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1 README for GDB release
2
3This is GDB, the GNU source-level debugger.
4
5A summary of new features is in the file `gdb/NEWS'.
6
7Check the GDB home page at http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/ for up to
8date release information, mailing list links and archives, etc.
9
10GDB's bug tracking data base can be found at
11http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/
12
13Unpacking and Installation -- quick overview
14==========================
15
16 The release is provided as a gzipped tar file called
17'gdb-VERSION.tar.gz', where VERSION is the version of GDB.
18
19 The GDB debugger sources, the generic GNU include
20files, the BFD ("binary file description") library, the readline
21library, and other libraries all have directories of their own
22underneath the gdb-VERSION directory. The idea is that a variety of GNU
23tools can share a common copy of these things. Be aware of variation
24over time--for example don't try to build GDB with a copy of bfd from
25a release other than the GDB release (such as a binutils release),
26especially if the releases are more than a few weeks apart.
27Configuration scripts and makefiles exist to cruise up and down this
28directory tree and automatically build all the pieces in the right
29order.
30
31 When you unpack the gdb-VERSION.tar.gz file, it will create a
32source directory called `gdb-VERSION'.
33
34You can build GDB right in the source directory:
35
36 cd gdb-VERSION
37 ./configure --prefix=/usr/local (or wherever you want)
38 make all install
39
40However, we recommend that an empty directory be used instead.
41This way you do not clutter your source tree with binary files
42and will be able to create different builds with different
43configuration options.
44
45You can build GDB in any empty build directory:
46
47 mkdir build
48 cd build
49 <full path to your sources>/gdb-VERSION/configure [etc...]
50 make all install
51
52(Building GDB with DJGPP tools for MS-DOS/MS-Windows is slightly
53different; see the file gdb-VERSION/gdb/config/djgpp/README for details.)
54
55 This will configure and build all the libraries as well as GDB. If
56`configure' can't determine your system type, specify one as its
57argument, e.g., `./configure sun4' or `./configure decstation'.
58
59 Make sure that your 'configure' line ends in 'gdb-VERSION/configure':
60
61 /berman/migchain/source/gdb-VERSION/configure # RIGHT
62 /berman/migchain/source/gdb-VERSION/gdb/configure # WRONG
63
64 The GDB package contains several subdirectories, such as 'gdb',
65'bfd', and 'readline'. If your 'configure' line ends in
66'gdb-VERSION/gdb/configure', then you are configuring only the gdb
67subdirectory, not the whole GDB package. This leads to build errors
68such as:
69
70 make: *** No rule to make target `../bfd/bfd.h', needed by `gdb.o'. Stop.
71
72 If you get other compiler errors during this stage, see the `Reporting
73Bugs' section below; there are a few known problems.
74
75 GDB's `configure' script has many options to enable or disable
76different features or dependencies. These options are not generally
77known to the top-level `configure', so if you want to see a complete
78list of options, invoke the subdirectory `configure', like:
79
80 /berman/migchain/source/gdb-VERSION/gdb/configure --help
81
82 (Take note of how this differs from the invocation used to actually
83configure the build tree.)
84
85 GDB requires a C++11 compiler. If you do not have a
86C++11 compiler for your system, you may be able to download and install
87the GNU CC compiler. It is available via anonymous FTP from the
88directory `ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/gcc'. GDB also requires an ISO
89C standard library. The GDB remote server, GDBserver, builds with some
90non-ISO standard libraries - e.g. for Windows CE.
91
92 GDB can optionally be built against various external libraries.
93These dependencies are described below in the "`configure options"
94section of this README.
95
96 GDB can be used as a cross-debugger, running on a machine of one
97type while debugging a program running on a machine of another type.
98See below.
99
100
101More Documentation
102******************
103
104 All the documentation for GDB comes as part of the machine-readable
105distribution. The documentation is written in Texinfo format, which
106is a documentation system that uses a single source file to produce
107both on-line information and a printed manual. You can use one of the
108Info formatting commands to create the on-line version of the
109documentation and TeX (or `texi2roff') to typeset the printed version.
110
111 GDB includes an already formatted copy of the on-line Info version
112of this manual in the `gdb/doc' subdirectory. The main Info file is
113`gdb-VERSION/gdb/doc/gdb.info', and it refers to subordinate files
114matching `gdb.info*' in the same directory. If necessary, you can
115print out these files, or read them with any editor; but they are
116easier to read using the `info' subsystem in GNU Emacs or the
117standalone `info' program, available as part of the GNU Texinfo
118distribution.
