do {
2656                    end_report(), next CMD if $finished and $level <= 1;
2657
2658                    # Single step, but don't enter subs.
2659                    $single = 2;
2660
2661                    # Save for empty command (repeat last).
2662                    $laststep = $cmd;
2663                    last CMD;
2664                };
2665
2666=head4 C<s> - single-step, entering subs
2667
2668Sets C<$single> to 1, which causes C<DB::sub> to continue tracing inside
2669subs. Also saves C<s> as C<$lastcmd>.
2670
2671=cut
2672
2673                # s - single step.
2674                $cmd =~ /^s$/ && do {
2675
2676                    # Get out and restart the command loop if program
2677                    # has finished.
2678                    end_report(), next CMD if $finished and $level <= 1;
2679
2680                    # Single step should enter subs.
2681                    $single = 1;
2682
2683                    # Save for empty command (repeat last).
2684                    $laststep = $cmd;
2685                    last CMD;
2686                };
2687
2688=head4 C<c> - run continuously, setting an optional breakpoint
2689
2690Most of the code for this command is taken up with locating the optional
2691breakpoint, which is either a subroutine name or a line number. We set
2692the appropriate one-time-break in C<@dbline> and then turn off single-stepping
2693in this and all call levels above this one.
2694
2695=cut
2696
2697                # c - start continuous execution.
2698                $cmd =~ /^c\b\s*([\w:]*)\s*$/ && do {
2699
2700                    # Hey, show's over. The debugged program finished
2701                    # executing already.
2702                    end_report(), next CMD if $finished and $level <= 1;
2703
2704                    # Capture the place to put a one-time break.
2705                    $subname = $i = $1;
2706
2707                    #  Probably not needed, since we finish an interactive
2708                    #  sub-session anyway...
2709                    # local $filename = $filename;
2710                    # local *dbline = *dbline; # XXX Would this work?!
2711                    #
2712                    # The above question wonders if localizing the alias
2713                    # to the magic array works or not. Since it's commented
2714                    # out, we'll just leave that to speculation for now.
2715
2716                    # If the "subname" isn't all digits, we'll assume it
2717                    # is a subroutine name, and try to find it.
2718                    if ( $subname =~ /\D/ ) {    # subroutine name
2719                            # Qualify it to the current package unless it's
2720                            # already qualified.
2721                        $subname = $package . "::" . $subname
2722                          unless $subname =~ /::/;
2723
2724                        # find_sub will return "file:line_number" corresponding
2725                        # to where the subroutine is defined; we call find_sub,
2726                        # break up the return value, and assign it in one
2727                        # operation.
2728                        ( $file, $i ) = ( find_sub($subname) =~ /^(.*):(.*)$/ );
2729
2730                        # Force the line number to be numeric.
2731                        $i += 0;
2732
2733                        # If we got a line number, we found the sub.
2734                        if ($i) {
2735
2736                            # Switch all the debugger's internals around so
2737                            # we're actually working with that file.
2738                            $filename = $file;
2739                            *dbline   = $main::{ '_<' . $filename };
2740
2741                            # Mark that there's a breakpoint in this file.
2742                            $had_breakpoints{$filename} |= 1;
2743
2744                            # Scan forward to the first executable line
2745                            # after the 'sub whatever' line.
2746                            $max = $#dbline;
2747                            ++$i while $dbline[$i] == 0 && $i < $max;
2748                        } ## end if ($i)
2749
2750                        # We didn't find a sub by that name.
2751                        else {
2752                            print $OUT "Subroutine $subname not found.\n";
2753                            next CMD;
2754                        }
2755                    } ## end if ($subname =~ /\D/)
2756
2757                    # At this point, either the subname was all digits (an
2758                    # absolute line-break request) or we've scanned through
2759                    # the code following the definition of the sub, looking
2760                    # for an executable, which we may or may not have found.
2761                    #
2762                    # If $i (which we set $subname from) is non-zero, we
2763                    # got a request to break at some line somewhere. On
2764                    # one hand, if there wasn't any real subroutine name
2765                    # involved, this will be a request to break in the current
2766                    # file at the specified line, so we have to check to make
2767                    # sure that the line specified really is breakable.
2768                    #
2769                    # On the other hand, if there was a subname supplied, the
2770                    # preceding block has moved us to the proper file and
2771                    # location within that file, and then scanned forward
2772                    # looking for the next executable line. We have to make
2773                    # sure that one was found.
2774                    #
2775                    # On the gripping hand, we can't do anything unless the
2776                    # current value of $i points to a valid breakable line.
2777                    # Check that.
2778                    if ($i) {
2779
2780                        # Breakable?
2781                        if ( $dbline[$i] == 0 ) {
2782                            print $OUT "Line $i not breakable.\n";
2783                            next CMD;
2784                        }
2785
2786                        # Yes. Set up the one-time-break sigil.
2787                        $dbline{$i} =~ s/($|\0)/;9$1/;  # add one-time-only b.p.
2788                    } ## end if ($i)
2789
2790                    # Turn off stack tracing from here up.
2791                    for ( $i = 0 ; $i <= $stack_depth ; ) {
2792                        $stack[ $i++ ] &= ~1;
2793                    }
2794                    last CMD;
2795                };
2796
2797=head4 C<r> - return from a subroutine
2798
2799For C<r> to work properly, the debugger has to stop execution again
2800immediately after the return is executed. This is done by forcing
2801single-stepping to be on in the call level above the current one. If
2802we are printing return values when a C<r> is executed, set C<$doret>
2803appropriately, and force us out of the command loop.
2804
2805=cut
2806
2807                # r - return from the current subroutine.
2808                $cmd =~ /^r$/ && do {
2809
2810                    # Can't do anythign if the program's over.
2811                    end_report(), next CMD if $finished and $level <= 1;
2812
2813                    # Turn on stack trace.
2814                    $stack[$stack_depth] |= 1;
2815
2816                    # Print return value unless the stack is empty.
2817                    $doret = $option{PrintRet} ? $stack_depth - 1 : -2;
2818                    last CMD;
2819                };
2820
2821=head4 C<T> - stack trace
2822
2823Just calls C<DB::print_trace>.
2824
2825=cut
2826
2827                $cmd =~ /^T$/ && do {
2828                    print_trace( $OUT, 1 );    # skip DB
2829                    next CMD;
2830                };
2831
2832=head4 C<w> - List window around current line.
2833
2834Just calls C<DB::cmd_w>.
2835
2836=cut
2837
2838                $cmd =~ /^w\b\s*(.*)/s && do { &cmd_w( 'w', $1 ); next CMD; };
2839
2840=head4 C<W> - watch-expression processing.
2841
2842Just calls C<DB::cmd_W>.
2843
2844=cut
2845
2846                $cmd =~ /^W\b\s*(.*)/s && do { &cmd_W( 'W', $1 ); next CMD; };
2847
2848=head4 C</> - search forward for a string in the source
2849
2850We take the argument and treat it as a pattern. If it turns out to be a
2851bad one, we return the error we got from trying to C<eval> it and exit.
2852If not, we create some code to do the search and C<eval> it so it can't
2853mess us up.
2854
2855=cut
2856
2857                $cmd =~ /^\/(.*)$/ && do {
2858
2859                    # The pattern as a string.
2860                    $inpat = $1;
2861
2862                    # Remove the final slash.
2863                    $inpat =~ s:([^\\])/$:$1:;
2864
2865                    # If the pattern isn't null ...
2866                    if ( $inpat ne "" ) {
2867
2868                        # Turn of warn and die procesing for a bit.
2869                        local $SIG{__DIE__};
2870                        local $SIG{__WARN__};
2871
2872                        # Create the pattern.
2873                        eval '$inpat =~ m' . "\a$inpat\a";
2874                        if ( $@ ne "" ) {
2875
2876                            # Oops. Bad pattern. No biscuit.
2877                            # Print the eval error and go back for more
2878                            # commands.
2879                            print $OUT "$@";
2880                            next CMD;
2881                        }
2882                        $pat = $inpat;
2883                    } ## end if ($inpat ne "")
2884
2885                    # Set up to stop on wrap-around.
2886                    $end = $start;
2887
2888                    # Don't move off the current line.
2889                    $incr = -1;
2890
2891                    # Done in eval so nothing breaks if the pattern
2892                    # does something weird.
2893                    eval '
2894                        for (;;) {
2895                            # Move ahead one line.
2896                            ++$start;
2897
2898                            # Wrap if we pass the last line.
2899                            $start = 1 if ($start > $max);
2900
2901                            # Stop if we have gotten back to this line again,
2902                            last if ($start == $end);
2903
2904                            # A hit! (Note, though, that we are doing
2905                            # case-insensitive matching. Maybe a qr//
2906                            # expression would be better, so the user could
2907                            # do case-sensitive matching if desired.
2908                            if ($dbline[$start] =~ m' . "\a$pat\a" . 'i) {
2909                                if ($slave_editor) {
2910                                    # Handle proper escaping in the slave.
2911                                    print $OUT "\032\032$filename:$start:0\n";
2912                                }
2913                                else {
2914                                    # Just print the line normally.
2915                                    print $OUT "$start:\t",$dbline[$start],"\n";
2916                                }
2917                                # And quit since we found something.
2918                                last;
2919                            }
2920                         } ';
2921
2922                    # If we wrapped, there never was a match.
2923                    print $OUT "/$pat/: not found\n" if ( $start == $end );
2924                    next CMD;
2925                };
2926
2927=head4 C<?> - search backward for a string in the source
2928
2929Same as for C</>, except the loop runs backwards.
2930
2931=cut
2932
2933                # ? - backward pattern search.
2934                $cmd =~ /^\?(.*)$/ && do {
2935
2936                    # Get the pattern, remove trailing question mark.
2937                    $inpat = $1;
2938                    $inpat =~ s:([^\\])\?$:$1:;
2939
2940                    # If we've got one ...
2941                    if ( $inpat ne "" ) {
2942
2943                        # Turn off die & warn handlers.
2944                        local $SIG{__DIE__};
2945                        local $SIG{__WARN__};
2946                        eval '$inpat =~ m' . "\a$inpat\a";
2947
2948                        if ( $@ ne "" ) {
2949
2950                            # Ouch. Not good. Print the error.
2951                            print $OUT $@;
2952                            next CMD;
2953                        }
2954                        $pat = $inpat;
2955                    } ## end if ($inpat ne "")
2956
2957                    # Where we are now is where to stop after wraparound.
2958                    $end = $start;
2959
2960                    # Don't move away from this line.
2961                    $incr = -1;
2962
2963                    # Search inside the eval to prevent pattern badness
2964                    # from killing us.
2965                    eval '
2966                        for (;;) {
2967                            # Back up a line.
2968                            --$start;
2969
2970                            # Wrap if we pass the first line.
2971
2972                            $start = $max if ($start <= 0);
2973
2974                            # Quit if we get back where we started,
2975                            last if ($start == $end);
2976
2977                            # Match?
2978                            if ($dbline[$start] =~ m' . "\a$pat\a" . 'i) {
2979                                if ($slave_editor) {
2980                                    # Yep, follow slave editor requirements.
2981                                    print $OUT "\032\032$filename:$start:0\n";
2982                                }
2983                                else {
2984                                    # Yep, just print normally.
2985                                    print $OUT "$start:\t",$dbline[$start],"\n";
2986                                }
2987
2988                                # Found, so done.
2989                                last;
2990                            }
2991                        } ';
2992
2993                    # Say we failed if the loop never found anything,
2994                    print $OUT "?$pat?: not found\n" if ( $start == $end );
2995                    next CMD;
2996                };
2997
2998=head4 C<$rc> - Recall command
2999
3000Manages the commands in C<@hist> (which is created if C<Term::ReadLine> reports
3001that the terminal supports history). It find the command required, puts it
3002into C<$cmd>, and redoes the loop to execute it.
3003
3004=cut
3005
3006                # $rc - recall command.
3007                $cmd =~ /^$rc+\s*(-)?(\d+)?$/ && do {
3008
3009                    # No arguments, take one thing off history.
3010                    pop(@hist) if length($cmd) > 1;
3011
3012                    # Relative (- found)?
3013                    #  Y - index back from most recent (by 1 if bare minus)
3014                    #  N - go to that particular command slot or the last
3015                    #      thing if nothing following.
3016                    $i = $1 ? ( $#hist - ( $2 || 1 ) ) : ( $2 || $#hist );
3017
3018                    # Pick out the command desired.
3019                    $cmd = $hist[$i];
3020
3021                    # Print the command to be executed and restart the loop
3022                    # with that command in the buffer.
3023                    print $OUT $cmd, "\n";
3024                    redo CMD;
3025                };
3026
3027=head4 C<$sh$sh> - C<system()> command
3028
3029Calls the C<DB::system()> to handle the command. This keeps the C<STDIN> and
3030C<STDOUT> from getting messed up.
3031
3032=cut
3033
3034                # $sh$sh - run a shell command (if it's all ASCII).
3035                # Can't run shell commands with Unicode in the debugger, hmm.
3036                $cmd =~ /^$sh$sh\s*([\x00-\xff]*)/ && do {
3037
3038                    # System it.
3039                    &system($1);
3040                    next CMD;
3041                };
3042
3043=head4 C<$rc I<pattern> $rc> - Search command history
3044
3045Another command to manipulate C<@hist>: this one searches it with a pattern.
3046If a command is found, it is placed in C<$cmd> and executed via C<redo>.
3047
3048=cut
3049
3050                # $rc pattern $rc - find a command in the history.
3051                $cmd =~ /^$rc([^$rc].*)$/ && do {
3052
3053                    # Create the pattern to use.
3054                    $pat = "^$1";
3055
3056                    # Toss off last entry if length is >1 (and it always is).
3057                    pop(@hist) if length($cmd) > 1;
3058
3059                    # Look backward through the history.
3060                    for ( $i = $#hist ; $i ; --$i ) {
3061
3062                        # Stop if we find it.
3063                        last if $hist[$i] =~ /$pat/;
3064                    }
3065
3066                    if ( !$i ) {
3067
3068                        # Never found it.
3069                        print $OUT "No such command!\n\n";
3070                        next CMD;
3071                    }
3072
3073                    # Found it. Put it in the buffer, print it, and process it.
3074                    $cmd = $hist[$i];
3075                    print $OUT $cmd, "\n";
3076                    redo CMD;
3077                };
3078
3079=head4 C<$sh> - Invoke a shell
3080
3081Uses C<DB::system> to invoke a shell.
3082
3083=cut
3084
3085                # $sh - start a shell.
3086                $cmd =~ /^$sh$/ && do {
3087
3088                    # Run the user's shell. If none defined, run Bourne.
3089                    # We resume execution when the shell terminates.
3090                    &system( $ENV{SHELL} || "/bin/sh" );
3091                    next CMD;
3092                };
3093
3094=head4 C<$sh I<command>> - Force execution of a command in a shell
3095
3096Like the above, but the command is passed to the shell. Again, we use
3097C<DB::system> to avoid problems with C<STDIN> and C<STDOUT>.
3098
3099=cut
3100
3101                # $sh command - start a shell and run a command in it.
3102                $cmd =~ /^$sh\s*([\x00-\xff]*)/ && do {
3103
3104                    # XXX: using csh or tcsh destroys sigint retvals!
3105                    #&system($1);  # use this instead
3106
3107                    # use the user's shell, or Bourne if none defined.
3108                    &system( $ENV{SHELL} || "/bin/sh", "-c", $1 );
3109                    next CMD;
3110                };
3111
3112=head4 C<H> - display commands in history
3113
3114Prints the contents of C<@hist> (if any).
3115
3116=cut
3117
3118                $cmd =~ /^H\b\s*\*/ && do {
3119                    @hist = @truehist = ();
3120                    print $OUT "History cleansed\n";
3121                    next CMD;
3122                };
3123
3124                $cmd =~ /^H\b\s*(-(\d+))?/ && do {
3125
3126                    # Anything other than negative numbers is ignored by
3127                    # the (incorrect) pattern, so this test does nothing.
3128                    $end = $2 ? ( $#hist - $2 ) : 0;
3129
3130                    # Set to the minimum if less than zero.
3131                    $hist = 0 if $hist < 0;
3132
3133                    # Start at the end of the array.
3134                    # Stay in while we're still above the ending value.
3135                    # Tick back by one each time around the loop.
3136                    for ( $i = $#hist ; $i > $end ; $i-- ) {
3137
3138                        # Print the command  unless it has no arguments.
3139                        print $OUT "$i: ", $hist[$i], "\n"
3140                          unless $hist[$i] =~ /^.?$/;
3141                    }
3142                    next CMD;
3143                };
3144
3145=head4 C<man, doc, perldoc> - look up documentation
3146
3147Just calls C<runman()> to print the appropriate document.
3148
3149=cut
3150
3151                # man, perldoc, doc - show manual pages.
3152                $cmd =~ /^(?:man|(?:perl)?doc)\b(?:\s+([^(]*))?$/ && do {
3153                    runman($1);
3154                    next CMD;
3155                };
3156
3157=head4 C<p> - print
3158
3159Builds a C<print EXPR> expression in the C<$cmd>; this will get executed at
3160the bottom of the loop.
3161
3162=cut
3163
3164                # p - print (no args): print $_.
3165                $cmd =~ s/^p$/print {\$DB::OUT} \$_/;
3166
3167                # p - print the given expression.
3168                $cmd =~ s/^p\b/print {\$DB::OUT} /;
3169
3170=head4 C<=> - define command alias
3171
3172Manipulates C<%alias> to add or list command aliases.
3173
3174=cut
3175
3176                # = - set up a command alias.
3177                $cmd =~ s/^=\s*// && do {
3178                    my @keys;
3179                    if ( length $cmd == 0 ) {
3180
3181                        # No args, get current aliases.
3182                        @keys = sort keys %alias;
3183                    }
3184                    elsif ( my ( $k, $v ) = ( $cmd =~ /^(\S+)\s+(\S.*)/ ) ) {
3185
3186                        # Creating a new alias. $k is alias name, $v is
3187                        # alias value.
3188
3189                        # can't use $_ or kill //g state
3190                        for my $x ( $k, $v ) {
3191
3192                            # Escape "alarm" characters.
3193                            $x =~ s/\a/\\a/g;
3194                        }
3195
3196                        # Substitute key for value, using alarm chars
3197                        # as separators (which is why we escaped them in
3198                        # the command).
3199                        $alias{$k} = "s\a$k\a$v\a";
3200
3201                        # Turn off standard warn and die behavior.
3202                        local $SIG{__DIE__};
3203                        local $SIG{__WARN__};
3204
3205                        # Is it valid Perl?
3206                        unless ( eval "sub { s\a$k\a$v\a }; 1" ) {
3207
3208                            # Nope. Bad alias. Say so and get out.
3209                            print $OUT "Can't alias $k to $v: $@\n";
3210                            delete $alias{$k};
3211                            next CMD;
3212                        }
3213
3214                        # We'll only list the new one.
3215                        @keys = ($k);
3216                    } ## end elsif (my ($k, $v) = ($cmd...
3217
3218                    # The argument is the alias to list.
3219                    else {
3220                        @keys = ($cmd);
3221                    }
3222
3223                    # List aliases.
3224                    for my $k (@keys) {
3225
3226                        # Messy metaquoting: Trim the substiution code off.
3227                        # We use control-G as the delimiter because it's not
3228                        # likely to appear in the alias.
3229                        if ( ( my $v = $alias{$k} ) =~ ss\a$k\a(.*)\a$1 ) {
3230
3231                            # Print the alias.
3232                            print $OUT "$k\t= $1\n";
3233                        }
3234                        elsif ( defined $alias{$k} ) {
3235
3236                            # Couldn't trim it off; just print the alias code.
3237                            print $OUT "$k\t$alias{$k}\n";
3238                        }
3239                        else {
3240
3241                            # No such, dude.
3242                            print "No alias for $k\n";
3243                        }
3244                    } ## end for my $k (@keys)
3245                    next CMD;
3246                };
3247
3248=head4 C<source> - read commands from a file.
3249
3250Opens a lexical filehandle and stacks it on C<@cmdfhs>; C<DB::readline> will
3251pick it up.
3252
3253=cut
3254
3255                # source - read commands from a file (or pipe!) and execute.
3256                $cmd =~ /^source\s+(.*\S)/ && do {
3257                    if ( open my $fh, $1 ) {
3258
3259                        # Opened OK; stick it in the list of file handles.
3260                        push @cmdfhs, $fh;
3261                    }
3262                    else {
3263
3264                        # Couldn't open it.
3265                        &warn("Can't execute `$1': $!\n");
3266                    }
3267                    next CMD;
3268                };
3269
3270=head4 C<save> - send current history to a file
3271
3272Takes the complete history, (not the shrunken version you see with C<H>),
3273and saves it to the given filename, so it can be replayed using C<source>.
3274
3275Note that all C<^(save|source)>'s are commented out with a view to minimise recursion.
3276
3277=cut
3278
3279                # save source - write commands to a file for later use
3280                $cmd =~ /^save\s*(.*)$/ && do {
3281                    my $file = $1 || '.perl5dbrc';    # default?
3282                    if ( open my $fh, "> $file" ) {
3283
3284                       # chomp to remove extraneous newlines from source'd files
3285                        chomp( my @truelist =
3286                              map { m/^\s*(save|source)/ ? "#$_" : $_ }
3287                              @truehist );
3288                        print $fh join( "\n", @truelist );
3289                        print "commands saved in $file\n";
3290                    }
3291                    else {
3292                        &warn("Can't save debugger commands in '$1': $!\n");
3293                    }
3294                    next CMD;
3295                };
3296
3297=head4 C<R> - restart
3298
3299Restart the debugger session.
3300
3301=head4 C<rerun> - rerun the current session
3302
3303Return to any given position in the B<true>-history list
3304
3305=cut
3306
3307                # R - restart execution.
3308                # rerun - controlled restart execution.
3309                $cmd =~ /^(R|rerun\s*(.*))$/ && do {
3310                    my @args = ($1 eq 'R' ? restart() : rerun($2));
3311
3312                    # Close all non-system fds for a clean restart.  A more
3313                    # correct method would be to close all fds that were not
3314                    # open when the process started, but this seems to be
3315                    # hard.  See "debugger 'R'estart and open database
3316                    # connections" on p5p.
3317
3318                    my $max_fd = 1024; # default if POSIX can't be loaded
3319                    if (eval { require POSIX }) {
3320                        $max_fd = POSIX::sysconf(POSIX::_SC_OPEN_MAX());
3321                    }
3322
3323                    if (defined $max_fd) {
3324                        foreach ($^F+1 .. $max_fd-1) {
3325                            next unless open FD_TO_CLOSE, "<&=$_";
3326                            close(FD_TO_CLOSE);
3327                        }
3328                    }
3329
3330                    # And run Perl again.  We use exec() to keep the
3331                    # PID stable (and that way $ini_pids is still valid).
3332                    exec(@args) || print $OUT "exec failed: $!\n";
3333
3334                    last CMD;
3335                };
3336
3337=head4 C<|, ||> - pipe output through the pager.
3338
3339For C<|>, we save C<OUT> (the debugger's output filehandle) and C<STDOUT>
3340(the program's standard output). For C<||>, we only save C<OUT>. We open a
3341pipe to the pager (restoring the output filehandles if this fails). If this
3342is the C<|> command, we also set up a C<SIGPIPE> handler which will simply
3343set C<$signal>, sending us back into the debugger.
3344
3345We then trim off the pipe symbols and C<redo> the command loop at the
3346C<PIPE> label, causing us to evaluate the command in C<$cmd> without
3347reading another.
3348
3349=cut
3350
3351                # || - run command in the pager, with output to DB::OUT.
3352                $cmd =~ /^\|\|?\s*[^|]/ && do {
3353                    if ( $pager =~ /^\|/ ) {
3354
3355                        # Default pager is into a pipe. Redirect I/O.
3356                        open( SAVEOUT, ">&STDOUT" )
3357                          || &warn("Can't save STDOUT");
3358                        open( STDOUT, ">&OUT" )
3359                          || &warn("Can't redirect STDOUT");
3360                    } ## end if ($pager =~ /^\|/)
3361                    else {
3362
3363                        # Not into a pipe. STDOUT is safe.
3364                        open( SAVEOUT, ">&OUT" ) || &warn("Can't save DB::OUT");
3365                    }
3366
3367                    # Fix up environment to record we have less if so.
3368                    fix_less();
3369
3370                    unless ( $piped = open( OUT, $pager ) ) {
3371
3372                        # Couldn't open pipe to pager.
3373                        &warn("Can't pipe output to `$pager'");
3374                        if ( $pager =~ /^\|/ ) {
3375
3376                            # Redirect I/O back again.
3377                            open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" )    # XXX: lost message
3378                              || &warn("Can't restore DB::OUT");
3379                            open( STDOUT, ">&SAVEOUT" )
3380                              || &warn("Can't restore STDOUT");
3381                            close(SAVEOUT);
3382                        } ## end if ($pager =~ /^\|/)
3383                        else {
3384
3385                            # Redirect I/O. STDOUT already safe.
3386                            open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" )    # XXX: lost message
3387                              || &warn("Can't restore DB::OUT");
3388                        }
3389                        next CMD;
3390                    } ## end unless ($piped = open(OUT,...
3391
3392                    # Set up broken-pipe handler if necessary.
3393                    $SIG{PIPE} = \&DB::catch
3394                      if $pager =~ /^\|/
3395                      && ( "" eq $SIG{PIPE} || "DEFAULT" eq $SIG{PIPE} );
3396
3397                    # Save current filehandle, unbuffer out, and put it back.
3398                    $selected = select(OUT);
3399                    $|        = 1;
3400
3401                    # Don't put it back if pager was a pipe.
3402                    select($selected), $selected = "" unless $cmd =~ /^\|\|/;
3403
3404                    # Trim off the pipe symbols and run the command now.
3405                    $cmd =~ s/^\|+\s*//;
3406                    redo PIPE;
3407                };
3408
3409=head3 END OF COMMAND PARSING
3410
3411Anything left in C<$cmd> at this point is a Perl expression that we want to
3412evaluate. We'll always evaluate in the user's context, and fully qualify
3413any variables we might want to address in the C<DB> package.
3414
3415=cut
3416
3417                # t - turn trace on.
3418                $cmd =~ s/^t\s/\$DB::trace |= 1;\n/;
3419
3420                # s - single-step. Remember the last command was 's'.
3421                $cmd =~ s/^s\s/\$DB::single = 1;\n/ && do { $laststep = 's' };
3422
3423                # n - single-step, but not into subs. Remember last command
3424                # was 'n'.
3425                $cmd =~ s/^n\s/\$DB::single = 2;\n/ && do { $laststep = 'n' };
3426
3427            }    # PIPE:
3428
3429            # Make sure the flag that says "the debugger's running" is
3430            # still on, to make sure we get control again.
3431            $evalarg = "\$^D = \$^D | \$DB::db_stop;\n$cmd";
3432
3433            # Run *our* eval that executes in the caller's context.
3434            &eval;
3435
3436            # Turn off the one-time-dump stuff now.
3437            if ($onetimeDump) {
3438                $onetimeDump      = undef;
3439                $onetimedumpDepth = undef;
3440            }
3441            elsif ( $term_pid == $$ ) {
3442		eval {		# May run under miniperl, when not available...
3443                    STDOUT->flush();
3444                    STDERR->flush();
3445		};
3446
3447                # XXX If this is the master pid, print a newline.
3448                print $OUT "\n";
3449            }
3450        } ## end while (($term || &setterm...
3451
3452=head3 POST-COMMAND PROCESSING
3453
3454After each command, we check to see if the command output was piped anywhere.
3455If so, we go through the necessary code to unhook the pipe and go back to
3456our standard filehandles for input and output.
3457
3458=cut
3459
3460        continue {    # CMD:
3461
3462            # At the end of every command:
3463            if ($piped) {
3464
3465                # Unhook the pipe mechanism now.
3466                if ( $pager =~ /^\|/ ) {
3467
3468                    # No error from the child.
3469                    $? = 0;
3470
3471                    # we cannot warn here: the handle is missing --tchrist
3472                    close(OUT) || print SAVEOUT "\nCan't close DB::OUT\n";
3473
3474                    # most of the $? crud was coping with broken cshisms
3475                    # $? is explicitly set to 0, so this never runs.
3476                    if ($?) {
3477                        print SAVEOUT "Pager `$pager' failed: ";
3478                        if ( $? == -1 ) {
3479                            print SAVEOUT "shell returned -1\n";
3480                        }
3481                        elsif ( $? >> 8 ) {
3482                            print SAVEOUT ( $? & 127 )
3483                              ? " (SIG#" . ( $? & 127 ) . ")"
3484                              : "", ( $? & 128 ) ? " -- core dumped" : "", "\n";
3485                        }
3486                        else {
3487                            print SAVEOUT "status ", ( $? >> 8 ), "\n";
3488                        }
3489                    } ## end if ($?)
3490
3491                    # Reopen filehandle for our output (if we can) and
3492                    # restore STDOUT (if we can).
3493                    open( OUT, ">&STDOUT" ) || &warn("Can't restore DB::OUT");
3494                    open( STDOUT, ">&SAVEOUT" )
3495                      || &warn("Can't restore STDOUT");
3496
3497                    # Turn off pipe exception handler if necessary.
3498                    $SIG{PIPE} = "DEFAULT" if $SIG{PIPE} eq \&DB::catch;
3499
3500                    # Will stop ignoring SIGPIPE if done like nohup(1)
3501                    # does SIGINT but Perl doesn't give us a choice.
3502                } ## end if ($pager =~ /^\|/)
3503                else {
3504
3505                    # Non-piped "pager". Just restore STDOUT.
3506                    open( OUT, ">&SAVEOUT" ) || &warn("Can't restore DB::OUT");
3507                }
3508
3509                # Close filehandle pager was using, restore the normal one
3510                # if necessary,
3511                close(SAVEOUT);
3512                select($selected), $selected = "" unless $selected eq "";
3513
3514                # No pipes now.
3515                $piped = "";
3516            } ## end if ($piped)
3517        }    # CMD:
3518
3519=head3 COMMAND LOOP TERMINATION
3520
3521When commands have finished executing, we come here. If the user closed the
3522input filehandle, we turn on C<$fall_off_end> to emulate a C<q> command. We
3523evaluate any post-prompt items. We restore C<$@>, C<$!>, C<$^E>, C<$,>, C<$/>,
3524C<$\>, and C<$^W>, and return a null list as expected by the Perl interpreter.
3525The interpreter will then execute the next line and then return control to us
3526again.
3527
3528=cut
3529
3530        # No more commands? Quit.
3531        $fall_off_end = 1 unless defined $cmd;    # Emulate `q' on EOF
3532
3533        # Evaluate post-prompt commands.
