openocd/src/helper/command.h

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/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later */
/***************************************************************************
* Copyright (C) 2005 by Dominic Rath *
* Dominic.Rath@gmx.de *
* *
* Copyright (C) 2007,2008 Øyvind Harboe *
* oyvind.harboe@zylin.com *
***************************************************************************/
#ifndef OPENOCD_HELPER_COMMAND_H
#define OPENOCD_HELPER_COMMAND_H
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <helper/jim-nvp.h>
#include <helper/list.h>
#include <helper/types.h>
/* To achieve C99 printf compatibility in MinGW, gnu_printf should be
* used for __attribute__((format( ... ))), with GCC v4.4 or later
*/
#if (defined(IS_MINGW) && (((__GNUC__ << 16) + __GNUC_MINOR__) >= 0x00040004))
#define PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT gnu_printf
#else
#define PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT printf
#endif
/**
* OpenOCD command mode is COMMAND_CONFIG at start, then switches to COMMAND_EXEC
* during the execution of command 'init'.
* The field 'mode' in struct command_registration specifies in which command mode
* the command can be executed:
* - during COMMAND_CONFIG only,
* - during COMMAND_EXEC only,
* - in both modes (COMMAND_ANY).
*/
enum command_mode {
COMMAND_EXEC,
COMMAND_CONFIG,
COMMAND_ANY,
COMMAND_UNKNOWN = -1, /* error condition */
};
struct command_context;
/** The type signature for command context's output handler. */
typedef int (*command_output_handler_t)(struct command_context *context,
const char *line);
struct command_context {
Jim_Interp *interp;
enum command_mode mode;
struct target *current_target;
/* The target set by 'targets xx' command or the latest created */
struct target *current_target_override;
/* If set overrides current_target
* It happens during processing of
* 1) a target prefixed command
* 2) an event handler
* Pay attention to reentrancy when setting override.
*/
command_output_handler_t output_handler;
void *output_handler_priv;
struct list_head *help_list;
};
struct command;
/**
* When run_command is called, a new instance will be created on the
* stack, filled with the proper values, and passed by reference to the
* required COMMAND_HANDLER routine.
*/
struct command_invocation {
struct command_context *ctx;
struct command *current;
const char *name;
unsigned argc;
const char **argv;
helper/command: Handle Tcl return values consistently Rationale: 1. There's logging output and there're return values; 2. If a function should return something, it should do it explicitly, same for logging; 3. Interactive interfaces (telnet, Gdb and Tcl RPC) must always return the result of the evaluation for the given expression. You can suppress this output by adding ``; after 0'' to the end of your expression. 4. Some commands "throw an exception" and if you want to be able to collect both the return value (when it succeeds) and the log output (when something goes wrong) you can use do like this: set log_output [capture "catch {reset_config} return_value"] So what I'm proposing is following: 1. Every jim_handler command should set the return value the standard JimTcl way, without any tricks. If it needs to print some logging output, it should use LOG_* functions. 2. The usual commands (COMMANDS) can easily construct their return value by appending strings with command_print() and command_print_sameline(). This required changing "struct command_invocation" and passing a pointer to it to command_print* functions. The code is already functional, please test and comment. TODO items: 1. Modify all jim_handler commands to properly return or log values (some of them are commented out for now in this patch). 2. Properly document "capture" command and provide a convenience function to automate log_output + return_value gathering. 3. Add appropriate Doxygen comments. 4. Add Tcl RPC interface description to the manual, all the example clients in different languages (from the mailing list) to contrib/. This change is the core part of http://openocd.zylin.com/1815 from Paul Fertser. It has been extracted and rebased to simplify the review and provided again as 1815. Change-Id: I675c91aa9da1e4e7c6f0a8fe6112a00550b9e4db Signed-off-by: Paul Fertser <fercerpav@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Tomas Vanek <vanekt@fbl.cz> Signed-off-by: Antonio Borneo <borneo.antonio@gmail.com> Reviewed-on: http://openocd.zylin.com/1815 Tested-by: jenkins
2019-04-04 07:54:09 +00:00
Jim_Obj *output;
};
/**
* Return true if the command @c cmd is registered by OpenOCD.