119
120 If you want to format these Info files yourself, you need one of the
121Info formatting programs, such as `texinfo-format-buffer' or
122`makeinfo'.
123
124 If you have `makeinfo' installed, and are in the top level GDB
125source directory (`gdb-VERSION'), you can make the Info file by
126typing:
127
128 cd gdb/doc
129 make info
130
131 If you want to typeset and print copies of this manual, you need
132TeX, a program to print its DVI output files, and `texinfo.tex', the
133Texinfo definitions file. This file is included in the GDB
134distribution, in the directory `gdb-VERSION/texinfo'.
135
136 TeX is a typesetting program; it does not print files directly, but
137produces output files called DVI files. To print a typeset document,
138you need a program to print DVI files. If your system has TeX
139installed, chances are it has such a program. The precise command to
140use depends on your system; `lpr -d' is common; another (for PostScript
141devices) is `dvips'. The DVI print command may require a file name
142without any extension or a `.dvi' extension.
143
144 TeX also requires a macro definitions file called `texinfo.tex'.
145This file tells TeX how to typeset a document written in Texinfo
146format. On its own, TeX cannot read, much less typeset a Texinfo file.
147 `texinfo.tex' is distributed with GDB and is located in the
148`gdb-VERSION/texinfo' directory.
149
150 If you have TeX and a DVI printer program installed, you can typeset
151and print this manual. First switch to the `gdb' subdirectory of
152the main source directory (for example, to `gdb-VERSION/gdb') and then type:
153
154 make doc/gdb.dvi
155
156 If you prefer to have the manual in PDF format, type this from the
157`gdb/doc' subdirectory of the main source directory:
158
159 make gdb.pdf
160
161For this to work, you will need the PDFTeX package to be installed.
162
163
164Installing GDB
165**************
166
167 GDB comes with a `configure' script that automates the process of
168preparing GDB for installation; you can then use `make' to build the
169`gdb' program.
170
171 The GDB distribution includes all the source code you need for GDB in
172a single directory. That directory contains:
173
174`gdb-VERSION/{COPYING,COPYING.LIB}'
175 Standard GNU license files. Please read them.
176
177`gdb-VERSION/bfd'
178 source for the Binary File Descriptor library
179
180`gdb-VERSION/config*'
181 script for configuring GDB, along with other support files
182
183`gdb-VERSION/gdb'
184 the source specific to GDB itself
185
186`gdb-VERSION/include'
187 GNU include files
188
189`gdb-VERSION/libiberty'
190 source for the `-liberty' free software library
191
192`gdb-VERSION/opcodes'
193 source for the library of opcode tables and disassemblers
194
195`gdb-VERSION/readline'
196 source for the GNU command-line interface
197 NOTE: The readline library is compiled for use by GDB, but will
198 not be installed on your system when "make install" is issued.
199
200`gdb-VERSION/sim'
201 source for some simulators (ARM, D10V, SPARC, M32R, MIPS, PPC, V850, etc)
202
203`gdb-VERSION/texinfo'
204 The `texinfo.tex' file, which you need in order to make a printed
205 manual using TeX.
206
207`gdb-VERSION/etc'
208 Coding standards, useful files for editing GDB, and other
209 miscellanea.
210
211 Note: the following instructions are for building GDB on Unix or
212Unix-like systems. Instructions for building with DJGPP for
213MS-DOS/MS-Windows are in the file gdb/config/djgpp/README.
214
215 The simplest way to configure and build GDB is to run `configure'
216from the `gdb-VERSION' directory.
217
218 First switch to the `gdb-VERSION' source directory if you are
219not already in it; then run `configure'.
220
221 For example:
222
223 cd gdb-VERSION
224 ./configure
225 make
226
227 Running `configure' followed by `make' builds the `bfd',
228`readline', `mmalloc', and `libiberty' libraries, then `gdb' itself.
229The configured source files, and the binaries, are left in the
230corresponding source directories.
231
232 `configure' is a Bourne-shell (`/bin/sh') script; if your system
233does not recognize this automatically when you run a different shell,
234you may need to run `sh' on it explicitly:
235
236 sh configure
237
238 If you run `configure' from a directory that contains source
239directories for multiple libraries or programs, `configure' creates
240configuration files for every directory level underneath (unless
241you tell it not to, with the `--norecursion' option).