3534        foreach $evalarg (@$post) {
3535            &eval;
3536        }
3537    }    # if ($single || $signal)
3538
3539    # Put the user's globals back where you found them.
3540    ( $@, $!, $^E, $,, $/, $\, $^W ) = @saved;
3541    ();
3542} ## end sub DB
3543
3544# The following code may be executed now:
3545# BEGIN {warn 4}
3546
3547=head2 sub
3548
3549C<sub> is called whenever a subroutine call happens in the program being
3550debugged. The variable C<$DB::sub> contains the name of the subroutine
3551being called.
3552
3553The core function of this subroutine is to actually call the sub in the proper
3554context, capturing its output. This of course causes C<DB::DB> to get called
3555again, repeating until the subroutine ends and returns control to C<DB::sub>
3556again. Once control returns, C<DB::sub> figures out whether or not to dump the
3557return value, and returns its captured copy of the return value as its own
3558return value. The value then feeds back into the program being debugged as if
3559C<DB::sub> hadn't been there at all.
3560
3561C<sub> does all the work of printing the subroutine entry and exit messages
3562enabled by setting C<$frame>. It notes what sub the autoloader got called for,
3563and also prints the return value if needed (for the C<r> command and if
3564the 16 bit is set in C<$frame>).
3565
3566It also tracks the subroutine call depth by saving the current setting of
3567C<$single> in the C<@stack> package global; if this exceeds the value in
3568C<$deep>, C<sub> automatically turns on printing of the current depth by
3569setting the C<4> bit in C<$single>. In any case, it keeps the current setting
3570of stop/don't stop on entry to subs set as it currently is set.
3571
3572=head3 C<caller()> support
3573
3574If C<caller()> is called from the package C<DB>, it provides some
3575additional data, in the following order:
3576
3577=over 4
3578
3579=item * C<$package>
3580
3581The package name the sub was in
3582
3583=item * C<$filename>
3584
3585The filename it was defined in
3586
3587=item * C<$line>
3588
3589The line number it was defined on
3590
3591=item * C<$subroutine>
3592
3593The subroutine name; C<(eval)> if an C<eval>().
3594
3595=item * C<$hasargs>
3596
35971 if it has arguments, 0 if not
3598
3599=item * C<$wantarray>
3600
36011 if array context, 0 if scalar context
3602
3603=item * C<$evaltext>
3604
3605The C<eval>() text, if any (undefined for C<eval BLOCK>)
3606
3607=item * C<$is_require>
3608
3609frame was created by a C<use> or C<require> statement
3610
3611=item * C<$hints>
3612
3613pragma information; subject to change between versions
3614
3615=item * C<$bitmask>
3616
3617pragma information; subject to change between versions
3618
3619=item * C<@DB::args>
3620
3621arguments with which the subroutine was invoked
3622
3623=back
3624
3625=cut
3626
3627sub sub {
3628
3629	# lock ourselves under threads
3630	lock($DBGR);
3631
3632    # Whether or not the autoloader was running, a scalar to put the
3633    # sub's return value in (if needed), and an array to put the sub's
3634    # return value in (if needed).
3635    my ( $al, $ret, @ret ) = "";
3636	if ($sub =~ /^threads::new$/ && $ENV{PERL5DB_THREADED}) {
3637		print "creating new thread\n";
3638	}
3639
3640    # If the last ten characters are '::AUTOLOAD', note we've traced
3641    # into AUTOLOAD for $sub.
3642    if ( length($sub) > 10 && substr( $sub, -10, 10 ) eq '::AUTOLOAD' ) {
3643        $al = " for $$sub" if defined $$sub;
3644    }
3645
3646    # We stack the stack pointer and then increment it to protect us
3647    # from a situation that might unwind a whole bunch of call frames
3648    # at once. Localizing the stack pointer means that it will automatically
3649    # unwind the same amount when multiple stack frames are unwound.
3650    local $stack_depth = $stack_depth + 1;    # Protect from non-local exits
3651
3652    # Expand @stack.
3653    $#stack = $stack_depth;
3654
3655    # Save current single-step setting.
3656    $stack[-1] = $single;
3657
3658    # Turn off all flags except single-stepping.
3659    $single &= 1;
3660
3661    # If we've gotten really deeply recursed, turn on the flag that will
3662    # make us stop with the 'deep recursion' message.
3663    $single |= 4 if $stack_depth == $deep;
3664
3665    # If frame messages are on ...
3666    (
3667        $frame & 4    # Extended frame entry message
3668        ? (
3669            print_lineinfo( ' ' x ( $stack_depth - 1 ), "in  " ),
3670
3671            # Why -1? But it works! :-(
3672            # Because print_trace will call add 1 to it and then call
3673            # dump_trace; this results in our skipping -1+1 = 0 stack frames
3674            # in dump_trace.
3675            print_trace( $LINEINFO, -1, 1, 1, "$sub$al" )
3676          )
3677        : print_lineinfo( ' ' x ( $stack_depth - 1 ), "entering $sub$al\n" )
3678
3679          # standard frame entry message
3680      )
3681      if $frame;
3682
3683    # Determine the sub's return type,and capture approppriately.
3684    if (wantarray) {
3685
3686        # Called in array context. call sub and capture output.
3687        # DB::DB will recursively get control again if appropriate; we'll come
3688        # back here when the sub is finished.
3689	@ret = &$sub;
3690
3691        # Pop the single-step value back off the stack.
3692        $single |= $stack[ $stack_depth-- ];
3693
3694        # Check for exit trace messages...
3695        (
3696            $frame & 4    # Extended exit message
3697            ? (
3698                print_lineinfo( ' ' x $stack_depth, "out " ),
3699                print_trace( $LINEINFO, -1, 1, 1, "$sub$al" )
3700              )
3701            : print_lineinfo( ' ' x $stack_depth, "exited $sub$al\n" )
3702
3703              # Standard exit message
3704          )
3705          if $frame & 2;
3706
3707        # Print the return info if we need to.
3708        if ( $doret eq $stack_depth or $frame & 16 ) {
3709
3710            # Turn off output record separator.
3711            local $\ = '';
3712            my $fh = ( $doret eq $stack_depth ? $OUT : $LINEINFO );
3713
3714            # Indent if we're printing because of $frame tracing.
3715            print $fh ' ' x $stack_depth if $frame & 16;
3716
3717            # Print the return value.
3718            print $fh "list context return from $sub:\n";
3719            dumpit( $fh, \@ret );
3720
3721            # And don't print it again.
3722            $doret = -2;
3723        } ## end if ($doret eq $stack_depth...
3724            # And we have to return the return value now.
3725        @ret;
3726    } ## end if (wantarray)
3727
3728    # Scalar context.
3729    else {
3730	if ( defined wantarray ) {
3731
3732	    # Save the value if it's wanted at all.
3733	    $ret = &$sub;
3734	}
3735	else {
3736
3737	    # Void return, explicitly.
3738	    &$sub;
3739	    undef $ret;
3740	}
3741
3742        # Pop the single-step value off the stack.
3743        $single |= $stack[ $stack_depth-- ];
3744
3745        # If we're doing exit messages...
3746        (
3747            $frame & 4    # Extended messsages
3748            ? (
3749                print_lineinfo( ' ' x $stack_depth, "out " ),
3750                print_trace( $LINEINFO, -1, 1, 1, "$sub$al" )
3751              )
3752            : print_lineinfo( ' ' x $stack_depth, "exited $sub$al\n" )
3753
3754              # Standard messages
3755          )
3756          if $frame & 2;
3757
3758        # If we are supposed to show the return value... same as before.
3759        if ( $doret eq $stack_depth or $frame & 16 and defined wantarray ) {
3760            local $\ = '';
3761            my $fh = ( $doret eq $stack_depth ? $OUT : $LINEINFO );
3762            print $fh ( ' ' x $stack_depth ) if $frame & 16;
3763            print $fh (
3764                defined wantarray
3765                ? "scalar context return from $sub: "
3766                : "void context return from $sub\n"
3767            );
3768            dumpit( $fh, $ret ) if defined wantarray;
3769            $doret = -2;
3770        } ## end if ($doret eq $stack_depth...
3771
3772        # Return the appropriate scalar value.
3773        $ret;
3774    } ## end else [ if (wantarray)
3775} ## end sub sub
3776
3777=head1 EXTENDED COMMAND HANDLING AND THE COMMAND API
3778
3779In Perl 5.8.0, there was a major realignment of the commands and what they did,
3780Most of the changes were to systematize the command structure and to eliminate
3781commands that threw away user input without checking.
3782
3783The following sections describe the code added to make it easy to support
3784multiple command sets with conflicting command names. This section is a start
3785at unifying all command processing to make it simpler to develop commands.
3786
3787Note that all the cmd_[a-zA-Z] subroutines require the command name, a line
3788number, and C<$dbline> (the current line) as arguments.
3789
3790Support functions in this section which have multiple modes of failure C<die>
3791on error; the rest simply return a false value.
3792
3793The user-interface functions (all of the C<cmd_*> functions) just output
3794error messages.
3795
3796=head2 C<%set>
3797
3798The C<%set> hash defines the mapping from command letter to subroutine
3799name suffix.
3800
3801C<%set> is a two-level hash, indexed by set name and then by command name.
3802Note that trying to set the CommandSet to C<foobar> simply results in the
38035.8.0 command set being used, since there's no top-level entry for C<foobar>.
3804
3805=cut 
3806
3807### The API section
3808
3809my %set = (    #
3810    'pre580' => {
3811        'a' => 'pre580_a',
3812        'A' => 'pre580_null',
3813        'b' => 'pre580_b',
3814        'B' => 'pre580_null',
3815        'd' => 'pre580_null',
3816        'D' => 'pre580_D',
3817        'h' => 'pre580_h',
3818        'M' => 'pre580_null',
3819        'O' => 'o',
3820        'o' => 'pre580_null',
3821        'v' => 'M',
3822        'w' => 'v',
3823        'W' => 'pre580_W',
3824    },
3825    'pre590' => {
3826        '<'  => 'pre590_prepost',
3827        '<<' => 'pre590_prepost',
3828        '>'  => 'pre590_prepost',
3829        '>>' => 'pre590_prepost',
3830        '{'  => 'pre590_prepost',
3831        '{{' => 'pre590_prepost',
3832    },
3833);
3834
3835=head2 C<cmd_wrapper()> (API)
3836
3837C<cmd_wrapper()> allows the debugger to switch command sets
3838depending on the value of the C<CommandSet> option.
3839
3840It tries to look up the command in the C<%set> package-level I<lexical>
3841(which means external entities can't fiddle with it) and create the name of
3842the sub to call based on the value found in the hash (if it's there). I<All>
3843of the commands to be handled in a set have to be added to C<%set>; if they
3844aren't found, the 5.8.0 equivalent is called (if there is one).
3845
3846This code uses symbolic references.
3847
3848=cut
3849
3850sub cmd_wrapper {
3851    my $cmd      = shift;
3852    my $line     = shift;
3853    my $dblineno = shift;
3854
3855    # Assemble the command subroutine's name by looking up the
3856    # command set and command name in %set. If we can't find it,
3857    # default to the older version of the command.
3858    my $call = 'cmd_'
3859      . ( $set{$CommandSet}{$cmd}
3860          || ( $cmd =~ /^[<>{]+/o ? 'prepost' : $cmd ) );
3861
3862    # Call the command subroutine, call it by name.
3863    return &$call( $cmd, $line, $dblineno );
3864} ## end sub cmd_wrapper
3865
3866=head3 C<cmd_a> (command)
3867
3868The C<a> command handles pre-execution actions. These are associated with a
3869particular line, so they're stored in C<%dbline>. We default to the current
3870line if none is specified.
3871
3872=cut
3873
3874sub cmd_a {
3875    my $cmd    = shift;
3876    my $line   = shift || '';    # [.|line] expr
3877    my $dbline = shift;
3878
3879    # If it's dot (here), or not all digits,  use the current line.
3880    $line =~ s/^(\.|(?:[^\d]))/$dbline/;
3881
3882    # Should be a line number followed by an expression.
3883    if ( $line =~ /^\s*(\d*)\s*(\S.+)/ ) {
3884        my ( $lineno, $expr ) = ( $1, $2 );
3885
3886        # If we have an expression ...
3887        if ( length $expr ) {
3888
3889            # ... but the line isn't breakable, complain.
3890            if ( $dbline[$lineno] == 0 ) {
3891                print $OUT
3892                  "Line $lineno($dbline[$lineno]) does not have an action?\n";
3893            }
3894            else {
3895
3896                # It's executable. Record that the line has an action.
3897                $had_breakpoints{$filename} |= 2;
3898
3899                # Remove any action, temp breakpoint, etc.
3900                $dbline{$lineno} =~ s/\0[^\0]*//;
3901
3902                # Add the action to the line.
3903                $dbline{$lineno} .= "\0" . action($expr);
3904            }
3905        } ## end if (length $expr)
3906    } ## end if ($line =~ /^\s*(\d*)\s*(\S.+)/)
3907    else {
3908
3909        # Syntax wrong.
3910        print $OUT
3911          "Adding an action requires an optional lineno and an expression\n"
3912          ;    # hint
3913    }
3914} ## end sub cmd_a
3915
3916=head3 C<cmd_A> (command)
3917
3918Delete actions. Similar to above, except the delete code is in a separate
3919subroutine, C<delete_action>.
3920
3921=cut
3922
3923sub cmd_A {
3924    my $cmd    = shift;
3925    my $line   = shift || '';
3926    my $dbline = shift;
3927
3928    # Dot is this line.
3929    $line =~ s/^\./$dbline/;
3930
3931    # Call delete_action with a null param to delete them all.
3932    # The '1' forces the eval to be true. It'll be false only
3933    # if delete_action blows up for some reason, in which case
3934    # we print $@ and get out.
3935    if ( $line eq '*' ) {
3936        eval { &delete_action(); 1 } or print $OUT $@ and return;
3937    }
3938
3939    # There's a real line  number. Pass it to delete_action.
3940    # Error trapping is as above.
3941    elsif ( $line =~ /^(\S.*)/ ) {
3942        eval { &delete_action($1); 1 } or print $OUT $@ and return;
3943    }
3944
3945    # Swing and a miss. Bad syntax.
3946    else {
3947        print $OUT
3948          "Deleting an action requires a line number, or '*' for all\n" ; # hint
3949    }
3950} ## end sub cmd_A
3951
3952=head3 C<delete_action> (API)
3953
3954C<delete_action> accepts either a line number or C<undef>. If a line number
3955is specified, we check for the line being executable (if it's not, it
3956couldn't have had an  action). If it is, we just take the action off (this
3957will get any kind of an action, including breakpoints).
3958
3959=cut
3960
3961sub delete_action {
3962    my $i = shift;
3963    if ( defined($i) ) {
3964
3965        # Can there be one?
3966        die "Line $i has no action .\n" if $dbline[$i] == 0;
3967
3968        # Nuke whatever's there.
3969        $dbline{$i} =~ s/\0[^\0]*//;    # \^a
3970        delete $dbline{$i} if $dbline{$i} eq '';
3971    }
3972    else {
3973        print $OUT "Deleting all actions...\n";
3974        for my $file ( keys %had_breakpoints ) {
3975            local *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $file };
3976            my $max = $#dbline;
3977            my $was;
3978            for ( $i = 1 ; $i <= $max ; $i++ ) {
3979                if ( defined $dbline{$i} ) {
3980                    $dbline{$i} =~ s/\0[^\0]*//;
3981                    delete $dbline{$i} if $dbline{$i} eq '';
3982                }
3983                unless ( $had_breakpoints{$file} &= ~2 ) {
3984                    delete $had_breakpoints{$file};
3985                }
3986            } ## end for ($i = 1 ; $i <= $max...
3987        } ## end for my $file (keys %had_breakpoints)
3988    } ## end else [ if (defined($i))
3989} ## end sub delete_action
3990
3991=head3 C<cmd_b> (command)
3992
3993Set breakpoints. Since breakpoints can be set in so many places, in so many
3994ways, conditionally or not, the breakpoint code is kind of complex. Mostly,
3995we try to parse the command type, and then shuttle it off to an appropriate
3996subroutine to actually do the work of setting the breakpoint in the right
3997place.
3998
3999=cut
4000
4001sub cmd_b {
4002    my $cmd    = shift;
4003    my $line   = shift;    # [.|line] [cond]
4004    my $dbline = shift;
4005
4006    # Make . the current line number if it's there..
4007    $line =~ s/^\./$dbline/;
4008
4009    # No line number, no condition. Simple break on current line.
4010    if ( $line =~ /^\s*$/ ) {
4011        &cmd_b_line( $dbline, 1 );
4012    }
4013
4014    # Break on load for a file.
4015    elsif ( $line =~ /^load\b\s*(.*)/ ) {
4016        my $file = $1;
4017        $file =~ s/\s+$//;
4018        &cmd_b_load($file);
4019    }
4020
4021    # b compile|postpone <some sub> [<condition>]
4022    # The interpreter actually traps this one for us; we just put the
4023    # necessary condition in the %postponed hash.
4024    elsif ( $line =~ /^(postpone|compile)\b\s*([':A-Za-z_][':\w]*)\s*(.*)/ ) {
4025
4026        # Capture the condition if there is one. Make it true if none.
4027        my $cond = length $3 ? $3 : '1';
4028
4029        # Save the sub name and set $break to 1 if $1 was 'postpone', 0
4030        # if it was 'compile'.
4031        my ( $subname, $break ) = ( $2, $1 eq 'postpone' );
4032
4033        # De-Perl4-ify the name - ' separators to ::.
4034        $subname =~ s/\'/::/g;
4035
4036        # Qualify it into the current package unless it's already qualified.
4037        $subname = "${'package'}::" . $subname unless $subname =~ /::/;
4038
4039        # Add main if it starts with ::.
4040        $subname = "main" . $subname if substr( $subname, 0, 2 ) eq "::";
4041
4042        # Save the break type for this sub.
4043        $postponed{$subname} = $break ? "break +0 if $cond" : "compile";
4044    } ## end elsif ($line =~ ...
4045
4046    # b <sub name> [<condition>]
4047    elsif ( $line =~ /^([':A-Za-z_][':\w]*(?:\[.*\])?)\s*(.*)/ ) {
4048
4049        #
4050        $subname = $1;
4051        $cond = length $2 ? $2 : '1';
4052        &cmd_b_sub( $subname, $cond );
4053    }
4054
4055    # b <line> [<condition>].
4056    elsif ( $line =~ /^(\d*)\s*(.*)/ ) {
4057
4058        # Capture the line. If none, it's the current line.
4059        $line = $1 || $dbline;
4060
4061        # If there's no condition, make it '1'.
4062        $cond = length $2 ? $2 : '1';
4063
4064        # Break on line.
4065        &cmd_b_line( $line, $cond );
4066    }
4067
4068    # Line didn't make sense.
4069    else {
4070        print "confused by line($line)?\n";
4071    }
4072} ## end sub cmd_b
4073
4074=head3 C<break_on_load> (API)
4075
4076We want to break when this file is loaded. Mark this file in the
4077C<%break_on_load> hash, and note that it has a breakpoint in
4078C<%had_breakpoints>.
4079
4080=cut
4081
4082sub break_on_load {
4083    my $file = shift;
4084    $break_on_load{$file} = 1;
4085    $had_breakpoints{$file} |= 1;
4086}
4087
4088=head3 C<report_break_on_load> (API)
4089
4090Gives us an array of filenames that are set to break on load. Note that
4091only files with break-on-load are in here, so simply showing the keys
4092suffices.
4093
4094=cut
4095
4096sub report_break_on_load {
4097    sort keys %break_on_load;
4098}
4099
4100=head3 C<cmd_b_load> (command)
4101
4102We take the file passed in and try to find it in C<%INC> (which maps modules
4103to files they came from). We mark those files for break-on-load via
4104C<break_on_load> and then report that it was done.
4105
4106=cut
4107
4108sub cmd_b_load {
4109    my $file = shift;
4110    my @files;
4111
4112    # This is a block because that way we can use a redo inside it
4113    # even without there being any looping structure at all outside it.
4114    {
4115
4116        # Save short name and full path if found.
4117        push @files, $file;
4118        push @files, $::INC{$file} if $::INC{$file};
4119
4120        # Tack on .pm and do it again unless there was a '.' in the name
4121        # already.
4122        $file .= '.pm', redo unless $file =~ /\./;
4123    }
4124
4125    # Do the real work here.
4126    break_on_load($_) for @files;
4127
4128    # All the files that have break-on-load breakpoints.
4129    @files = report_break_on_load;
4130
4131    # Normalize for the purposes of our printing this.
4132    local $\ = '';
4133    local $" = ' ';
4134    print $OUT "Will stop on load of `@files'.\n";
4135} ## end sub cmd_b_load
4136
4137=head3 C<$filename_error> (API package global)
4138
4139Several of the functions we need to implement in the API need to work both
4140on the current file and on other files. We don't want to duplicate code, so
4141C<$filename_error> is used to contain the name of the file that's being
4142worked on (if it's not the current one).
4143
4144We can now build functions in pairs: the basic function works on the current
4145file, and uses C<$filename_error> as part of its error message. Since this is
4146initialized to C<"">, no filename will appear when we are working on the
4147current file.
4148
4149The second function is a wrapper which does the following:
4150
4151=over 4
4152
4153=item *
4154
4155Localizes C<$filename_error> and sets it to the name of the file to be processed.
4156
4157=item *
4158
4159Localizes the C<*dbline> glob and reassigns it to point to the file we want to process.
4160
4161=item *
4162
4163Calls the first function.
4164
4165The first function works on the I<current> file (i.e., the one we changed to),
4166and prints C<$filename_error> in the error message (the name of the other file)
4167if it needs to. When the functions return, C<*dbline> is restored to point
4168to the actual current file (the one we're executing in) and
4169C<$filename_error> is restored to C<"">. This restores everything to
4170the way it was before the second function was called at all.
4171
4172See the comments in C<breakable_line> and C<breakable_line_in_file> for more
4173details.
4174
4175=back
4176
4177=cut
4178
4179$filename_error = '';
4180
4181=head3 breakable_line(from, to) (API)
4182
4183The subroutine decides whether or not a line in the current file is breakable.
4184It walks through C<@dbline> within the range of lines specified, looking for
4185the first line that is breakable.
4186
4187If C<$to> is greater than C<$from>, the search moves forwards, finding the
4188first line I<after> C<$to> that's breakable, if there is one.
4189
4190If C<$from> is greater than C<$to>, the search goes I<backwards>, finding the
4191first line I<before> C<$to> that's breakable, if there is one.
4192
4193=cut
4194
4195sub breakable_line {
4196
4197    my ( $from, $to ) = @_;
4198
4199    # $i is the start point. (Where are the FORTRAN programs of yesteryear?)
4200    my $i = $from;
4201
4202    # If there are at least 2 arguments, we're trying to search a range.
4203    if ( @_ >= 2 ) {
4204
4205        # $delta is positive for a forward search, negative for a backward one.
4206        my $delta = $from < $to ? +1 : -1;
4207
4208        # Keep us from running off the ends of the file.
4209        my $limit = $delta > 0 ? $#dbline : 1;
4210
4211        # Clever test. If you're a mathematician, it's obvious why this
4212        # test works. If not:
4213        # If $delta is positive (going forward), $limit will be $#dbline.
4214        #    If $to is less than $limit, ($limit - $to) will be positive, times
4215        #    $delta of 1 (positive), so the result is > 0 and we should use $to
4216        #    as the stopping point.
4217        #
4218        #    If $to is greater than $limit, ($limit - $to) is negative,
4219        #    times $delta of 1 (positive), so the result is < 0 and we should
4220        #    use $limit ($#dbline) as the stopping point.
4221        #
4222        # If $delta is negative (going backward), $limit will be 1.
4223        #    If $to is zero, ($limit - $to) will be 1, times $delta of -1
4224        #    (negative) so the result is > 0, and we use $to as the stopping
4225        #    point.
4226        #
4227        #    If $to is less than zero, ($limit - $to) will be positive,
4228        #    times $delta of -1 (negative), so the result is not > 0, and
4229        #    we use $limit (1) as the stopping point.
4230        #
4231        #    If $to is 1, ($limit - $to) will zero, times $delta of -1
4232        #    (negative), still giving zero; the result is not > 0, and
4233        #    we use $limit (1) as the stopping point.
4234        #
4235        #    if $to is >1, ($limit - $to) will be negative, times $delta of -1
4236        #    (negative), giving a positive (>0) value, so we'll set $limit to
4237        #    $to.
4238
4239        $limit = $to if ( $limit - $to ) * $delta > 0;
4240
4241        # The real search loop.
4242        # $i starts at $from (the point we want to start searching from).
4243        # We move through @dbline in the appropriate direction (determined
4244        # by $delta: either -1 (back) or +1 (ahead).
4245        # We stay in as long as we haven't hit an executable line
4246        # ($dbline[$i] == 0 means not executable) and we haven't reached
4247        # the limit yet (test similar to the above).
4248        $i += $delta while $dbline[$i] == 0 and ( $limit - $i ) * $delta > 0;
4249
4250    } ## end if (@_ >= 2)
4251
4252    # If $i points to a line that is executable, return that.
4253    return $i unless $dbline[$i] == 0;
4254
4255    # Format the message and print it: no breakable lines in range.
4256    my ( $pl, $upto ) = ( '', '' );
4257    ( $pl, $upto ) = ( 's', "..$to" ) if @_ >= 2 and $from != $to;
4258
4259    # If there's a filename in filename_error, we'll see it.
4260    # If not, not.
4261    die "Line$pl $from$upto$filename_error not breakable\n";
4262} ## end sub breakable_line
4263
4264=head3 breakable_line_in_filename(file, from, to) (API)
4265
4266Like C<breakable_line>, but look in another file.
4267
4268=cut
4269
4270sub breakable_line_in_filename {
4271
4272    # Capture the file name.
4273    my ($f) = shift;
4274
4275    # Swap the magic line array over there temporarily.
4276    local *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $f };
4277
4278    # If there's an error, it's in this other file.
4279    local $filename_error = " of `$f'";
4280
4281    # Find the breakable line.
4282    breakable_line(@_);
4283
4284    # *dbline and $filename_error get restored when this block ends.
4285
4286} ## end sub breakable_line_in_filename
4287
4288=head3 break_on_line(lineno, [condition]) (API)
4289
4290Adds a breakpoint with the specified condition (or 1 if no condition was
4291specified) to the specified line. Dies if it can't.
4292
4293=cut
4294
4295sub break_on_line {
4296    my ( $i, $cond ) = @_;
4297
4298    # Always true if no condition supplied.
4299    $cond = 1 unless @_ >= 2;
4300
4301    my $inii  = $i;
4302    my $after = '';
4303    my $pl    = '';
4304
4305    # Woops, not a breakable line. $filename_error allows us to say
4306    # if it was in a different file.
4307    die "Line $i$filename_error not breakable.\n" if $dbline[$i] == 0;
4308
4309    # Mark this file as having breakpoints in it.
4310    $had_breakpoints{$filename} |= 1;
4311
4312    # If there is an action or condition here already ...
4313    if ( $dbline{$i} ) {
4314
4315        # ... swap this condition for the existing one.
4316        $dbline{$i} =~ s/^[^\0]*/$cond/;
4317    }
4318    else {
4319
4320        # Nothing here - just add the condition.
4321        $dbline{$i} = $cond;
4322    }
4323} ## end sub break_on_line
4324
4325=head3 cmd_b_line(line, [condition]) (command)
4326
4327Wrapper for C<break_on_line>. Prints the failure message if it
4328doesn't work.
4329
4330=cut 
4331
4332sub cmd_b_line {
4333    eval { break_on_line(@_); 1 } or do {
4334        local $\ = '';
4335        print $OUT $@ and return;
4336    };
4337} ## end sub cmd_b_line
4338
4339=head3 break_on_filename_line(file, line, [condition]) (API)
4340
4341Switches to the file specified and then calls C<break_on_line> to set
4342the breakpoint.
4343
4344=cut
4345
4346sub break_on_filename_line {
4347    my ( $f, $i, $cond ) = @_;
4348
4349    # Always true if condition left off.
4350    $cond = 1 unless @_ >= 3;
4351
4352    # Switch the magical hash temporarily.
4353    local *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $f };
4354
4355    # Localize the variables that break_on_line uses to make its message.
4356    local $filename_error = " of `$f'";
4357    local $filename       = $f;
4358
4359    # Add the breakpoint.
4360    break_on_line( $i, $cond );
4361} ## end sub break_on_filename_line
4362
4363=head3 break_on_filename_line_range(file, from, to, [condition]) (API)
4364
4365Switch to another file, search the range of lines specified for an
4366executable one, and put a breakpoint on the first one you find.
4367
4368=cut
4369
4370sub break_on_filename_line_range {
4371    my ( $f, $from, $to, $cond ) = @_;
4372
4373    # Find a breakable line if there is one.
4374    my $i = breakable_line_in_filename( $f, $from, $to );
4375
4376    # Always true if missing.
4377    $cond = 1 unless @_ >= 3;
4378
4379    # Add the breakpoint.
4380    break_on_filename_line( $f, $i, $cond );
4381} ## end sub break_on_filename_line_range
4382
4383=head3 subroutine_filename_lines(subname, [condition]) (API)
4384
4385Search for a subroutine within a given file. The condition is ignored.
4386Uses C<find_sub> to locate the desired subroutine.
4387
4388=cut
4389
4390sub subroutine_filename_lines {
4391    my ( $subname, $cond ) = @_;
4392
4393    # Returned value from find_sub() is fullpathname:startline-endline.
4394    # The match creates the list (fullpathname, start, end). Falling off
4395    # the end of the subroutine returns this implicitly.
4396    find_sub($subname) =~ /^(.*):(\d+)-(\d+)$/;
4397} ## end sub subroutine_filename_lines
4398
4399=head3 break_subroutine(subname) (API)
4400
4401Places a break on the first line possible in the specified subroutine. Uses
4402C<subroutine_filename_lines> to find the subroutine, and
4403C<break_on_filename_line_range> to place the break.
4404
4405=cut
4406
4407sub break_subroutine {
4408    my $subname = shift;
4409
4410    # Get filename, start, and end.
4411    my ( $file, $s, $e ) = subroutine_filename_lines($subname)
4412      or die "Subroutine $subname not found.\n";
4413
4414    # Null condition changes to '1' (always true).
4415    $cond = 1 unless @_ >= 2;
4416
4417    # Put a break the first place possible in the range of lines
4418    # that make up this subroutine.
