The slice cannot be integrated automatically because there is a modal popping up


        Warning: Process should not be redefined. Proceed to store
        over it.


Not sure what to do. Manual integration?

We will check that :)


Norbert

Am 23.06.2014 um 23:55 schrieb Norbert Hartl <norb...@hartl.name <mailto:norb...@hartl.name>>:

https://pharo.fogbugz.com/default.asp?13378

Btw. I tested this as well in 3.0 and a backport would be highly appreciated.

Norbert

Am 23.06.2014 um 20:08 schrieb stepharo <steph...@free.fr <mailto:steph...@free.fr>>:

Thanks Eliot.
Sven, Norbert if you package that nicely (BTW having some tests would be great) we can include that in 4.0

Stef
On 23/6/14 19:29, Eliot Miranda wrote:
and here are the changes I've just committed to Squeak trunk.


On Mon, Jun 23, 2014 at 10:05 AM, Eliot Miranda <eliot.mira...@gmail.com <mailto:eliot.mira...@gmail.com>> wrote:

    Hi Norbert,

        [ let me try again.  never try and get code out too early
    in the morning ;-) ]

      it is the debugger that needs fixing, not your code !! :-).
     The debugger needs to respect process identity.  Andreas and I
    (mostly Andreas) came up with the following changes at Qwaq.
     Your message is a good reminder that I need to add this to
    Squeak asap.

    The idea is for Process to have an additional inst var
    'effectiveProcess' that holds the actual process running code.
     For the most part this is self, but in the debugger we
    substitute the process being debugged:

    /Process methods for accessing/
    *effectiveProcess*
    "effectiveProcess is a mechanism to allow process-faithful
    debugging.  The debugger executes code
     on behalf of processes, so unless some effort is made the
    identity of Processor activeProcess is not
     correctly maintained when debugging code.  The debugger uses
    evaluate:onBehalfOf: to assign the
     debugged process as the effectiveProcess of the process
    executing the code, preserving process
     identity."
    ^effectiveProcess ifNil: [self]

    then the relevant methods in Process and processorScheduler
    defer to effectiveProcess, e.g.

    /ProcessorScheduler methods for process state change/
    *terminateActive*
    "Terminate the process that is currently running."

    activeProcess effectiveProcess terminate

    and the debugging methods use evaluate:onBehalfOf: to install
    the process being debugged:

    /Process methods for private/
    *evaluate: aBlock onBehalfOf: aProcess*
    "Evaluate aBlock setting effectiveProcess to aProcess.  Used
     in the execution simulation machinery to ensure that
     Processor activeProcess evaluates correctly when debugging."
    | oldEffectiveProcess |
    oldEffectiveProcess := effectiveProcess.
    effectiveProcess := aProcess.
    ^aBlock ensure: [effectiveProcess := oldEffectiveProcess]

    /Process methods for changing suspended state/
    *step*

    ^Processor activeProcess
    evaluate: [suspendedContext := suspendedContext step]
    onBehalfOf: self

    *stepToCallee*
    "Step until top context changes"

    Processor activeProcess
    evaluate:
    [| ctxt |
    ctxt := suspendedContext.
    [ctxt == suspendedContext] whileTrue: [
    suspendedContext := suspendedContext step]]
    onBehalfOf: self.
    ^suspendedContext

    etc.  Changes from a Qwaq image attached.

    HTH


    On Mon, Jun 23, 2014 at 4:50 AM, Norbert Hartl
    <norb...@hartl.name <mailto:norb...@hartl.name>> wrote:

        In my code I'm using a DynamicVariable to request a context
        object when needed. Until now I knew the name
        DynamicVariable only from seaside. There it is called
        WADynamicVariable and it is an exception. So I blindly
        assumed the pharo DynamicVariable works the same.
        I thought this might be a good optimization not to travel
        the stack all the time but put in the process.
        Now that I am using it I can see the difference. I find it
        real hard using it because I don't know how to debug/step
        in code. DynamicVariable is a process specific variable but
        as soon as a debugger opens it is very likely to be in
        another process. This makes stepping in method using the
        DynamicVariable impossible. The only way round is to set
        break points after the dynamic lookup and step from there.
        But this feels just wrong.
        What would be the best way to have DynamicVariable and be
        able to debug anything? Or is there a variant that uses the
        stack instead of the "active" process?

        thanks,

        Norbert





-- best,
    Eliot




--
best,
Eliot




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