*/
bool jimcmd_is_oocd_command(Jim_Cmd *cmd);
/**
* Return the pointer to the command's private data specified during the
* registration of command @a cmd .
*/
void *jimcmd_privdata(Jim_Cmd *cmd);
/**
* Command handlers may be defined with more parameters than the base
* set provided by command.c. This macro uses C99 magic to allow
* defining all such derivative types using this macro.
*/
#define __COMMAND_HANDLER(name, extra ...) \
int name(struct command_invocation *cmd, ## extra)
/**
* Use this to macro to call a command helper (or a nested handler).
* It provides command handler authors protection against reordering or
* removal of unused parameters.
*
* @b Note: This macro uses lexical capture to provide some arguments.
* As a result, this macro should be used @b only within functions
* defined by the COMMAND_HANDLER or COMMAND_HELPER macros. Those
* macros provide the expected lexical context captured by this macro.
* Furthermore, it should be used only from the top-level of handler or
* helper function, or care must be taken to avoid redefining the same
* variables in intervening scope(s) by accident.
*/
#define CALL_COMMAND_HANDLER(name, extra ...) \
name(cmd, ## extra)
/**
* Always use this macro to define new command handler functions.
* It ensures the parameters are ordered, typed, and named properly, so
* they be can be used by other macros (e.g. COMMAND_PARSE_NUMBER).
* All command handler functions must be defined as static in scope.
*/
#define COMMAND_HANDLER(name) \
static __COMMAND_HANDLER(name)
/**
* Similar to COMMAND_HANDLER, except some parameters are expected.
* A helper is globally-scoped because it may be shared between several
* source files (e.g. the s3c24xx device command helper).
*/
#define COMMAND_HELPER(name, extra ...) __COMMAND_HANDLER(name, extra)
/**
* Use this macro to access the command being handled,
* rather than accessing the variable directly. It may be moved.
*/
#define CMD (cmd)
/**
* Use this macro to access the context of the command being handled,
* rather than accessing the variable directly. It may be moved.
*/
#define CMD_CTX (cmd->ctx)
/**
* Use this macro to access the number of arguments for the command being
* handled, rather than accessing the variable directly. It may be moved.
*/
#define CMD_ARGC (cmd->argc)
/**
* Use this macro to access the arguments for the command being handled,
* rather than accessing the variable directly. It may be moved.
*/
#define CMD_ARGV (cmd->argv)
/**
* Use this macro to access the name of the command being handled,
* rather than accessing the variable directly. It may be moved.
*/
#define CMD_NAME (cmd->name)
/**
* Use this macro to access the current command being handled,
* rather than accessing the variable directly. It may be moved.
*/
#define CMD_CURRENT (cmd->current)
/**
* Use this macro to access the invoked command handler's data pointer,
* rather than accessing the variable directly. It may be moved.
*/
#define CMD_DATA (CMD_CURRENT->jim_handler_data)
/**
* The type signature for command handling functions. They are
* usually registered as part of command_registration, providing
* a high-level means for executing a command.
*
* If the command fails, it *MUST* return a value != ERROR_OK
* (many commands break this rule, patches welcome!)
*
* This is *especially* important for commands such as writing
* to flash or verifying memory. The reason is that those commands
* can be used by programs to determine if the operation succeeded
* or not. If the operation failed, then a program can try
* an alternative approach.
*
* Returning ERROR_COMMAND_SYNTAX_ERROR will have the effect of
* printing out the syntax of the command.