4419    break_on_filename_line_range( $file, $s, $e, @_ );
4420} ## end sub break_subroutine
4421
4422=head3 cmd_b_sub(subname, [condition]) (command)
4423
4424We take the incoming subroutine name and fully-qualify it as best we can.
4425
4426=over 4
4427
4428=item 1. If it's already fully-qualified, leave it alone.
4429
4430=item 2. Try putting it in the current package.
4431
4432=item 3. If it's not there, try putting it in CORE::GLOBAL if it exists there.
4433
4434=item 4. If it starts with '::', put it in 'main::'.
4435
4436=back
4437
4438After all this cleanup, we call C<break_subroutine> to try to set the
4439breakpoint.
4440
4441=cut
4442
4443sub cmd_b_sub {
4444    my ( $subname, $cond ) = @_;
4445
4446    # Add always-true condition if we have none.
4447    $cond = 1 unless @_ >= 2;
4448
4449    # If the subname isn't a code reference, qualify it so that
4450    # break_subroutine() will work right.
4451    unless ( ref $subname eq 'CODE' ) {
4452
4453        # Not Perl4.
4454        $subname =~ s/\'/::/g;
4455        my $s = $subname;
4456
4457        # Put it in this package unless it's already qualified.
4458        $subname = "${'package'}::" . $subname
4459          unless $subname =~ /::/;
4460
4461        # Requalify it into CORE::GLOBAL if qualifying it into this
4462        # package resulted in its not being defined, but only do so
4463        # if it really is in CORE::GLOBAL.
4464        $subname = "CORE::GLOBAL::$s"
4465          if not defined &$subname
4466          and $s !~ /::/
4467          and defined &{"CORE::GLOBAL::$s"};
4468
4469        # Put it in package 'main' if it has a leading ::.
4470        $subname = "main" . $subname if substr( $subname, 0, 2 ) eq "::";
4471
4472    } ## end unless (ref $subname eq 'CODE')
4473
4474    # Try to set the breakpoint.
4475    eval { break_subroutine( $subname, $cond ); 1 } or do {
4476        local $\ = '';
4477        print $OUT $@ and return;
4478      }
4479} ## end sub cmd_b_sub
4480
4481=head3 C<cmd_B> - delete breakpoint(s) (command)
4482
4483The command mostly parses the command line and tries to turn the argument
4484into a line spec. If it can't, it uses the current line. It then calls
4485C<delete_breakpoint> to actually do the work.
4486
4487If C<*> is  specified, C<cmd_B> calls C<delete_breakpoint> with no arguments,
4488thereby deleting all the breakpoints.
4489
4490=cut
4491
4492sub cmd_B {
4493    my $cmd = shift;
4494
4495    # No line spec? Use dbline.
4496    # If there is one, use it if it's non-zero, or wipe it out if it is.
4497    my $line   = ( $_[0] =~ /^\./ ) ? $dbline : shift || '';
4498    my $dbline = shift;
4499
4500    # If the line was dot, make the line the current one.
4501    $line =~ s/^\./$dbline/;
4502
4503    # If it's * we're deleting all the breakpoints.
4504    if ( $line eq '*' ) {
4505        eval { &delete_breakpoint(); 1 } or print $OUT $@ and return;
4506    }
4507
4508    # If there is a line spec, delete the breakpoint on that line.
4509    elsif ( $line =~ /^(\S.*)/ ) {
4510        eval { &delete_breakpoint( $line || $dbline ); 1 } or do {
4511            local $\ = '';
4512            print $OUT $@ and return;
4513        };
4514    } ## end elsif ($line =~ /^(\S.*)/)
4515
4516    # No line spec.
4517    else {
4518        print $OUT
4519          "Deleting a breakpoint requires a line number, or '*' for all\n"
4520          ;    # hint
4521    }
4522} ## end sub cmd_B
4523
4524=head3 delete_breakpoint([line]) (API)
4525
4526This actually does the work of deleting either a single breakpoint, or all
4527of them.
4528
4529For a single line, we look for it in C<@dbline>. If it's nonbreakable, we
4530just drop out with a message saying so. If it is, we remove the condition
4531part of the 'condition\0action' that says there's a breakpoint here. If,
4532after we've done that, there's nothing left, we delete the corresponding
4533line in C<%dbline> to signal that no action needs to be taken for this line.
4534
4535For all breakpoints, we iterate through the keys of C<%had_breakpoints>,
4536which lists all currently-loaded files which have breakpoints. We then look
4537at each line in each of these files, temporarily switching the C<%dbline>
4538and C<@dbline> structures to point to the files in question, and do what
4539we did in the single line case: delete the condition in C<@dbline>, and
4540delete the key in C<%dbline> if nothing's left.
4541
4542We then wholesale delete C<%postponed>, C<%postponed_file>, and
4543C<%break_on_load>, because these structures contain breakpoints for files
4544and code that haven't been loaded yet. We can just kill these off because there
4545are no magical debugger structures associated with them.
4546
4547=cut
4548
4549sub delete_breakpoint {
4550    my $i = shift;
4551
4552    # If we got a line, delete just that one.
4553    if ( defined($i) ) {
4554
4555        # Woops. This line wasn't breakable at all.
4556        die "Line $i not breakable.\n" if $dbline[$i] == 0;
4557
4558        # Kill the condition, but leave any action.
4559        $dbline{$i} =~ s/^[^\0]*//;
4560
4561        # Remove the entry entirely if there's no action left.
4562        delete $dbline{$i} if $dbline{$i} eq '';
4563    }
4564
4565    # No line; delete them all.
4566    else {
4567        print $OUT "Deleting all breakpoints...\n";
4568
4569        # %had_breakpoints lists every file that had at least one
4570        # breakpoint in it.
4571        for my $file ( keys %had_breakpoints ) {
4572
4573            # Switch to the desired file temporarily.
4574            local *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $file };
4575
4576            my $max = $#dbline;
4577            my $was;
4578
4579            # For all lines in this file ...
4580            for ( $i = 1 ; $i <= $max ; $i++ ) {
4581
4582                # If there's a breakpoint or action on this line ...
4583                if ( defined $dbline{$i} ) {
4584
4585                    # ... remove the breakpoint.
4586                    $dbline{$i} =~ s/^[^\0]+//;
4587                    if ( $dbline{$i} =~ s/^\0?$// ) {
4588
4589                        # Remove the entry altogether if no action is there.
4590                        delete $dbline{$i};
4591                    }
4592                } ## end if (defined $dbline{$i...
4593            } ## end for ($i = 1 ; $i <= $max...
4594
4595            # If, after we turn off the "there were breakpoints in this file"
4596            # bit, the entry in %had_breakpoints for this file is zero,
4597            # we should remove this file from the hash.
4598            if ( not $had_breakpoints{$file} &= ~1 ) {
4599                delete $had_breakpoints{$file};
4600            }
4601        } ## end for my $file (keys %had_breakpoints)
4602
4603        # Kill off all the other breakpoints that are waiting for files that
4604        # haven't been loaded yet.
4605        undef %postponed;
4606        undef %postponed_file;
4607        undef %break_on_load;
4608    } ## end else [ if (defined($i))
4609} ## end sub delete_breakpoint
4610
4611=head3 cmd_stop (command)
4612
4613This is meant to be part of the new command API, but it isn't called or used
4614anywhere else in the debugger. XXX It is probably meant for use in development
4615of new commands.
4616
4617=cut
4618
4619sub cmd_stop {    # As on ^C, but not signal-safy.
4620    $signal = 1;
4621}
4622
4623=head3 C<cmd_e> - threads
4624
4625Display the current thread id:
4626
4627	e
4628
4629This could be how (when implemented) to send commands to this thread id (e cmd)
4630or that thread id (e tid cmd).
4631
4632=cut
4633
4634sub cmd_e {
4635    my $cmd  = shift;
4636    my $line = shift;
4637	unless (exists($INC{'threads.pm'})) {
4638		print "threads not loaded($ENV{PERL5DB_THREADED})
4639		please run the debugger with PERL5DB_THREADED=1 set in the environment\n";
4640	} else {
4641		my $tid = threads->tid;
4642		print "thread id: $tid\n";
4643	}
4644} ## end sub cmd_e
4645
4646=head3 C<cmd_E> - list of thread ids
4647
4648Display the list of available thread ids:
4649
4650	E
4651
4652This could be used (when implemented) to send commands to all threads (E cmd).
4653
4654=cut
4655
4656sub cmd_E {
4657    my $cmd  = shift;
4658    my $line = shift;
4659	unless (exists($INC{'threads.pm'})) {
4660		print "threads not loaded($ENV{PERL5DB_THREADED})
4661		please run the debugger with PERL5DB_THREADED=1 set in the environment\n";
4662	} else {
4663		my $tid = threads->tid;
4664		print "thread ids: ".join(', ',
4665			map { ($tid == $_->tid ? '<'.$_->tid.'>' : $_->tid) } threads->list
4666		)."\n";
4667	}
4668} ## end sub cmd_E
4669
4670=head3 C<cmd_h> - help command (command)
4671
4672Does the work of either
4673
4674=over 4
4675
4676=item *
4677
4678Showing all the debugger help
4679
4680=item *
4681
4682Showing help for a specific command
4683
4684=back
4685
4686=cut
4687
4688sub cmd_h {
4689    my $cmd = shift;
4690
4691    # If we have no operand, assume null.
4692    my $line = shift || '';
4693
4694    # 'h h'. Print the long-format help.
4695    if ( $line =~ /^h\s*/ ) {
4696        print_help($help);
4697    }
4698
4699    # 'h <something>'. Search for the command and print only its help.
4700    elsif ( $line =~ /^(\S.*)$/ ) {
4701
4702        # support long commands; otherwise bogus errors
4703        # happen when you ask for h on <CR> for example
4704        my $asked = $1;    # the command requested
4705                           # (for proper error message)
4706
4707        my $qasked = quotemeta($asked);    # for searching; we don't
4708                                           # want to use it as a pattern.
4709                                           # XXX: finds CR but not <CR>
4710
4711        # Search the help string for the command.
4712        if (
4713            $help =~ /^                    # Start of a line
4714                      <?                   # Optional '<'
4715                      (?:[IB]<)            # Optional markup
4716                      $qasked              # The requested command
4717                     /mx
4718          )
4719        {
4720
4721            # It's there; pull it out and print it.
4722            while (
4723                $help =~ /^
4724                              (<?            # Optional '<'
4725                                 (?:[IB]<)   # Optional markup
4726                                 $qasked     # The command
4727                                 ([\s\S]*?)  # Description line(s)
4728                              \n)            # End of last description line
4729                              (?!\s)         # Next line not starting with
4730                                             # whitespace
4731                             /mgx
4732              )
4733            {
4734                print_help($1);
4735            }
4736        }
4737
4738        # Not found; not a debugger command.
4739        else {
4740            print_help("B<$asked> is not a debugger command.\n");
4741        }
4742    } ## end elsif ($line =~ /^(\S.*)$/)
4743
4744    # 'h' - print the summary help.
4745    else {
4746        print_help($summary);
4747    }
4748} ## end sub cmd_h
4749
4750=head3 C<cmd_i> - inheritance display
4751
4752Display the (nested) parentage of the module or object given.
4753
4754=cut
4755
4756sub cmd_i {
4757    my $cmd  = shift;
4758    my $line = shift;
4759    eval { require Class::ISA };
4760    if ($@) {
4761        &warn( $@ =~ /locate/
4762            ? "Class::ISA module not found - please install\n"
4763            : $@ );
4764    }
4765    else {
4766      ISA:
4767        foreach my $isa ( split( /\s+/, $line ) ) {
4768            $evalarg = $isa;
4769            ($isa) = &eval;
4770            no strict 'refs';
4771            print join(
4772                ', ',
4773                map {    # snaffled unceremoniously from Class::ISA
4774                    "$_"
4775                      . (
4776                        defined( ${"$_\::VERSION"} )
4777                        ? ' ' . ${"$_\::VERSION"}
4778                        : undef )
4779                  } Class::ISA::self_and_super_path(ref($isa) || $isa)
4780            );
4781            print "\n";
4782        }
4783    }
4784} ## end sub cmd_i
4785
4786=head3 C<cmd_l> - list lines (command)
4787
4788Most of the command is taken up with transforming all the different line
4789specification syntaxes into 'start-stop'. After that is done, the command
4790runs a loop over C<@dbline> for the specified range of lines. It handles
4791the printing of each line and any markers (C<==E<gt>> for current line,
4792C<b> for break on this line, C<a> for action on this line, C<:> for this
4793line breakable).
4794
4795We save the last line listed in the C<$start> global for further listing
4796later.
4797
4798=cut
4799
4800sub cmd_l {
4801    my $current_line = $line;
4802    my $cmd  = shift;
4803    my $line = shift;
4804
4805    # If this is '-something', delete any spaces after the dash.
4806    $line =~ s/^-\s*$/-/;
4807
4808    # If the line is '$something', assume this is a scalar containing a
4809    # line number.
4810    if ( $line =~ /^(\$.*)/s ) {
4811
4812        # Set up for DB::eval() - evaluate in *user* context.
4813        $evalarg = $1;
4814        # $evalarg = $2;
4815        my ($s) = &eval;
4816
4817        # Ooops. Bad scalar.
4818        print( $OUT "Error: $@\n" ), next CMD if $@;
4819
4820        # Good scalar. If it's a reference, find what it points to.
4821        $s = CvGV_name($s);
4822        print( $OUT "Interpreted as: $1 $s\n" );
4823        $line = "$1 $s";
4824
4825        # Call self recursively to really do the command.
4826        &cmd_l( 'l', $s );
4827    } ## end if ($line =~ /^(\$.*)/s)
4828
4829    # l name. Try to find a sub by that name.
4830    elsif ( $line =~ /^([\':A-Za-z_][\':\w]*(\[.*\])?)/s ) {
4831        my $s = $subname = $1;
4832
4833        # De-Perl4.
4834        $subname =~ s/\'/::/;
4835
4836        # Put it in this package unless it starts with ::.
4837        $subname = $package . "::" . $subname unless $subname =~ /::/;
4838
4839        # Put it in CORE::GLOBAL if t doesn't start with :: and
4840        # it doesn't live in this package and it lives in CORE::GLOBAL.
4841        $subname = "CORE::GLOBAL::$s"
4842          if not defined &$subname
4843          and $s !~ /::/
4844          and defined &{"CORE::GLOBAL::$s"};
4845
4846        # Put leading '::' names into 'main::'.
4847        $subname = "main" . $subname if substr( $subname, 0, 2 ) eq "::";
4848
4849        # Get name:start-stop from find_sub, and break this up at
4850        # colons.
4851        @pieces = split( /:/, find_sub($subname) || $sub{$subname} );
4852
4853        # Pull off start-stop.
4854        $subrange = pop @pieces;
4855
4856        # If the name contained colons, the split broke it up.
4857        # Put it back together.
4858        $file = join( ':', @pieces );
4859
4860        # If we're not in that file, switch over to it.
4861        if ( $file ne $filename ) {
4862            print $OUT "Switching to file '$file'.\n"
4863              unless $slave_editor;
4864
4865            # Switch debugger's magic structures.
4866            *dbline   = $main::{ '_<' . $file };
4867            $max      = $#dbline;
4868            $filename = $file;
4869        } ## end if ($file ne $filename)
4870
4871        # Subrange is 'start-stop'. If this is less than a window full,
4872        # swap it to 'start+', which will list a window from the start point.
4873        if ($subrange) {
4874            if ( eval($subrange) < -$window ) {
4875                $subrange =~ s/-.*/+/;
4876            }
4877
4878            # Call self recursively to list the range.
4879            $line = $subrange;
4880            &cmd_l( 'l', $subrange );
4881        } ## end if ($subrange)
4882
4883        # Couldn't find it.
4884        else {
4885            print $OUT "Subroutine $subname not found.\n";
4886        }
4887    } ## end elsif ($line =~ /^([\':A-Za-z_][\':\w]*(\[.*\])?)/s)
4888
4889    # Bare 'l' command.
4890    elsif ( $line =~ /^\s*$/ ) {
4891
4892        # Compute new range to list.
4893        $incr = $window - 1;
4894        $line = $start . '-' . ( $start + $incr );
4895
4896        # Recurse to do it.
4897        &cmd_l( 'l', $line );
4898    }
4899
4900    # l [start]+number_of_lines
4901    elsif ( $line =~ /^(\d*)\+(\d*)$/ ) {
4902
4903        # Don't reset start for 'l +nnn'.
4904        $start = $1 if $1;
4905
4906        # Increment for list. Use window size if not specified.
4907        # (Allows 'l +' to work.)
4908        $incr = $2;
4909        $incr = $window - 1 unless $incr;
4910
4911        # Create a line range we'll understand, and recurse to do it.
4912        $line = $start . '-' . ( $start + $incr );
4913        &cmd_l( 'l', $line );
4914    } ## end elsif ($line =~ /^(\d*)\+(\d*)$/)
4915
4916    # l start-stop or l start,stop
4917    elsif ( $line =~ /^((-?[\d\$\.]+)([-,]([\d\$\.]+))?)?/ ) {
4918
4919        # Determine end point; use end of file if not specified.
4920        $end = ( !defined $2 ) ? $max : ( $4 ? $4 : $2 );
4921
4922        # Go on to the end, and then stop.
4923        $end = $max if $end > $max;
4924
4925        # Determine start line.
4926        $i    = $2;
4927        $i    = $line if $i eq '.';
4928        $i    = 1 if $i < 1;
4929        $incr = $end - $i;
4930
4931        # If we're running under a slave editor, force it to show the lines.
4932        if ($slave_editor) {
4933            print $OUT "\032\032$filename:$i:0\n";
4934            $i = $end;
4935        }
4936
4937        # We're doing it ourselves. We want to show the line and special
4938        # markers for:
4939        # - the current line in execution
4940        # - whether a line is breakable or not
4941        # - whether a line has a break or not
4942        # - whether a line has an action or not
4943        else {
4944            for ( ; $i <= $end ; $i++ ) {
4945
4946                # Check for breakpoints and actions.
4947                my ( $stop, $action );
4948                ( $stop, $action ) = split( /\0/, $dbline{$i} )
4949                  if $dbline{$i};
4950
4951                # ==> if this is the current line in execution,
4952                # : if it's breakable.
4953                $arrow =
4954                  ( $i == $current_line and $filename eq $filename_ini )
4955                  ? '==>'
4956                  : ( $dbline[$i] + 0 ? ':' : ' ' );
4957
4958                # Add break and action indicators.
4959                $arrow .= 'b' if $stop;
4960                $arrow .= 'a' if $action;
4961
4962                # Print the line.
4963                print $OUT "$i$arrow\t", $dbline[$i];
4964
4965                # Move on to the next line. Drop out on an interrupt.
4966                $i++, last if $signal;
4967            } ## end for (; $i <= $end ; $i++)
4968
4969            # Line the prompt up; print a newline if the last line listed
4970            # didn't have a newline.
4971            print $OUT "\n" unless $dbline[ $i - 1 ] =~ /\n$/;
4972        } ## end else [ if ($slave_editor)
4973
4974        # Save the point we last listed to in case another relative 'l'
4975        # command is desired. Don't let it run off the end.
4976        $start = $i;
4977        $start = $max if $start > $max;
4978    } ## end elsif ($line =~ /^((-?[\d\$\.]+)([-,]([\d\$\.]+))?)?/)
4979} ## end sub cmd_l
4980
4981=head3 C<cmd_L> - list breakpoints, actions, and watch expressions (command)
4982
4983To list breakpoints, the command has to look determine where all of them are
4984first. It starts a C<%had_breakpoints>, which tells us what all files have
4985breakpoints and/or actions. For each file, we switch the C<*dbline> glob (the
4986magic source and breakpoint data structures) to the file, and then look
4987through C<%dbline> for lines with breakpoints and/or actions, listing them
4988out. We look through C<%postponed> not-yet-compiled subroutines that have
4989breakpoints, and through C<%postponed_file> for not-yet-C<require>'d files
4990that have breakpoints.
4991
4992Watchpoints are simpler: we just list the entries in C<@to_watch>.
4993
4994=cut
4995
4996sub cmd_L {
4997    my $cmd = shift;
4998
4999    # If no argument, list everything. Pre-5.8.0 version always lists
5000    # everything
5001    my $arg = shift || 'abw';
5002    $arg = 'abw' unless $CommandSet eq '580';    # sigh...
5003
5004    # See what is wanted.
5005    my $action_wanted = ( $arg =~ /a/ ) ? 1 : 0;
5006    my $break_wanted  = ( $arg =~ /b/ ) ? 1 : 0;
5007    my $watch_wanted  = ( $arg =~ /w/ ) ? 1 : 0;
5008
5009    # Breaks and actions are found together, so we look in the same place
5010    # for both.
5011    if ( $break_wanted or $action_wanted ) {
5012
5013        # Look in all the files with breakpoints...
5014        for my $file ( keys %had_breakpoints ) {
5015
5016            # Temporary switch to this file.
5017            local *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $file };
5018
5019            # Set up to look through the whole file.
5020            my $max = $#dbline;
5021            my $was;    # Flag: did we print something
5022                        # in this file?
5023
5024            # For each line in the file ...
5025            for ( $i = 1 ; $i <= $max ; $i++ ) {
5026
5027                # We've got something on this line.
5028                if ( defined $dbline{$i} ) {
5029
5030                    # Print the header if we haven't.
5031                    print $OUT "$file:\n" unless $was++;
5032
5033                    # Print the line.
5034                    print $OUT " $i:\t", $dbline[$i];
5035
5036                    # Pull out the condition and the action.
5037                    ( $stop, $action ) = split( /\0/, $dbline{$i} );
5038
5039                    # Print the break if there is one and it's wanted.
5040                    print $OUT "   break if (", $stop, ")\n"
5041                      if $stop
5042                      and $break_wanted;
5043
5044                    # Print the action if there is one and it's wanted.
5045                    print $OUT "   action:  ", $action, "\n"
5046                      if $action
5047                      and $action_wanted;
5048
5049                    # Quit if the user hit interrupt.
5050                    last if $signal;
5051                } ## end if (defined $dbline{$i...
5052            } ## end for ($i = 1 ; $i <= $max...
5053        } ## end for my $file (keys %had_breakpoints)
5054    } ## end if ($break_wanted or $action_wanted)
5055
5056    # Look for breaks in not-yet-compiled subs:
5057    if ( %postponed and $break_wanted ) {
5058        print $OUT "Postponed breakpoints in subroutines:\n";
5059        my $subname;
5060        for $subname ( keys %postponed ) {
5061            print $OUT " $subname\t$postponed{$subname}\n";
5062            last if $signal;
5063        }
5064    } ## end if (%postponed and $break_wanted)
5065
5066    # Find files that have not-yet-loaded breaks:
5067    my @have = map {    # Combined keys
5068        keys %{ $postponed_file{$_} }
5069    } keys %postponed_file;
5070
5071    # If there are any, list them.
5072    if ( @have and ( $break_wanted or $action_wanted ) ) {
5073        print $OUT "Postponed breakpoints in files:\n";
5074        my ( $file, $line );
5075
5076        for $file ( keys %postponed_file ) {
5077            my $db = $postponed_file{$file};
5078            print $OUT " $file:\n";
5079            for $line ( sort { $a <=> $b } keys %$db ) {
5080                print $OUT "  $line:\n";
5081                my ( $stop, $action ) = split( /\0/, $$db{$line} );
5082                print $OUT "    break if (", $stop, ")\n"
5083                  if $stop
5084                  and $break_wanted;
5085                print $OUT "    action:  ", $action, "\n"
5086                  if $action
5087                  and $action_wanted;
5088                last if $signal;
5089            } ## end for $line (sort { $a <=>...
5090            last if $signal;
5091        } ## end for $file (keys %postponed_file)
5092    } ## end if (@have and ($break_wanted...
5093    if ( %break_on_load and $break_wanted ) {
5094        print $OUT "Breakpoints on load:\n";
5095        my $file;
5096        for $file ( keys %break_on_load ) {
5097            print $OUT " $file\n";
5098            last if $signal;
5099        }
5100    } ## end if (%break_on_load and...
5101    if ($watch_wanted) {
5102        if ( $trace & 2 ) {
5103            print $OUT "Watch-expressions:\n" if @to_watch;
5104            for my $expr (@to_watch) {
5105                print $OUT " $expr\n";
5106                last if $signal;
5107            }
5108        } ## end if ($trace & 2)
5109    } ## end if ($watch_wanted)
5110} ## end sub cmd_L
5111
5112=head3 C<cmd_M> - list modules (command)
5113
5114Just call C<list_modules>.
5115
5116=cut
5117
5118sub cmd_M {
5119    &list_modules();
5120}
5121
5122=head3 C<cmd_o> - options (command)
5123
5124If this is just C<o> by itself, we list the current settings via
5125C<dump_option>. If there's a nonblank value following it, we pass that on to
5126C<parse_options> for processing.
5127
5128=cut
5129
5130sub cmd_o {
5131    my $cmd = shift;
5132    my $opt = shift || '';    # opt[=val]
5133
5134    # Nonblank. Try to parse and process.
5135    if ( $opt =~ /^(\S.*)/ ) {
5136        &parse_options($1);
5137    }
5138
5139    # Blank. List the current option settings.
5140    else {
5141        for (@options) {
5142            &dump_option($_);
5143        }
5144    }
5145} ## end sub cmd_o
5146
5147=head3 C<cmd_O> - nonexistent in 5.8.x (command)
5148
5149Advises the user that the O command has been renamed.
5150
5151=cut
5152
5153sub cmd_O {
5154    print $OUT "The old O command is now the o command.\n";             # hint
5155    print $OUT "Use 'h' to get current command help synopsis or\n";     #
5156    print $OUT "use 'o CommandSet=pre580' to revert to old usage\n";    #
5157}
5158
5159=head3 C<cmd_v> - view window (command)
5160
5161Uses the C<$preview> variable set in the second C<BEGIN> block (q.v.) to
5162move back a few lines to list the selected line in context. Uses C<cmd_l>
5163to do the actual listing after figuring out the range of line to request.
5164
5165=cut 
5166
5167sub cmd_v {
5168    my $cmd  = shift;
5169    my $line = shift;
5170
5171    # Extract the line to list around. (Astute readers will have noted that
5172    # this pattern will match whether or not a numeric line is specified,
5173    # which means that we'll always enter this loop (though a non-numeric
5174    # argument results in no action at all)).
5175    if ( $line =~ /^(\d*)$/ ) {
5176
5177        # Total number of lines to list (a windowful).
5178        $incr = $window - 1;
5179
5180        # Set the start to the argument given (if there was one).
5181        $start = $1 if $1;
5182
5183        # Back up by the context amount.
5184        $start -= $preview;
5185
5186        # Put together a linespec that cmd_l will like.
5187        $line = $start . '-' . ( $start + $incr );
5188
5189        # List the lines.
5190        &cmd_l( 'l', $line );
5191    } ## end if ($line =~ /^(\d*)$/)
5192} ## end sub cmd_v
5193
5194=head3 C<cmd_w> - add a watch expression (command)
5195
5196The 5.8 version of this command adds a watch expression if one is specified;
5197it does nothing if entered with no operands.
5198
5199We extract the expression, save it, evaluate it in the user's context, and
5200save the value. We'll re-evaluate it each time the debugger passes a line,
5201and will stop (see the code at the top of the command loop) if the value
5202of any of the expressions changes.
5203
5204=cut
5205
5206sub cmd_w {
5207    my $cmd = shift;
5208
5209    # Null expression if no arguments.
5210    my $expr = shift || '';
5211
5212    # If expression is not null ...
5213    if ( $expr =~ /^(\S.*)/ ) {
5214
5215        # ... save it.
5216        push @to_watch, $expr;
5217
5218        # Parameterize DB::eval and call it to get the expression's value
5219        # in the user's context. This version can handle expressions which
5220        # return a list value.
5221        $evalarg = $expr;
5222        my ($val) = join( ' ', &eval );
5223        $val = ( defined $val ) ? "'$val'" : 'undef';
5224
5225        # Save the current value of the expression.
5226        push @old_watch, $val;
5227
5228        # We are now watching expressions.
5229        $trace |= 2;
5230    } ## end if ($expr =~ /^(\S.*)/)
5231
5232    # You have to give one to get one.
5233    else {
5234        print $OUT "Adding a watch-expression requires an expression\n";  # hint
5235    }
5236} ## end sub cmd_w
5237
5238=head3 C<cmd_W> - delete watch expressions (command)
5239
5240This command accepts either a watch expression to be removed from the list
5241of watch expressions, or C<*> to delete them all.
5242
5243If C<*> is specified, we simply empty the watch expression list and the
5244watch expression value list. We also turn off the bit that says we've got
5245watch expressions.
5246
5247If an expression (or partial expression) is specified, we pattern-match
5248through the expressions and remove the ones that match. We also discard
5249the corresponding values. If no watch expressions are left, we turn off
5250the I<watching expressions> bit.
5251
5252=cut
5253
5254sub cmd_W {
5255    my $cmd  = shift;
5256    my $expr = shift || '';
5257
5258    # Delete them all.
5259    if ( $expr eq '*' ) {
5260
5261        # Not watching now.
5262        $trace &= ~2;
5263
5264        print $OUT "Deleting all watch expressions ...\n";
5265
5266        # And all gone.
5267        @to_watch = @old_watch = ();
5268    }
5269
5270    # Delete one of them.
5271    elsif ( $expr =~ /^(\S.*)/ ) {
5272
5273        # Where we are in the list.
5274        my $i_cnt = 0;
5275
5276        # For each expression ...
5277        foreach (@to_watch) {
5278            my $val = $to_watch[$i_cnt];
5279
5280            # Does this one match the command argument?
5281            if ( $val eq $expr ) {    # =~ m/^\Q$i$/) {
5282                                      # Yes. Turn it off, and its value too.
5283                splice( @to_watch,  $i_cnt, 1 );
5284                splice( @old_watch, $i_cnt, 1 );
5285            }
5286            $i_cnt++;
5287        } ## end foreach (@to_watch)
5288
5289        # We don't bother to turn watching off because
5290        #  a) we don't want to stop calling watchfunction() it it exists
5291        #  b) foreach over a null list doesn't do anything anyway
5292
5293    } ## end elsif ($expr =~ /^(\S.*)/)
5294
5295    # No command arguments entered.
5296    else {
5297        print $OUT
5298          "Deleting a watch-expression requires an expression, or '*' for all\n"
5299          ;    # hint
5300    }
5301} ## end sub cmd_W
5302
5303### END of the API section
5304
5305=head1 SUPPORT ROUTINES
5306
5307These are general support routines that are used in a number of places
5308throughout the debugger.
5309
5310=head2 save
5311
5312save() saves the user's versions of globals that would mess us up in C<@saved>,
5313and installs the versions we like better.
