When a value is printed in various contexts, GDB uses annotations to delimit the value from the surrounding text.
If a value is printed using print
and added to the value history,
the annotation looks like
^Z^Zvalue-history-begin history-number value-flags history-string ^Z^Zvalue-history-value the-value ^Z^Zvalue-history-end
where history-number is the number it is getting in the value history, history-string is a string, such as `$5 = ', which introduces the value to the user, the-value is the output corresponding to the value itself, and value-flags is `*' for a value which can be dereferenced and `-' for a value which cannot.
If the value is not added to the value history (it is an invalid float
or it is printed with the output
command), the annotation is similar:
^Z^Zvalue-begin value-flags the-value ^Z^Zvalue-end
When GDB prints an argument to a function (for example, in the output
from the backtrace
command), it annotates it as follows:
^Z^Zarg-begin argument-name ^Z^Zarg-name-end separator-string ^Z^Zarg-value value-flags the-value ^Z^Zarg-end
where argument-name is the name of the argument,
separator-string is text which separates the name from the value
for the user's benefit (such as `='), and value-flags and
the-value have the same meanings as in a
value-history-begin
annotation.
When printing a structure, GDB annotates it as follows:
^Z^Zfield-begin value-flags field-name ^Z^Zfield-name-end separator-string ^Z^Zfield-value the-value ^Z^Zfield-end
where field-name is the name of the field, separator-string
is text which separates the name from the value for the user's benefit
(such as `='), and value-flags and the-value have the
same meanings as in a value-history-begin
annotation.
When printing an array, GDB annotates it as follows:
^Z^Zarray-section-begin array-index value-flags
where array-index is the index of the first element being
annotated and value-flags has the same meaning as in a
value-history-begin
annotation. This is followed by any number
of elements, where is element can be either a single element:
`,' whitespace ; omitted for the first element the-value ^Z^Zelt
or a repeated element
`,' whitespace ; omitted for the first element the-value ^Z^Zelt-rep number-of-repititions repetition-string ^Z^Zelt-rep-end
In both cases, the-value is the output for the value of the element and whitespace can contain spaces, tabs, and newlines. In the repeated case, number-of-repititons is the number of consecutive array elements which contain that value, and repetition-string is a string which is designed to convey to the user that repitition is being depicted.
Once all the array elements have been output, the array annotation is ended with
^Z^Zarray-section-end
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