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/* Target signal numbers for GDB and the GDB remote protocol. Copyright 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GDB. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ #ifndef GDB_SIGNALS_H #define GDB_SIGNALS_H /* The numbering of these signals is chosen to match traditional unix signals (insofar as various unices use the same numbers, anyway). It is also the numbering of the GDB remote protocol. Other remote protocols, if they use a different numbering, should make sure to translate appropriately. Since these numbers have actually made it out into other software (stubs, etc.), you mustn't disturb the assigned numbering. If you need to add new signals here, add them to the end of the explicitly numbered signals, at the comment marker. Add them unconditionally, not within any #if or #ifdef. This is based strongly on Unix/POSIX signals for several reasons: (1) This set of signals represents a widely-accepted attempt to represent events of this sort in a portable fashion, (2) we want a signal to make it from wait to child_wait to the user intact, (3) many remote protocols use a similar encoding. However, it is recognized that this set of signals has limitations (such as not distinguishing between various kinds of SIGSEGV, or not distinguishing hitting a breakpoint from finishing a single step). So in the future we may get around this either by adding additional signals for breakpoint, single-step, etc., or by adding signal codes; the latter seems more in the spirit of what BSD, System V, etc. are doing to address these issues. */ /* For an explanation of what each signal means, see target_signal_to_string. */ enum target_signal { /* Used some places (e.g. stop_signal) to record the concept that there is no signal. */ TARGET_SIGNAL_0 = 0, TARGET_SIGNAL_FIRST = 0, TARGET_SIGNAL_HUP = 1, TARGET_SIGNAL_INT = 2, TARGET_SIGNAL_QUIT = 3, TARGET_SIGNAL_ILL = 4, TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP = 5, TARGET_SIGNAL_ABRT = 6, TARGET_SIGNAL_EMT = 7, TARGET_SIGNAL_FPE = 8, TARGET_SIGNAL_KILL = 9, TARGET_SIGNAL_BUS = 10, TARGET_SIGNAL_SEGV = 11, TARGET_SIGNAL_SYS = 12, TARGET_SIGNAL_PIPE = 13, TARGET_SIGNAL_ALRM = 14, TARGET_SIGNAL_TERM = 15, TARGET_SIGNAL_URG = 16, TARGET_SIGNAL_STOP = 17, TARGET_SIGNAL_TSTP = 18, TARGET_SIGNAL_CONT = 19, TARGET_SIGNAL_CHLD = 20, TARGET_SIGNAL_TTIN = 21, TARGET_SIGNAL_TTOU = 22, TARGET_SIGNAL_IO = 23, TARGET_SIGNAL_XCPU = 24, TARGET_SIGNAL_XFSZ = 25, TARGET_SIGNAL_VTALRM = 26, TARGET_SIGNAL_PROF = 27, TARGET_SIGNAL_WINCH = 28, TARGET_SIGNAL_LOST = 29, TARGET_SIGNAL_USR1 = 30, TARGET_SIGNAL_USR2 = 31, TARGET_SIGNAL_PWR = 32, /* Similar to SIGIO. Perhaps they should have the same number. */ TARGET_SIGNAL_POLL = 33, TARGET_SIGNAL_WIND = 34, TARGET_SIGNAL_PHONE = 35, TARGET_SIGNAL_WAITING = 36, TARGET_SIGNAL_LWP = 37, TARGET_SIGNAL_DANGER = 38, TARGET_SIGNAL_GRANT = 39, TARGET_SIGNAL_RETRACT = 40, TARGET_SIGNAL_MSG = 41, TARGET_SIGNAL_SOUND = 42, TARGET_SIGNAL_SAK = 43, TARGET_SIGNAL_PRIO = 44, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_33 = 45, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_34 = 46, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_35 = 47, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_36 = 48, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_37 = 49, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_38 = 50, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_39 = 51, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_40 = 52, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_41 = 53, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_42 = 54, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_43 = 55, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_44 = 56, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_45 = 57, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_46 = 58, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_47 = 59, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_48 = 60, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_49 = 61, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_50 = 62, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_51 = 63, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_52 = 64, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_53 = 65, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_54 = 66, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_55 = 67, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_56 = 68, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_57 = 69, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_58 = 70, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_59 = 71, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_60 = 72, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_61 = 73, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_62 = 74, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_63 = 75, /* Used internally by Solaris threads. See signal(5) on Solaris. */ TARGET_SIGNAL_CANCEL = 76, /* Yes, this pains me, too. But LynxOS didn't have SIG32, and now GNU/Linux does, and we can't disturb the numbering, since it's part of the remote protocol. Note that in some GDB's TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_32 is number 76. */ TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_32, /* Yet another pain, IRIX 6 has SIG64. */ TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_64, /* Yet another pain, GNU/Linux MIPS might go up to 128. */ TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_65, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_66, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_67, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_68, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_69, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_70, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_71, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_72, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_73, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_74, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_75, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_76, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_77, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_78, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_79, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_80, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_81, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_82, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_83, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_84, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_85, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_86, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_87, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_88, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_89, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_90, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_91, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_92, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_93, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_94, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_95, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_96, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_97, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_98, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_99, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_100, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_101, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_102, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_103, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_104, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_105, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_106, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_107, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_108, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_109, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_110, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_111, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_112, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_113, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_114, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_115, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_116, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_117, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_118, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_119, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_120, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_121, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_122, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_123, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_124, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_125, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_126, TARGET_SIGNAL_REALTIME_127, TARGET_SIGNAL_INFO, /* Some signal we don't know about. */ TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN, /* Use whatever signal we use when one is not specifically specified (for passing to proceed and so on). */ TARGET_SIGNAL_DEFAULT, /* Mach exceptions. In versions of GDB before 5.2, these were just before TARGET_SIGNAL_INFO if you were compiling on a Mach host (and missing otherwise). */ TARGET_EXC_BAD_ACCESS, TARGET_EXC_BAD_INSTRUCTION, TARGET_EXC_ARITHMETIC, TARGET_EXC_EMULATION, TARGET_EXC_SOFTWARE, TARGET_EXC_BREAKPOINT, /* If you are adding a new signal, add it just above this comment. */ /* Last and unused enum value, for sizing arrays, etc. */ TARGET_SIGNAL_LAST }; #endif /* #ifndef GDB_SIGNALS_H */