5314
5315=cut
5316
5317sub save {
5318
5319    # Save eval failure, command failure, extended OS error, output field
5320    # separator, input record separator, output record separator and
5321    # the warning setting.
5322    @saved = ( $@, $!, $^E, $,, $/, $\, $^W );
5323
5324    $,  = "";      # output field separator is null string
5325    $/  = "\n";    # input record separator is newline
5326    $\  = "";      # output record separator is null string
5327    $^W = 0;       # warnings are off
5328} ## end sub save
5329
5330=head2 C<print_lineinfo> - show where we are now
5331
5332print_lineinfo prints whatever it is that it is handed; it prints it to the
5333C<$LINEINFO> filehandle instead of just printing it to STDOUT. This allows
5334us to feed line information to a slave editor without messing up the
5335debugger output.
5336
5337=cut
5338
5339sub print_lineinfo {
5340
5341    # Make the terminal sensible if we're not the primary debugger.
5342    resetterm(1) if $LINEINFO eq $OUT and $term_pid != $$;
5343    local $\ = '';
5344    local $, = '';
5345    print $LINEINFO @_;
5346} ## end sub print_lineinfo
5347
5348=head2 C<postponed_sub>
5349
5350Handles setting postponed breakpoints in subroutines once they're compiled.
5351For breakpoints, we use C<DB::find_sub> to locate the source file and line
5352range for the subroutine, then mark the file as having a breakpoint,
5353temporarily switch the C<*dbline> glob over to the source file, and then
5354search the given range of lines to find a breakable line. If we find one,
5355we set the breakpoint on it, deleting the breakpoint from C<%postponed>.
5356
5357=cut 
5358
5359# The following takes its argument via $evalarg to preserve current @_
5360
5361sub postponed_sub {
5362
5363    # Get the subroutine name.
5364    my $subname = shift;
5365
5366    # If this is a 'break +<n> if <condition>' ...
5367    if ( $postponed{$subname} =~ s/^break\s([+-]?\d+)\s+if\s// ) {
5368
5369        # If there's no offset, use '+0'.
5370        my $offset = $1 || 0;
5371
5372        # find_sub's value is 'fullpath-filename:start-stop'. It's
5373        # possible that the filename might have colons in it too.
5374        my ( $file, $i ) = ( find_sub($subname) =~ /^(.*):(\d+)-.*$/ );
5375        if ($i) {
5376
5377            # We got the start line. Add the offset '+<n>' from
5378            # $postponed{subname}.
5379            $i += $offset;
5380
5381            # Switch to the file this sub is in, temporarily.
5382            local *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $file };
5383
5384            # No warnings, please.
5385            local $^W = 0;    # != 0 is magical below
5386
5387            # This file's got a breakpoint in it.
5388            $had_breakpoints{$file} |= 1;
5389
5390            # Last line in file.
5391            my $max = $#dbline;
5392
5393            # Search forward until we hit a breakable line or get to
5394            # the end of the file.
5395            ++$i until $dbline[$i] != 0 or $i >= $max;
5396
5397            # Copy the breakpoint in and delete it from %postponed.
5398            $dbline{$i} = delete $postponed{$subname};
5399        } ## end if ($i)
5400
5401        # find_sub didn't find the sub.
5402        else {
5403            local $\ = '';
5404            print $OUT "Subroutine $subname not found.\n";
5405        }
5406        return;
5407    } ## end if ($postponed{$subname...
5408    elsif ( $postponed{$subname} eq 'compile' ) { $signal = 1 }
5409
5410    #print $OUT "In postponed_sub for `$subname'.\n";
5411} ## end sub postponed_sub
5412
5413=head2 C<postponed>
5414
5415Called after each required file is compiled, but before it is executed;
5416also called if the name of a just-compiled subroutine is a key of
5417C<%postponed>. Propagates saved breakpoints (from C<b compile>, C<b load>,
5418etc.) into the just-compiled code.
5419
5420If this is a C<require>'d file, the incoming parameter is the glob
5421C<*{"_<$filename"}>, with C<$filename> the name of the C<require>'d file.
5422
5423If it's a subroutine, the incoming parameter is the subroutine name.
5424
5425=cut
5426
5427sub postponed {
5428
5429    # If there's a break, process it.
5430    if ($ImmediateStop) {
5431
5432        # Right, we've stopped. Turn it off.
5433        $ImmediateStop = 0;
5434
5435        # Enter the command loop when DB::DB gets called.
5436        $signal = 1;
5437    }
5438
5439    # If this is a subroutine, let postponed_sub() deal with it.
5440    return &postponed_sub unless ref \$_[0] eq 'GLOB';
5441
5442    # Not a subroutine. Deal with the file.
5443    local *dbline = shift;
5444    my $filename = $dbline;
5445    $filename =~ s/^_<//;
5446    local $\ = '';
5447    $signal = 1, print $OUT "'$filename' loaded...\n"
5448      if $break_on_load{$filename};
5449    print_lineinfo( ' ' x $stack_depth, "Package $filename.\n" ) if $frame;
5450
5451    # Do we have any breakpoints to put in this file?
5452    return unless $postponed_file{$filename};
5453
5454    # Yes. Mark this file as having breakpoints.
5455    $had_breakpoints{$filename} |= 1;
5456
5457    # "Cannot be done: unsufficient magic" - we can't just put the
5458    # breakpoints saved in %postponed_file into %dbline by assigning
5459    # the whole hash; we have to do it one item at a time for the
5460    # breakpoints to be set properly.
5461    #%dbline = %{$postponed_file{$filename}};
5462
5463    # Set the breakpoints, one at a time.
5464    my $key;
5465
5466    for $key ( keys %{ $postponed_file{$filename} } ) {
5467
5468        # Stash the saved breakpoint into the current file's magic line array.
5469        $dbline{$key} = ${ $postponed_file{$filename} }{$key};
5470    }
5471
5472    # This file's been compiled; discard the stored breakpoints.
5473    delete $postponed_file{$filename};
5474
5475} ## end sub postponed
5476
5477=head2 C<dumpit>
5478
5479C<dumpit> is the debugger's wrapper around dumpvar.pl.
5480
5481It gets a filehandle (to which C<dumpvar.pl>'s output will be directed) and
5482a reference to a variable (the thing to be dumped) as its input.
5483
5484The incoming filehandle is selected for output (C<dumpvar.pl> is printing to
5485the currently-selected filehandle, thank you very much). The current
5486values of the package globals C<$single> and C<$trace> are backed up in
5487lexicals, and they are turned off (this keeps the debugger from trying
5488to single-step through C<dumpvar.pl> (I think.)). C<$frame> is localized to
5489preserve its current value and it is set to zero to prevent entry/exit
5490messages from printing, and C<$doret> is localized as well and set to -2 to
5491prevent return values from being shown.
5492
5493C<dumpit()> then checks to see if it needs to load C<dumpvar.pl> and
5494tries to load it (note: if you have a C<dumpvar.pl>  ahead of the
5495installed version in C<@INC>, yours will be used instead. Possible security
5496problem?).
5497
5498It then checks to see if the subroutine C<main::dumpValue> is now defined
5499(it should have been defined by C<dumpvar.pl>). If it has, C<dumpit()>
5500localizes the globals necessary for things to be sane when C<main::dumpValue()>
5501is called, and picks up the variable to be dumped from the parameter list.
5502
5503It checks the package global C<%options> to see if there's a C<dumpDepth>
5504specified. If not, -1 is assumed; if so, the supplied value gets passed on to
5505C<dumpvar.pl>. This tells C<dumpvar.pl> where to leave off when dumping a
5506structure: -1 means dump everything.
5507
5508C<dumpValue()> is then called if possible; if not, C<dumpit()>just prints a
5509warning.
5510
5511In either case, C<$single>, C<$trace>, C<$frame>, and C<$doret> are restored
5512and we then return to the caller.
5513
5514=cut
5515
5516sub dumpit {
5517
5518    # Save the current output filehandle and switch to the one
5519    # passed in as the first parameter.
5520    local ($savout) = select(shift);
5521
5522    # Save current settings of $single and $trace, and then turn them off.
5523    my $osingle = $single;
5524    my $otrace  = $trace;
5525    $single = $trace = 0;
5526
5527    # XXX Okay, what do $frame and $doret do, again?
5528    local $frame = 0;
5529    local $doret = -2;
5530
5531    # Load dumpvar.pl unless we've already got the sub we need from it.
5532    unless ( defined &main::dumpValue ) {
5533        do 'dumpvar.pl' or die $@;
5534    }
5535
5536    # If the load succeeded (or we already had dumpvalue()), go ahead
5537    # and dump things.
5538    if ( defined &main::dumpValue ) {
5539        local $\ = '';
5540        local $, = '';
5541        local $" = ' ';
5542        my $v = shift;
5543        my $maxdepth = shift || $option{dumpDepth};
5544        $maxdepth = -1 unless defined $maxdepth;    # -1 means infinite depth
5545        &main::dumpValue( $v, $maxdepth );
5546    } ## end if (defined &main::dumpValue)
5547
5548    # Oops, couldn't load dumpvar.pl.
5549    else {
5550        local $\ = '';
5551        print $OUT "dumpvar.pl not available.\n";
5552    }
5553
5554    # Reset $single and $trace to their old values.
5555    $single = $osingle;
5556    $trace  = $otrace;
5557
5558    # Restore the old filehandle.
5559    select($savout);
5560} ## end sub dumpit
5561
5562=head2 C<print_trace>
5563
5564C<print_trace>'s job is to print a stack trace. It does this via the
5565C<dump_trace> routine, which actually does all the ferreting-out of the
5566stack trace data. C<print_trace> takes care of formatting it nicely and
5567printing it to the proper filehandle.
5568
5569Parameters:
5570
5571=over 4
5572
5573=item *
5574
5575The filehandle to print to.
5576
5577=item *
5578
5579How many frames to skip before starting trace.
5580
5581=item *
5582
5583How many frames to print.
5584
5585=item *
5586
5587A flag: if true, print a I<short> trace without filenames, line numbers, or arguments
5588
5589=back
5590
5591The original comment below seems to be noting that the traceback may not be
5592correct if this routine is called in a tied method.
5593
5594=cut
5595
5596# Tied method do not create a context, so may get wrong message:
5597
5598sub print_trace {
5599    local $\ = '';
5600    my $fh = shift;
5601
5602    # If this is going to a slave editor, but we're not the primary
5603    # debugger, reset it first.
5604    resetterm(1)
5605      if $fh        eq $LINEINFO    # slave editor
5606      and $LINEINFO eq $OUT         # normal output
5607      and $term_pid != $$;          # not the primary
5608
5609    # Collect the actual trace information to be formatted.
5610    # This is an array of hashes of subroutine call info.
5611    my @sub = dump_trace( $_[0] + 1, $_[1] );
5612
5613    # Grab the "short report" flag from @_.
5614    my $short = $_[2];              # Print short report, next one for sub name
5615
5616    # Run through the traceback info, format it, and print it.
5617    my $s;
5618    for ( $i = 0 ; $i <= $#sub ; $i++ ) {
5619
5620        # Drop out if the user has lost interest and hit control-C.
5621        last if $signal;
5622
5623        # Set the separator so arrys print nice.
5624        local $" = ', ';
5625
5626        # Grab and stringify the arguments if they are there.
5627        my $args =
5628          defined $sub[$i]{args}
5629          ? "(@{ $sub[$i]{args} })"
5630          : '';
5631
5632        # Shorten them up if $maxtrace says they're too long.
5633        $args = ( substr $args, 0, $maxtrace - 3 ) . '...'
5634          if length $args > $maxtrace;
5635
5636        # Get the file name.
5637        my $file = $sub[$i]{file};
5638
5639        # Put in a filename header if short is off.
5640        $file = $file eq '-e' ? $file : "file `$file'" unless $short;
5641
5642        # Get the actual sub's name, and shorten to $maxtrace's requirement.
5643        $s = $sub[$i]{sub};
5644        $s = ( substr $s, 0, $maxtrace - 3 ) . '...' if length $s > $maxtrace;
5645
5646        # Short report uses trimmed file and sub names.
5647        if ($short) {
5648            my $sub = @_ >= 4 ? $_[3] : $s;
5649            print $fh "$sub[$i]{context}=$sub$args from $file:$sub[$i]{line}\n";
5650        } ## end if ($short)
5651
5652        # Non-short report includes full names.
5653        else {
5654            print $fh "$sub[$i]{context} = $s$args"
5655              . " called from $file"
5656              . " line $sub[$i]{line}\n";
5657        }
5658    } ## end for ($i = 0 ; $i <= $#sub...
5659} ## end sub print_trace
5660
5661=head2 dump_trace(skip[,count])
5662
5663Actually collect the traceback information available via C<caller()>. It does
5664some filtering and cleanup of the data, but mostly it just collects it to
5665make C<print_trace()>'s job easier.
5666
5667C<skip> defines the number of stack frames to be skipped, working backwards
5668from the most current. C<count> determines the total number of frames to
5669be returned; all of them (well, the first 10^9) are returned if C<count>
5670is omitted.
5671
5672This routine returns a list of hashes, from most-recent to least-recent
5673stack frame. Each has the following keys and values:
5674
5675=over 4
5676
5677=item * C<context> - C<.> (null), C<$> (scalar), or C<@> (array)
5678
5679=item * C<sub> - subroutine name, or C<eval> information
5680
5681=item * C<args> - undef, or a reference to an array of arguments
5682
5683=item * C<file> - the file in which this item was defined (if any)
5684
5685=item * C<line> - the line on which it was defined
5686
5687=back
5688
5689=cut
5690
5691sub dump_trace {
5692
5693    # How many levels to skip.
5694    my $skip = shift;
5695
5696    # How many levels to show. (1e9 is a cheap way of saying "all of them";
5697    # it's unlikely that we'll have more than a billion stack frames. If you
5698    # do, you've got an awfully big machine...)
5699    my $count = shift || 1e9;
5700
5701    # We increment skip because caller(1) is the first level *back* from
5702    # the current one.  Add $skip to the count of frames so we have a
5703    # simple stop criterion, counting from $skip to $count+$skip.
5704    $skip++;
5705    $count += $skip;
5706
5707    # These variables are used to capture output from caller();
5708    my ( $p, $file, $line, $sub, $h, $context );
5709
5710    my ( $e, $r, @a, @sub, $args );
5711
5712    # XXX Okay... why'd we do that?
5713    my $nothard = not $frame & 8;
5714    local $frame = 0;
5715
5716    # Do not want to trace this.
5717    my $otrace = $trace;
5718    $trace = 0;
5719
5720    # Start out at the skip count.
5721    # If we haven't reached the number of frames requested, and caller() is
5722    # still returning something, stay in the loop. (If we pass the requested
5723    # number of stack frames, or we run out - caller() returns nothing - we
5724    # quit.
5725    # Up the stack frame index to go back one more level each time.
5726    for (
5727        $i = $skip ;
5728        $i < $count
5729        and ( $p, $file, $line, $sub, $h, $context, $e, $r ) = caller($i) ;
5730        $i++
5731      )
5732    {
5733
5734        # Go through the arguments and save them for later.
5735        @a = ();
5736        for $arg (@args) {
5737            my $type;
5738            if ( not defined $arg ) {    # undefined parameter
5739                push @a, "undef";
5740            }
5741
5742            elsif ( $nothard and tied $arg ) {    # tied parameter
5743                push @a, "tied";
5744            }
5745            elsif ( $nothard and $type = ref $arg ) {    # reference
5746                push @a, "ref($type)";
5747            }
5748            else {                                       # can be stringified
5749                local $_ =
5750                  "$arg";    # Safe to stringify now - should not call f().
5751
5752                # Backslash any single-quotes or backslashes.
5753                s/([\'\\])/\\$1/g;
5754
5755                # Single-quote it unless it's a number or a colon-separated
5756                # name.
5757                s/(.*)/'$1'/s
5758                  unless /^(?: -?[\d.]+ | \*[\w:]* )$/x;
5759
5760                # Turn high-bit characters into meta-whatever.
5761                s/([\200-\377])/sprintf("M-%c",ord($1)&0177)/eg;
5762
5763                # Turn control characters into ^-whatever.
5764                s/([\0-\37\177])/sprintf("^%c",ord($1)^64)/eg;
5765
5766                push( @a, $_ );
5767            } ## end else [ if (not defined $arg)
5768        } ## end for $arg (@args)
5769
5770        # If context is true, this is array (@)context.
5771        # If context is false, this is scalar ($) context.
5772        # If neither, context isn't defined. (This is apparently a 'can't
5773        # happen' trap.)
5774        $context = $context ? '@' : ( defined $context ? "\$" : '.' );
5775
5776        # if the sub has args ($h true), make an anonymous array of the
5777        # dumped args.
5778        $args = $h ? [@a] : undef;
5779
5780        # remove trailing newline-whitespace-semicolon-end of line sequence
5781        # from the eval text, if any.
5782        $e =~ s/\n\s*\;\s*\Z// if $e;
5783
5784        # Escape backslashed single-quotes again if necessary.
5785        $e =~ s/([\\\'])/\\$1/g if $e;
5786
5787        # if the require flag is true, the eval text is from a require.
5788        if ($r) {
5789            $sub = "require '$e'";
5790        }
5791
5792        # if it's false, the eval text is really from an eval.
5793        elsif ( defined $r ) {
5794            $sub = "eval '$e'";
5795        }
5796
5797        # If the sub is '(eval)', this is a block eval, meaning we don't
5798        # know what the eval'ed text actually was.
5799        elsif ( $sub eq '(eval)' ) {
5800            $sub = "eval {...}";
5801        }
5802
5803        # Stick the collected information into @sub as an anonymous hash.
5804        push(
5805            @sub,
5806            {
5807                context => $context,
5808                sub     => $sub,
5809                args    => $args,
5810                file    => $file,
5811                line    => $line
5812            }
5813        );
5814
5815        # Stop processing frames if the user hit control-C.
5816        last if $signal;
5817    } ## end for ($i = $skip ; $i < ...
5818
5819    # Restore the trace value again.
5820    $trace = $otrace;
5821    @sub;
5822} ## end sub dump_trace
5823
5824=head2 C<action()>
5825
5826C<action()> takes input provided as the argument to an add-action command,
5827either pre- or post-, and makes sure it's a complete command. It doesn't do
5828any fancy parsing; it just keeps reading input until it gets a string
5829without a trailing backslash.
5830
5831=cut
5832
5833sub action {
5834    my $action = shift;
5835
5836    while ( $action =~ s/\\$// ) {
5837
5838        # We have a backslash on the end. Read more.
5839        $action .= &gets;
5840    } ## end while ($action =~ s/\\$//)
5841
5842    # Return the assembled action.
5843    $action;
5844} ## end sub action
5845
5846=head2 unbalanced
5847
5848This routine mostly just packages up a regular expression to be used
5849to check that the thing it's being matched against has properly-matched
5850curly braces.
5851
5852Of note is the definition of the C<$balanced_brace_re> global via C<||=>, which
5853speeds things up by only creating the qr//'ed expression once; if it's
5854already defined, we don't try to define it again. A speed hack.
5855
5856=cut
5857
5858sub unbalanced {
5859
5860    # I hate using globals!
5861    $balanced_brace_re ||= qr{
5862        ^ \{
5863             (?:
5864                 (?> [^{}] + )              # Non-parens without backtracking
5865                |
5866                 (??{ $balanced_brace_re }) # Group with matching parens
5867              ) *
5868          \} $
5869   }x;
5870    return $_[0] !~ m/$balanced_brace_re/;
5871} ## end sub unbalanced
5872
5873=head2 C<gets()>
5874
5875C<gets()> is a primitive (very primitive) routine to read continuations.
5876It was devised for reading continuations for actions.
5877it just reads more input with C<readline()> and returns it.
5878
5879=cut
5880
5881sub gets {
5882    &readline("cont: ");
5883}
5884
5885=head2 C<DB::system()> - handle calls to<system()> without messing up the debugger
5886
5887The C<system()> function assumes that it can just go ahead and use STDIN and
5888STDOUT, but under the debugger, we want it to use the debugger's input and
5889outout filehandles.
5890
5891C<DB::system()> socks away the program's STDIN and STDOUT, and then substitutes
5892the debugger's IN and OUT filehandles for them. It does the C<system()> call,
5893and then puts everything back again.
5894
5895=cut
5896
5897sub system {
5898
5899    # We save, change, then restore STDIN and STDOUT to avoid fork() since
5900    # some non-Unix systems can do system() but have problems with fork().
5901    open( SAVEIN,  "<&STDIN" )  || &warn("Can't save STDIN");
5902    open( SAVEOUT, ">&STDOUT" ) || &warn("Can't save STDOUT");
5903    open( STDIN,   "<&IN" )     || &warn("Can't redirect STDIN");
5904    open( STDOUT,  ">&OUT" )    || &warn("Can't redirect STDOUT");
5905
5906    # XXX: using csh or tcsh destroys sigint retvals!
5907    system(@_);
5908    open( STDIN,  "<&SAVEIN" )  || &warn("Can't restore STDIN");
5909    open( STDOUT, ">&SAVEOUT" ) || &warn("Can't restore STDOUT");
5910    close(SAVEIN);
5911    close(SAVEOUT);
5912
5913    # most of the $? crud was coping with broken cshisms
5914    if ( $? >> 8 ) {
5915        &warn( "(Command exited ", ( $? >> 8 ), ")\n" );
5916    }
5917    elsif ($?) {
5918        &warn(
5919            "(Command died of SIG#",
5920            ( $? & 127 ),
5921            ( ( $? & 128 ) ? " -- core dumped" : "" ),
5922            ")", "\n"
5923        );
5924    } ## end elsif ($?)
5925
5926    return $?;
5927
5928} ## end sub system
5929
5930=head1 TTY MANAGEMENT
5931
5932The subs here do some of the terminal management for multiple debuggers.
5933
5934=head2 setterm
5935
5936Top-level function called when we want to set up a new terminal for use
5937by the debugger.
5938
5939If the C<noTTY> debugger option was set, we'll either use the terminal
5940supplied (the value of the C<noTTY> option), or we'll use C<Term::Rendezvous>
5941to find one. If we're a forked debugger, we call C<resetterm> to try to
5942get a whole new terminal if we can.
5943
5944In either case, we set up the terminal next. If the C<ReadLine> option was
5945true, we'll get a C<Term::ReadLine> object for the current terminal and save
5946the appropriate attributes. We then
5947
5948=cut
5949
5950sub setterm {
5951
5952    # Load Term::Readline, but quietly; don't debug it and don't trace it.
5953    local $frame = 0;
5954    local $doret = -2;
5955    eval { require Term::ReadLine } or die $@;
5956
5957    # If noTTY is set, but we have a TTY name, go ahead and hook up to it.
5958    if ($notty) {
5959        if ($tty) {
5960            my ( $i, $o ) = split $tty, /,/;
5961            $o = $i unless defined $o;
5962            open( IN,  "<$i" ) or die "Cannot open TTY `$i' for read: $!";
5963            open( OUT, ">$o" ) or die "Cannot open TTY `$o' for write: $!";
5964            $IN  = \*IN;
5965            $OUT = \*OUT;
5966            my $sel = select($OUT);
5967            $| = 1;
5968            select($sel);
5969        } ## end if ($tty)
5970
5971        # We don't have a TTY - try to find one via Term::Rendezvous.
5972        else {
5973            eval "require Term::Rendezvous;" or die;
5974
5975            # See if we have anything to pass to Term::Rendezvous.
5976            # Use $HOME/.perldbtty$$ if not.
5977            my $rv = $ENV{PERLDB_NOTTY} || "$ENV{HOME}/.perldbtty$$";
5978
5979            # Rendezvous and get the filehandles.
5980            my $term_rv = new Term::Rendezvous $rv;
5981            $IN  = $term_rv->IN;
5982            $OUT = $term_rv->OUT;
5983        } ## end else [ if ($tty)
5984    } ## end if ($notty)
5985
5986    # We're a daughter debugger. Try to fork off another TTY.
5987    if ( $term_pid eq '-1' ) {    # In a TTY with another debugger
5988        resetterm(2);
5989    }
5990
5991    # If we shouldn't use Term::ReadLine, don't.
5992    if ( !$rl ) {
5993        $term = new Term::ReadLine::Stub 'perldb', $IN, $OUT;
5994    }
5995
5996    # We're using Term::ReadLine. Get all the attributes for this terminal.
5997    else {
5998        $term = new Term::ReadLine 'perldb', $IN, $OUT;
5999
6000        $rl_attribs = $term->Attribs;
6001        $rl_attribs->{basic_word_break_characters} .= '-:+/*,[])}'
6002          if defined $rl_attribs->{basic_word_break_characters}
6003          and index( $rl_attribs->{basic_word_break_characters}, ":" ) == -1;
6004        $rl_attribs->{special_prefixes} = '$@&%';
6005        $rl_attribs->{completer_word_break_characters} .= '$@&%';
6006        $rl_attribs->{completion_function} = \&db_complete;
6007    } ## end else [ if (!$rl)
6008
6009    # Set up the LINEINFO filehandle.
6010    $LINEINFO = $OUT     unless defined $LINEINFO;
6011    $lineinfo = $console unless defined $lineinfo;
6012
6013    $term->MinLine(2);
6014
6015    &load_hist();
6016
6017    if ( $term->Features->{setHistory} and "@hist" ne "?" ) {
6018        $term->SetHistory(@hist);
6019    }
6020
6021    # XXX Ornaments are turned on unconditionally, which is not
6022    # always a good thing.
6023    ornaments($ornaments) if defined $ornaments;
6024    $term_pid = $$;
6025} ## end sub setterm
6026
6027sub load_hist {
6028    $histfile //= option_val("HistFile", undef);
6029    return unless defined $histfile;
6030    open my $fh, "<", $histfile or return;
6031    local $/ = "\n";
6032    @hist = ();
6033    while (<$fh>) {
6034        chomp;
6035        push @hist, $_;
6036    }
6037    close $fh;
6038}
6039
6040sub save_hist {
6041    return unless defined $histfile;
6042    eval { require File::Path } or return;
6043    eval { require File::Basename } or return;
6044    File::Path::mkpath(File::Basename::dirname($histfile));
6045    open my $fh, ">", $histfile or die "Could not open '$histfile': $!";
6046    $histsize //= option_val("HistSize",100);
6047    my @copy = grep { $_ ne '?' } @hist;
6048    my $start = scalar(@copy) > $histsize ? scalar(@copy)-$histsize : 0;
6049    for ($start .. $#copy) {
6050        print $fh "$copy[$_]\n";
6051    }
6052    close $fh or die "Could not write '$histfile': $!";
6053}
6054
6055=head1 GET_FORK_TTY EXAMPLE FUNCTIONS
6056
6057When the process being debugged forks, or the process invokes a command
6058via C<system()> which starts a new debugger, we need to be able to get a new
6059C<IN> and C<OUT> filehandle for the new debugger. Otherwise, the two processes
6060fight over the terminal, and you can never quite be sure who's going to get the
6061input you're typing.
6062
6063C<get_fork_TTY> is a glob-aliased function which calls the real function that
6064is tasked with doing all the necessary operating system mojo to get a new
6065TTY (and probably another window) and to direct the new debugger to read and
6066write there.
6067
6068The debugger provides C<get_fork_TTY> functions which work for X Windows,
6069OS/2, and Mac OS X. Other systems are not supported. You are encouraged
6070to write C<get_fork_TTY> functions which work for I<your> platform
6071and contribute them.
6072
6073=head3 C<xterm_get_fork_TTY>
6074
6075This function provides the C<get_fork_TTY> function for X windows. If a
6076program running under the debugger forks, a new <xterm> window is opened and
6077the subsidiary debugger is directed there.
6078
6079The C<open()> call is of particular note here. We have the new C<xterm>
6080we're spawning route file number 3 to STDOUT, and then execute the C<tty>
6081command (which prints the device name of the TTY we'll want to use for input
6082and output to STDOUT, then C<sleep> for a very long time, routing this output
6083to file number 3. This way we can simply read from the <XT> filehandle (which
6084is STDOUT from the I<commands> we ran) to get the TTY we want to use.
6085
6086Only works if C<xterm> is in your path and C<$ENV{DISPLAY}>, etc. are
6087properly set up.
6088
6089=cut
6090
6091sub xterm_get_fork_TTY {
6092    ( my $name = $0 ) =~ s,^.*[/\\],,s;
6093    open XT,
6094qq[3>&1 xterm -title "Daughter Perl debugger $pids $name" -e sh -c 'tty 1>&3;\
6095 sleep 10000000' |];
6096
6097    # Get the output from 'tty' and clean it up a little.
6098    my $tty = <XT>;
6099    chomp $tty;
6100
6101    $pidprompt = '';    # Shown anyway in titlebar
6102
6103    # There's our new TTY.
6104    return $tty;
6105} ## end sub xterm_get_fork_TTY
6106
6107=head3 C<os2_get_fork_TTY>
6108
6109XXX It behooves an OS/2 expert to write the necessary documentation for this!
6110
6111=cut
6112
6113# This example function resets $IN, $OUT itself
6114my $c_pipe = 0;
6115sub os2_get_fork_TTY { # A simplification of the following (and works without):
6116    local $\  = '';
6117    ( my $name = $0 ) =~ s,^.*[/\\],,s;
6118    my %opt = (	title => "Daughter Perl debugger $pids $name",
6119		($rl ? (read_by_key => 1) : ()) );
6120    require OS2::Process;
6121    my ($in, $out, $pid) = eval { OS2::Process::io_term(related => 0, %opt) }
6122      or return;
6123    $pidprompt = '';    # Shown anyway in titlebar
6124    reset_IN_OUT($in, $out);
6125    $tty = '*reset*';
6126    return '';          # Indicate that reset_IN_OUT is called
6127} ## end sub os2_get_fork_TTY
6128
6129=head3 C<macosx_get_fork_TTY>
6130
6131The Mac OS X version uses AppleScript to tell Terminal.app to create
6132a new window.
6133
6134=cut
6135
6136# Notes about Terminal.app's AppleScript support,
6137# (aka things that might break in future OS versions).
6138#
6139# The "do script" command doesn't return a reference to the new window
6140# it creates, but since it appears frontmost and windows are enumerated
6141# front to back, we can use "first window" === "window 1".
6142#
6143# Since "do script" is implemented by supplying the argument (plus a
6144# return character) as terminal input, there's a potential race condition
6145# where the debugger could beat the shell to reading the command.
6146# To prevent this, we wait for the screen to clear before proceeding.
6147#
6148# 10.3 and 10.4:
6149# There's no direct accessor for the tty device name, so we fiddle
6150# with the window title options until it says what we want.