*/
typedef __COMMAND_HANDLER((*command_handler_t));
struct command {
char *name;
command_handler_t handler;
Jim_CmdProc *jim_handler;
void *jim_handler_data;
/* Command handlers can use it for any handler specific data */
struct target *jim_override_target;
/* Used only for target of target-prefixed cmd */
enum command_mode mode;
};
helper/command: always pass struct command as jim private data While registering a new command, jim accepts a pointer to command's private data that will be accessible during the command execution. Today openocd is not consistent and passes different private data depending on the command, and then even overwrites it: - "simple" commands (.handler) are registered with their own struct command pointer as command private data; - "native" commands (.jim_handler) at root level are registered with NULL command private data; - "native" commands (.jim_handler) not at root level are registered with the struct command pointer of their root command as command private data but, when executed, the command private data is overwritten by the value in field jim_handler_data taken from their struct command. Uniform the usage of command private data by always set it to the struct command pointer while registering the new commands. Note: for multi-word commands only the root command is registered, so command private data will be set to the struct command of the root command. This will change later in this series when the full- name of the command will be registered. Don't overwrite the command private data, but let the commands that needs jim_handler_data to get it directly through struct command. For sake of uniformity, let function command_set_handler_data() to set the field jim_handler_data also for "group" commands, even if such value will not be used. Now Jim_CmdPrivData() always returns a struct command pointer, so wrap it in the inline function jim_to_command() to gain compile time check on the returned type. While there, uniform the code to use the macro Jim_CmdPrivData() to access the command's private data pointer. Change-Id: Idba16242ba1f6769341b4030a49cdf35a5278695 Signed-off-by: Antonio Borneo <borneo.antonio@gmail.com> Reviewed-on: http://openocd.zylin.com/5664 Tested-by: jenkins Reviewed-by: Oleksij Rempel <linux@rempel-privat.de>
2020-05-11 22:22:13 +00:00
/*
* Return the struct command pointer kept in private data
* Used to enforce check on data type
*/
static inline struct command *jim_to_command(Jim_Interp *interp)
{
return Jim_CmdPrivData(interp);
}
/*
* Commands should be registered by filling in one or more of these
* structures and passing them to [un]register_commands().
*
* A conventional format should be used for help strings, to provide both
* usage and basic information:
* @code
* "@<options@> ... - some explanation text"
* @endcode
*
* @param name The name of the command to register, which must not have
* been registered previously in the intended context.
* @param handler The callback function that will be called. If NULL,
* then the command serves as a placeholder for its children or a script.
* @param mode The command mode(s) in which this command may be run.
* @param help The help text that will be displayed to the user.
*/
struct command_registration {
const char *name;
command_handler_t handler;
Jim_CmdProc *jim_handler;
enum command_mode mode;
const char *help;
/** a string listing the options and arguments, required or optional */
const char *usage;
/**
* If non-NULL, the commands in @c chain will be registered in
* the same context and scope of this registration record.
* This allows modules to inherit lists commands from other
* modules.
*/
const struct command_registration *chain;
};
/** Use this as the last entry in an array of command_registration records. */
#define COMMAND_REGISTRATION_DONE { .name = NULL, .chain = NULL }
int __register_commands(struct command_context *cmd_ctx, const char *cmd_prefix,
const struct command_registration *cmds, void *data,
struct target *override_target);
/**
* Register one or more commands in the specified context, as children
* of @c parent (or top-level commends, if NULL). In a registration's
* record contains a non-NULL @c chain member and name is NULL, the
* commands on the chain will be registered in the same context.
* Otherwise, the chained commands are added as children of the command.
*
* @param cmd_ctx The command_context in which to register the command.
* @param cmd_prefix Register this command as a child of this, or NULL to
* register a top-level command.
* @param cmds Pointer to an array of command_registration records that
* contains the desired command parameters. The last record must have
* NULL for all fields.
* @returns ERROR_OK on success; ERROR_FAIL if any registration fails.
*/
static inline int register_commands(struct command_context *cmd_ctx, const char *cmd_prefix,
const struct command_registration *cmds)
{
return __register_commands(cmd_ctx, cmd_prefix, cmds, NULL, NULL);
}
/**
* Register one or more commands, as register_commands(), plus specify
* that command should override the current target
*
* @param cmd_ctx The command_context in which to register the command.
* @param cmd_prefix Register this command as a child of this, or NULL to
* register a top-level command.
* @param cmds Pointer to an array of command_registration records that
* contains the desired command parameters. The last record must have
* NULL for all fields.
* @param target The target that has to override current target.
* @returns ERROR_OK on success; ERROR_FAIL if any registration fails.
*/
static inline int register_commands_override_target(struct command_context *cmd_ctx,
const char *cmd_prefix, const struct command_registration *cmds,
struct target *target)
{
return __register_commands(cmd_ctx, cmd_prefix, cmds, NULL, target);
}
/**
* Register one or more commands, as register_commands(), plus specify
* a pointer to command private data that would be accessible through
* the macro CMD_DATA. The private data will not be freed when command
* is unregistered.
*
* @param cmd_ctx The command_context in which to register the command.
