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[PATCH] Re-indent maint.c


FYI,

I've applied the attatched.  It fixes a number of indentation problems
that crept into maint.c.

	enjoy,
		Andrew
Sat Mar 25 18:55:57 2000  Andrew Cagney  <cagney@b1.cygnus.com>

	* maint.c: Re-indent.

Index: maint.c
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/src/src/gdb/maint.c,v
retrieving revision 1.3
diff -u -r1.3 maint.c
--- maint.c	2000/03/25 07:58:54	1.3
+++ maint.c	2000/03/25 08:05:00
@@ -120,13 +120,13 @@
   internal_error ("internal maintenance");
 }
 
-/*  Someday we should allow demangling for things other than just
-   explicit strings.  For example, we might want to be able to
-   specify the address of a string in either GDB's process space
-   or the debuggee's process space, and have gdb fetch and demangle
-   that string.  If we have a char* pointer "ptr" that points to
-   a string, we might want to be able to given just the name and
-   have GDB demangle and print what it points to, etc.  (FIXME) */
+/* Someday we should allow demangling for things other than just
+   explicit strings.  For example, we might want to be able to specify
+   the address of a string in either GDB's process space or the
+   debuggee's process space, and have gdb fetch and demangle that
+   string.  If we have a char* pointer "ptr" that points to a string,
+   we might want to be able to given just the name and have GDB
+   demangle and print what it points to, etc.  (FIXME) */
 
 static void
 maintenance_demangle (args, from_tty)
@@ -180,9 +180,9 @@
     display_space = strtol (args, NULL, 10);
 }
 
-/* The "maintenance info" command is defined as a prefix, with allow_unknown 0.
-   Therefore, its own definition is called only for "maintenance info" with
-   no args.  */
+/* The "maintenance info" command is defined as a prefix, with
+   allow_unknown 0.  Therefore, its own definition is called only for
+   "maintenance info" with no args.  */
 
 /* ARGSUSED */
 static void
@@ -281,9 +281,9 @@
   print_symbol_bcache_statistics ();
 }
 
-/* The "maintenance print" command is defined as a prefix, with allow_unknown
-   0.  Therefore, its own definition is called only for "maintenance print"
-   with no args.  */
+/* The "maintenance print" command is defined as a prefix, with
+   allow_unknown 0.  Therefore, its own definition is called only for
+   "maintenance print" with no args.  */
 
 /* ARGSUSED */
 static void
@@ -360,7 +360,8 @@
 
 
 /* When a comamnd is deprecated the user will be warned the first time
-   the command is used.  If possible, a replacement will be offered. */
+   the command is used.  If possible, a replacement will be
+   offered. */
 
 static void
 maintenance_deprecate (char *args, int from_tty)
@@ -371,7 +372,7 @@
 the command you want to deprecate, and optionally the replacement command \n\
 enclosed in quotes.\n");
     }
-  
+
   maintenance_do_deprecate (args, 1);
 
 }
@@ -385,86 +386,86 @@
       printf_unfiltered ("\"maintenance undeprecate\" takes an argument, \n\
 the command you want to undeprecate.\n");
     }
-  
+
   maintenance_do_deprecate (args, 0);
-  
+
 }
+
+/* You really shouldn't be using this. It is just for the testsuite.
+   Rather, you should use deprecate_cmd() when the command is created
+   in _initialize_blah().
+
+   This function deprecates a command and optionally assigns it a
+   replacement.  */
+
+static void 
+maintenance_do_deprecate (char *text, int deprecate)
+{
+
+  struct cmd_list_element *alias = NULL;
+  struct cmd_list_element *prefix_cmd = NULL;
+  struct cmd_list_element *cmd = NULL;
 
-/*  
-    You really shouldn't be using this. It is just for the testsuite.
-    Rather, you should use deprecate_cmd() when the command is created
-    in _initialize_blah().
-  
-    This function deprecates a command and optionally assigns it a 
-    replacement.
-*/
-
-static void maintenance_do_deprecate(char *text, int deprecate){
-
-  struct cmd_list_element *alias=NULL; 
-  struct cmd_list_element *prefix_cmd=NULL; 
-  struct cmd_list_element *cmd=NULL;
-  
-  char *start_ptr=NULL; 
-  char *end_ptr=NULL;
+  char *start_ptr = NULL;
+  char *end_ptr = NULL;
   int len;
-  char *replacement=NULL;
+  char *replacement = NULL;
+
 