6151#
6152# 10.5:
6153# There _is_ a direct accessor for the tty device name, _and_ there's
6154# a new possible component of the window title (the name of the settings
6155# set).  A separate version is needed.
6156
6157my @script_versions=
6158
6159    ([237, <<'__LEOPARD__'],
6160tell application "Terminal"
6161    do script "clear;exec sleep 100000"
6162    tell first tab of first window
6163        copy tty to thetty
6164        set custom title to "forked perl debugger"
6165        set title displays custom title to true
6166        repeat while (length of first paragraph of (get contents)) > 0
6167            delay 0.1
6168        end repeat
6169    end tell
6170end tell
6171thetty
6172__LEOPARD__
6173
6174     [100, <<'__JAGUAR_TIGER__'],
6175tell application "Terminal"
6176    do script "clear;exec sleep 100000"
6177    tell first window
6178        set title displays shell path to false
6179        set title displays window size to false
6180        set title displays file name to false
6181        set title displays device name to true
6182        set title displays custom title to true
6183        set custom title to ""
6184        copy "/dev/" & name to thetty
6185        set custom title to "forked perl debugger"
6186        repeat while (length of first paragraph of (get contents)) > 0
6187            delay 0.1
6188        end repeat
6189    end tell
6190end tell
6191thetty
6192__JAGUAR_TIGER__
6193
6194);
6195
6196sub macosx_get_fork_TTY
6197{
6198    my($version,$script,$pipe,$tty);
6199
6200    return unless $version=$ENV{TERM_PROGRAM_VERSION};
6201    foreach my $entry (@script_versions) {
6202	if ($version>=$entry->[0]) {
6203	    $script=$entry->[1];
6204	    last;
6205	}
6206    }
6207    return unless defined($script);
6208    return unless open($pipe,'-|','/usr/bin/osascript','-e',$script);
6209    $tty=readline($pipe);
6210    close($pipe);
6211    return unless defined($tty) && $tty =~ m(^/dev/);
6212    chomp $tty;
6213    return $tty;
6214}
6215
6216=head2 C<create_IN_OUT($flags)>
6217
6218Create a new pair of filehandles, pointing to a new TTY. If impossible,
6219try to diagnose why.
6220
6221Flags are:
6222
6223=over 4
6224
6225=item * 1 - Don't know how to create a new TTY.
6226
6227=item * 2 - Debugger has forked, but we can't get a new TTY.
6228
6229=item * 4 - standard debugger startup is happening.
6230
6231=back
6232
6233=cut
6234
6235sub create_IN_OUT {    # Create a window with IN/OUT handles redirected there
6236
6237    # If we know how to get a new TTY, do it! $in will have
6238    # the TTY name if get_fork_TTY works.
6239    my $in = &get_fork_TTY if defined &get_fork_TTY;
6240
6241    # It used to be that
6242    $in = $fork_TTY if defined $fork_TTY;    # Backward compatibility
6243
6244    if ( not defined $in ) {
6245        my $why = shift;
6246
6247        # We don't know how.
6248        print_help(<<EOP) if $why == 1;
6249I<#########> Forked, but do not know how to create a new B<TTY>. I<#########>
6250EOP
6251
6252        # Forked debugger.
6253        print_help(<<EOP) if $why == 2;
6254I<#########> Daughter session, do not know how to change a B<TTY>. I<#########>
6255  This may be an asynchronous session, so the parent debugger may be active.
6256EOP
6257
6258        # Note that both debuggers are fighting over the same input.
6259        print_help(<<EOP) if $why != 4;
6260  Since two debuggers fight for the same TTY, input is severely entangled.
6261
6262EOP
6263        print_help(<<EOP);
6264  I know how to switch the output to a different window in xterms, OS/2
6265  consoles, and Mac OS X Terminal.app only.  For a manual switch, put the name
6266  of the created I<TTY> in B<\$DB::fork_TTY>, or define a function
6267  B<DB::get_fork_TTY()> returning this.
6268
6269  On I<UNIX>-like systems one can get the name of a I<TTY> for the given window
6270  by typing B<tty>, and disconnect the I<shell> from I<TTY> by B<sleep 1000000>.
6271
6272EOP
6273    } ## end if (not defined $in)
6274    elsif ( $in ne '' ) {
6275        TTY($in);
6276    }
6277    else {
6278        $console = '';    # Indicate no need to open-from-the-console
6279    }
6280    undef $fork_TTY;
6281} ## end sub create_IN_OUT
6282
6283=head2 C<resetterm>
6284
6285Handles rejiggering the prompt when we've forked off a new debugger.
6286
6287If the new debugger happened because of a C<system()> that invoked a
6288program under the debugger, the arrow between the old pid and the new
6289in the prompt has I<two> dashes instead of one.
6290
6291We take the current list of pids and add this one to the end. If there
6292isn't any list yet, we make one up out of the initial pid associated with
6293the terminal and our new pid, sticking an arrow (either one-dashed or
6294two dashed) in between them.
6295
6296If C<CreateTTY> is off, or C<resetterm> was called with no arguments,
6297we don't try to create a new IN and OUT filehandle. Otherwise, we go ahead
6298and try to do that.
6299
6300=cut
6301
6302sub resetterm {    # We forked, so we need a different TTY
6303
6304    # Needs to be passed to create_IN_OUT() as well.
6305    my $in = shift;
6306
6307    # resetterm(2): got in here because of a system() starting a debugger.
6308    # resetterm(1): just forked.
6309    my $systemed = $in > 1 ? '-' : '';
6310
6311    # If there's already a list of pids, add this to the end.
6312    if ($pids) {
6313        $pids =~ s/\]/$systemed->$$]/;
6314    }
6315
6316    # No pid list. Time to make one.
6317    else {
6318        $pids = "[$term_pid->$$]";
6319    }
6320
6321    # The prompt we're going to be using for this debugger.
6322    $pidprompt = $pids;
6323
6324    # We now 0wnz this terminal.
6325    $term_pid = $$;
6326
6327    # Just return if we're not supposed to try to create a new TTY.
6328    return unless $CreateTTY & $in;
6329
6330    # Try to create a new IN/OUT pair.
6331    create_IN_OUT($in);
6332} ## end sub resetterm
6333
6334=head2 C<readline>
6335
6336First, we handle stuff in the typeahead buffer. If there is any, we shift off
6337the next line, print a message saying we got it, add it to the terminal
6338history (if possible), and return it.
6339
6340If there's nothing in the typeahead buffer, check the command filehandle stack.
6341If there are any filehandles there, read from the last one, and return the line
6342if we got one. If not, we pop the filehandle off and close it, and try the
6343next one up the stack.
6344
6345If we've emptied the filehandle stack, we check to see if we've got a socket
6346open, and we read that and return it if we do. If we don't, we just call the
6347core C<readline()> and return its value.
6348
6349=cut
6350
6351sub readline {
6352
6353    # Localize to prevent it from being smashed in the program being debugged.
6354    local $.;
6355
6356    # Pull a line out of the typeahead if there's stuff there.
6357    if (@typeahead) {
6358
6359        # How many lines left.
6360        my $left = @typeahead;
6361
6362        # Get the next line.
6363        my $got = shift @typeahead;
6364
6365        # Print a message saying we got input from the typeahead.
6366        local $\ = '';
6367        print $OUT "auto(-$left)", shift, $got, "\n";
6368
6369        # Add it to the terminal history (if possible).
6370        $term->AddHistory($got)
6371          if length($got) > 1
6372          and defined $term->Features->{addHistory};
6373        return $got;
6374    } ## end if (@typeahead)
6375
6376    # We really need to read some input. Turn off entry/exit trace and
6377    # return value printing.
6378    local $frame = 0;
6379    local $doret = -2;
6380
6381    # If there are stacked filehandles to read from ...
6382    while (@cmdfhs) {
6383
6384        # Read from the last one in the stack.
6385        my $line = CORE::readline( $cmdfhs[-1] );
6386
6387        # If we got a line ...
6388        defined $line
6389          ? ( print $OUT ">> $line" and return $line )    # Echo and return
6390          : close pop @cmdfhs;                            # Pop and close
6391    } ## end while (@cmdfhs)
6392
6393    # Nothing on the filehandle stack. Socket?
6394    if ( ref $OUT and UNIVERSAL::isa( $OUT, 'IO::Socket::INET' ) ) {
6395
6396        # Send anyting we have to send.
6397        $OUT->write( join( '', @_ ) );
6398
6399        # Receive anything there is to receive.
6400        $stuff;
6401        my $stuff = '';
6402        my $buf;
6403        do {
6404            $IN->recv( $buf = '', 2048 );   # XXX "what's wrong with sysread?"
6405                                            # XXX Don't know. You tell me.
6406        } while length $buf and ($stuff .= $buf) !~ /\n/;
6407
6408        # What we got.
6409        $stuff;
6410    } ## end if (ref $OUT and UNIVERSAL::isa...
6411
6412    # No socket. Just read from the terminal.
6413    else {
6414        $term->readline(@_);
6415    }
6416} ## end sub readline
6417
6418=head1 OPTIONS SUPPORT ROUTINES
6419
6420These routines handle listing and setting option values.
6421
6422=head2 C<dump_option> - list the current value of an option setting
6423
6424This routine uses C<option_val> to look up the value for an option.
6425It cleans up escaped single-quotes and then displays the option and
6426its value.
6427
6428=cut
6429
6430sub dump_option {
6431    my ( $opt, $val ) = @_;
6432    $val = option_val( $opt, 'N/A' );
6433    $val =~ s/([\\\'])/\\$1/g;
6434    printf $OUT "%20s = '%s'\n", $opt, $val;
6435} ## end sub dump_option
6436
6437sub options2remember {
6438    foreach my $k (@RememberOnROptions) {
6439        $option{$k} = option_val( $k, 'N/A' );
6440    }
6441    return %option;
6442}
6443
6444=head2 C<option_val> - find the current value of an option
6445
6446This can't just be a simple hash lookup because of the indirect way that
6447the option values are stored. Some are retrieved by calling a subroutine,
6448some are just variables.
6449
6450You must supply a default value to be used in case the option isn't set.
6451
6452=cut
6453
6454sub option_val {
6455    my ( $opt, $default ) = @_;
6456    my $val;
6457
6458    # Does this option exist, and is it a variable?
6459    # If so, retrieve the value via the value in %optionVars.
6460    if (    defined $optionVars{$opt}
6461        and defined ${ $optionVars{$opt} } )
6462    {
6463        $val = ${ $optionVars{$opt} };
6464    }
6465
6466    # Does this option exist, and it's a subroutine?
6467    # If so, call the subroutine via the ref in %optionAction
6468    # and capture the value.
6469    elsif ( defined $optionAction{$opt}
6470        and defined &{ $optionAction{$opt} } )
6471    {
6472        $val = &{ $optionAction{$opt} }();
6473    }
6474
6475    # If there's an action or variable for the supplied option,
6476    # but no value was set, use the default.
6477    elsif (defined $optionAction{$opt} and not defined $option{$opt}
6478        or defined $optionVars{$opt} and not defined ${ $optionVars{$opt} } )
6479    {
6480        $val = $default;
6481    }
6482
6483    # Otherwise, do the simple hash lookup.
6484    else {
6485        $val = $option{$opt};
6486    }
6487
6488    # If the value isn't defined, use the default.
6489    # Then return whatever the value is.
6490    $val = $default unless defined $val;
6491    $val;
6492} ## end sub option_val
6493
6494=head2 C<parse_options>
6495
6496Handles the parsing and execution of option setting/displaying commands.
6497
6498An option entered by itself is assumed to be I<set me to 1> (the default value)
6499if the option is a boolean one. If not, the user is prompted to enter a valid
6500value or to query the current value (via C<option? >).
6501
6502If C<option=value> is entered, we try to extract a quoted string from the
6503value (if it is quoted). If it's not, we just use the whole value as-is.
6504
6505We load any modules required to service this option, and then we set it: if
6506it just gets stuck in a variable, we do that; if there's a subroutine to
6507handle setting the option, we call that.
6508
6509Finally, if we're running in interactive mode, we display the effect of the
6510user's command back to the terminal, skipping this if we're setting things
6511during initialization.
6512
6513=cut
6514
6515sub parse_options {
6516    local ($_) = @_;
6517    local $\ = '';
6518
6519    # These options need a value. Don't allow them to be clobbered by accident.
6520    my %opt_needs_val = map { ( $_ => 1 ) } qw{
6521      dumpDepth arrayDepth hashDepth LineInfo maxTraceLen ornaments windowSize
6522      pager quote ReadLine recallCommand RemotePort ShellBang TTY CommandSet
6523    };
6524
6525    while (length) {
6526        my $val_defaulted;
6527
6528        # Clean off excess leading whitespace.
6529        s/^\s+// && next;
6530
6531        # Options are always all word characters, followed by a non-word
6532        # separator.
6533        s/^(\w+)(\W?)// or print( $OUT "Invalid option `$_'\n" ), last;
6534        my ( $opt, $sep ) = ( $1, $2 );
6535
6536        # Make sure that such an option exists.
6537        my $matches = grep( /^\Q$opt/ && ( $option = $_ ), @options )
6538          || grep( /^\Q$opt/i && ( $option = $_ ), @options );
6539
6540        print( $OUT "Unknown option `$opt'\n" ), next unless $matches;
6541        print( $OUT "Ambiguous option `$opt'\n" ), next if $matches > 1;
6542        my $val;
6543
6544        # '?' as separator means query, but must have whitespace after it.
6545        if ( "?" eq $sep ) {
6546            print( $OUT "Option query `$opt?' followed by non-space `$_'\n" ),
6547              last
6548              if /^\S/;
6549
6550            #&dump_option($opt);
6551        } ## end if ("?" eq $sep)
6552
6553        # Separator is whitespace (or just a carriage return).
6554        # They're going for a default, which we assume is 1.
6555        elsif ( $sep !~ /\S/ ) {
6556            $val_defaulted = 1;
6557            $val           = "1";   #  this is an evil default; make 'em set it!
6558        }
6559
6560        # Separator is =. Trying to set a value.
6561        elsif ( $sep eq "=" ) {
6562
6563            # If quoted, extract a quoted string.
6564            if (s/ (["']) ( (?: \\. | (?! \1 ) [^\\] )* ) \1 //x) {
6565                my $quote = $1;
6566                ( $val = $2 ) =~ s/\\([$quote\\])/$1/g;
6567            }
6568
6569            # Not quoted. Use the whole thing. Warn about 'option='.
6570            else {
6571                s/^(\S*)//;
6572                $val = $1;
6573                print OUT qq(Option better cleared using $opt=""\n)
6574                  unless length $val;
6575            } ## end else [ if (s/ (["']) ( (?: \\. | (?! \1 ) [^\\] )* ) \1 //x)
6576
6577        } ## end elsif ($sep eq "=")
6578
6579        # "Quoted" with [], <>, or {}.
6580        else {    #{ to "let some poor schmuck bounce on the % key in B<vi>."
6581            my ($end) =
6582              "\\" . substr( ")]>}$sep", index( "([<{", $sep ), 1 );    #}
6583            s/^(([^\\$end]|\\[\\$end])*)$end($|\s+)//
6584              or print( $OUT "Unclosed option value `$opt$sep$_'\n" ), last;
6585            ( $val = $1 ) =~ s/\\([\\$end])/$1/g;
6586        } ## end else [ if ("?" eq $sep)
6587
6588        # Exclude non-booleans from getting set to 1 by default.
6589        if ( $opt_needs_val{$option} && $val_defaulted ) {
6590            my $cmd = ( $CommandSet eq '580' ) ? 'o' : 'O';
6591            print $OUT
6592"Option `$opt' is non-boolean.  Use `$cmd $option=VAL' to set, `$cmd $option?' to query\n";
6593            next;
6594        } ## end if ($opt_needs_val{$option...
6595
6596        # Save the option value.
6597        $option{$option} = $val if defined $val;
6598
6599        # Load any module that this option requires.
6600        eval qq{
6601                local \$frame = 0;
6602                local \$doret = -2;
6603                require '$optionRequire{$option}';
6604                1;
6605               } || die    # XXX: shouldn't happen
6606          if defined $optionRequire{$option}
6607          && defined $val;
6608
6609        # Set it.
6610        # Stick it in the proper variable if it goes in a variable.
6611        ${ $optionVars{$option} } = $val
6612          if defined $optionVars{$option}
6613          && defined $val;
6614
6615        # Call the appropriate sub if it gets set via sub.
6616        &{ $optionAction{$option} }($val)
6617          if defined $optionAction{$option}
6618          && defined &{ $optionAction{$option} }
6619          && defined $val;
6620
6621        # Not initialization - echo the value we set it to.
6622        dump_option($option) unless $OUT eq \*STDERR;
6623    } ## end while (length)
6624} ## end sub parse_options
6625
6626=head1 RESTART SUPPORT
6627
6628These routines are used to store (and restore) lists of items in environment
6629variables during a restart.
6630
6631=head2 set_list
6632
6633Set_list packages up items to be stored in a set of environment variables
6634(VAR_n, containing the number of items, and VAR_0, VAR_1, etc., containing
6635the values). Values outside the standard ASCII charset are stored by encoding
6636then as hexadecimal values.
6637
6638=cut
6639
6640sub set_list {
6641    my ( $stem, @list ) = @_;
6642    my $val;
6643
6644    # VAR_n: how many we have. Scalar assignment gets the number of items.
6645    $ENV{"${stem}_n"} = @list;
6646
6647    # Grab each item in the list, escape the backslashes, encode the non-ASCII
6648    # as hex, and then save in the appropriate VAR_0, VAR_1, etc.
6649    for $i ( 0 .. $#list ) {
6650        $val = $list[$i];
6651        $val =~ s/\\/\\\\/g;
6652        $val =~ s/([\0-\37\177\200-\377])/"\\0x" . unpack('H2',$1)/eg;
6653        $ENV{"${stem}_$i"} = $val;
6654    } ## end for $i (0 .. $#list)
6655} ## end sub set_list
6656
6657=head2 get_list
6658
6659Reverse the set_list operation: grab VAR_n to see how many we should be getting
6660back, and then pull VAR_0, VAR_1. etc. back out.
6661
6662=cut 
6663
6664sub get_list {
6665    my $stem = shift;
6666    my @list;
6667    my $n = delete $ENV{"${stem}_n"};
6668    my $val;
6669    for $i ( 0 .. $n - 1 ) {
6670        $val = delete $ENV{"${stem}_$i"};
6671        $val =~ s/\\((\\)|0x(..))/ $2 ? $2 : pack('H2', $3) /ge;
6672        push @list, $val;
6673    }
6674    @list;
6675} ## end sub get_list
6676
6677=head1 MISCELLANEOUS SIGNAL AND I/O MANAGEMENT
6678
6679=head2 catch()
6680
6681The C<catch()> subroutine is the essence of fast and low-impact. We simply
6682set an already-existing global scalar variable to a constant value. This
6683avoids allocating any memory possibly in the middle of something that will
6684get all confused if we do, particularly under I<unsafe signals>.
6685
6686=cut
6687
6688sub catch {
6689    $signal = 1;
6690    return;    # Put nothing on the stack - malloc/free land!
6691}
6692
6693=head2 C<warn()>
6694
6695C<warn> emits a warning, by joining together its arguments and printing
6696them, with couple of fillips.
6697
6698If the composited message I<doesn't> end with a newline, we automatically
6699add C<$!> and a newline to the end of the message. The subroutine expects $OUT
6700to be set to the filehandle to be used to output warnings; it makes no
6701assumptions about what filehandles are available.
6702
6703=cut
6704
6705sub warn {
6706    my ($msg) = join( "", @_ );
6707    $msg .= ": $!\n" unless $msg =~ /\n$/;
6708    local $\ = '';
6709    print $OUT $msg;
6710} ## end sub warn
6711
6712=head1 INITIALIZATION TTY SUPPORT
6713
6714=head2 C<reset_IN_OUT>
6715
6716This routine handles restoring the debugger's input and output filehandles
6717after we've tried and failed to move them elsewhere.  In addition, it assigns
6718the debugger's output filehandle to $LINEINFO if it was already open there.
6719
6720=cut
6721
6722sub reset_IN_OUT {
6723    my $switch_li = $LINEINFO eq $OUT;
6724
6725    # If there's a term and it's able to get a new tty, try to get one.
6726    if ( $term and $term->Features->{newTTY} ) {
6727        ( $IN, $OUT ) = ( shift, shift );
6728        $term->newTTY( $IN, $OUT );
6729    }
6730
6731    # This term can't get a new tty now. Better luck later.
6732    elsif ($term) {
6733        &warn("Too late to set IN/OUT filehandles, enabled on next `R'!\n");
6734    }
6735
6736    # Set the filehndles up as they were.
6737    else {
6738        ( $IN, $OUT ) = ( shift, shift );
6739    }
6740
6741    # Unbuffer the output filehandle.
6742    my $o = select $OUT;
6743    $| = 1;
6744    select $o;
6745
6746    # Point LINEINFO to the same output filehandle if it was there before.
6747    $LINEINFO = $OUT if $switch_li;
6748} ## end sub reset_IN_OUT
6749
6750=head1 OPTION SUPPORT ROUTINES
6751
6752The following routines are used to process some of the more complicated
6753debugger options.
6754
6755=head2 C<TTY>
6756
6757Sets the input and output filehandles to the specified files or pipes.
6758If the terminal supports switching, we go ahead and do it. If not, and
6759there's already a terminal in place, we save the information to take effect
6760on restart.
6761
6762If there's no terminal yet (for instance, during debugger initialization),
6763we go ahead and set C<$console> and C<$tty> to the file indicated.
6764
6765=cut
6766
6767sub TTY {
6768
6769    # With VMS we can get here with $term undefined, so we do not
6770    # switch to this terminal.  There may be a better place to make
6771    # sure that $term is defined on VMS
6772    if ( @_ and ($^O eq 'VMS') and !defined($term) ) {
6773	eval { require Term::ReadLine } or die $@;
6774        if ( !$rl ) {
6775	    $term = new Term::ReadLine::Stub 'perldb', $IN, $OUT;
6776	}
6777	else {
6778	    $term = new Term::ReadLine 'perldb', $IN, $OUT;
6779	}
6780    }
6781    if ( @_ and $term and $term->Features->{newTTY} ) {
6782
6783        # This terminal supports switching to a new TTY.
6784        # Can be a list of two files, or on string containing both names,
6785        # comma-separated.
6786        # XXX Should this perhaps be an assignment from @_?
6787        my ( $in, $out ) = shift;
6788        if ( $in =~ /,/ ) {
6789
6790            # Split list apart if supplied.
6791            ( $in, $out ) = split /,/, $in, 2;
6792        }
6793        else {
6794
6795            # Use the same file for both input and output.
6796            $out = $in;
6797        }
6798
6799        # Open file onto the debugger's filehandles, if you can.
6800        open IN,  $in     or die "cannot open `$in' for read: $!";
6801        open OUT, ">$out" or die "cannot open `$out' for write: $!";
6802
6803        # Swap to the new filehandles.
6804        reset_IN_OUT( \*IN, \*OUT );
6805
6806        # Save the setting for later.
6807        return $tty = $in;
6808    } ## end if (@_ and $term and $term...
6809
6810    # Terminal doesn't support new TTY, or doesn't support readline.
6811    # Can't do it now, try restarting.
6812    &warn("Too late to set TTY, enabled on next `R'!\n") if $term and @_;
6813
6814    # Useful if done through PERLDB_OPTS:
6815    $console = $tty = shift if @_;
6816
6817    # Return whatever the TTY is.
6818    $tty or $console;
6819} ## end sub TTY
6820
6821=head2 C<noTTY>
6822
6823Sets the C<$notty> global, controlling whether or not the debugger tries to
6824get a terminal to read from. If called after a terminal is already in place,
6825we save the value to use it if we're restarted.
6826
6827=cut
6828
6829sub noTTY {
6830    if ($term) {
6831        &warn("Too late to set noTTY, enabled on next `R'!\n") if @_;
6832    }
6833    $notty = shift if @_;
6834    $notty;
6835} ## end sub noTTY
6836
6837=head2 C<ReadLine>
6838
6839Sets the C<$rl> option variable. If 0, we use C<Term::ReadLine::Stub>
6840(essentially, no C<readline> processing on this I<terminal>). Otherwise, we
6841use C<Term::ReadLine>. Can't be changed after a terminal's in place; we save
6842the value in case a restart is done so we can change it then.
6843
6844=cut
6845
6846sub ReadLine {
6847    if ($term) {
6848        &warn("Too late to set ReadLine, enabled on next `R'!\n") if @_;
6849    }
6850    $rl = shift if @_;
6851    $rl;
6852} ## end sub ReadLine
6853
6854=head2 C<RemotePort>
6855
6856Sets the port that the debugger will try to connect to when starting up.
6857If the terminal's already been set up, we can't do it, but we remember the
6858setting in case the user does a restart.
6859
6860=cut
6861
6862sub RemotePort {
6863    if ($term) {
6864        &warn("Too late to set RemotePort, enabled on next 'R'!\n") if @_;
6865    }
6866    $remoteport = shift if @_;
6867    $remoteport;
6868} ## end sub RemotePort
6869
6870=head2 C<tkRunning>
6871
6872Checks with the terminal to see if C<Tk> is running, and returns true or
6873false. Returns false if the current terminal doesn't support C<readline>.
6874
6875=cut
6876
6877sub tkRunning {
6878    if ( ${ $term->Features }{tkRunning} ) {
6879        return $term->tkRunning(@_);
6880    }
6881    else {
6882        local $\ = '';
6883        print $OUT "tkRunning not supported by current ReadLine package.\n";
6884        0;
6885    }
6886} ## end sub tkRunning
6887
6888=head2 C<NonStop>
6889
6890Sets nonstop mode. If a terminal's already been set up, it's too late; the
6891debugger remembers the setting in case you restart, though.
6892
6893=cut
6894
6895sub NonStop {
6896    if ($term) {
6897        &warn("Too late to set up NonStop mode, enabled on next `R'!\n")
6898          if @_;
6899    }
6900    $runnonstop = shift if @_;
6901    $runnonstop;
6902} ## end sub NonStop
6903
6904sub DollarCaretP {
6905    if ($term) {
6906        &warn("Some flag changes could not take effect until next 'R'!\n")
6907          if @_;
6908    }
6909    $^P = parse_DollarCaretP_flags(shift) if @_;
6910    expand_DollarCaretP_flags($^P);
6911}
6912
6913=head2 C<pager>
6914
6915Set up the C<$pager> variable. Adds a pipe to the front unless there's one
6916there already.
6917
6918=cut
6919
6920sub pager {
6921    if (@_) {
6922        $pager = shift;
6923        $pager = "|" . $pager unless $pager =~ /^(\+?\>|\|)/;
6924    }
6925    $pager;
6926} ## end sub pager
6927
6928=head2 C<shellBang>
6929
6930Sets the shell escape command, and generates a printable copy to be used
6931in the help.
6932
6933=cut
6934
6935sub shellBang {
6936
6937    # If we got an argument, meta-quote it, and add '\b' if it
6938    # ends in a word character.
6939    if (@_) {
6940        $sh = quotemeta shift;
6941        $sh .= "\\b" if $sh =~ /\w$/;
6942    }
6943
6944    # Generate the printable version for the help:
6945    $psh = $sh;    # copy it
6946    $psh =~ s/\\b$//;        # Take off trailing \b if any
6947    $psh =~ s/\\(.)/$1/g;    # De-escape
6948    $psh;                    # return the printable version
6949} ## end sub shellBang
6950
6951=head2 C<ornaments>
6952
6953If the terminal has its own ornaments, fetch them. Otherwise accept whatever
6954was passed as the argument. (This means you can't override the terminal's
6955ornaments.)
6956
6957=cut 
6958
6959sub ornaments {
6960    if ( defined $term ) {
6961
6962        # We don't want to show warning backtraces, but we do want die() ones.
6963        local ( $warnLevel, $dieLevel ) = ( 0, 1 );
6964
6965        # No ornaments if the terminal doesn't support them.
6966        return '' unless $term->Features->{ornaments};
6967        eval { $term->ornaments(@_) } || '';
6968    }
6969
6970    # Use what was passed in if we can't determine it ourselves.
6971    else {
6972        $ornaments = shift;
6973    }
6974} ## end sub ornaments
6975
6976=head2 C<recallCommand>
6977
6978Sets the recall command, and builds a printable version which will appear in
6979the help text.
6980
6981=cut
6982
6983sub recallCommand {
6984
6985    # If there is input, metaquote it. Add '\b' if it ends with a word
6986    # character.
6987    if (@_) {
6988        $rc = quotemeta shift;
6989        $rc .= "\\b" if $rc =~ /\w$/;
6990    }
6991
6992    # Build it into a printable version.
6993    $prc = $rc;    # Copy it
6994    $prc =~ s/\\b$//;        # Remove trailing \b
6995    $prc =~ s/\\(.)/$1/g;    # Remove escapes
6996    $prc;                    # Return the printable version
6997} ## end sub recallCommand
6998
6999=head2 C<LineInfo> - where the line number information goes
7000
7001Called with no arguments, returns the file or pipe that line info should go to.
7002
7003Called with an argument (a file or a pipe), it opens that onto the
7004C<LINEINFO> filehandle, unbuffers the filehandle, and then returns the
7005file or pipe again to the caller.
7006
7007=cut
7008
7009sub LineInfo {
7010    return $lineinfo unless @_;
7011    $lineinfo = shift;
7012
7013    #  If this is a valid "thing to be opened for output", tack a
7014    # '>' onto the front.
7015    my $stream = ( $lineinfo =~ /^(\+?\>|\|)/ ) ? $lineinfo : ">$lineinfo";
7016
7017    # If this is a pipe, the stream points to a slave editor.
7018    $slave_editor = ( $stream =~ /^\|/ );
7019
7020    # Open it up and unbuffer it.
7021    open( LINEINFO, "$stream" ) || &warn("Cannot open `$stream' for write");
7022    $LINEINFO = \*LINEINFO;
7023    my $save = select($LINEINFO);
7024    $| = 1;
7025    select($save);
7026
7027    # Hand the file or pipe back again.
7028    $lineinfo;
7029} ## end sub LineInfo
7030
7031=head1 COMMAND SUPPORT ROUTINES
7032
7033These subroutines provide functionality for various commands.
7034
7035=head2 C<list_modules>
7036
7037For the C<M> command: list modules loaded and their versions.
7038Essentially just runs through the keys in %INC, picks each package's
7039C<$VERSION> variable, gets the file name, and formats the information
7040for output.
7041
7042=cut
7043
7044sub list_modules {    # versions
7045    my %version;
7046    my $file;
7047
7048    # keys are the "as-loaded" name, values are the fully-qualified path
7049    # to the file itself.