* @param cmd_prefix Register this command as a child of this, or NULL to
* register a top-level command.
* @param cmds Pointer to an array of command_registration records that
* contains the desired command parameters. The last record must have
* NULL for all fields.
* @param data The command private data.
* @returns ERROR_OK on success; ERROR_FAIL if any registration fails.
*/
static inline int register_commands_with_data(struct command_context *cmd_ctx,
const char *cmd_prefix, const struct command_registration *cmds,
void *data)
{
return __register_commands(cmd_ctx, cmd_prefix, cmds, data, NULL);
}
/**
* Unregisters all commands from the specified context.
* @param cmd_ctx The context that will be cleared of registered commands.
* @param cmd_prefix If given, only clear commands from under this one command.
* @returns ERROR_OK on success, or an error code.
*/
int unregister_all_commands(struct command_context *cmd_ctx,
const char *cmd_prefix);
/**
* Unregisters the help for all commands. Used at exit to remove the help
* added through the commands 'add_help_text' and 'add_usage_text'.
* @param cmd_ctx The context that will be cleared of registered helps.
* @returns ERROR_OK on success, or an error code.
*/
int help_del_all_commands(struct command_context *cmd_ctx);
void command_set_output_handler(struct command_context *context,
command_output_handler_t output_handler, void *priv);
int command_context_mode(struct command_context *context, enum command_mode mode);
/* Return the current command context associated with the Jim interpreter or
* alternatively the global default command interpreter
*/
struct command_context *current_command_context(Jim_Interp *interp);
/**
* Creates a new command context using the startup TCL provided and
* the existing Jim interpreter, if any. If interp == NULL, then command_init
* creates a command interpreter.
*/
struct command_context *command_init(const char *startup_tcl, Jim_Interp *interp);
/**
* Shutdown a command context.
*
* Free the command context and the associated Jim interpreter.
*
* @param context The command_context that will be destroyed.
*/
void command_exit(struct command_context *context);
/**
* Creates a copy of an existing command context. This does not create
* a deep copy of the command list, so modifications in one context will
* affect all shared contexts. The caller must track reference counting
* and ensure the commands are freed before destroying the last instance.
* @param cmd_ctx The command_context that will be copied.
* @returns A new command_context with the same state as the original.
*/
struct command_context *copy_command_context(struct command_context *cmd_ctx);
/**
* Frees the resources associated with a command context. The commands
* are not removed, so unregister_all_commands() must be called first.
* @param context The command_context that will be destroyed.
*/
void command_done(struct command_context *context);
void command_print(struct command_invocation *cmd, const char *format, ...)
__attribute__ ((format (PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT, 2, 3)));
void command_print_sameline(struct command_invocation *cmd, const char *format, ...)
__attribute__ ((format (PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT, 2, 3)));
int command_run_line(struct command_context *context, char *line);
int command_run_linef(struct command_context *context, const char *format, ...)
__attribute__ ((format (PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT, 2, 3)));
void command_output_text(struct command_context *context, const char *data);
void process_jim_events(struct command_context *cmd_ctx);
#define ERROR_COMMAND_CLOSE_CONNECTION (-600)
#define ERROR_COMMAND_SYNTAX_ERROR (-601)
#define ERROR_COMMAND_NOTFOUND (-602)
#define ERROR_COMMAND_ARGUMENT_INVALID (-603)
#define ERROR_COMMAND_ARGUMENT_OVERFLOW (-604)
#define ERROR_COMMAND_ARGUMENT_UNDERFLOW (-605)
int parse_ulong(const char *str, unsigned long *ul);
int parse_ullong(const char *str, unsigned long long *ul);
int parse_long(const char *str, long *ul);
int parse_llong(const char *str, long long *ul);
#define DECLARE_PARSE_WRAPPER(name, type) \
int parse ## name(const char *str, type * ul)
DECLARE_PARSE_WRAPPER(_uint, unsigned);
DECLARE_PARSE_WRAPPER(_u64, uint64_t);
DECLARE_PARSE_WRAPPER(_u32, uint32_t);
DECLARE_PARSE_WRAPPER(_u16, uint16_t);
DECLARE_PARSE_WRAPPER(_u8, uint8_t);
DECLARE_PARSE_WRAPPER(_int, int);
DECLARE_PARSE_WRAPPER(_s64, int64_t);
DECLARE_PARSE_WRAPPER(_s32, int32_t);
DECLARE_PARSE_WRAPPER(_s16, int16_t);
DECLARE_PARSE_WRAPPER(_s8, int8_t);
DECLARE_PARSE_WRAPPER(_target_addr, target_addr_t);
/**
* @brief parses the string @a in into @a out as a @a type, or prints
* a command error and passes the error code to the caller. If an error
* does occur, the calling function will return the error code produced
* by the parsing function (one of ERROR_COMMAND_ARGUMENT_*).
