Totalview® Reference Guide : PART I CLI Commands : Chapter 2 CLI Commands : Command Overview : dactions
dactions
Displays information, and saves and reloads action points
Format 
Displays information about action points.
dactions [ ap-id-list ] [ -at source-loc ] [ -enabled | -disabled ]    [ -enabled_blocks |-disabled_blocks ] [ ‑block_images | -block_lines ]
Saves action points to a file.
dactions -save [ filename ]
Loads previously saved action points.
dactions -load [ filename ]
Arguments 
ap-id-list
A list of action point identifiers. If you specify individual action points, the information that appears is limited to these points.
Do not enclose this list within quotes or braces. See the examples at the end of this section for more information.
Without this argument, the CLI displays summary information about all action points in the processes in the focus set. If you enter one ID, the CLI displays full information for it. If you enter more than one ID, the CLI displays just summary information for each.
-at source-loc
Displays the action points at source-loc. See dbreak for the details on the form of source-loc.
-enabled
Shows only enabled action points.
-disabled
Shows only disabled action points.
-enabled_blocks
When displaying the full information for an action point, only shows the enabled address blocks. (See example below.)
-disabled_blocks
When displaying the full information for an action point, only shows the disabled address blocks. (See example below.)
-block_images
When displaying the full information for an action point, shows the image name of each address block.
-block_lines
When displaying the full information for an action point, shows the source line of each address block.
-save
Writes information about action points to a file.
-load
Restores action point information previously saved in a file.
filename
The name of the file into which TotalView reads and writes action point information. If you omit this file name, TotalView writes action point information to a file named program_name.TVD.v3breakpoints, where program_name is the name of your program.
Description 
The dactions command displays information about action points in the processes in the current focus. If you do not indicate a focus, the default focus is at the process level. The information is printed; it is not returned.
Using the Action Point Identifier
To get the action point identifier, just enter dactions with no arguments. You need this identifier to delete, enable, and disable action points.
The identifier is returned when TotalView creates the action point. The CLI prints this ID when the thread stops at an action point.
You can include action point identifiers as arguments to the command when more detailed information is needed. The -enabled and -disabled options restrict output to action points in one of these states.
You cannot use the dactions command when you are debugging a core file or before TotalView loads executables.
Saving and Loading Action Points
The -save option writes action point information to a file so that either you or TotalView can restore your action points later. The -load option immediately reads the saved file. Using the filename argument with either option writes to or reads from this file. If you do not use this argument, TotalView names the file program_name.TVD.v3breakpoints (where program_name is the name of your program), and writes it to the directory in which your program resides.
The information saved includes expressions associated with the action point and whether the action point is enabled or disabled. For example, if your program’s name is foo, TotalView writes this information to foo.TVD.v3breakpoints.
NOTE >> TotalView does not save information about watchpoints.
If a file with the default name exists, TotalView can read this information when it starts your program. When TotalView exits, it can create the default. For more information, see the File > Preference Action Points Page information in the online Help.
Command alias 
Alias
Definition
Description
ac
dactions
Displays all action points
Examples 
ac -at 81
Displays information about the action points on line 81. (This example uses the alias instead of the full command name.) Here is the output from this command:
ac -at 81
1 shared action point for group 3:
   1 addr=0x10001544 [arrays.F#81] Enabled
         Share in group: true
          Stop when hit: group
 
dactions 1 3
Displays information about action points 1 and 3, as follows:
2 shared action points for process 1:
1 addr=0x100012a8 [arrays.F#56] Enabled
3 addr=0x100012c0 [arrays.F#57] Enabled
If you have saved a list of action points as a string or as a Tcl list, you can use the eval command to process the list’s elements.
For example:
d1.<> dactions
2 shared action points for group 3:
3 [global_pointer_ref.cxx#52] Enabled
4 [global_pointer_ref.cxx#53] Enabled
d1.<> set group1 "3 4"
3 4
d1.<> eval ddisable $group1
d1.<> ac
2 shared action points for group 3:
3 [global_pointer_ref.cxx#52] Disabled
4 [global_pointer_ref.cxx#53] Disabled
 
dfocus p1 dactions
Displays information about all action points defined in process 1.
dfocus p1 dactions -enabled
Displays information about all enabled action points in process 1
dactions n [-enabled_blocks|-disabled_blocks]
This extended example demonstrates the use of these two options.
Set a break point:
d1.<> b {bar<std::vector<int, std::allocator<int> > >::bar(int)}
Incorporating 10079 bytes of DWARF '.debug_info' information for tx_test2.cxx (linenumber)...done
1
Entering dactions reports on only the top-level action point associated with this action point number:
d1.<> dactions
1 shared action point for group 3:
1 [bar<std::vector<int,\ std::allocator<int>\ >\ >::bar(int)] Enabled
 
Entering dactions n reports on all action point instances (the address block) associated with this action point number:
d1.<> dactions 1
1 shared action point for group 3:
1 [bar<std::vector<int,\ std::allocator<int>\ >\ >::bar(int)] Enabled
Address 0: [Enabled] bar<std::vector<int,std::allocator<int> > >::bar+0x12 (0x004013d2)
Address 1: [Enabled] bar<std::vector<int,std::allocator<int> > >::bar+0x84 (0x00401444)
Address 2: [Disabled] bar<std::vector<double,std::allocator<double> > >::bar+0x12 (0x00401496)
Address 3: [Disabled] bar<std::vector<double,std::allocator<double> > >::bar+0x86 (0x0040150a)
Share in group: true
Stop when hit: process
Using -enabled_blocks reports on only enabled action point instances (the address block) associated with this action point number:
d1.<> dactions 1 -enabled_blocks
1 shared action point for group 3:
1 [bar<std::vector<int,\ std::allocator<int>\ >\ >::bar(int) Enabled
Address 0: [Enabled] bar<std::vector<int,std::allocator<int> > >::bar+0x12 (0x004013d2)
Address 1: [Enabled] bar<std::vector<int,std::allocator<int> > >::bar+0x84 (0x00401444)
Share in group: true
Stop when hit: process
Using -disabled_blocks reports on only disabled action point instances (the address block) associated with this action point number:
d1.<> dactions 1 -disabled_blocks
1 shared action point for group 3:
1 [bar<std::vector<int,\ std::allocator<int>\ >\ >::bar(int)] Enabled
Address 2: [Disabled] bar<std::vector<double,std::allocator<double> > >::bar+0x12 (0x00401496)
Address 3: [Disabled] bar<std::vector<double,std::allocator<double> > >::bar+0x86 (0x0040150a)
Share in group: true
Stop when hit: process
d1.<>
You could use this information, for example, to enabled the currently disabled action point addresses:
d1.<> denable -block 2 3