7050    for ( keys %INC ) {
7051        $file = $_;                                # get the module name
7052        s,\.p[lm]$,,i;                             # remove '.pl' or '.pm'
7053        s,/,::,g;                                  # change '/' to '::'
7054        s/^perl5db$/DB/;                           # Special case: debugger
7055                                                   # moves to package DB
7056        s/^Term::ReadLine::readline$/readline/;    # simplify readline
7057
7058        # If the package has a $VERSION package global (as all good packages
7059        # should!) decode it and save as partial message.
7060        if ( defined ${ $_ . '::VERSION' } ) {
7061            $version{$file} = "${ $_ . '::VERSION' } from ";
7062        }
7063
7064        # Finish up the message with the file the package came from.
7065        $version{$file} .= $INC{$file};
7066    } ## end for (keys %INC)
7067
7068    # Hey, dumpit() formats a hash nicely, so why not use it?
7069    dumpit( $OUT, \%version );
7070} ## end sub list_modules
7071
7072=head2 C<sethelp()>
7073
7074Sets up the monster string used to format and print the help.
7075
7076=head3 HELP MESSAGE FORMAT
7077
7078The help message is a peculiar format unto itself; it mixes C<pod> I<ornaments>
7079(C<< B<> >> C<< I<> >>) with tabs to come up with a format that's fairly
7080easy to parse and portable, but which still allows the help to be a little
7081nicer than just plain text.
7082
7083Essentially, you define the command name (usually marked up with C<< B<> >>
7084and C<< I<> >>), followed by a tab, and then the descriptive text, ending in a
7085newline. The descriptive text can also be marked up in the same way. If you
7086need to continue the descriptive text to another line, start that line with
7087just tabs and then enter the marked-up text.
7088
7089If you are modifying the help text, I<be careful>. The help-string parser is
7090not very sophisticated, and if you don't follow these rules it will mangle the
7091help beyond hope until you fix the string.
7092
7093=cut
7094
7095sub sethelp {
7096
7097    # XXX: make sure there are tabs between the command and explanation,
7098    #      or print_help will screw up your formatting if you have
7099    #      eeevil ornaments enabled.  This is an insane mess.
7100
7101    $help = "
7102Help is currently only available for the new 5.8 command set.
7103No help is available for the old command set.
7104We assume you know what you're doing if you switch to it.
7105
7106B<T>        Stack trace.
7107B<s> [I<expr>]    Single step [in I<expr>].
7108B<n> [I<expr>]    Next, steps over subroutine calls [in I<expr>].
7109<B<CR>>        Repeat last B<n> or B<s> command.
7110B<r>        Return from current subroutine.
7111B<c> [I<line>|I<sub>]    Continue; optionally inserts a one-time-only breakpoint
7112        at the specified position.
7113B<l> I<min>B<+>I<incr>    List I<incr>+1 lines starting at I<min>.
7114B<l> I<min>B<->I<max>    List lines I<min> through I<max>.
7115B<l> I<line>        List single I<line>.
7116B<l> I<subname>    List first window of lines from subroutine.
7117B<l> I<\$var>        List first window of lines from subroutine referenced by I<\$var>.
7118B<l>        List next window of lines.
7119B<->        List previous window of lines.
7120B<v> [I<line>]    View window around I<line>.
7121B<.>        Return to the executed line.
7122B<f> I<filename>    Switch to viewing I<filename>. File must be already loaded.
7123        I<filename> may be either the full name of the file, or a regular
7124        expression matching the full file name:
7125        B<f> I</home/me/foo.pl> and B<f> I<oo\\.> may access the same file.
7126        Evals (with saved bodies) are considered to be filenames:
7127        B<f> I<(eval 7)> and B<f> I<eval 7\\b> access the body of the 7th eval
7128        (in the order of execution).
7129B</>I<pattern>B</>    Search forwards for I<pattern>; final B</> is optional.
7130B<?>I<pattern>B<?>    Search backwards for I<pattern>; final B<?> is optional.
7131B<L> [I<a|b|w>]        List actions and or breakpoints and or watch-expressions.
7132B<S> [[B<!>]I<pattern>]    List subroutine names [not] matching I<pattern>.
7133B<t>        Toggle trace mode.
7134B<t> I<expr>        Trace through execution of I<expr>.
7135B<b>        Sets breakpoint on current line)
7136B<b> [I<line>] [I<condition>]
7137        Set breakpoint; I<line> defaults to the current execution line;
7138        I<condition> breaks if it evaluates to true, defaults to '1'.
7139B<b> I<subname> [I<condition>]
7140        Set breakpoint at first line of subroutine.
7141B<b> I<\$var>        Set breakpoint at first line of subroutine referenced by I<\$var>.
7142B<b> B<load> I<filename> Set breakpoint on 'require'ing the given file.
7143B<b> B<postpone> I<subname> [I<condition>]
7144        Set breakpoint at first line of subroutine after
7145        it is compiled.
7146B<b> B<compile> I<subname>
7147        Stop after the subroutine is compiled.
7148B<B> [I<line>]    Delete the breakpoint for I<line>.
7149B<B> I<*>             Delete all breakpoints.
7150B<a> [I<line>] I<command>
7151        Set an action to be done before the I<line> is executed;
7152        I<line> defaults to the current execution line.
7153        Sequence is: check for breakpoint/watchpoint, print line
7154        if necessary, do action, prompt user if necessary,
7155        execute line.
7156B<a>        Does nothing
7157B<A> [I<line>]    Delete the action for I<line>.
7158B<A> I<*>             Delete all actions.
7159B<w> I<expr>        Add a global watch-expression.
7160B<w>             Does nothing
7161B<W> I<expr>        Delete a global watch-expression.
7162B<W> I<*>             Delete all watch-expressions.
7163B<V> [I<pkg> [I<vars>]]    List some (default all) variables in package (default current).
7164        Use B<~>I<pattern> and B<!>I<pattern> for positive and negative regexps.
7165B<X> [I<vars>]    Same as \"B<V> I<currentpackage> [I<vars>]\".
7166B<x> I<expr>        Evals expression in list context, dumps the result.
7167B<m> I<expr>        Evals expression in list context, prints methods callable
7168        on the first element of the result.
7169B<m> I<class>        Prints methods callable via the given class.
7170B<M>        Show versions of loaded modules.
7171B<i> I<class>       Prints nested parents of given class.
7172B<e>         Display current thread id.
7173B<E>         Display all thread ids the current one will be identified: <n>.
7174B<y> [I<n> [I<Vars>]]   List lexicals in higher scope <n>.  Vars same as B<V>.
7175
7176B<<> ?            List Perl commands to run before each prompt.
7177B<<> I<expr>        Define Perl command to run before each prompt.
7178B<<<> I<expr>        Add to the list of Perl commands to run before each prompt.
7179B<< *>                Delete the list of perl commands to run before each prompt.
7180B<>> ?            List Perl commands to run after each prompt.
7181B<>> I<expr>        Define Perl command to run after each prompt.
7182B<>>B<>> I<expr>        Add to the list of Perl commands to run after each prompt.
7183B<>>B< *>        Delete the list of Perl commands to run after each prompt.
7184B<{> I<db_command>    Define debugger command to run before each prompt.
7185B<{> ?            List debugger commands to run before each prompt.
7186B<{{> I<db_command>    Add to the list of debugger commands to run before each prompt.
7187B<{ *>             Delete the list of debugger commands to run before each prompt.
7188B<$prc> I<number>    Redo a previous command (default previous command).
7189B<$prc> I<-number>    Redo number'th-to-last command.
7190B<$prc> I<pattern>    Redo last command that started with I<pattern>.
7191        See 'B<O> I<recallCommand>' too.
7192B<$psh$psh> I<cmd>      Run cmd in a subprocess (reads from DB::IN, writes to DB::OUT)"
7193      . (
7194        $rc eq $sh
7195        ? ""
7196        : "
7197B<$psh> [I<cmd>] Run I<cmd> in subshell (forces \"\$SHELL -c 'cmd'\")."
7198      ) . "
7199        See 'B<O> I<shellBang>' too.
7200B<source> I<file>     Execute I<file> containing debugger commands (may nest).
7201B<save> I<file>       Save current debugger session (actual history) to I<file>.
7202B<rerun>           Rerun session to current position.
7203B<rerun> I<n>         Rerun session to numbered command.
7204B<rerun> I<-n>        Rerun session to number'th-to-last command.
7205B<H> I<-number>    Display last number commands (default all).
7206B<H> I<*>          Delete complete history.
7207B<p> I<expr>        Same as \"I<print {DB::OUT} expr>\" in current package.
7208B<|>I<dbcmd>        Run debugger command, piping DB::OUT to current pager.
7209B<||>I<dbcmd>        Same as B<|>I<dbcmd> but DB::OUT is temporarilly select()ed as well.
7210B<\=> [I<alias> I<value>]    Define a command alias, or list current aliases.
7211I<command>        Execute as a perl statement in current package.
7212B<R>        Pure-man-restart of debugger, some of debugger state
7213        and command-line options may be lost.
7214        Currently the following settings are preserved:
7215        history, breakpoints and actions, debugger B<O>ptions
7216        and the following command-line options: I<-w>, I<-I>, I<-e>.
7217
7218B<o> [I<opt>] ...    Set boolean option to true
7219B<o> [I<opt>B<?>]    Query options
7220B<o> [I<opt>B<=>I<val>] [I<opt>=B<\">I<val>B<\">] ...
7221        Set options.  Use quotes if spaces in value.
7222    I<recallCommand>, I<ShellBang>    chars used to recall command or spawn shell;
7223    I<pager>            program for output of \"|cmd\";
7224    I<tkRunning>            run Tk while prompting (with ReadLine);
7225    I<signalLevel> I<warnLevel> I<dieLevel>    level of verbosity;
7226    I<inhibit_exit>        Allows stepping off the end of the script.
7227    I<ImmediateStop>        Debugger should stop as early as possible.
7228    I<RemotePort>            Remote hostname:port for remote debugging
7229  The following options affect what happens with B<V>, B<X>, and B<x> commands:
7230    I<arrayDepth>, I<hashDepth>     print only first N elements ('' for all);
7231    I<compactDump>, I<veryCompact>     change style of array and hash dump;
7232    I<globPrint>             whether to print contents of globs;
7233    I<DumpDBFiles>         dump arrays holding debugged files;
7234    I<DumpPackages>         dump symbol tables of packages;
7235    I<DumpReused>             dump contents of \"reused\" addresses;
7236    I<quote>, I<HighBit>, I<undefPrint>     change style of string dump;
7237    I<bareStringify>         Do not print the overload-stringified value;
7238  Other options include:
7239    I<PrintRet>        affects printing of return value after B<r> command,
7240    I<frame>        affects printing messages on subroutine entry/exit.
7241    I<AutoTrace>    affects printing messages on possible breaking points.
7242    I<maxTraceLen>    gives max length of evals/args listed in stack trace.
7243    I<ornaments>     affects screen appearance of the command line.
7244    I<CreateTTY>     bits control attempts to create a new TTY on events:
7245            1: on fork()    2: debugger is started inside debugger
7246            4: on startup
7247    During startup options are initialized from \$ENV{PERLDB_OPTS}.
7248    You can put additional initialization options I<TTY>, I<noTTY>,
7249    I<ReadLine>, I<NonStop>, and I<RemotePort> there (or use
7250    `B<R>' after you set them).
7251
7252B<q> or B<^D>        Quit. Set B<\$DB::finished = 0> to debug global destruction.
7253B<h>        Summary of debugger commands.
7254B<h> [I<db_command>]    Get help [on a specific debugger command], enter B<|h> to page.
7255B<h h>        Long help for debugger commands
7256B<$doccmd> I<manpage>    Runs the external doc viewer B<$doccmd> command on the
7257        named Perl I<manpage>, or on B<$doccmd> itself if omitted.
7258        Set B<\$DB::doccmd> to change viewer.
7259
7260Type `|h h' for a paged display if this was too hard to read.
7261
7262";    # Fix balance of vi % matching: }}}}
7263
7264    #  note: tabs in the following section are not-so-helpful
7265    $summary = <<"END_SUM";
7266I<List/search source lines:>               I<Control script execution:>
7267  B<l> [I<ln>|I<sub>]  List source code            B<T>           Stack trace
7268  B<-> or B<.>      List previous/current line  B<s> [I<expr>]    Single step [in expr]
7269  B<v> [I<line>]    View around line            B<n> [I<expr>]    Next, steps over subs
7270  B<f> I<filename>  View source in file         <B<CR>/B<Enter>>  Repeat last B<n> or B<s>
7271  B</>I<pattern>B</> B<?>I<patt>B<?>   Search forw/backw    B<r>           Return from subroutine
7272  B<M>           Show module versions        B<c> [I<ln>|I<sub>]  Continue until position
7273I<Debugger controls:>                        B<L>           List break/watch/actions
7274  B<o> [...]     Set debugger options        B<t> [I<expr>]    Toggle trace [trace expr]
7275  B<<>[B<<>]|B<{>[B<{>]|B<>>[B<>>] [I<cmd>] Do pre/post-prompt B<b> [I<ln>|I<event>|I<sub>] [I<cnd>] Set breakpoint
7276  B<$prc> [I<N>|I<pat>]   Redo a previous command     B<B> I<ln|*>      Delete a/all breakpoints
7277  B<H> [I<-num>]    Display last num commands   B<a> [I<ln>] I<cmd>  Do cmd before line
7278  B<=> [I<a> I<val>]   Define/list an alias        B<A> I<ln|*>      Delete a/all actions
7279  B<h> [I<db_cmd>]  Get help on command         B<w> I<expr>      Add a watch expression
7280  B<h h>         Complete help page          B<W> I<expr|*>    Delete a/all watch exprs
7281  B<|>[B<|>]I<db_cmd>  Send output to pager        B<$psh>\[B<$psh>\] I<syscmd> Run cmd in a subprocess
7282  B<q> or B<^D>     Quit                        B<R>           Attempt a restart
7283I<Data Examination:>     B<expr>     Execute perl code, also see: B<s>,B<n>,B<t> I<expr>
7284  B<x>|B<m> I<expr>       Evals expr in list context, dumps the result or lists methods.
7285  B<p> I<expr>         Print expression (uses script's current package).
7286  B<S> [[B<!>]I<pat>]     List subroutine names [not] matching pattern
7287  B<V> [I<Pk> [I<Vars>]]  List Variables in Package.  Vars can be ~pattern or !pattern.
7288  B<X> [I<Vars>]       Same as \"B<V> I<current_package> [I<Vars>]\".  B<i> I<class> inheritance tree.
7289  B<y> [I<n> [I<Vars>]]   List lexicals in higher scope <n>.  Vars same as B<V>.
7290  B<e>     Display thread id     B<E> Display all thread ids.
7291For more help, type B<h> I<cmd_letter>, or run B<$doccmd perldebug> for all docs.
7292END_SUM
7293
7294    # ')}}; # Fix balance of vi % matching
7295
7296    # and this is really numb...
7297    $pre580_help = "
7298B<T>        Stack trace.
7299B<s> [I<expr>]    Single step [in I<expr>].
7300B<n> [I<expr>]    Next, steps over subroutine calls [in I<expr>].
7301B<CR>>        Repeat last B<n> or B<s> command.
7302B<r>        Return from current subroutine.
7303B<c> [I<line>|I<sub>]    Continue; optionally inserts a one-time-only breakpoint
7304        at the specified position.
7305B<l> I<min>B<+>I<incr>    List I<incr>+1 lines starting at I<min>.
7306B<l> I<min>B<->I<max>    List lines I<min> through I<max>.
7307B<l> I<line>        List single I<line>.
7308B<l> I<subname>    List first window of lines from subroutine.
7309B<l> I<\$var>        List first window of lines from subroutine referenced by I<\$var>.
7310B<l>        List next window of lines.
7311B<->        List previous window of lines.
7312B<w> [I<line>]    List window around I<line>.
7313B<.>        Return to the executed line.
7314B<f> I<filename>    Switch to viewing I<filename>. File must be already loaded.
7315        I<filename> may be either the full name of the file, or a regular
7316        expression matching the full file name:
7317        B<f> I</home/me/foo.pl> and B<f> I<oo\\.> may access the same file.
7318        Evals (with saved bodies) are considered to be filenames:
7319        B<f> I<(eval 7)> and B<f> I<eval 7\\b> access the body of the 7th eval
7320        (in the order of execution).
7321B</>I<pattern>B</>    Search forwards for I<pattern>; final B</> is optional.
7322B<?>I<pattern>B<?>    Search backwards for I<pattern>; final B<?> is optional.
7323B<L>        List all breakpoints and actions.
7324B<S> [[B<!>]I<pattern>]    List subroutine names [not] matching I<pattern>.
7325B<t>        Toggle trace mode.
7326B<t> I<expr>        Trace through execution of I<expr>.
7327B<b> [I<line>] [I<condition>]
7328        Set breakpoint; I<line> defaults to the current execution line;
7329        I<condition> breaks if it evaluates to true, defaults to '1'.
7330B<b> I<subname> [I<condition>]
7331        Set breakpoint at first line of subroutine.
7332B<b> I<\$var>        Set breakpoint at first line of subroutine referenced by I<\$var>.
7333B<b> B<load> I<filename> Set breakpoint on `require'ing the given file.
7334B<b> B<postpone> I<subname> [I<condition>]
7335        Set breakpoint at first line of subroutine after
7336        it is compiled.
7337B<b> B<compile> I<subname>
7338        Stop after the subroutine is compiled.
7339B<d> [I<line>]    Delete the breakpoint for I<line>.
7340B<D>        Delete all breakpoints.
7341B<a> [I<line>] I<command>
7342        Set an action to be done before the I<line> is executed;
7343        I<line> defaults to the current execution line.
7344        Sequence is: check for breakpoint/watchpoint, print line
7345        if necessary, do action, prompt user if necessary,
7346        execute line.
7347B<a> [I<line>]    Delete the action for I<line>.
7348B<A>        Delete all actions.
7349B<W> I<expr>        Add a global watch-expression.
7350B<W>        Delete all watch-expressions.
7351B<V> [I<pkg> [I<vars>]]    List some (default all) variables in package (default current).
7352        Use B<~>I<pattern> and B<!>I<pattern> for positive and negative regexps.
7353B<X> [I<vars>]    Same as \"B<V> I<currentpackage> [I<vars>]\".
7354B<x> I<expr>        Evals expression in list context, dumps the result.
7355B<m> I<expr>        Evals expression in list context, prints methods callable
7356        on the first element of the result.
7357B<m> I<class>        Prints methods callable via the given class.
7358
7359B<<> ?            List Perl commands to run before each prompt.
7360B<<> I<expr>        Define Perl command to run before each prompt.
7361B<<<> I<expr>        Add to the list of Perl commands to run before each prompt.
7362B<>> ?            List Perl commands to run after each prompt.
7363B<>> I<expr>        Define Perl command to run after each prompt.
7364B<>>B<>> I<expr>        Add to the list of Perl commands to run after each prompt.
7365B<{> I<db_command>    Define debugger command to run before each prompt.
7366B<{> ?            List debugger commands to run before each prompt.
7367B<{{> I<db_command>    Add to the list of debugger commands to run before each prompt.
7368B<$prc> I<number>    Redo a previous command (default previous command).
7369B<$prc> I<-number>    Redo number'th-to-last command.
7370B<$prc> I<pattern>    Redo last command that started with I<pattern>.
7371        See 'B<O> I<recallCommand>' too.
7372B<$psh$psh> I<cmd>      Run cmd in a subprocess (reads from DB::IN, writes to DB::OUT)"
7373      . (
7374        $rc eq $sh
7375        ? ""
7376        : "
7377B<$psh> [I<cmd>]     Run I<cmd> in subshell (forces \"\$SHELL -c 'cmd'\")."
7378      ) . "
7379        See 'B<O> I<shellBang>' too.
7380B<source> I<file>        Execute I<file> containing debugger commands (may nest).
7381B<H> I<-number>    Display last number commands (default all).
7382B<p> I<expr>        Same as \"I<print {DB::OUT} expr>\" in current package.
7383B<|>I<dbcmd>        Run debugger command, piping DB::OUT to current pager.
7384B<||>I<dbcmd>        Same as B<|>I<dbcmd> but DB::OUT is temporarilly select()ed as well.
7385B<\=> [I<alias> I<value>]    Define a command alias, or list current aliases.
7386I<command>        Execute as a perl statement in current package.
7387B<v>        Show versions of loaded modules.
7388B<R>        Pure-man-restart of debugger, some of debugger state
7389        and command-line options may be lost.
7390        Currently the following settings are preserved:
7391        history, breakpoints and actions, debugger B<O>ptions
7392        and the following command-line options: I<-w>, I<-I>, I<-e>.
7393
7394B<O> [I<opt>] ...    Set boolean option to true
7395B<O> [I<opt>B<?>]    Query options
7396B<O> [I<opt>B<=>I<val>] [I<opt>=B<\">I<val>B<\">] ...
7397        Set options.  Use quotes if spaces in value.
7398    I<recallCommand>, I<ShellBang>    chars used to recall command or spawn shell;
7399    I<pager>            program for output of \"|cmd\";
7400    I<tkRunning>            run Tk while prompting (with ReadLine);
7401    I<signalLevel> I<warnLevel> I<dieLevel>    level of verbosity;
7402    I<inhibit_exit>        Allows stepping off the end of the script.
7403    I<ImmediateStop>        Debugger should stop as early as possible.
7404    I<RemotePort>            Remote hostname:port for remote debugging
7405  The following options affect what happens with B<V>, B<X>, and B<x> commands:
7406    I<arrayDepth>, I<hashDepth>     print only first N elements ('' for all);
7407    I<compactDump>, I<veryCompact>     change style of array and hash dump;
7408    I<globPrint>             whether to print contents of globs;
7409    I<DumpDBFiles>         dump arrays holding debugged files;
7410    I<DumpPackages>         dump symbol tables of packages;
7411    I<DumpReused>             dump contents of \"reused\" addresses;
7412    I<quote>, I<HighBit>, I<undefPrint>     change style of string dump;
7413    I<bareStringify>         Do not print the overload-stringified value;
7414  Other options include:
7415    I<PrintRet>        affects printing of return value after B<r> command,
7416    I<frame>        affects printing messages on subroutine entry/exit.
7417    I<AutoTrace>    affects printing messages on possible breaking points.
7418    I<maxTraceLen>    gives max length of evals/args listed in stack trace.
7419    I<ornaments>     affects screen appearance of the command line.
7420    I<CreateTTY>     bits control attempts to create a new TTY on events:
7421            1: on fork()    2: debugger is started inside debugger
7422            4: on startup
7423    During startup options are initialized from \$ENV{PERLDB_OPTS}.
7424    You can put additional initialization options I<TTY>, I<noTTY>,
7425    I<ReadLine>, I<NonStop>, and I<RemotePort> there (or use
7426    `B<R>' after you set them).
7427
7428B<q> or B<^D>        Quit. Set B<\$DB::finished = 0> to debug global destruction.
7429B<h> [I<db_command>]    Get help [on a specific debugger command], enter B<|h> to page.
7430B<h h>        Summary of debugger commands.
7431B<$doccmd> I<manpage>    Runs the external doc viewer B<$doccmd> command on the
7432        named Perl I<manpage>, or on B<$doccmd> itself if omitted.
7433        Set B<\$DB::doccmd> to change viewer.
7434
7435Type `|h' for a paged display if this was too hard to read.
7436
7437";    # Fix balance of vi % matching: }}}}
7438
7439    #  note: tabs in the following section are not-so-helpful
7440    $pre580_summary = <<"END_SUM";
7441I<List/search source lines:>               I<Control script execution:>
7442  B<l> [I<ln>|I<sub>]  List source code            B<T>           Stack trace
7443  B<-> or B<.>      List previous/current line  B<s> [I<expr>]    Single step [in expr]
7444  B<w> [I<line>]    List around line            B<n> [I<expr>]    Next, steps over subs
7445  B<f> I<filename>  View source in file         <B<CR>/B<Enter>>  Repeat last B<n> or B<s>
7446  B</>I<pattern>B</> B<?>I<patt>B<?>   Search forw/backw    B<r>           Return from subroutine
7447  B<v>           Show versions of modules    B<c> [I<ln>|I<sub>]  Continue until position
7448I<Debugger controls:>                        B<L>           List break/watch/actions
7449  B<O> [...]     Set debugger options        B<t> [I<expr>]    Toggle trace [trace expr]
7450  B<<>[B<<>]|B<{>[B<{>]|B<>>[B<>>] [I<cmd>] Do pre/post-prompt B<b> [I<ln>|I<event>|I<sub>] [I<cnd>] Set breakpoint
7451  B<$prc> [I<N>|I<pat>]   Redo a previous command     B<d> [I<ln>] or B<D> Delete a/all breakpoints
7452  B<H> [I<-num>]    Display last num commands   B<a> [I<ln>] I<cmd>  Do cmd before line
7453  B<=> [I<a> I<val>]   Define/list an alias        B<W> I<expr>      Add a watch expression
7454  B<h> [I<db_cmd>]  Get help on command         B<A> or B<W>      Delete all actions/watch
7455  B<|>[B<|>]I<db_cmd>  Send output to pager        B<$psh>\[B<$psh>\] I<syscmd> Run cmd in a subprocess
7456  B<q> or B<^D>     Quit                        B<R>           Attempt a restart
7457I<Data Examination:>     B<expr>     Execute perl code, also see: B<s>,B<n>,B<t> I<expr>
7458  B<x>|B<m> I<expr>       Evals expr in list context, dumps the result or lists methods.
7459  B<p> I<expr>         Print expression (uses script's current package).
7460  B<S> [[B<!>]I<pat>]     List subroutine names [not] matching pattern
7461  B<V> [I<Pk> [I<Vars>]]  List Variables in Package.  Vars can be ~pattern or !pattern.
7462  B<X> [I<Vars>]       Same as \"B<V> I<current_package> [I<Vars>]\".
7463  B<y> [I<n> [I<Vars>]]   List lexicals in higher scope <n>.  Vars same as B<V>.
7464For more help, type B<h> I<cmd_letter>, or run B<$doccmd perldebug> for all docs.
7465END_SUM
7466
7467    # ')}}; # Fix balance of vi % matching
7468
7469} ## end sub sethelp
7470
7471=head2 C<print_help()>
7472
7473Most of what C<print_help> does is just text formatting. It finds the
7474C<B> and C<I> ornaments, cleans them off, and substitutes the proper
7475terminal control characters to simulate them (courtesy of
7476C<Term::ReadLine::TermCap>).
7477
7478=cut
7479
7480sub print_help {
7481    local $_ = shift;
7482
7483    # Restore proper alignment destroyed by eeevil I<> and B<>
7484    # ornaments: A pox on both their houses!
7485    #
7486    # A help command will have everything up to and including
7487    # the first tab sequence padded into a field 16 (or if indented 20)
7488    # wide.  If it's wider than that, an extra space will be added.
7489    s{
7490        ^                       # only matters at start of line
7491          ( \040{4} | \t )*     # some subcommands are indented
7492          ( < ?                 # so <CR> works
7493            [BI] < [^\t\n] + )  # find an eeevil ornament
7494          ( \t+ )               # original separation, discarded
7495          ( .* )                # this will now start (no earlier) than
7496                                # column 16
7497    } {
7498        my($leadwhite, $command, $midwhite, $text) = ($1, $2, $3, $4);
7499        my $clean = $command;
7500        $clean =~ s/[BI]<([^>]*)>/$1/g;
7501
7502        # replace with this whole string:
7503        ($leadwhite ? " " x 4 : "")
7504      . $command
7505      . ((" " x (16 + ($leadwhite ? 4 : 0) - length($clean))) || " ")
7506      . $text;
7507
7508    }mgex;
7509
7510    s{                          # handle bold ornaments
7511       B < ( [^>] + | > ) >
7512    } {
7513          $Term::ReadLine::TermCap::rl_term_set[2]
7514        . $1
7515        . $Term::ReadLine::TermCap::rl_term_set[3]
7516    }gex;
7517
7518    s{                         # handle italic ornaments
7519       I < ( [^>] + | > ) >
7520    } {
7521          $Term::ReadLine::TermCap::rl_term_set[0]
7522        . $1
7523        . $Term::ReadLine::TermCap::rl_term_set[1]
7524    }gex;
7525
7526    local $\ = '';
7527    print $OUT $_;
7528} ## end sub print_help
7529
7530=head2 C<fix_less>
7531
7532This routine does a lot of gyrations to be sure that the pager is C<less>.
7533It checks for C<less> masquerading as C<more> and records the result in
7534C<$ENV{LESS}> so we don't have to go through doing the stats again.
7535
7536=cut
7537
7538sub fix_less {
7539
7540    # We already know if this is set.
7541    return if defined $ENV{LESS} && $ENV{LESS} =~ /r/;
7542
7543    # Pager is less for sure.
7544    my $is_less = $pager =~ /\bless\b/;
7545    if ( $pager =~ /\bmore\b/ ) {
7546
7547        # Nope, set to more. See what's out there.
7548        my @st_more = stat('/usr/bin/more');
7549        my @st_less = stat('/usr/bin/less');
7550
7551        # is it really less, pretending to be more?
7552             $is_less = @st_more
7553          && @st_less
7554          && $st_more[0] == $st_less[0]
7555          && $st_more[1] == $st_less[1];
7556    } ## end if ($pager =~ /\bmore\b/)
7557
7558    # changes environment!
7559    # 'r' added so we don't do (slow) stats again.
7560    $ENV{LESS} .= 'r' if $is_less;
7561} ## end sub fix_less
7562
7563=head1 DIE AND WARN MANAGEMENT
7564
7565=head2 C<diesignal>
7566
7567C<diesignal> is a just-drop-dead C<die> handler. It's most useful when trying
7568to debug a debugger problem.
7569
7570It does its best to report the error that occurred, and then forces the
7571program, debugger, and everything to die.
7572
7573=cut
7574
7575sub diesignal {
7576
7577    # No entry/exit messages.
7578    local $frame = 0;
7579
7580    # No return value prints.
7581    local $doret = -2;
7582
7583    # set the abort signal handling to the default (just terminate).
7584    $SIG{'ABRT'} = 'DEFAULT';
7585
7586    # If we enter the signal handler recursively, kill myself with an
7587    # abort signal (so we just terminate).
7588    kill 'ABRT', $$ if $panic++;
7589
7590    # If we can show detailed info, do so.
7591    if ( defined &Carp::longmess ) {
7592
7593        # Don't recursively enter the warn handler, since we're carping.
7594        local $SIG{__WARN__} = '';
7595
7596        # Skip two levels before reporting traceback: we're skipping
7597        # mydie and confess.