*
* This function may cause the calling function to return immediately,
* so it should be used carefully to avoid leaking resources. In most
* situations, parsing should be completed in full before proceeding
* to allocate resources, and this strategy will most prevents leaks.
*/
#define COMMAND_PARSE_NUMBER(type, in, out) \
do { \
int retval_macro_tmp = parse_ ## type(in, &(out)); \
if (retval_macro_tmp != ERROR_OK) { \
command_print(CMD, stringify(out) \
" option value ('%s') is not valid", in); \
return retval_macro_tmp; \
} \
} while (0)
#define COMMAND_PARSE_ADDRESS(in, out) \
COMMAND_PARSE_NUMBER(target_addr, in, out)
/**
* @brief parses the command argument at position @a argn into @a out
* as a @a type, or prints a command error referring to @a name_str
* and passes the error code to the caller. @a argn will be incremented
* if no error occurred. Otherwise the calling function will return
* the error code produced by the parsing function.
*
* This function may cause the calling function to return immediately,
* so it should be used carefully to avoid leaking resources. In most
* situations, parsing should be completed in full before proceeding
* to allocate resources, and this strategy will most prevents leaks.
*/
#define COMMAND_PARSE_ADDITIONAL_NUMBER(type, argn, out, name_str) \
do { \
if (argn+1 >= CMD_ARGC || CMD_ARGV[argn+1][0] == '-') { \
command_print(CMD, "no " name_str " given"); \
return ERROR_FAIL; \
} \
++argn; \
COMMAND_PARSE_NUMBER(type, CMD_ARGV[argn], out); \
} while (0)
/**
* @brief parses the command argument at position @a argn into @a out
* as a @a type if the argument @a argn does not start with '-'.
* and passes the error code to the caller. @a argn will be incremented
* if no error occurred. Otherwise the calling function will return
* the error code produced by the parsing function.
*
* This function may cause the calling function to return immediately,
* so it should be used carefully to avoid leaking resources. In most
* situations, parsing should be completed in full before proceeding
* to allocate resources, and this strategy will most prevents leaks.
*/
#define COMMAND_PARSE_OPTIONAL_NUMBER(type, argn, out) \
do { \
if (argn+1 < CMD_ARGC && CMD_ARGV[argn+1][0] != '-') { \
++argn; \
COMMAND_PARSE_NUMBER(type, CMD_ARGV[argn], out); \
} \
} while (0)
/**
* Parse the string @c as a binary parameter, storing the boolean value
* in @c out. The strings @c on and @c off are used to match different
* strings for true and false options (e.g. "on" and "off" or
* "enable" and "disable").
*/
#define COMMAND_PARSE_BOOL(in, out, on, off) \
do { \
bool value; \
int retval_macro_tmp = command_parse_bool_arg(in, &value); \
if (retval_macro_tmp != ERROR_OK) { \
command_print(CMD, stringify(out) \
" option value ('%s') is not valid", in); \
command_print(CMD, " choices are '%s' or '%s'", \
on, off); \
return retval_macro_tmp; \
} \
out = value; \
} while (0)
int command_parse_bool_arg(const char *in, bool *out);
COMMAND_HELPER(handle_command_parse_bool, bool *out, const char *label);
/** parses an on/off command argument */
#define COMMAND_PARSE_ON_OFF(in, out) \
COMMAND_PARSE_BOOL(in, out, "on", "off")
/** parses an enable/disable command argument */
#define COMMAND_PARSE_ENABLE(in, out) \
COMMAND_PARSE_BOOL(in, out, "enable", "disable")
#endif /* OPENOCD_HELPER_COMMAND_H */