242
243 You can install `gdb' anywhere; it has no hardwired paths. However,
244you should make sure that the shell on your path (named by the `SHELL'
245environment variable) is publicly readable. Remember that GDB uses the
246shell to start your program--some systems refuse to let GDB debug child
247processes whose programs are not readable.
248
249
250Compiling GDB in another directory
251==================================
252
253 If you want to run GDB versions for several host or target machines,
254you need a different `gdb' compiled for each combination of host and
255target. `configure' is designed to make this easy by allowing you to
256generate each configuration in a separate subdirectory, rather than in
257the source directory. If your `make' program handles the `VPATH'
258feature correctly (GNU `make' and SunOS 'make' are two that should),
259running `make' in each of these directories builds the `gdb' program
260specified there.
261
262 To build `gdb' in a separate directory, run `configure' with the
263`--srcdir' option to specify where to find the source. (You also need
264to specify a path to find `configure' itself from your working
265directory. If the path to `configure' would be the same as the
266argument to `--srcdir', you can leave out the `--srcdir' option; it
267will be assumed.)
268
269 For example, you can build GDB in a separate
270directory for a Sun 4 like this:
271
272 cd gdb-VERSION
273 mkdir ../gdb-sun4
274 cd ../gdb-sun4
275 ../gdb-VERSION/configure
276 make
277
278 When `configure' builds a configuration using a remote source
279directory, it creates a tree for the binaries with the same structure
280(and using the same names) as the tree under the source directory. In
281the example, you'd find the Sun 4 library `libiberty.a' in the
282directory `gdb-sun4/libiberty', and GDB itself in `gdb-sun4/gdb'.
283
284 One popular reason to build several GDB configurations in separate
285directories is to configure GDB for cross-compiling (where GDB runs on
286one machine--the host--while debugging programs that run on another
287machine--the target). You specify a cross-debugging target by giving
288the `--target=TARGET' option to `configure'.
289
290 When you run `make' to build a program or library, you must run it
291in a configured directory--whatever directory you were in when you
292called `configure' (or one of its subdirectories).
293
294 The `Makefile' that `configure' generates in each source directory
295also runs recursively. If you type `make' in a source directory such
296as `gdb-VERSION' (or in a separate configured directory configured with
297`--srcdir=PATH/gdb-VERSION'), you will build all the required libraries,
298and then build GDB.
299
300 When you have multiple hosts or targets configured in separate
301directories, you can run `make' on them in parallel (for example, if
302they are NFS-mounted on each of the hosts); they will not interfere
303with each other.
304
305
306Specifying names for hosts and targets
307======================================
308
309 The specifications used for hosts and targets in the `configure'
310script are based on a three-part naming scheme, but some short
311predefined aliases are also supported. The full naming scheme encodes
312three pieces of information in the following pattern:
313
314 ARCHITECTURE-VENDOR-OS
315
316 For example, you can use the alias `sun4' as a HOST argument or in a
317`--target=TARGET' option. The equivalent full name is
318`sparc-sun-sunos4'.
319
320 The `configure' script accompanying GDB does not provide any query
321facility to list all supported host and target names or aliases.
322`configure' calls the Bourne shell script `config.sub' to map
323abbreviations to full names; you can read the script, if you wish, or
324you can use it to test your guesses on abbreviations--for example:
325
326 % sh config.sub sun4
327 sparc-sun-sunos4.1.1
328 % sh config.sub sun3
329 m68k-sun-sunos4.1.1
330 % sh config.sub decstation
331 mips-dec-ultrix4.2
332 % sh config.sub hp300bsd
333 m68k-hp-bsd
334 % sh config.sub i386v
335 i386-pc-sysv
336 % sh config.sub i786v
337 Invalid configuration `i786v': machine `i786v' not recognized
338
339`config.sub' is also distributed in the GDB source directory.
340
341
342`configure' options
343===================
344
345 Here is a summary of the `configure' options and arguments that are
346most often useful for building GDB. `configure' also has several other
347options not listed here. There are many options to gdb's `configure'
348script, some of which are only useful in special situation.
349*note : (autoconf.info)Running configure scripts, for a full
350explanation of `configure'.
351
352 configure [--help]
353 [--prefix=DIR]
354 [--srcdir=PATH]
355 [--target=TARGET]
356 [--host=HOST]
357 [HOST]
358
359You may introduce options with a single `-' rather than `--' if you
360prefer; but you may abbreviate option names if you use `--'. Some
361more obscure GDB `configure' options are not listed here.