7598        local $Carp::CarpLevel = 2;    # mydie + confess
7599
7600        # Tell us all about it.
7601        &warn( Carp::longmess("Signal @_") );
7602    }
7603
7604    # No Carp. Tell us about the signal as best we can.
7605    else {
7606        local $\ = '';
7607        print $DB::OUT "Got signal @_\n";
7608    }
7609
7610    # Drop dead.
7611    kill 'ABRT', $$;
7612} ## end sub diesignal
7613
7614=head2 C<dbwarn>
7615
7616The debugger's own default C<$SIG{__WARN__}> handler. We load C<Carp> to
7617be able to get a stack trace, and output the warning message vi C<DB::dbwarn()>.
7618
7619=cut
7620
7621sub dbwarn {
7622
7623    # No entry/exit trace.
7624    local $frame = 0;
7625
7626    # No return value printing.
7627    local $doret = -2;
7628
7629    # Turn off warn and die handling to prevent recursive entries to this
7630    # routine.
7631    local $SIG{__WARN__} = '';
7632    local $SIG{__DIE__}  = '';
7633
7634    # Load Carp if we can. If $^S is false (current thing being compiled isn't
7635    # done yet), we may not be able to do a require.
7636    eval { require Carp }
7637      if defined $^S;    # If error/warning during compilation,
7638                         # require may be broken.
7639
7640    # Use the core warn() unless Carp loaded OK.
7641    CORE::warn( @_,
7642        "\nCannot print stack trace, load with -MCarp option to see stack" ),
7643      return
7644      unless defined &Carp::longmess;
7645
7646    # Save the current values of $single and $trace, and then turn them off.
7647    my ( $mysingle, $mytrace ) = ( $single, $trace );
7648    $single = 0;
7649    $trace  = 0;
7650
7651    # We can call Carp::longmess without its being "debugged" (which we
7652    # don't want - we just want to use it!). Capture this for later.
7653    my $mess = Carp::longmess(@_);
7654
7655    # Restore $single and $trace to their original values.
7656    ( $single, $trace ) = ( $mysingle, $mytrace );
7657
7658    # Use the debugger's own special way of printing warnings to print
7659    # the stack trace message.
7660    &warn($mess);
7661} ## end sub dbwarn
7662
7663=head2 C<dbdie>
7664
7665The debugger's own C<$SIG{__DIE__}> handler. Handles providing a stack trace
7666by loading C<Carp> and calling C<Carp::longmess()> to get it. We turn off
7667single stepping and tracing during the call to C<Carp::longmess> to avoid
7668debugging it - we just want to use it.
7669
7670If C<dieLevel> is zero, we let the program being debugged handle the
7671exceptions. If it's 1, you get backtraces for any exception. If it's 2,
7672the debugger takes over all exception handling, printing a backtrace and
7673displaying the exception via its C<dbwarn()> routine.
7674
7675=cut
7676
7677sub dbdie {
7678    local $frame         = 0;
7679    local $doret         = -2;
7680    local $SIG{__DIE__}  = '';
7681    local $SIG{__WARN__} = '';
7682    my $i      = 0;
7683    my $ineval = 0;
7684    my $sub;
7685    if ( $dieLevel > 2 ) {
7686        local $SIG{__WARN__} = \&dbwarn;
7687        &warn(@_);    # Yell no matter what
7688        return;
7689    }
7690    if ( $dieLevel < 2 ) {
7691        die @_ if $^S;    # in eval propagate
7692    }
7693
7694    # The code used to check $^S to see if compiliation of the current thing
7695    # hadn't finished. We don't do it anymore, figuring eval is pretty stable.
7696    eval { require Carp };
7697
7698    die( @_,
7699        "\nCannot print stack trace, load with -MCarp option to see stack" )
7700      unless defined &Carp::longmess;
7701
7702    # We do not want to debug this chunk (automatic disabling works
7703    # inside DB::DB, but not in Carp). Save $single and $trace, turn them off,
7704    # get the stack trace from Carp::longmess (if possible), restore $signal
7705    # and $trace, and then die with the stack trace.
7706    my ( $mysingle, $mytrace ) = ( $single, $trace );
7707    $single = 0;
7708    $trace  = 0;
7709    my $mess = "@_";
7710    {
7711
7712        package Carp;    # Do not include us in the list
7713        eval { $mess = Carp::longmess(@_); };
7714    }
7715    ( $single, $trace ) = ( $mysingle, $mytrace );
7716    die $mess;
7717} ## end sub dbdie
7718
7719=head2 C<warnlevel()>
7720
7721Set the C<$DB::warnLevel> variable that stores the value of the
7722C<warnLevel> option. Calling C<warnLevel()> with a positive value
7723results in the debugger taking over all warning handlers. Setting
7724C<warnLevel> to zero leaves any warning handlers set up by the program
7725being debugged in place.
7726
7727=cut
7728
7729sub warnLevel {
7730    if (@_) {
7731        $prevwarn = $SIG{__WARN__} unless $warnLevel;
7732        $warnLevel = shift;
7733        if ($warnLevel) {
7734            $SIG{__WARN__} = \&DB::dbwarn;
7735        }
7736        elsif ($prevwarn) {
7737            $SIG{__WARN__} = $prevwarn;
7738        }
7739    } ## end if (@_)
7740    $warnLevel;
7741} ## end sub warnLevel
7742
7743=head2 C<dielevel>
7744
7745Similar to C<warnLevel>. Non-zero values for C<dieLevel> result in the
7746C<DB::dbdie()> function overriding any other C<die()> handler. Setting it to
7747zero lets you use your own C<die()> handler.
7748
7749=cut
7750
7751sub dieLevel {
7752    local $\ = '';
7753    if (@_) {
7754        $prevdie = $SIG{__DIE__} unless $dieLevel;
7755        $dieLevel = shift;
7756        if ($dieLevel) {
7757
7758            # Always set it to dbdie() for non-zero values.
7759            $SIG{__DIE__} = \&DB::dbdie;    # if $dieLevel < 2;
7760
7761            # No longer exists, so don't try  to use it.
7762            #$SIG{__DIE__} = \&DB::diehard if $dieLevel >= 2;
7763
7764            # If we've finished initialization, mention that stack dumps
7765            # are enabled, If dieLevel is 1, we won't stack dump if we die
7766            # in an eval().
7767            print $OUT "Stack dump during die enabled",
7768              ( $dieLevel == 1 ? " outside of evals" : "" ), ".\n"
7769              if $I_m_init;
7770
7771            # XXX This is probably obsolete, given that diehard() is gone.
7772            print $OUT "Dump printed too.\n" if $dieLevel > 2;
7773        } ## end if ($dieLevel)
7774
7775        # Put the old one back if there was one.
7776        elsif ($prevdie) {
7777            $SIG{__DIE__} = $prevdie;
7778            print $OUT "Default die handler restored.\n";
7779        }
7780    } ## end if (@_)
7781    $dieLevel;
7782} ## end sub dieLevel
7783
7784=head2 C<signalLevel>
7785
7786Number three in a series: set C<signalLevel> to zero to keep your own
7787signal handler for C<SIGSEGV> and/or C<SIGBUS>. Otherwise, the debugger
7788takes over and handles them with C<DB::diesignal()>.
7789
7790=cut
7791
7792sub signalLevel {
7793    if (@_) {
7794        $prevsegv = $SIG{SEGV} unless $signalLevel;
7795        $prevbus  = $SIG{BUS}  unless $signalLevel;
7796        $signalLevel = shift;
7797        if ($signalLevel) {
7798            $SIG{SEGV} = \&DB::diesignal;
7799            $SIG{BUS}  = \&DB::diesignal;
7800        }
7801        else {
7802            $SIG{SEGV} = $prevsegv;
7803            $SIG{BUS}  = $prevbus;
7804        }
7805    } ## end if (@_)
7806    $signalLevel;
7807} ## end sub signalLevel
7808
7809=head1 SUBROUTINE DECODING SUPPORT
7810
7811These subroutines are used during the C<x> and C<X> commands to try to
7812produce as much information as possible about a code reference. They use
7813L<Devel::Peek> to try to find the glob in which this code reference lives
7814(if it does) - this allows us to actually code references which correspond
7815to named subroutines (including those aliased via glob assignment).
7816
7817=head2 C<CvGV_name()>
7818
7819Wrapper for C<CvGV_name_or_bust>; tries to get the name of a reference
7820via that routine. If this fails, return the reference again (when the
7821reference is stringified, it'll come out as C<SOMETHING(0x...)>).
7822
7823=cut
7824
7825sub CvGV_name {
7826    my $in   = shift;
7827    my $name = CvGV_name_or_bust($in);
7828    defined $name ? $name : $in;
7829}
7830
7831=head2 C<CvGV_name_or_bust> I<coderef>
7832
7833Calls L<Devel::Peek> to try to find the glob the ref lives in; returns
7834C<undef> if L<Devel::Peek> can't be loaded, or if C<Devel::Peek::CvGV> can't
7835find a glob for this ref.
7836
7837Returns C<< I<package>::I<glob name> >> if the code ref is found in a glob.
7838
7839=cut
7840
7841sub CvGV_name_or_bust {
7842    my $in = shift;
7843    return if $skipCvGV;    # Backdoor to avoid problems if XS broken...
7844    return unless ref $in;
7845    $in = \&$in;            # Hard reference...
7846    eval { require Devel::Peek; 1 } or return;
7847    my $gv = Devel::Peek::CvGV($in) or return;
7848    *$gv{PACKAGE} . '::' . *$gv{NAME};
7849} ## end sub CvGV_name_or_bust
7850
7851=head2 C<find_sub>
7852
7853A utility routine used in various places; finds the file where a subroutine
7854was defined, and returns that filename and a line-number range.
7855
7856Tries to use C<@sub> first; if it can't find it there, it tries building a
7857reference to the subroutine and uses C<CvGV_name_or_bust> to locate it,
7858loading it into C<@sub> as a side effect (XXX I think). If it can't find it
7859this way, it brute-force searches C<%sub>, checking for identical references.
7860
7861=cut
7862
7863sub find_sub {
7864    my $subr = shift;
7865    $sub{$subr} or do {
7866        return unless defined &$subr;
7867        my $name = CvGV_name_or_bust($subr);
7868        my $data;
7869        $data = $sub{$name} if defined $name;
7870        return $data if defined $data;
7871
7872        # Old stupid way...
7873        $subr = \&$subr;    # Hard reference
7874        my $s;
7875        for ( keys %sub ) {
7876            $s = $_, last if $subr eq \&$_;
7877        }
7878        $sub{$s} if $s;
7879      } ## end do
7880} ## end sub find_sub
7881
7882=head2 C<methods>
7883
7884A subroutine that uses the utility function C<methods_via> to find all the
7885methods in the class corresponding to the current reference and in
7886C<UNIVERSAL>.
7887
7888=cut
7889
7890sub methods {
7891
7892    # Figure out the class - either this is the class or it's a reference
7893    # to something blessed into that class.
7894    my $class = shift;
7895    $class = ref $class if ref $class;
7896
7897    local %seen;
7898
7899    # Show the methods that this class has.
7900    methods_via( $class, '', 1 );
7901
7902    # Show the methods that UNIVERSAL has.
7903    methods_via( 'UNIVERSAL', 'UNIVERSAL', 0 );
7904} ## end sub methods
7905
7906=head2 C<methods_via($class, $prefix, $crawl_upward)>
7907
7908C<methods_via> does the work of crawling up the C<@ISA> tree and reporting
7909all the parent class methods. C<$class> is the name of the next class to
7910try; C<$prefix> is the message prefix, which gets built up as we go up the
7911C<@ISA> tree to show parentage; C<$crawl_upward> is 1 if we should try to go
7912higher in the C<@ISA> tree, 0 if we should stop.
7913
7914=cut
7915
7916sub methods_via {
7917
7918    # If we've processed this class already, just quit.
7919    my $class = shift;
7920    return if $seen{$class}++;
7921
7922    # This is a package that is contributing the methods we're about to print.
7923    my $prefix  = shift;
7924    my $prepend = $prefix ? "via $prefix: " : '';
7925
7926    my $name;
7927    for $name (
7928
7929        # Keep if this is a defined subroutine in this class.
7930        grep { defined &{ ${"${class}::"}{$_} } }
7931
7932        # Extract from all the symbols in this class.
7933        sort keys %{"${class}::"}
7934      )
7935    {
7936
7937        # If we printed this already, skip it.
7938        next if $seen{$name}++;
7939
7940        # Print the new method name.
7941        local $\ = '';
7942        local $, = '';
7943        print $DB::OUT "$prepend$name\n";
7944    } ## end for $name (grep { defined...
7945
7946    # If the $crawl_upward argument is false, just quit here.
7947    return unless shift;
7948
7949    # $crawl_upward true: keep going up the tree.
7950    # Find all the classes this one is a subclass of.
7951    for $name ( @{"${class}::ISA"} ) {
7952
7953        # Set up the new prefix.
7954        $prepend = $prefix ? $prefix . " -> $name" : $name;
7955
7956        # Crawl up the tree and keep trying to crawl up.
7957        methods_via( $name, $prepend, 1 );
7958    }
7959} ## end sub methods_via
7960
7961=head2 C<setman> - figure out which command to use to show documentation
7962
7963Just checks the contents of C<$^O> and sets the C<$doccmd> global accordingly.
7964
7965=cut
7966
7967sub setman {
7968    $doccmd = $^O !~ /^(?:MSWin32|VMS|os2|dos|amigaos|riscos|MacOS|NetWare)\z/s
7969      ? "man"         # O Happy Day!
7970      : "perldoc";    # Alas, poor unfortunates
7971} ## end sub setman
7972
7973=head2 C<runman> - run the appropriate command to show documentation
7974
7975Accepts a man page name; runs the appropriate command to display it (set up
7976during debugger initialization). Uses C<DB::system> to avoid mucking up the
7977program's STDIN and STDOUT.
7978
7979=cut
7980
7981sub runman {
7982    my $page = shift;
7983    unless ($page) {
7984        &system("$doccmd $doccmd");
7985        return;
7986    }
7987
7988    # this way user can override, like with $doccmd="man -Mwhatever"
7989    # or even just "man " to disable the path check.
7990    unless ( $doccmd eq 'man' ) {
7991        &system("$doccmd $page");
7992        return;
7993    }
7994
7995    $page = 'perl' if lc($page) eq 'help';
7996
7997    require Config;
7998    my $man1dir = $Config::Config{'man1dir'};
7999    my $man3dir = $Config::Config{'man3dir'};
8000    for ( $man1dir, $man3dir ) { s#/[^/]*\z## if /\S/ }
8001    my $manpath = '';
8002    $manpath .= "$man1dir:" if $man1dir =~ /\S/;
8003    $manpath .= "$man3dir:" if $man3dir =~ /\S/ && $man1dir ne $man3dir;
8004    chop $manpath if $manpath;
8005
8006    # harmless if missing, I figure
8007    my $oldpath = $ENV{MANPATH};
8008    $ENV{MANPATH} = $manpath if $manpath;
8009    my $nopathopt = $^O =~ /dunno what goes here/;
8010    if (
8011        CORE::system(
8012            $doccmd,
8013
8014            # I just *know* there are men without -M
8015            ( ( $manpath && !$nopathopt ) ? ( "-M", $manpath ) : () ),
8016            split ' ', $page
8017        )
8018      )
8019    {
8020        unless ( $page =~ /^perl\w/ ) {
8021# do it this way because its easier to slurp in to keep up to date - clunky though.
8022my @pods = qw(
8023    5004delta
8024    5005delta
8025    561delta
8026    56delta
8027    570delta
8028    571delta
8029    572delta
8030    573delta
8031    58delta
8032    581delta
8033    582delta
8034    583delta
8035    584delta
8036    590delta
8037    591delta
8038    592delta
8039    aix
8040    amiga
8041    apio
8042    api
8043    apollo
8044    artistic
8045    beos
8046    book
8047    boot
8048    bot
8049    bs2000
8050    call
8051    ce
8052    cheat
8053    clib
8054    cn
8055    compile
8056    cygwin
8057    data
8058    dbmfilter
8059    debguts
8060    debtut
8061    debug
8062    delta
8063    dgux
8064    diag
8065    doc
8066    dos
8067    dsc
8068    ebcdic
8069    embed
8070    epoc
8071    faq1
8072    faq2
8073    faq3
8074    faq4
8075    faq5
8076    faq6
8077    faq7
8078    faq8
8079    faq9
8080    faq
8081    filter
8082    fork
8083    form
8084    freebsd
8085    func
8086    gpl
8087    guts
8088    hack
8089    hist
8090    hpux
8091    hurd
8092    intern
8093    intro
8094    iol
8095    ipc
8096    irix
8097    jp
8098    ko
8099    lexwarn
8100    locale
8101    lol
8102    machten
8103    macos
8104    macosx
8105    mint
8106    modinstall
8107    modlib
8108    mod
8109    modstyle
8110    mpeix
8111    netware
8112    newmod
8113    number
8114    obj
8115    opentut
8116    op
8117    os2
8118    os390
8119    os400
8120    othrtut
8121    packtut
8122    plan9
8123    pod
8124    podspec
8125    port
8126    qnx
8127    ref
8128    reftut
8129    re
8130    requick
8131    reref
8132    retut
8133    run
8134    sec
8135    solaris
8136    style
8137    sub
8138    syn
8139    thrtut
8140    tie
8141    toc
8142    todo
8143    tooc
8144    toot
8145    trap
8146    tru64
8147    tw
8148    unicode
8149    uniintro
8150    util
8151    uts
8152    var
8153    vmesa
8154    vms
8155    vos
8156    win32
8157    xs
8158    xstut
8159);
8160            if (grep { $page eq $_ } @pods) {
8161                $page =~ s/^/perl/;
8162                CORE::system( $doccmd,
8163                    ( ( $manpath && !$nopathopt ) ? ( "-M", $manpath ) : () ),
8164                    $page );
8165            } ## end if (grep { $page eq $_...
8166        } ## end unless ($page =~ /^perl\w/)
8167    } ## end if (CORE::system($doccmd...
8168    if ( defined $oldpath ) {
8169        $ENV{MANPATH} = $manpath;
8170    }
8171    else {
8172        delete $ENV{MANPATH};
8173    }
8174} ## end sub runman
8175
8176#use Carp;                          # This did break, left for debugging
8177
8178=head1 DEBUGGER INITIALIZATION - THE SECOND BEGIN BLOCK
8179
8180Because of the way the debugger interface to the Perl core is designed, any
8181debugger package globals that C<DB::sub()> requires have to be defined before
8182any subroutines can be called. These are defined in the second C<BEGIN> block.
8183
8184This block sets things up so that (basically) the world is sane
8185before the debugger starts executing. We set up various variables that the
8186debugger has to have set up before the Perl core starts running:
8187
8188=over 4
8189
8190=item *
8191
8192The debugger's own filehandles (copies of STD and STDOUT for now).
8193
8194=item *
8195
8196Characters for shell escapes, the recall command, and the history command.
8197
8198=item *
8199
8200The maximum recursion depth.
8201
8202=item *
8203
8204The size of a C<w> command's window.
8205
8206=item *
8207
8208The before-this-line context to be printed in a C<v> (view a window around this line) command.
8209
8210=item *
8211
8212The fact that we're not in a sub at all right now.
8213
8214=item *
8215
8216The default SIGINT handler for the debugger.
8217
8218=item *
8219
8220The appropriate value of the flag in C<$^D> that says the debugger is running
8221
8222=item *
8223
8224The current debugger recursion level
8225
8226=item *
8227
8228The list of postponed items and the C<$single> stack (XXX define this)
8229
8230=item *
8231
8232That we want no return values and no subroutine entry/exit trace.
8233
8234=back
8235
8236=cut
8237
8238# The following BEGIN is very handy if debugger goes havoc, debugging debugger?
8239
8240BEGIN {    # This does not compile, alas. (XXX eh?)
8241    $IN  = \*STDIN;     # For bugs before DB::OUT has been opened
8242    $OUT = \*STDERR;    # For errors before DB::OUT has been opened
8243
8244    # Define characters used by command parsing.
8245    $sh       = '!';      # Shell escape (does not work)
8246    $rc       = ',';      # Recall command (does not work)
8247    @hist     = ('?');    # Show history (does not work)
8248    @truehist = ();       # Can be saved for replay (per session)
8249
8250    # This defines the point at which you get the 'deep recursion'
8251    # warning. It MUST be defined or the debugger will not load.
8252    $deep = 100;
8253
8254    # Number of lines around the current one that are shown in the
8255    # 'w' command.
8256    $window = 10;
8257
8258    # How much before-the-current-line context the 'v' command should
8259    # use in calculating the start of the window it will display.
8260    $preview = 3;
8261
8262    # We're not in any sub yet, but we need this to be a defined value.
8263    $sub = '';
8264
8265    # Set up the debugger's interrupt handler. It simply sets a flag
8266    # ($signal) that DB::DB() will check before each command is executed.
8267    $SIG{INT} = \&DB::catch;
8268
8269    # The following lines supposedly, if uncommented, allow the debugger to
8270    # debug itself. Perhaps we can try that someday.
8271    # This may be enabled to debug debugger:
8272    #$warnLevel = 1 unless defined $warnLevel;
8273    #$dieLevel = 1 unless defined $dieLevel;
8274    #$signalLevel = 1 unless defined $signalLevel;
8275
8276    # This is the flag that says "a debugger is running, please call
8277    # DB::DB and DB::sub". We will turn it on forcibly before we try to
8278    # execute anything in the user's context, because we always want to
8279    # get control back.
8280    $db_stop = 0;          # Compiler warning ...
8281    $db_stop = 1 << 30;    # ... because this is only used in an eval() later.
8282
8283    # This variable records how many levels we're nested in debugging. Used
8284    # Used in the debugger prompt, and in determining whether it's all over or
8285    # not.
8286    $level = 0;            # Level of recursive debugging
8287
8288    # "Triggers bug (?) in perl if we postpone this until runtime."
8289    # XXX No details on this yet, or whether we should fix the bug instead
8290    # of work around it. Stay tuned.
8291    @postponed = @stack = (0);
8292
8293    # Used to track the current stack depth using the auto-stacked-variable
8294    # trick.
8295    $stack_depth = 0;      # Localized repeatedly; simple way to track $#stack
8296
8297    # Don't print return values on exiting a subroutine.
8298    $doret = -2;
8299
8300    # No extry/exit tracing.
8301    $frame = 0;
8302
8303} ## end BEGIN
8304
8305BEGIN { $^W = $ini_warn; }    # Switch warnings back
8306
8307=head1 READLINE SUPPORT - COMPLETION FUNCTION
8308
8309=head2 db_complete
8310
8311C<readline> support - adds command completion to basic C<readline>.
8312
8313Returns a list of possible completions to C<readline> when invoked. C<readline>
8314will print the longest common substring following the text already entered.
8315
8316If there is only a single possible completion, C<readline> will use it in full.
8317
8318This code uses C<map> and C<grep> heavily to create lists of possible
8319completion. Think LISP in this section.
8320
8321=cut
8322
8323sub db_complete {
8324
8325    # Specific code for b c l V m f O, &blah, $blah, @blah, %blah
8326    # $text is the text to be completed.
8327    # $line is the incoming line typed by the user.
8328    # $start is the start of the text to be completed in the incoming line.
8329    my ( $text, $line, $start ) = @_;
8330
8331    # Save the initial text.
8332    # The search pattern is current package, ::, extract the next qualifier
8333    # Prefix and pack are set to undef.
8334    my ( $itext, $search, $prefix, $pack ) =
8335      ( $text, "^\Q${'package'}::\E([^:]+)\$" );
8336
8337=head3 C<b postpone|compile>
8338
8339=over 4
8340
8341=item *
8342
8343Find all the subroutines that might match in this package
8344
8345=item *
8346
8347Add C<postpone>, C<load>, and C<compile> as possibles (we may be completing the keyword itself)
8348
8349=item *
8350
8351Include all the rest of the subs that are known
8352
8353=item *
8354
8355C<grep> out the ones that match the text we have so far
8356
8357=item *
8358
8359Return this as the list of possible completions
8360
8361=back
8362
8363=cut 
8364
8365    return sort grep /^\Q$text/, ( keys %sub ),
8366      qw(postpone load compile),    # subroutines
8367      ( map { /$search/ ? ($1) : () } keys %sub )
8368      if ( substr $line, 0, $start ) =~ /^\|*[blc]\s+((postpone|compile)\s+)?$/;
8369
8370=head3 C<b load>
8371
8372Get all the possible files from C<@INC> as it currently stands and
8373select the ones that match the text so far.
8374
8375=cut
8376
8377    return sort grep /^\Q$text/, values %INC    # files
8378      if ( substr $line, 0, $start ) =~ /^\|*b\s+load\s+$/;
8379
8380=head3  C<V> (list variable) and C<m> (list modules)
8381
8382There are two entry points for these commands:
8383
8384=head4 Unqualified package names
8385
8386Get the top-level packages and grab everything that matches the text
8387so far. For each match, recursively complete the partial packages to
8388get all possible matching packages. Return this sorted list.
8389
8390=cut
8391
8392    return sort map { ( $_, db_complete( $_ . "::", "V ", 2 ) ) }
8393      grep /^\Q$text/, map { /^(.*)::$/ ? ($1) : () } keys %::    # top-packages
8394      if ( substr $line, 0, $start ) =~ /^\|*[Vm]\s+$/ and $text =~ /^\w*$/;
8395
8396=head4 Qualified package names
8397
8398Take a partially-qualified package and find all subpackages for it
8399by getting all the subpackages for the package so far, matching all
8400the subpackages against the text, and discarding all of them which
8401start with 'main::'. Return this list.
8402
8403=cut
8404
8405    return sort map { ( $_, db_complete( $_ . "::", "V ", 2 ) ) }
8406      grep !/^main::/, grep /^\Q$text/,
8407      map { /^(.*)::$/ ? ( $prefix . "::$1" ) : () } keys %{ $prefix . '::' }
8408      if ( substr $line, 0, $start ) =~ /^\|*[Vm]\s+$/
8409      and $text =~ /^(.*[^:])::?(\w*)$/
8410      and $prefix = $1;
8411
8412=head3 C<f> - switch files
8413
8414Here, we want to get a fully-qualified filename for the C<f> command.
8415Possibilities are:
8416
8417=over 4
8418
8419=item 1. The original source file itself
8420
8421=item 2. A file from C<@INC>
8422
8423=item 3. An C<eval> (the debugger gets a C<(eval N)> fake file for each C<eval>).
8424
8425=back
8426
8427=cut
8428
8429    if ( $line =~ /^\|*f\s+(.*)/ ) {    # Loaded files
8430           # We might possibly want to switch to an eval (which has a "filename"
8431           # like '(eval 9)'), so we may need to clean up the completion text
8432           # before proceeding.
8433        $prefix = length($1) - length($text);
8434        $text   = $1;
8435
8436=pod
8437
8438Under the debugger, source files are represented as C<_E<lt>/fullpath/to/file>
8439(C<eval>s are C<_E<lt>(eval NNN)>) keys in C<%main::>. We pull all of these
8440out of C<%main::>, add the initial source file, and extract the ones that
8441match the completion text so far.
8442
8443=cut
8444
8445        return sort
8446          map { substr $_, 2 + $prefix } grep /^_<\Q$text/, ( keys %main:: ),
8447          $0;
8448    } ## end if ($line =~ /^\|*f\s+(.*)/)
8449
8450=head3 Subroutine name completion
8451
8452We look through all of the defined subs (the keys of C<%sub>) and
8453return both all the possible matches to the subroutine name plus
8454all the matches qualified to the current package.
8455
8456=cut
8457
8458    if ( ( substr $text, 0, 1 ) eq '&' ) {    # subroutines
8459        $text = substr $text, 1;
8460        $prefix = "&";
8461        return sort map "$prefix$_", grep /^\Q$text/, ( keys %sub ),
8462          (
8463            map { /$search/ ? ($1) : () }
8464              keys %sub
8465          );
8466    } ## end if ((substr $text, 0, ...
8467
8468=head3  Scalar, array, and hash completion: partially qualified package
8469
8470Much like the above, except we have to do a little more cleanup:
8471
8472=cut
8473
8474    if ( $text =~ /^[\$@%](.*)::(.*)/ ) {    # symbols in a package
8475
8476=pod
8477
8478=over 4
8479
8480=item *
8481
8482Determine the package that the symbol is in. Put it in C<::> (effectively C<main::>) if no package is specified.
8483
8484=cut
8485
8486        $pack = ( $1 eq 'main' ? '' : $1 ) . '::';
8487
8488=pod
8489
8490=item *
8491
8492Figure out the prefix vs. what needs completing.
8493
8494=cut
8495
8496        $prefix = ( substr $text, 0, 1 ) . $1 . '::';
8497        $text   = $2;
8498
8499=pod
8500
8501=item *
8502
8503Look through all the symbols in the package. C<grep> out all the possible hashes/arrays/scalars, and then C<grep> the possible matches out of those. C<map> the prefix onto all the possibilities.
8504
8505=cut
8506
8507        my @out = map "$prefix$_", grep /^\Q$text/, grep /^_?[a-zA-Z]/,
8508          keys %$pack;
8509
8510=pod
8511
8512=item *
8513
8514If there's only one hit, and it's a package qualifier, and it's not equal to the initial text, re-complete it using the symbol we actually found.
8515
8516=cut
8517
8518        if ( @out == 1 and $out[0] =~ /::$/ and $out[0] ne $itext ) {
8519            return db_complete( $out[0], $line, $start );
8520        }
8521
8522        # Return the list of possibles.
8523        return sort @out;
8524
8525    } ## end if ($text =~ /^[\$@%](.*)::(.*)/)
8526
8527=pod
8528
8529=back
8530
8531=head3 Symbol completion: current package or package C<main>.
8532
8533=cut
8534
8535    if ( $text =~ /^[\$@%]/ ) {    # symbols (in $package + packages in main)
8536
8537=pod
8538
8539=over 4
8540
8541=item *
8542
8543If it's C<main>, delete main to just get C<::> leading.
8544
8545=cut
8546
8547        $pack = ( $package eq 'main' ? '' : $package ) . '::';
8548
8549=pod
8550
8551=item *
8552
8553We set the prefix to the item's sigil, and trim off the sigil to get the text to be completed.
8554
8555=cut
8556
8557        $prefix = substr $text, 0, 1;
8558        $text   = substr $text, 1;
8559
8560=pod
8561
8562=item *
8563
8564If the package is C<::> (C<main>), create an empty list; if it's something else, create a list of all the packages known.  Append whichever list to a list of all the possible symbols in the current package. C<grep> out the matches to the text entered so far, then C<map> the prefix back onto the symbols.