+  if (!lookup_cmd_composition (text, &alias, &prefix_cmd, &cmd))
+    {
+      printf_filtered ("Can't find command '%s' to deprecate.\n", text);
+      return;
+    }
 
-  if (!lookup_cmd_composition (text, &alias, &prefix_cmd, &cmd)){
-    printf_filtered ("Can't find command '%s' to deprecate.\n", text);
-    return;
-  }
-  
   if (deprecate)
     {
       /* look for a replacement command */
       if (start_ptr = strchr (text, '\"'))
-      {
-        start_ptr++;
-        if(end_ptr = strrchr (start_ptr, '\"'))
-          {
-            len = end_ptr-start_ptr;
-            start_ptr[len]='\0';
-            replacement = xstrdup (start_ptr);
-          }
-      }
+	{
+	  start_ptr++;
+	  if (end_ptr = strrchr (start_ptr, '\"'))
+	    {
+	      len = end_ptr - start_ptr;
+	      start_ptr[len] = '\0';
+	      replacement = xstrdup (start_ptr);
+	    }
+	}
     }
-  
+
   if (!start_ptr || !end_ptr)
     replacement = NULL;
-  
-    
+
+
   /* If they used an alias, we only want to deprecate the alias.
-     
+
      Note the MALLOCED_REPLACEMENT test.  If the command's replacement
      string was allocated at compile time we don't want to free the
-     memory.  
-  */
+     memory. */
   if (alias)
     {
-      
+
       if (alias->flags & MALLOCED_REPLACEMENT)
-      free (alias->replacement);
-      
+	free (alias->replacement);
+
       if (deprecate)
-      alias->flags |= (DEPRECATED_WARN_USER | CMD_DEPRECATED);
+	alias->flags |= (DEPRECATED_WARN_USER | CMD_DEPRECATED);
       else
-      alias->flags &= ~(DEPRECATED_WARN_USER | CMD_DEPRECATED);
-      alias->replacement=replacement;
+	alias->flags &= ~(DEPRECATED_WARN_USER | CMD_DEPRECATED);
+      alias->replacement = replacement;
       alias->flags |= MALLOCED_REPLACEMENT;
       return;
     }
   else if (cmd)
     {
       if (cmd->flags & MALLOCED_REPLACEMENT)
-      free (cmd->replacement);
+	free (cmd->replacement);
 
       if (deprecate)
-      cmd->flags |= (DEPRECATED_WARN_USER | CMD_DEPRECATED);
+	cmd->flags |= (DEPRECATED_WARN_USER | CMD_DEPRECATED);
       else
-      cmd->flags &= ~(DEPRECATED_WARN_USER | CMD_DEPRECATED);
-      cmd->replacement=replacement;
+	cmd->flags &= ~(DEPRECATED_WARN_USER | CMD_DEPRECATED);
+      cmd->replacement = replacement;
       cmd->flags |= MALLOCED_REPLACEMENT;
       return;
     }
@@ -570,17 +571,17 @@
 	   &maintenancelist);
 
   add_cmd ("deprecate", class_maintenance, maintenance_deprecate,
-         "Deprecate a command.  Note that this is just in here so the \n\
+	   "Deprecate a command.  Note that this is just in here so the \n\
 testsuite can check the comamnd deprecator. You probably shouldn't use this,\n\
 rather you should use the C function deprecate_cmd().  If you decide you \n\
 want to use it: maintenance deprecate 'commandname' \"replacement\". The \n\
 replacement is optional.", &maintenancelist);
 
   add_cmd ("undeprecate", class_maintenance, maintenance_undeprecate,
-         "Undeprecate a command.  Note that this is just in here so the \n\
+	   "Undeprecate a command.  Note that this is just in here so the \n\
 testsuite can check the comamnd deprecator. You probably shouldn't use this,\n\
-If you decide you want to use it: maintenance undeprecate 'commandname'", 
-         &maintenancelist);
+If you decide you want to use it: maintenance undeprecate 'commandname'",
+	   &maintenancelist);
 
   add_show_from_set (
 		      add_set_cmd ("watchdog", class_maintenance, var_zinteger, (char *) &watchdog,

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