362
363`--help'
364 Display a quick summary of how to invoke `configure'.
365
366`-prefix=DIR'
367 Configure the source to install programs and files under directory
368 `DIR'.
369
370`--srcdir=PATH'
371 *Warning: using this option requires GNU `make', or another `make'
372 that compatibly implements the `VPATH' feature.*
373 Use this option to make configurations in directories separate
374 from the GDB source directories. Among other things, you can use
375 this to build (or maintain) several configurations simultaneously,
376 in separate directories. `configure' writes configuration
377 specific files in the current directory, but arranges for them to
378 use the source in the directory PATH. `configure' will create
379 directories under the working directory in parallel to the source
380 directories below PATH.
381
382`--host=HOST'
383 Configure GDB to run on the specified HOST.
384
385 There is no convenient way to generate a list of all available
386 hosts.
387
388`HOST ...'
389 Same as `--host=HOST'. If you omit this, GDB will guess; it's
390 quite accurate.
391
392`--target=TARGET'
393 Configure GDB for cross-debugging programs running on the specified
394 TARGET. Without this option, GDB is configured to debug programs
395 that run on the same machine (HOST) as GDB itself.
396
397 There is no convenient way to generate a list of all available
398 targets.
399
400`--enable-targets=TARGET,TARGET,...'
401`--enable-targets=all`
402 Configure GDB for cross-debugging programs running on the
403 specified list of targets. The special value `all' configures
404 GDB for debugging programs running on any target it supports.
405
406`--with-gdb-datadir=PATH'
407 Set the GDB-specific data directory. GDB will look here for
408 certain supporting files or scripts. This defaults to the `gdb'
409 subdirectory of `datadir' (which can be set using `--datadir').
410
411`--with-relocated-sources=DIR'
412 Sets up the default source path substitution rule so that
413 directory names recorded in debug information will be
414 automatically adjusted for any directory under DIR. DIR should
415 be a subdirectory of GDB's configured prefix, the one mentioned
416 in the `--prefix' or `--exec-prefix' options to configure. This
417 option is useful if GDB is supposed to be moved to a different
418 place after it is built.
419
420`--enable-64-bit-bfd'
421 Enable 64-bit support in BFD on 32-bit hosts.
422
423`--disable-gdbmi'
424 Build GDB without the GDB/MI machine interface.
425
426`--enable-tui'
427 Build GDB with the text-mode full-screen user interface (TUI).
428 Requires a curses library (ncurses and cursesX are also
429 supported).
430
431`--with-curses'
432 Use the curses library instead of the termcap library, for
433 text-mode terminal operations.
434
435`--with-libunwind-ia64'
436 Use the libunwind library for unwinding function call stack on ia64
437 target platforms.
438 See http://www.nongnu.org/libunwind/index.html for details.
439
440`--with-system-readline'
441 Use the readline library installed on the host, rather than the
442 library supplied as part of GDB. Readline 7 or newer is required;
443 this is enforced by the build system.
444
445`--with-system-zlib
446 Use the zlib library installed on the host, rather than the
447 library supplied as part of GDB.
448
449`--with-expat'
450 Build GDB with Expat, a library for XML parsing. (Done by
451 default if libexpat is installed and found at configure time.)
452 This library is used to read XML files supplied with GDB. If it
453 is unavailable, some features, such as remote protocol memory
454 maps, target descriptions, and shared library lists, that are
455 based on XML files, will not be available in GDB. If your host
456 does not have libexpat installed, you can get the latest version
457 from `http://expat.sourceforge.net'.
458
459`--with-libiconv-prefix[=DIR]'
460 Build GDB with GNU libiconv, a character set encoding conversion
461 library. This is not done by default, as on GNU systems the
462 `iconv' that is built in to the C library is sufficient. If your
463 host does not have a working `iconv', you can get the latest
464 version of GNU iconv from `https://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv/'.
465
466 GDB's build system also supports building GNU libiconv as part of
467 the overall build. See the GDB manual instructions on how to do
468 this.
469
470`--with-lzma'
471 Build GDB with LZMA, a compression library. (Done by default if
472 liblzma is installed and found at configure time.) LZMA is used
473 by GDB's "mini debuginfo" feature, which is only useful on
474 platforms using the ELF object file format. If your host does
475 not have liblzma installed, you can get the latest version from
476 `https://tukaani.org/xz/'.
477
478`--with-mpfr'
479 Build GDB with GNU MPFR, a library for multiple-precision
480 floating-point computation with correct rounding. (Done by
481 default if GNU MPFR is installed and found at configure time.)