8565
8566=cut
8567
8568        my @out = map "$prefix$_", grep /^\Q$text/,
8569          ( grep /^_?[a-zA-Z]/, keys %$pack ),
8570          ( $pack eq '::' ? () : ( grep /::$/, keys %:: ) );
8571
8572=item *
8573
8574If there's only one hit, it's a package qualifier, and it's not equal to the initial text, recomplete using this symbol.
8575
8576=back
8577
8578=cut
8579
8580        if ( @out == 1 and $out[0] =~ /::$/ and $out[0] ne $itext ) {
8581            return db_complete( $out[0], $line, $start );
8582        }
8583
8584        # Return the list of possibles.
8585        return sort @out;
8586    } ## end if ($text =~ /^[\$@%]/)
8587
8588=head3 Options
8589
8590We use C<option_val()> to look up the current value of the option. If there's
8591only a single value, we complete the command in such a way that it is a
8592complete command for setting the option in question. If there are multiple
8593possible values, we generate a command consisting of the option plus a trailing
8594question mark, which, if executed, will list the current value of the option.
8595
8596=cut
8597
8598    if ( ( substr $line, 0, $start ) =~ /^\|*[oO]\b.*\s$/ )
8599    {    # Options after space
8600           # We look for the text to be matched in the list of possible options,
8601           # and fetch the current value.
8602        my @out = grep /^\Q$text/, @options;
8603        my $val = option_val( $out[0], undef );
8604
8605        # Set up a 'query option's value' command.
8606        my $out = '? ';
8607        if ( not defined $val or $val =~ /[\n\r]/ ) {
8608
8609            # There's really nothing else we can do.
8610        }
8611
8612        # We have a value. Create a proper option-setting command.
8613        elsif ( $val =~ /\s/ ) {
8614
8615            # XXX This may be an extraneous variable.
8616            my $found;
8617
8618            # We'll want to quote the string (because of the embedded
8619            # whtespace), but we want to make sure we don't end up with
8620            # mismatched quote characters. We try several possibilities.
8621            foreach $l ( split //, qq/\"\'\#\|/ ) {
8622
8623                # If we didn't find this quote character in the value,
8624                # quote it using this quote character.
8625                $out = "$l$val$l ", last if ( index $val, $l ) == -1;
8626            }
8627        } ## end elsif ($val =~ /\s/)
8628
8629        # Don't need any quotes.
8630        else {
8631            $out = "=$val ";
8632        }
8633
8634        # If there were multiple possible values, return '? ', which
8635        # makes the command into a query command. If there was just one,
8636        # have readline append that.
8637        $rl_attribs->{completer_terminator_character} =
8638          ( @out == 1 ? $out : '? ' );
8639
8640        # Return list of possibilities.
8641        return sort @out;
8642    } ## end if ((substr $line, 0, ...
8643
8644=head3 Filename completion
8645
8646For entering filenames. We simply call C<readline>'s C<filename_list()>
8647method with the completion text to get the possible completions.
8648
8649=cut
8650
8651    return $term->filename_list($text);    # filenames
8652
8653} ## end sub db_complete
8654
8655=head1 MISCELLANEOUS SUPPORT FUNCTIONS
8656
8657Functions that possibly ought to be somewhere else.
8658
8659=head2 end_report
8660
8661Say we're done.
8662
8663=cut
8664
8665sub end_report {
8666    local $\ = '';
8667    print $OUT "Use `q' to quit or `R' to restart.  `h q' for details.\n";
8668}
8669
8670=head2 clean_ENV
8671
8672If we have $ini_pids, save it in the environment; else remove it from the
8673environment. Used by the C<R> (restart) command.
8674
8675=cut
8676
8677sub clean_ENV {
8678    if ( defined($ini_pids) ) {
8679        $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} = $ini_pids;
8680    }
8681    else {
8682        delete( $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} );
8683    }
8684} ## end sub clean_ENV
8685
8686# PERLDBf_... flag names from perl.h
8687our ( %DollarCaretP_flags, %DollarCaretP_flags_r );
8688
8689BEGIN {
8690    %DollarCaretP_flags = (
8691        PERLDBf_SUB       => 0x01,     # Debug sub enter/exit
8692        PERLDBf_LINE      => 0x02,     # Keep line #
8693        PERLDBf_NOOPT     => 0x04,     # Switch off optimizations
8694        PERLDBf_INTER     => 0x08,     # Preserve more data
8695        PERLDBf_SUBLINE   => 0x10,     # Keep subr source lines
8696        PERLDBf_SINGLE    => 0x20,     # Start with single-step on
8697        PERLDBf_NONAME    => 0x40,     # For _SUB: no name of the subr
8698        PERLDBf_GOTO      => 0x80,     # Report goto: call DB::goto
8699        PERLDBf_NAMEEVAL  => 0x100,    # Informative names for evals
8700        PERLDBf_NAMEANON  => 0x200,    # Informative names for anon subs
8701        PERLDB_ALL        => 0x33f,    # No _NONAME, _GOTO
8702    );
8703
8704    %DollarCaretP_flags_r = reverse %DollarCaretP_flags;
8705}
8706
8707sub parse_DollarCaretP_flags {
8708    my $flags = shift;
8709    $flags =~ s/^\s+//;
8710    $flags =~ s/\s+$//;
8711    my $acu = 0;
8712    foreach my $f ( split /\s*\|\s*/, $flags ) {
8713        my $value;
8714        if ( $f =~ /^0x([[:xdigit:]]+)$/ ) {
8715            $value = hex $1;
8716        }
8717        elsif ( $f =~ /^(\d+)$/ ) {
8718            $value = int $1;
8719        }
8720        elsif ( $f =~ /^DEFAULT$/i ) {
8721            $value = $DollarCaretP_flags{PERLDB_ALL};
8722        }
8723        else {
8724            $f =~ /^(?:PERLDBf_)?(.*)$/i;
8725            $value = $DollarCaretP_flags{ 'PERLDBf_' . uc($1) };
8726            unless ( defined $value ) {
8727                print $OUT (
8728                    "Unrecognized \$^P flag '$f'!\n",
8729                    "Acceptable flags are: "
8730                      . join( ', ', sort keys %DollarCaretP_flags ),
8731                    ", and hexadecimal and decimal numbers.\n"
8732                );
8733                return undef;
8734            }
8735        }
8736        $acu |= $value;
8737    }
8738    $acu;
8739}
8740
8741sub expand_DollarCaretP_flags {
8742    my $DollarCaretP = shift;
8743    my @bits         = (
8744        map {
8745            my $n = ( 1 << $_ );
8746            ( $DollarCaretP & $n )
8747              ? ( $DollarCaretP_flags_r{$n}
8748                  || sprintf( '0x%x', $n ) )
8749              : ()
8750          } 0 .. 31
8751    );
8752    return @bits ? join( '|', @bits ) : 0;
8753}
8754
8755=over 4
8756
8757=item rerun
8758
8759Rerun the current session to:
8760
8761    rerun        current position
8762
8763    rerun 4      command number 4
8764
8765    rerun -4     current command minus 4 (go back 4 steps)
8766
8767Whether this always makes sense, in the current context is unknowable, and is
8768in part left as a useful exersize for the reader.  This sub returns the
8769appropriate arguments to rerun the current session.
8770
8771=cut
8772
8773sub rerun {
8774    my $i = shift;
8775    my @args;
8776    pop(@truehist);                      # strim
8777    unless (defined $truehist[$i]) {
8778        print "Unable to return to non-existent command: $i\n";
8779    } else {
8780        $#truehist = ($i < 0 ? $#truehist + $i : $i > 0 ? $i : $#truehist);
8781        my @temp = @truehist;            # store
8782        push(@DB::typeahead, @truehist); # saved
8783        @truehist = @hist = ();          # flush
8784        @args = &restart();              # setup
8785        &get_list("PERLDB_HIST");        # clean
8786        &set_list("PERLDB_HIST", @temp); # reset
8787    }
8788    return @args;
8789}
8790
8791=item restart
8792
8793Restarting the debugger is a complex operation that occurs in several phases.
8794First, we try to reconstruct the command line that was used to invoke Perl
8795and the debugger.
8796
8797=cut
8798
8799sub restart {
8800    # I may not be able to resurrect you, but here goes ...
8801    print $OUT
8802"Warning: some settings and command-line options may be lost!\n";
8803    my ( @script, @flags, $cl );
8804
8805    # If warn was on before, turn it on again.
8806    push @flags, '-w' if $ini_warn;
8807
8808    # Rebuild the -I flags that were on the initial
8809    # command line.
8810    for (@ini_INC) {
8811        push @flags, '-I', $_;
8812    }
8813
8814    # Turn on taint if it was on before.
8815    push @flags, '-T' if ${^TAINT};
8816
8817    # Arrange for setting the old INC:
8818    # Save the current @init_INC in the environment.
8819    set_list( "PERLDB_INC", @ini_INC );
8820
8821    # If this was a perl one-liner, go to the "file"
8822    # corresponding to the one-liner read all the lines
8823    # out of it (except for the first one, which is going
8824    # to be added back on again when 'perl -d' runs: that's
8825    # the 'require perl5db.pl;' line), and add them back on
8826    # to the command line to be executed.
8827    if ( $0 eq '-e' ) {
8828        for ( 1 .. $#{'::_<-e'} ) {  # The first line is PERL5DB
8829            chomp( $cl = ${'::_<-e'}[$_] );
8830            push @script, '-e', $cl;
8831        }
8832    } ## end if ($0 eq '-e')
8833
8834    # Otherwise we just reuse the original name we had
8835    # before.
8836    else {
8837        @script = $0;
8838    }
8839
8840=pod
8841
8842After the command line  has been reconstructed, the next step is to save
8843the debugger's status in environment variables. The C<DB::set_list> routine
8844is used to save aggregate variables (both hashes and arrays); scalars are
8845just popped into environment variables directly.
8846
8847=cut
8848
8849    # If the terminal supported history, grab it and
8850    # save that in the environment.
8851    set_list( "PERLDB_HIST",
8852          $term->Features->{getHistory}
8853        ? $term->GetHistory
8854        : @hist );
8855
8856    # Find all the files that were visited during this
8857    # session (i.e., the debugger had magic hashes
8858    # corresponding to them) and stick them in the environment.
8859    my @had_breakpoints = keys %had_breakpoints;
8860    set_list( "PERLDB_VISITED", @had_breakpoints );
8861
8862    # Save the debugger options we chose.
8863    set_list( "PERLDB_OPT", %option );
8864    # set_list( "PERLDB_OPT", options2remember() );
8865
8866    # Save the break-on-loads.
8867    set_list( "PERLDB_ON_LOAD", %break_on_load );
8868
8869=pod
8870
8871The most complex part of this is the saving of all of the breakpoints. They
8872can live in an awful lot of places, and we have to go through all of them,
8873find the breakpoints, and then save them in the appropriate environment
8874variable via C<DB::set_list>.
8875
8876=cut
8877
8878    # Go through all the breakpoints and make sure they're
8879    # still valid.
8880    my @hard;
8881    for ( 0 .. $#had_breakpoints ) {
8882
8883        # We were in this file.
8884        my $file = $had_breakpoints[$_];
8885
8886        # Grab that file's magic line hash.
8887        *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $file };
8888
8889        # Skip out if it doesn't exist, or if the breakpoint
8890        # is in a postponed file (we'll do postponed ones
8891        # later).
8892        next unless %dbline or $postponed_file{$file};
8893
8894        # In an eval. This is a little harder, so we'll
8895        # do more processing on that below.
8896        ( push @hard, $file ), next
8897          if $file =~ /^\(\w*eval/;
8898
8899        # XXX I have no idea what this is doing. Yet.
8900        my @add;
8901        @add = %{ $postponed_file{$file} }
8902          if $postponed_file{$file};
8903
8904        # Save the list of all the breakpoints for this file.
8905        set_list( "PERLDB_FILE_$_", %dbline, @add );
8906    } ## end for (0 .. $#had_breakpoints)
8907
8908    # The breakpoint was inside an eval. This is a little
8909    # more difficult. XXX and I don't understand it.
8910    for (@hard) {
8911        # Get over to the eval in question.
8912        *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $_ };
8913        my ( $quoted, $sub, %subs, $line ) = quotemeta $_;
8914        for $sub ( keys %sub ) {
8915            next unless $sub{$sub} =~ /^$quoted:(\d+)-(\d+)$/;
8916            $subs{$sub} = [ $1, $2 ];
8917        }
8918        unless (%subs) {
8919            print $OUT
8920              "No subroutines in $_, ignoring breakpoints.\n";
8921            next;
8922        }
8923      LINES: for $line ( keys %dbline ) {
8924
8925            # One breakpoint per sub only:
8926            my ( $offset, $sub, $found );
8927          SUBS: for $sub ( keys %subs ) {
8928                if (
8929                    $subs{$sub}->[1] >=
8930                    $line    # Not after the subroutine
8931                    and (
8932                        not defined $offset    # Not caught
8933                        or $offset < 0
8934                    )
8935                  )
8936                {                              # or badly caught
8937                    $found  = $sub;
8938                    $offset = $line - $subs{$sub}->[0];
8939                    $offset = "+$offset", last SUBS
8940                      if $offset >= 0;
8941                } ## end if ($subs{$sub}->[1] >=...
8942            } ## end for $sub (keys %subs)
8943            if ( defined $offset ) {
8944                $postponed{$found} =
8945                  "break $offset if $dbline{$line}";
8946            }
8947            else {
8948                print $OUT
8949"Breakpoint in $_:$line ignored: after all the subroutines.\n";
8950            }
8951        } ## end for $line (keys %dbline)
8952    } ## end for (@hard)
8953
8954    # Save the other things that don't need to be
8955    # processed.
8956    set_list( "PERLDB_POSTPONE",  %postponed );
8957    set_list( "PERLDB_PRETYPE",   @$pretype );
8958    set_list( "PERLDB_PRE",       @$pre );
8959    set_list( "PERLDB_POST",      @$post );
8960    set_list( "PERLDB_TYPEAHEAD", @typeahead );
8961
8962    # We are oficially restarting.
8963    $ENV{PERLDB_RESTART} = 1;
8964
8965    # We are junking all child debuggers.
8966    delete $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS};    # Restore ini state
8967
8968    # Set this back to the initial pid.
8969    $ENV{PERLDB_PIDS} = $ini_pids if defined $ini_pids;
8970
8971=pod
8972
8973After all the debugger status has been saved, we take the command we built up
8974and then return it, so we can C<exec()> it. The debugger will spot the
8975C<PERLDB_RESTART> environment variable and realize it needs to reload its state
8976from the environment.
8977
8978=cut
8979
8980    # And run Perl again. Add the "-d" flag, all the
8981    # flags we built up, the script (whether a one-liner
8982    # or a file), add on the -emacs flag for a slave editor,
8983    # and then the old arguments.
8984
8985    return ($^X, '-d', @flags, @script, ($slave_editor ? '-emacs' : ()), @ARGS);
8986
8987};  # end restart
8988
8989=back
8990
8991=head1 END PROCESSING - THE C<END> BLOCK
8992
8993Come here at the very end of processing. We want to go into a
8994loop where we allow the user to enter commands and interact with the
8995debugger, but we don't want anything else to execute.
8996
8997First we set the C<$finished> variable, so that some commands that
8998shouldn't be run after the end of program quit working.
8999
9000We then figure out whether we're truly done (as in the user entered a C<q>
9001command, or we finished execution while running nonstop). If we aren't,
9002we set C<$single> to 1 (causing the debugger to get control again).
9003
9004We then call C<DB::fake::at_exit()>, which returns the C<Use 'q' to quit ...>
9005message and returns control to the debugger. Repeat.
9006
9007When the user finally enters a C<q> command, C<$fall_off_end> is set to
90081 and the C<END> block simply exits with C<$single> set to 0 (don't
9009break, run to completion.).
9010
9011=cut
9012
9013END {
9014    $finished = 1 if $inhibit_exit;    # So that some commands may be disabled.
9015    $fall_off_end = 1 unless $inhibit_exit;
9016
9017    # Do not stop in at_exit() and destructors on exit:
9018    if ($fall_off_end or $runnonstop) {
9019        &save_hist();
9020    } else {
9021        $DB::single = 1;
9022        DB::fake::at_exit();
9023    }
9024} ## end END
9025
9026=head1 PRE-5.8 COMMANDS
9027
9028Some of the commands changed function quite a bit in the 5.8 command
9029realignment, so much so that the old code had to be replaced completely.
9030Because we wanted to retain the option of being able to go back to the
9031former command set, we moved the old code off to this section.
9032
9033There's an awful lot of duplicated code here. We've duplicated the
9034comments to keep things clear.
9035
9036=head2 Null command
9037
9038Does nothing. Used to I<turn off> commands.
9039
9040=cut
9041
9042sub cmd_pre580_null {
9043
9044    # do nothing...
9045}
9046
9047=head2 Old C<a> command.
9048
9049This version added actions if you supplied them, and deleted them
9050if you didn't.
9051
9052=cut
9053
9054sub cmd_pre580_a {
9055    my $xcmd = shift;
9056    my $cmd  = shift;
9057
9058    # Argument supplied. Add the action.
9059    if ( $cmd =~ /^(\d*)\s*(.*)/ ) {
9060
9061        # If the line isn't there, use the current line.
9062        $i = $1 || $line;
9063        $j = $2;
9064
9065        # If there is an action ...
9066        if ( length $j ) {
9067
9068            # ... but the line isn't breakable, skip it.
9069            if ( $dbline[$i] == 0 ) {
9070                print $OUT "Line $i may not have an action.\n";
9071            }
9072            else {
9073
9074                # ... and the line is breakable:
9075                # Mark that there's an action in this file.
9076                $had_breakpoints{$filename} |= 2;
9077
9078                # Delete any current action.
9079                $dbline{$i} =~ s/\0[^\0]*//;
9080
9081                # Add the new action, continuing the line as needed.
9082                $dbline{$i} .= "\0" . action($j);
9083            }
9084        } ## end if (length $j)
9085
9086        # No action supplied.
9087        else {
9088
9089            # Delete the action.
9090            $dbline{$i} =~ s/\0[^\0]*//;
9091
9092            # Mark as having no break or action if nothing's left.
9093            delete $dbline{$i} if $dbline{$i} eq '';
9094        }
9095    } ## end if ($cmd =~ /^(\d*)\s*(.*)/)
9096} ## end sub cmd_pre580_a
9097
9098=head2 Old C<b> command
9099
9100Add breakpoints.
9101
9102=cut
9103
9104sub cmd_pre580_b {
9105    my $xcmd   = shift;
9106    my $cmd    = shift;
9107    my $dbline = shift;
9108
9109    # Break on load.
9110    if ( $cmd =~ /^load\b\s*(.*)/ ) {
9111        my $file = $1;
9112        $file =~ s/\s+$//;
9113        &cmd_b_load($file);
9114    }
9115
9116    # b compile|postpone <some sub> [<condition>]
9117    # The interpreter actually traps this one for us; we just put the
9118    # necessary condition in the %postponed hash.
9119    elsif ( $cmd =~ /^(postpone|compile)\b\s*([':A-Za-z_][':\w]*)\s*(.*)/ ) {
9120
9121        # Capture the condition if there is one. Make it true if none.
9122        my $cond = length $3 ? $3 : '1';
9123
9124        # Save the sub name and set $break to 1 if $1 was 'postpone', 0
9125        # if it was 'compile'.
9126        my ( $subname, $break ) = ( $2, $1 eq 'postpone' );
9127
9128        # De-Perl4-ify the name - ' separators to ::.
9129        $subname =~ s/\'/::/g;
9130
9131        # Qualify it into the current package unless it's already qualified.
9132        $subname = "${'package'}::" . $subname
9133          unless $subname =~ /::/;
9134
9135        # Add main if it starts with ::.
9136        $subname = "main" . $subname if substr( $subname, 0, 2 ) eq "::";
9137
9138        # Save the break type for this sub.
9139        $postponed{$subname} = $break ? "break +0 if $cond" : "compile";
9140    } ## end elsif ($cmd =~ ...
9141
9142    # b <sub name> [<condition>]
9143    elsif ( $cmd =~ /^([':A-Za-z_][':\w]*(?:\[.*\])?)\s*(.*)/ ) {
9144        my $subname = $1;
9145        my $cond = length $2 ? $2 : '1';
9146        &cmd_b_sub( $subname, $cond );
9147    }
9148
9149    # b <line> [<condition>].
9150    elsif ( $cmd =~ /^(\d*)\s*(.*)/ ) {
9151        my $i = $1 || $dbline;
9152        my $cond = length $2 ? $2 : '1';
9153        &cmd_b_line( $i, $cond );
9154    }
9155} ## end sub cmd_pre580_b
9156
9157=head2 Old C<D> command.
9158
9159Delete all breakpoints unconditionally.
9160
9161=cut
9162
9163sub cmd_pre580_D {
9164    my $xcmd = shift;
9165    my $cmd  = shift;
9166    if ( $cmd =~ /^\s*$/ ) {
9167        print $OUT "Deleting all breakpoints...\n";
9168
9169        # %had_breakpoints lists every file that had at least one
9170        # breakpoint in it.
9171        my $file;
9172        for $file ( keys %had_breakpoints ) {
9173
9174            # Switch to the desired file temporarily.
9175            local *dbline = $main::{ '_<' . $file };
9176
9177            my $max = $#dbline;
9178            my $was;
9179
9180            # For all lines in this file ...
9181            for ( $i = 1 ; $i <= $max ; $i++ ) {
9182
9183                # If there's a breakpoint or action on this line ...
9184                if ( defined $dbline{$i} ) {
9185
9186                    # ... remove the breakpoint.
9187                    $dbline{$i} =~ s/^[^\0]+//;
9188                    if ( $dbline{$i} =~ s/^\0?$// ) {
9189
9190                        # Remove the entry altogether if no action is there.
9191                        delete $dbline{$i};
9192                    }
9193                } ## end if (defined $dbline{$i...
9194            } ## end for ($i = 1 ; $i <= $max...
9195
9196            # If, after we turn off the "there were breakpoints in this file"
9197            # bit, the entry in %had_breakpoints for this file is zero,
9198            # we should remove this file from the hash.
9199            if ( not $had_breakpoints{$file} &= ~1 ) {
9200                delete $had_breakpoints{$file};
9201            }
9202        } ## end for $file (keys %had_breakpoints)
9203
9204        # Kill off all the other breakpoints that are waiting for files that
9205        # haven't been loaded yet.
9206        undef %postponed;
9207        undef %postponed_file;
9208        undef %break_on_load;
9209    } ## end if ($cmd =~ /^\s*$/)
9210} ## end sub cmd_pre580_D
9211
9212=head2 Old C<h> command
9213
9214Print help. Defaults to printing the long-form help; the 5.8 version
9215prints the summary by default.
9216
9217=cut
9218
9219sub cmd_pre580_h {
9220    my $xcmd = shift;
9221    my $cmd  = shift;
9222
9223    # Print the *right* help, long format.
9224    if ( $cmd =~ /^\s*$/ ) {
9225        print_help($pre580_help);
9226    }
9227
9228    # 'h h' - explicitly-requested summary.
9229    elsif ( $cmd =~ /^h\s*/ ) {
9230        print_help($pre580_summary);
9231    }
9232
9233    # Find and print a command's help.
9234    elsif ( $cmd =~ /^h\s+(\S.*)$/ ) {
9235        my $asked  = $1;                   # for proper errmsg
9236        my $qasked = quotemeta($asked);    # for searching
9237                                           # XXX: finds CR but not <CR>
9238        if (
9239            $pre580_help =~ /^
9240                              <?           # Optional '<'
9241                              (?:[IB]<)    # Optional markup
9242                              $qasked      # The command name
9243                            /mx
9244          )
9245        {
9246
9247            while (
9248                $pre580_help =~ /^
9249                                  (             # The command help:
9250                                   <?           # Optional '<'
9251                                   (?:[IB]<)    # Optional markup
9252                                   $qasked      # The command name
9253                                   ([\s\S]*?)   # Lines starting with tabs
9254                                   \n           # Final newline
9255                                  )
9256                                  (?!\s)/mgx
9257              )    # Line not starting with space
9258                   # (Next command's help)
9259            {
9260                print_help($1);
9261            }
9262        } ## end if ($pre580_help =~ /^<?(?:[IB]<)$qasked/m)
9263
9264        # Help not found.
9265        else {
9266            print_help("B<$asked> is not a debugger command.\n");
9267        }
9268    } ## end elsif ($cmd =~ /^h\s+(\S.*)$/)
9269} ## end sub cmd_pre580_h
9270
9271=head2 Old C<W> command
9272
9273C<W E<lt>exprE<gt>> adds a watch expression, C<W> deletes them all.
9274
9275=cut
9276
9277sub cmd_pre580_W {
9278    my $xcmd = shift;
9279    my $cmd  = shift;
9280
9281    # Delete all watch expressions.
9282    if ( $cmd =~ /^$/ ) {
9283
9284        # No watching is going on.
9285        $trace &= ~2;
9286
9287        # Kill all the watch expressions and values.
9288        @to_watch = @old_watch = ();
9289    }
9290
9291    # Add a watch expression.
9292    elsif ( $cmd =~ /^(.*)/s ) {
9293
9294        # add it to the list to be watched.
9295        push @to_watch, $1;
9296
9297        # Get the current value of the expression.
9298        # Doesn't handle expressions returning list values!
9299        $evalarg = $1;
9300        my ($val) = &eval;
9301        $val = ( defined $val ) ? "'$val'" : 'undef';
9302
9303        # Save it.
9304        push @old_watch, $val;
9305
9306        # We're watching stuff.
9307        $trace |= 2;
9308
9309    } ## end elsif ($cmd =~ /^(.*)/s)
9310} ## end sub cmd_pre580_W
9311
9312=head1 PRE-AND-POST-PROMPT COMMANDS AND ACTIONS
9313
9314The debugger used to have a bunch of nearly-identical code to handle
9315the pre-and-post-prompt action commands. C<cmd_pre590_prepost> and
9316C<cmd_prepost> unify all this into one set of code to handle the
9317appropriate actions.
9318
9319=head2 C<cmd_pre590_prepost>
9320
9321A small wrapper around C<cmd_prepost>; it makes sure that the default doesn't
9322do something destructive. In pre 5.8 debuggers, the default action was to
9323delete all the actions.
9324
9325=cut
9326
9327sub cmd_pre590_prepost {
9328    my $cmd    = shift;
9329    my $line   = shift || '*';
9330    my $dbline = shift;
9331
9332    return &cmd_prepost( $cmd, $line, $dbline );
9333} ## end sub cmd_pre590_prepost
9334
9335=head2 C<cmd_prepost>
9336
9337Actually does all the handling for C<E<lt>>, C<E<gt>>, C<{{>, C<{>, etc.
9338Since the lists of actions are all held in arrays that are pointed to by
9339references anyway, all we have to do is pick the right array reference and
9340then use generic code to all, delete, or list actions.
9341
9342=cut
9343
9344sub cmd_prepost {
9345    my $cmd = shift;
9346
9347    # No action supplied defaults to 'list'.
9348    my $line = shift || '?';
9349
9350    # Figure out what to put in the prompt.
9351    my $which = '';
9352
9353    # Make sure we have some array or another to address later.
9354    # This means that if ssome reason the tests fail, we won't be
9355    # trying to stash actions or delete them from the wrong place.
9356    my $aref = [];
9357
9358    # < - Perl code to run before prompt.
9359    if ( $cmd =~ /^\</o ) {
9360        $which = 'pre-perl';
9361        $aref  = $pre;
9362    }
9363
9364    # > - Perl code to run after prompt.
9365    elsif ( $cmd =~ /^\>/o ) {
9366        $which = 'post-perl';
9367        $aref  = $post;
9368    }
9369
9370    # { - first check for properly-balanced braces.
9371    elsif ( $cmd =~ /^\{/o ) {
9372        if ( $cmd =~ /^\{.*\}$/o && unbalanced( substr( $cmd, 1 ) ) ) {
9373            print $OUT
9374"$cmd is now a debugger command\nuse `;$cmd' if you mean Perl code\n";
9375        }
9376
9377        # Properly balanced. Pre-prompt debugger actions.
9378        else {
9379            $which = 'pre-debugger';
9380            $aref  = $pretype;
9381        }
9382    } ## end elsif ( $cmd =~ /^\{/o )
9383
9384    # Did we find something that makes sense?
9385    unless ($which) {
9386        print $OUT "Confused by command: $cmd\n";
9387    }
9388
9389    # Yes.
9390    else {
9391
9392        # List actions.
9393        if ( $line =~ /^\s*\?\s*$/o ) {
9394            unless (@$aref) {
9395
9396                # Nothing there. Complain.
9397                print $OUT "No $which actions.\n";
9398            }
9399            else {
9400
9401                # List the actions in the selected list.
9402                print $OUT "$which commands:\n";
9403                foreach my $action (@$aref) {
9404                    print $OUT "\t$cmd -- $action\n";
9405                }
9406            } ## end else
9407        } ## end if ( $line =~ /^\s*\?\s*$/o)
9408
9409        # Might be a delete.
9410        else {
9411            if ( length($cmd) == 1 ) {
9412                if ( $line =~ /^\s*\*\s*$/o ) {
9413
9414                    # It's a delete. Get rid of the old actions in the
9415                    # selected list..
9416                    @$aref = ();
9417                    print $OUT "All $cmd actions cleared.\n";
9418                }
9419                else {
9420
9421                    # Replace all the actions. (This is a <, >, or {).
9422                    @$aref = action($line);
9423                }
9424            } ## end if ( length($cmd) == 1)
9425            elsif ( length($cmd) == 2 ) {
9426
9427                # Add the action to the line. (This is a <<, >>, or {{).
9428                push @$aref, action($line);
9429            }
9430            else {
9431
9432                # <<<, >>>>, {{{{{{ ... something not a command.
9433                print $OUT
9434                  "Confused by strange length of $which command($cmd)...\n";
9435            }
9436        } ## end else [ if ( $line =~ /^\s*\?\s*$/o)
9437    } ## end else
9438} ## end sub cmd_prepost
9439
9440=head1 C<DB::fake>
9441
9442Contains the C<at_exit> routine that the debugger uses to issue the
9443C<Debugged program terminated ...> message after the program completes. See
9444the C<END> block documentation for more details.
9445
9446=cut
9447
9448package DB::fake;
9449
9450sub at_exit {
9451    "Debugged program terminated.  Use `q' to quit or `R' to restart.";
9452}
9453
9454package DB;    # Do not trace this 1; below!
9455
94561;
9457
9458
9459