482 This library is used to emulate target floating-point arithmetic
483 during expression evaluation when the target uses different
484 floating-point formats than the host. If GNU MPFR is not
485 available, GDB will fall back to using host floating-point
486 arithmetic. If your host does not have GNU MPFR installed, you
487 can get the latest version from `http://www.mpfr.org'.
488
489`--with-python[=PYTHON]'
490 Build GDB with Python scripting support. (Done by default if
491 libpython is present and found at configure time.) Python makes
492 GDB scripting much more powerful than the restricted CLI
493 scripting language. If your host does not have Python installed,
494 you can find it on `http://www.python.org/download/'. The oldest
495 version of Python supported by GDB is 2.6. The optional argument
496 PYTHON is used to find the Python headers and libraries. It can
497 be either the name of a Python executable, or the name of the
498 directory in which Python is installed.
499
500`--with-guile[=GUILE]'
501 Build GDB with GNU Guile scripting support. (Done by default if
502 libguile is present and found at configure time.) If your host
503 does not have Guile installed, you can find it at
504 `https://www.gnu.org/software/guile/'. The optional argument
505 GUILE can be a version number, which will cause `configure' to
506 try to use that version of Guile; or the file name of a
507 `pkg-config' executable, which will be queried to find the
508 information needed to compile and link against Guile.
509
510`--enable-source-highlight'
511 When printing source code, use source highlighting. This requires
512 libsource-highlight to be installed and is enabled by default
513 if the library is found.
514
515`--with-xxhash'
516 Use libxxhash for hashing. This has no user-visible effect but
517 speeds up various GDB operations such as symbol loading. Enabled
518 by default if libxxhash is found.
519
520`--without-included-regex'
521 Don't use the regex library included with GDB (as part of the
522 libiberty library). This is the default on hosts with version 2
523 of the GNU C library.
524
525`--with-sysroot=DIR'
526 Use DIR as the default system root directory for libraries whose
527 file names begin with `/lib' or `/usr/lib'. (The value of DIR
528 can be modified at run time by using the "set sysroot" command.)
529 If DIR is under the GDB configured prefix (set with `--prefix' or
530 `--exec-prefix' options), the default system root will be
531 automatically adjusted if and when GDB is moved to a different
532 location.
533
534`--with-system-gdbinit=FILE'
535 Configure GDB to automatically load a system-wide init file.
536 FILE should be an absolute file name. If FILE is in a directory
537 under the configured prefix, and GDB is moved to another location
538 after being built, the location of the system-wide init file will
539 be adjusted accordingly.
540
541`--with-system-gdbinit-dir=DIR'
542 Configure GDB to automatically load system-wide init files from
543 a directory. Files with extensions `.gdb', `.py' (if Python
544 support is enabled) and `.scm' (if Guile support is enabled) are
545 supported. DIR should be an absolute directory name. If DIR is
546 in a directory under the configured prefix, and GDB is moved to
547 another location after being built, the location of the system-
548 wide init directory will be adjusted accordingly.
549
550`--enable-build-warnings'
551 When building the GDB sources, ask the compiler to warn about any
552 code which looks even vaguely suspicious. It passes many
553 different warning flags, depending on the exact version of the
554 compiler you are using.
555
556`--enable-werror'
557 Treat compiler warnings as werrors. It adds the -Werror flag to
558 the compiler, which will fail the compilation if the compiler
559 outputs any warning messages.
560
561`--enable-ubsan'
562 Enable the GCC undefined behavior sanitizer. By default this is
563 disabled in GDB releases, but enabled when building from git.
564 The undefined behavior sanitizer checks for C++ undefined
565 behavior. It has a performance cost, so if you are looking at
566 GDB's performance, you should disable it.
567
568`--enable-unit-tests[=yes|no]'
569 Enable (i.e., include) support for unit tests when compiling GDB
570 and GDBServer. Note that if this option is not passed, GDB will
571 have selftests if it is a development build, and will *not* have
572 selftests if it is a non-development build.
573
574`configure' accepts other options, for compatibility with configuring
575other GNU tools recursively.
576
577
578Remote debugging
579=================
580
581 The files m68k-stub.c, i386-stub.c, and sparc-stub.c are examples
582of remote stubs to be used with remote.c. They are designed to run
583standalone on an m68k, i386, or SPARC cpu and communicate properly
584with the remote.c stub over a serial line.
585
586 The directory gdb/gdbserver/ contains `gdbserver', a program that
587allows remote debugging for Unix applications. GDBserver is only
588supported for some native configurations, including Sun 3, Sun 4, and
589Linux.
590
591 The file gdb/gdbserver/README includes further notes on GDBserver; in
592particular, it explains how to build GDBserver for cross-debugging
593(where GDBserver runs on the target machine, which is of a different
594architecture than the host machine running GDB).
595
596
597Reporting Bugs in GDB
598=====================
599
600 There are several ways of reporting bugs in GDB. The prefered
601method is to use the World Wide Web:
602
603 http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/bugs/
604
605As an alternative, the bug report can be submitted, via e-mail, to the
606address "bug-gdb@gnu.org".
607
608 When submitting a bug, please include the GDB version number, and
609how you configured it (e.g., "sun4" or "mach386 host,
610i586-intel-synopsys target"). Since GDB supports so many
611different configurations, it is important that you be precise about
612this. The simplest way to do this is to include the output from these
613commands:
614
615 % gdb --version
616 % gdb --config
617
618 For more information on how/whether to report bugs, see the
619Reporting Bugs chapter of the GDB manual (gdb/doc/gdb.texinfo).
620
621
622Graphical interface to GDB -- X Windows, MS Windows
623==========================
624
625 Several graphical interfaces to GDB are available. You should
626check:
627
628 https://sourceware.org/gdb/wiki/GDB%20Front%20Ends
629
630for an up-to-date list.
631
632 Emacs users will very likely enjoy the Grand Unified Debugger mode;
633try typing `M-x gdb RET'.
634
635
636Writing Code for GDB
637=====================
638
639 There is information about writing code for GDB in the file
640`CONTRIBUTE' and at the website:
641
642 http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/
643
644in particular in the wiki.
645
646 If you are pondering writing anything but a short patch, especially
647take note of the information about copyrights and copyright assignment.
648It can take quite a while to get all the paperwork done, so
649we encourage you to start that process as soon as you decide you are
650planning to work on something, or at least well ahead of when you
651think you will be ready to submit the patches.
652
653
654GDB Testsuite
655=============
656
657 Included with the GDB distribution is a DejaGNU based testsuite
658that can either be used to test your newly built GDB, or for
659regression testing a GDB with local modifications.
660
661 Running the testsuite requires the prior installation of DejaGNU,
662which is generally available via ftp. The directory
663ftp://sources.redhat.com/pub/dejagnu/ will contain a recent snapshot.
664Once DejaGNU is installed, you can run the tests in one of the
665following ways:
666
667 (1) cd gdb-VERSION
668 make check-gdb
669
670or
671
672 (2) cd gdb-VERSION/gdb
673 make check
674
675or
676
677 (3) cd gdb-VERSION/gdb/testsuite
678 make site.exp (builds the site specific file)
679 runtest -tool gdb GDB=../gdb (or GDB=<somepath> as appropriate)
680
681When using a `make'-based method, you can use the Makefile variable
682`RUNTESTFLAGS' to pass flags to `runtest', e.g.:
683
684 make RUNTESTFLAGS=--directory=gdb.cp check
685
686If you use GNU make, you can use its `-j' option to run the testsuite
687in parallel. This can greatly reduce the amount of time it takes for
688the testsuite to run. In this case, if you set `RUNTESTFLAGS' then,
689by default, the tests will be run serially even under `-j'. You can
690override this and force a parallel run by setting the `make' variable
691`FORCE_PARALLEL' to any non-empty value. Note that the parallel `make
692check' assumes that you want to run the entire testsuite, so it is not
693compatible with some dejagnu options, like `--directory'.
694
695The last method gives you slightly more control in case of problems
696with building one or more test executables or if you are using the
697testsuite `standalone', without it being part of the GDB source tree.
698
699See the DejaGNU documentation for further details.
700
701
702Copyright and License Notices
703=============================
704
705Most files maintained by the GDB Project contain a copyright notice
706as well as a license notice, usually at the start of the file.
707
708To reduce the length of copyright notices, consecutive years in the
709copyright notice can be combined into a single range. For instance,
710the following list of copyright years...
711
712 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991-1993, 1999, 2000, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011
713
714... is abbreviated into:
715
716 1986, 1988-1989, 1991-1993, 1999-2000, 2007-2011
717
718Every year of each range, inclusive, is a copyrightable year that
719could be listed individually.
720
721\f
722(this is for editing this file with GNU emacs)
723Local Variables:
724mode: text
725End:
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